On sevenday morning, before anyone else showed up, Rahl polished the brasswork on all the lamps-except those in Shyret’s locked study-as well as on the doors and cabinet pulls. Then he swept the tile floor and mopped the entry area. He had just finished getting cleaned up and settling into place at the wide desk when Daelyt walked through the front door.
“So…feel guilty about getting paid, and you decided to do more of the brasswork?” Daelyt laughed.
Rahl had gotten a silver the evening before, but that was only for one eightday’s pay, rather than two. While it was more than twice what he’d received at the training center, everything he had to spend coins on was far more costly in Swartheld than it had been in Nylan. “I appreciate the pay. Having coins is much better than not, but”-Rahl offered a grin before going on-“I only feel a little guilty.” He really wanted to tell the older clerk that he didn’t feel guilty at all, but that wouldn’t have been wise.
“A little guilt is good.” Daelyt set out his pen and inkwell, then lifted a folder. “The director asked for a copy of this, and we’ve been so busy, I never got to it. With the Montgren more than an eightday out, now’s a good time for you to work on it.”
“Ah…what is it?”
“Oh…it’s the final inventory of what was in the warehouses on the last day of spring. The director has to send the Association’s chief managing director an inventory at the end of each season. It includes both what was left at the end of the season, with an estimated value, as well as what was sold during the season and for what, as well as losses through spoilage and pilfering. There’s also an addendum that lists what we hold in storage for others and what we receive for the storage fees. I’ve let it drag, but it will have to be done and sent to Nylan on the Legacy of Montgren. The chief managing director gets upset if the reports get more than a season behind.” Daelyt extended the folder. “Director Shyret will need two copies, but just do one first, and I’ll check it as you do.”
Rahl took the heavy folder. “There are a lot of pages here.”
Daelyt grinned. “There are. It will give you a better idea of all that we handle here.”
After setting the folder in front of him, slightly to his left, Rahl began to turn the first few pages, filled with changes scrawled in the margins and smudges everywhere. With such entries going on for what looked to be almost twenty pages, he could definitely see why Daelyt would like someone else to do the fair copying.
He extracted the blank ledger sheets from his side of the desk and began to copy, taking his time, because he needed to check the figures as well as copy them neatly. Even so, it was certainly no worse than Natural Arithmetics and not nearly so impenetrable as Philosophies of Candar.
Daelyt looked over his efforts several times, then straightened as a trader came in the front entry. “Might I be of assistance, noble trader?”
“When’s your next vessel bound for Nylan?”
“That would be the Legacy of Montgren, and it will be porting sometime after an eightday from oneday.”
“I’m looking for cubage for amphorae-needlewasp honey.”
“How many stones’ worth?”
“Less than a hundred.”
“That will not be a problem.”
The trader nodded, turned, and left.
Rahl looked at Daelyt quizzically.
“You’ve never heard of needlewasp honey?” asked the older clerk.
“I didn’t know it came from Hamor. Don’t the vintners use it to sweeten and stabilize bitter wines?”
“More trades use it than you’d think. Apothecaries, vintners, brewers, even dyers.” Daelyt snorted. “Working for a wasp-keeper…almost as bad as the quarries or the ironworks. Worse if you’re the kind that swells up when you get stung.”
“Where do they keep the wasps?”
“Most of the wasp-keepers are in the low marshy valleys south of Cigoerne. That’s where the blue lilies grow.”
“Daelyt!” called Shyret from the archway leading to his study.
The older clerk slipped off his stool and hurried away.
Rahl kept working on the seasonal inventory through the rest of the morning and into the early afternoon, before Daelyt sent him over to Eneld’s for his midday repast. Then Daelyt went.
Late in the afternoon, when Daelyt had completed the draft cargo consignment form for the honey factor, Rahl cleared his throat.
“Yes?”
“Daelyt…I have a question, and it’s going to sound stupid.”
“The only stupid questions are the ones you don’t ask.” The older clerk gave a sardonic laugh.
“What is the Association? I’ve heard of it all the time I was in Nylan, and I’ve filled out forms for a season, but…all I know is that ships from Nylan carry cargoes for the Association, and it has directors and clerks.” Rahl offered an embarrassed shrug.
“You have the general idea, and that’s more than most people do,” replied the older clerk. “Some of the ships are owned by the Association, and some are owned by wealthy factors. But that doesn’t matter to us. The ships have to make golds on their own, and that’s something they worry about in Nylan. The members of the Merchant Association put up golds for shares in the Association. The golds they put up paid for the buildings and the warehouses in the ports like Swartheld or Lydiar or Renklaar or Summerdock. Each director operates his office and warehouses as he sees fit. He also has to obey the laws of the land. And the end of each year, he either makes golds or loses them. Directors who lose golds don’t stay directors. Each director gets a share of the profits he makes after he pays for the cargoes and sells them. The rest goes back to Nylan and gets split up among those with shares, according to how many shares they have. Oh, and directors have fixed terms in a port, and then they get moved to other ports, unless they decide to retire on a stipend. That’s determined by how many years they’ve worked for the Association and what they’ve made over those years.”
“How long has Director Shyret been here?”
“Five years. It’ll be six next fall. That’s when his term expires. Then he’ll go somewhere else.”
“Who was here before him?”
“Varselt. He’s in Nylan now.”
Rahl forbore to say that he knew that. “Do directors have shares?”
Daelyt laughed. “Anyone who has the golds to buy them can have shares. Every director, Director Shyret once told me, has to own at least two shares. Most have more than that, I’d wager, but who knows?”
“You make it sound so clear,” Rahl replied. “Thank you. Our wages come from what the director makes here?”
“That’s correct. So do Chenaryl’s and those of the teamsters and guards.”
Rahl just nodded and went back to work on the inventory form.
Daelyt had made it very clear. Shyret was cheating the shareholders and the other directors. And if he used his ill-gotten gains to purchase more shares, he could profit even more from the efforts of honest directors. Rahl wondered whether the other directors were honest-or more honest than Shyret-because the other ports were ones closer to Nylan where traders and factors were less unwelcome.
Yet…what could he do? He had yet to see an account or a cargo declaration-or even the inventory-that would support what he sensed to be true. And he really had no idea as to whether what Shyret was doing was condemned or tacitly accepted. A year ago he would have been sure, but after all he’d been through…
As he thought about it, he also realized that the inventory addendum contained no mention of storing pickles. That nagged at him, but he couldn’t say why. Then, there were more than a few things that bothered him, and most were things that he had to worry about because of Puvort’s dishonesty and pettiness…and because of the arrogance of the board of magisters in Nylan.