Later the servants come and show you to rooms. They are well appointed, perhaps a touch less so than you'd expect for a prestigious country lord, but not mean by any stretch.
You're given chamber pots, hot water and towels to wash up and promises to fetch you when dinner is ready. You're rooms are near each other, so you can rest or visit as you please.
You request of the steward that the tax collector be sent to you, and one John Alistair. The first he agrees to send right away, the second he says that that man had left the castle the prior day.
Cecil the Taxcollector
The tax collector arrives, a sturdy man, more fit to be a blacksmith than an accountant. Barrel chested, with wide mustaches and scarred arms, he seems a man who has seen his share of violence.
Gathered together in the larger room, he greets you all.
"My lords, I was sent by the steward to attend to you. What pray thou could I do for august men such as yourselves? Say it and it will be so."