45 Summer 515, morning
Dove looked from the pile of tumbled stone to the old man - Den, he called himself - she was working under.
"That's supposed to be a wall," he grumbled, pointing at the pile. "It was a wall, until some rider with more height than sense jumped it badly and knocked it part down. Then the sheep got over it into the crops and that did for the rest of it. It's got to be rebuilt, and sooner rather than later."
Dove looked at the trampled but recovering grain, nodded, and prodded the nearest slab with a booted toe. "I've never built a wall," she admitted. "But I can see the sheep need to be kept out. Where do we start?"
The man snorted. "You start by sorting those rocks by size so we can reuse them. I start by getting a good look at what's left."
Dove nodded again and bent to haul the stones apart. She set the biggest pieces at one end of thegap and started tossing small pieces towards the other end. The tossed stones landed in an uneven scatter rather than hitting the spot she was aiming for. Her braid fell over her shoulder and she flipped it back absently. It served to keep her hair together and out of her eyes, and that was all she really wanted from it. She'd seen some other girls preening around with loose hair, but from the clothes they wore, they didn't have to work. Or if they did, she thought, bending to haul another slab of stone away, it wasn't out here in the hot sun. It would be indoors, someplace cool and friendly with probably more pay than she ever saw. She earned enough though, and despite the sun baking her, she liked being in the open. She stretched her already aching shoulders, then bent again, wincing as the rough edges of the stones scraped her hands. The pile didn't seem to be getting any smaller, although she could see that she'd made other piles with various sized stones. All the stones seemed to be a whitish grey, and the same sort, though she didn't know what it was called. Her cottage was built of similar stones and she guessed it was a local stone.
"Where does it come from?" she asked shyly. Her curiousity always seemed to get the better of her.
"You ever stone-picked?" the old man responded with a chuckle. "The stones have to go somewhere, so they get turned into walls. Keeps them tidy."
Dove couldn't remember a time before she knew how to stone-pick in the fields. She'd been maybe three the first time, following her father, and learning that you threw the stones all the way to the edge, or you put them in a pail and carried them. If you threw and fell short, then you had to pick them a second time. Farmers couldn't afford to have the stones left on the surface, because if the plough hit one wrong, it either damaged the plough, or it flew out with the soil and hit the plough-oxen, or the farmer. If it hit the oxen, you had to stop and check them over. If it hit the farmer, she was likely to be bruised at best, or too hurt to continue at worst.