30 Summer 515
When Dove reported for work, she was sent to the Garrison gate and asked to wait there. She found it, leaned against the wall and tipped her head back to watch her namesake birds fluttering in and out of the Garrison. She smelled the heavy scent of horse manure from the stables just inside the gate, and she had her suspicions about what today would involve. Sure enough, a handful of chimes later, a cart and horse showed up, led by an older woman. She had steel grey hair braided up out of her way, and a face as wrinkled as the stone from inside a peach, but Dove saw the muscles bunch under the woman's plain shirt, and recognised her type as a fellow farmer. The gate guards also clearly recognised her and hailed her cheerfully. The farmer greeted Dove with a nod, and led the horse round to back the cart in through the gate. There wasn't much space between the sides of the cart and the sides of the gate, so Dove pushed off the wall and walked over to the farmer.
"I'm..."
"You're my help for the day? Good. Hold the horse for a moment while I talk to the lass in charge." The woman's eyes twinkled as she pushed the reins into Dove's hands and sprang up onto the cart's seat, and then over the back of the seat into the cart bed, rather than try and squeeze past the side of the cart.
Dove watched her for a moment. "I have a name you know," she mumbled under her breath. "Do I look like some kind of nameless animated thing?" The horse shoved its head against her shirt. She flinched back, still holding the reins. The horse was taller than she was, even at the shoulder, and its head was higher still. It was a rich warm brown with fluffy white feet and a black mane and tail. It shoved its head against her again and snorted, as if looking for something. This time Dove stood firm, bracing her feet against ground to resist the push. "What do you want, horse?"
The woman called back, "She likes to be patted on the neck and scratched between her ears." Then she hopped down from the cart and Dove could hear her voice moving away.
Dove patted the horse twice, then tentatively reached up her free hand and slid her fingers under the bit of mane that flopped forward between the ears. There was a bump there and she scratched it hesitantly at first, then with more confidence. The horse half-closed its eyes and rested its heavy head on her shoulder. The shoulder she'd bruised only a handful of days ago. Dove pushed it off and stifled her swearing. Beyond the horse, she could hear the uneven thumps as the stable crew shovelled composted manure into the cart. It didn't smell quite as bad as the fresh variety, and Dove resigned herself to being around it all day. The farms needed it. She was a farmer. Sometimes tasks weren't fun, but they were necessary, especially if you wanted to eat next year.