III
THE RESTRICTIONS OF PERSONS IN ABODES ACT
X
"THE DEAD NEVER TALK POLITICS"
XI
STERN DISCIPLINE FOR TRAVELLERS
This
book was
copied
right, in
the
dark, by
Illuminati.
About
the
e-book
TITLE: Helliconia Winter
AUTHOR: Aldiss, Brian W.
ABEB Version: 3.0
Hog Edition
Thanks for invaluable preliminary discussions go to Dr. J. M. Roberts (history) and Mr. Desmond Morris (anthropology). I also wish to thank Dr. B. E. Juel-Jensen (pathology) and Dr. Jack Cohen (biology) for factual suggestions. Anything sound philologically is owed to Professor Thomas Shippey; his lively enthusiasm has been of great help all along.
The globe of Helliconia itself was designed and built by Dr. Peter Cattermole, from its geology to its weather. For the cosmology and astronomy, I am indebted to Dr. Iain Nicolson, whose patience over the years is a cause for particular gratitude.
Dr. Mick Kelly and Dr. Norman Myers both gave up-to-date advice on winters other than natural ones. The structure of the Great Wheel owes much to Dr. Joern Bambeck. James Lovelock kindly allowed me to employ his concept of Gaia in this fictional form. Herr Wolfgang Jeschke's interest in this project from its early days has been vital.
My debt to the writings and friendship of Dr. J. T. Fraser is apparent.
To my wife, Margaret, loving thanks for letting Helliconia take over for so long, and for working on it with me.
In the first place, since the elements of which we see the world composed solid earth and moisture, the light breaths of air and torrid fire all consist of bodies that are neither birthless nor deathless, we must believe the same of the Earth as a whole, and of its populations.... And whatever earth contributes to feed the growth of others is restored to it. It is an observed fact that the Universal Mother is also the common grave. Earth, therefore, is whittled away and renewed with fresh increment.
Lucretius: De Rerum Natura 55 bc
Luterin
had recovered. He was free of the mysterious illness. He was allowed out again.
The couch by the window, the immobility, the grey schoolmaster who came every day they were done with. He was alive to
fill his lungs with the brisk airs of outdoors.
The
cold blew down from
The
fresh wind brought out his defiance. It drew the blood to his cheeks; it made
his limbs move with the beast which carried him across his father's land.
Letting out a yell, he spurred the hoxney into a gallop. He headed it away from
the incarcerating mansion with its tolling bell, away along the avenue
traversing the fields they still called the Vineyard. The movement, the air,
the uproar of his own blood in his arteries, intoxicated him.
Around
him lay his father's territory, a dominion triumphing over latitude, a small
world of moor, mountain, valley, plunging stream, cloud, snow, forest,
waterfall but he kept his
thought from the waterfall. Endless game roved here, springing up plenteously
even as his father hunted it down. Roving phagors. Birds whose migrations darkened the sky.
Soon
he would be hunting again, following the example of his father. Life had been
somehow stayed, was somehow renewed. He must rejoice and force away the
blackness hovering on the edges of his mind.
He
galloped past bare-chested slaves who exercised yelk about the Vineyard, clinging
to their snaffles. The hoofs of the animals scattered mounds of earth sent up
by moles.
Luterin
Shokerandit spared a sympathetic thought for the moles. They could ignore the
extravagances of the two suns. Moles could hunt and rut in any season. When
they died, their bodies were devoured by other moles. For moles, life was an
endless tunnel through which the males quested for food and mates. He had
forgotten them, lying abed.
"Moledom!"
he shouted, bouncing in the saddle, rising up in the stirrups. The spare flesh
on his body made its own movements under his arang jacket.
He
goaded the hoxney on. Exercise was what was needed to bring him back into
fighting shape. The spare fat was falling away from him even on this, his first
ride out for more than a small year. His twelfth birthday had been wasted flat
on his back. For over four hundred days he had lain like that for a considerable period unable to
move or speak. He had been entombed in his bed, in his room, in his parents'
mansion, in the great grave House of the Keeper. Now that episode was finished.
Strength
flowed back to his muscles, arriving from the animal beneath him, from the air,
from the trunks of trees as they flashed by, from his own inner being. Some
destructive force whose nature he did not comprehend had wiped him out of the
world; now he was back and determined to make a mark upon that flashing stage.
One
of the double entrance gates was opened for him by a slave before he reached
it. He galloped through without pause or sideways glance.
The
wind yelped in his unaccustomed ear like a hound. He lost the familiar note of
the bell of the house behind him. The small bells on his harness jingled as the
ground responded to his advance.
Both
Batalix and Freyr were low in the southern sky. They flitted among the tree
trunks like gongs, the big sun and the small. Luterin turned his back on them
as he reached the village road. Year by year, Freyr was sinking lower in the
skies of Sibornal. Its sinking called forth fury in the human spirit. The world
was about to change.
The
sweat that formed on his chest cooled instantly. He was whole again, determined
to make up for lost time by rutting and hunting like the moles. The hoxney
could carry him to the verge of the trackless caspiarn forests, those forests
which fell away and away into the deepest recesses of the mountain ranges. One
day soon, he planned to fade into the embrace of those forests, to fade and be
lost, relishing his own dangerousness like an animal among animals. But first
he would be lost in the embrace of Insil Esikananzi.
Luterin
gave a laugh. "Yes, you have a wild side, boy" his father had once
said, staring down at Luterin after some misdemeanour or other staring down with that friendless
look of his, while placing a hand on the boy's shoulder as if estimating the
amount of wildness per bone.
And
Luterin had gazed downwards, unable to meet that stare. How could his father
love him as he loved his father when he was so mute in the great man's
presence?
The
distant grey roofs of the monasteries showed through the naked trees. Close lay the gates of the Esikananzi estate. He let the brown
hoxney slow to a trot, sensing its lack of stamina. The species was preparing
for hibernation. Soon all hoxneys would be useless for riding. This was the
season for training up the recalcitrant but more powerful yelk. When a slave
opened the Esikananzi gate, the hoxney turned in at walking pace. The
distinctive Esikananzi bell sounded ahead, chiming randomly as the wind took
its vane.
He
prayed to God the Azoiaxic that his father knew nothing of his activities with
Ondod females, that wickedness he had fallen into shortly before paralysis had
overcome him. The Ondods gave what Insil so far refused him.
He
must resist those inhuman females now. He was a man. There were sleazy shacks
by the edge of the forest where he and his school friends including Umat Esikananzi went to meet those shameless
eight-fingered bitches. Bitches, witches, who came out of the woods, out of the
very roots of the woods... And it was said that they consorted with male
phagors too. Well, that would not happen again. It was in the past, like his
brother's death. And like his brother's death, best forgotten.
It
was not beautiful, the mansion of the Esikananzis. Brutality was the predominant
feature of its architecture; it was constructed to withstand the brutal
onslaughts of a northern climate. A row of blind arches formed the base of it.
Narrow windows, heavily shuttered, began only on the second floor. The whole
structure resembled a decapitated pyramid. The bell in its belfry made a slatey
sound, as if ringing from the adamantine heart of the building.
Luterin
dismounted, climbed the steps, and pulled the doorbell.
He
was a broad-shouldered youth, already lofty in the Sibornalese manner, with a
round face seemingly built naturally for merriment: although, at this moment,
awaiting sight of Insil, his brows were knit, his lips compressed. The tension
of his expression caused him to resemble his father, but his eyes were of a
clear grey, very different from his father's dark, in-dwelling pupils.
His
hair, curling riotously about his head and the nape of his neck, was light
brown, and formed a contrast to the neat dark head of the girl into whose
presence he was ushered.
Insil
Esikananzi had the airs of one born into a powerful family. She could be sharp
and dismissive. She teased. She lied. She cultivated a helpless manner; or, if
it suited her better, a look of command. Her smiles were wintery, more a
concession to politeness than an expression of her spirit. Her violet eyes
looked out of a face she kept as blank as possible.
She
was carrying a jug of water through the hall, clasped in both hands. As she
came towards Luterin she lifted her chin slightly into the air, in a kind of
mute exasperated enquiry. To Luterin, Insil was intensely desirable, and no
less desirable for her capriciousness.
This
was the girl he was to marry, according to the arrangement drawn up between his
father and hers at Insil's birth, to cement the accord between the two most
powerful men of the district.
Directly
he was in her presence, Luterin was caught up once more into their old
conspiracy, into that intricate teasing web of complaint which she wove about
herself.
"I
see, Luterin, you are on your two feet again. How excellent. And like a dutiful
husband-to-be, you have perfumed yourself with sweat and hoxney before
presuming to call and present your compliments. You have certainly grown while
in bed at least in the
region of your waistline."
She
fended off an embrace with the jug of water. He put an arm about her slender
waist as she led him up the immense staircase, made more
gloomy by dark portraits from which dead Esikananzis stared as if in
tether, shrunken by art and time.
"Don't
be provoking, Sil. I'll soon be slim again. It's wonderful to have my health
back."
Her
personal bell uttered its light clap on every stair.
"My
mother's so sickly. Always sickly. My slimness is illness, not health. You are
lucky to call when my tedious parents and my equally tedious brothers,
including your friend Umat, are all attending a boring ceremony elsewhere. So
you can expect to take advantage of me, can't you? Of course, you suspect that
I have been had by stable boys while you were in your year's hibernation. Giving myself in the hay to sons of slaves."
She
guided him along a corridor where the boards creaked under their worn Madi
carpets. She was close, phantasmal in the little light that filtered here
through shuttered windows.
"Why
do you punish my heart, Insil, when it is yours?"
"It's
not your heart I want, but your soul." She laughed. "Have more
spirit. Hit me, as my father does. Why not? Isn't punishment the essence of
things?"
He
said heatedly, "Punishment? Listen, we'll be married and I'll make you
happy. You can hunt with me. We'll never be apart. We'll explore the forests "
"You
know I'm more interested in rooms than forests." She paused with a hand on
a door latch, smiling provocatively, projecting her shallow breasts toward him
under their linens and laces.
"People
are better outside, Sil. Don't grin. Why pretend I'm a fool? I know as much
about suffering as you. That whole small year spent prostrate wasn't that about the worst
punishment anyone could imagine?"
Insil
put a finger on his chin and slid it up to his lip. "That clever paralysis
allowed you to escape from a greater punishment having to live here under our repressive parents, in this
repressive community where
you for instance were driven to cohabit with non-humans for relief..."
She
smiled as he blushed, but continued in her sweetest voice. "Have you no
insight into your own suffering? You often accused me of not loving you, and
that may be so, but don't I pay you better attention than you pay
yourself?"
"What
do you mean, Insil?" How her conversation tormented him.
"Is
your father at home or away on the hunt?"
"He's
at home."
"As
I recall, he had returned from the hunt not more than two days before your
brother committed suicide. Why did Favin commit suicide? I suspect that he knew
something you refuse to know."
Without
taking her dark gaze from his eyes, she opened the door behind her, pushing it
so that it opened to allow sunshine to bathe them as they stood, conspiratorial
yet opposed, on the threshold. He clutched her, tremulous to discover that she
was as necessary to him as ever, and as ever full of riddles.
"What
did Favin know? What am I supposed to know?" The mark of her power over
him was that he was always questioning her.
"Whatever
your brother knew, it was that which sent you escaping into your paralysis not
his actual death, as everyone pretends." She was twelve years and a
tenner, not much more than a child: yet a tension in her gestures made her seem
much older. She raised an eyebrow at his puzzlement.
He
followed her into the room, wishing to ask her more, yet tongue-tied. "How
do you know these things, Insil? You invent them to make yourself mysterious.
Always locked in these rooms..."
She
set the jug of water down on a table beside a bunch of white flowers which she
had picked earlier. The flowers lay scattered on the polished surface, their
faces reflected as in a misted mirror.
As
though to herself, she said, "I try to train you not to grow up like the
rest of the men here..."
She
walked over to the window, framed in heavy brown curtains which hung from
ceiling to floor. Although she stood with her back to him, he sensed that she
was not looking out. The dual sunlight, shining in from two different
directions, dissolved her as if it were liquid, so that her shadow on the tiled
floor appeared more substantial than she. Insil was demonstrating once more her
elusive nature.
It
was a room he had not entered before, a typical Esikananzi room, loaded with
heavy furniture. It held a tantalising scent, in part repugnant. Perhaps its
only purpose was to hoard furniture, most of it wooden, against the day when
the Weyr-Winter came and no more furniture would be made. There was a green
couch with carved scrollwork, and a massive wardrobe which dominated the
chamber. All the furniture had been imported; he saw that by its style.
He
shut the door, remaining there contemplating her. As if he did not exist, she
began arranging her flowers in a vase, pouring water from the jug into the
vase, shuffling the stems peremptorily with her long fingers.
He
sighed. "My mother is always sickly, too, poor thing. Every day of her
life she goes into pauk and communes with her dead parents."
Insil
looked up sharply at him. "And you while you were lying flat on your back
I suppose you've fallen into the habit of pauk
too?"
"No.
You're mistaken. My father forbad me... besides; it's not just that..."
Insil
put fingers to her temples. "Pauk is what the common people do. It's so
superstitious. To go into a trance and descend into that awful underworld,
where bodies rot and those ghastly corpses are still spitting the dregs of
life... oh, it's disgusting. You're sure you don't do it?"
"Never. I imagine my
mother's sickness comes from pauk."
"Well,
sherb you, I do it every day. I kiss my grandmother's corpse-lips and taste the
maggots..." Then she burst into laughter. "Don't look so silly. I'm
joking. I hate the thought of those things underground and I'm glad you don't
go near them."
She
lowered her gaze to the flowers.
"These
snowflowers are tokens of the world's death, don't you think? There are only
white flowers now, to go with the snow. Once, so the histories say, brightly
coloured flowers bloomed in Kharnabhar."
She
pushed the vase resignedly from her. Down in the throats of the pale blossoms,
a touch of gold remained, turning to a speck of intense red at the ovary, like
an emblem of the vanishing sun.
He
sauntered across to her, over the patterned tiles. "Come and sit on the
couch with me and talk of happier things."
"You
must be referring to the climate declining so rapidly that our grandchildren, if we live to have
any, will spend their lives in near darkness, wrapped in animal skins. Probably
making animal noises... That sounds a promising topic."
"What
nonsense you talk!" Laughing, he jumped forward and grasped her. She let
him drag her down on the couch as he uttered fevered endearments.
"Of
course you can't make love to me, Luterin. You may feel me as you have before,
but no lovemaking. I don't think I shall ever take kindly to lovemaking but in any case, were I to permit it,
you would lose your interest in me, your lust being satisfied."
"It's
a lie, a lie."
"It
had best stand as the truth, if we are to have any marital happiness at all. I
am not marrying a sated man."
"I
could never have enough of you." As he spoke, his hand was foraging up her
clothes.
"The
invading armies..." Insil sighed, but she kissed him and put the point of
her tongue in his mouth.
At which moment, the door of the wardrobe burst open. Out jumped a young man of Insil's dark colouration, but as
frenzied as his sister was passive. It was Umat, brandishing a sword, shouting.
"Sister, sister! Help is at
hand! Here's your brave rescuer, to save you and the family from dishonour!
Who's this beast? Isn't a year in bed enough for him, that
he must rise immediately to seek the nearest couch? Varlet! Rapist!"
"You
rat in the skirting!" Luterin shouted. He rushed at Umat in a rage, the
wooden sword fell to the floor, and they wrestled furiously. After his long
confinement, Luterin had lost some of his strength. His friend threw him to the
floor. As he picked himself up, he saw that Insil had flitted away.
He
ran to the door. She had vanished into the dark recesses of the house. In the
scuffle, her flowers had been spilt and the jug broken on the tiled floor.
Only
as he made his way disconsolately back to the village road, letting the hoxney
carry him at walking pace, did it occur to Luterin that possibly Insil had
staged Umat's interruption. Instead of going home, he turned right at the
Esikananzi gate, and rode into the village to drink at the Icen Inn.
Batalix
was close to setting when he followed the mournful Shokerandit bell home. Snow
was falling. No one was about in the grey world. At the inn, the talk consisted
mainly of jokes and complaints concerning the new regulations being introduced
by the Oligarch, such as curfew. The regulations were intended to strengthen
communities throughout Sibornal for ordeals to come.
Most
of the talk was cheap, and Luterin despised it. His father would never speak of
such things or not in his
one remaining son's hearing.
The
gaslights were burning in the long hall of his home. As Luterin was unbuckling his
personal bell, a slave came up, bowed, and announced that his father's
secretary wished to see him.
"Where
is my father?" Luterin demanded.
"Keeper
Shokerandit has left, sir."
Angrily
Luterin ran up the stairs and threw open the door into the secretary's room.
The secretary was a permanent member of the Shokerandit household. With his
beaklike nose, his straight line of eyebrow, his shallow forehead, and the
quiff of hair which protruded over that forehead, the secretary resembled a
crow. This narrow wooden room, its pigeonholes stuffed with secret documents,
was the crow's nest. From here, it surveyed many secret prospects beyond
Luterin's ken.
"Your
father is off on a hunt, Master Luterin," announced this wily bird now, in
a tone mingling deference with reproach. "Since you were nowhere to be
found, he had to leave without bidding you farewell."
"Why
didn't he let me accompany him? He knows I love the hunt. Perhaps I can catch
him up. Which way did his entourage go?"
"He
entrusted me with this epistle for you. You would perhaps be advised to read it
before dashing off."
The
secretary handed over a large envelope. Luterin snatched it from his talons. He
ripped open the cover and read what was set down on the enclosed sheet in his father's
large and careful hand:
Son Luterin,
There is a prospect in the days to come that you will be appointed
Keeper of the Wheel in my place. That role, as you are aware, combines both
secular and religious duties.
When you were born, you were taken to Rivenjk to be blessed by the
Priest-Supreme of the Church of the Formidable Peace. I believe this to have
fortified the godly side of your nature. You have proved a submissive son in
whom I am satisfied.
Now it is time to fortify the secular side of your nature. Your
late brother was commissioned to the army, as is the tradition with elder sons.
It is fitting that you should take up a similar office, especially as in the
wider world (of which you so far know nothing),
Sibornal's affairs are moving towards a point of decision.
Accordingly, I have left a sum of money with my secretary. He will
hand it over to you. You will proceed to Askitosh, chief city of our proud
continent, and there enroll yourself as a soldier, with a commissioned rank of
lieutenant ensign. Report to Arch-priest-Militant
Asperamanka, who will be familiar with your situation.
I have instructed that a masque shall be held in your honour, to
celebrate your departure.
You are to leave without delay and gather esteem to the family
name.
Your father
A
blush spread over Luterin's face as he read his father's rare word of praise.
That his father should be satisfied with him despite all his failings satisfied enough to declare a masque
in his honour!
His
glow of happiness faded when he realised that his father would himself not be
present at the masque. No matter. He would become a soldier and do anything
asked of him. He would make his father proud of him.
Perhaps
even Insil would warm to the name of glory....
The
masque was performed in the banqueting hall of the Shokerandit mansion on the
eve of Luterin's departure south.
Stately
personages in grand costume enacted preordained roles. A solemn music played. A
familiar story was performed telling of innocence and villainy, of the lust to
possess, and of the convoluted role of faith in the lives of men. To some
characters harm was allotted, to some good. All came under a law greater than
their own jurisdiction. The musicians, bent over their strings, emphasised the
mathematics which prevailed over relationships.
The
harmonies evoked by the musicians suggested a cadence of stern compassion,
inviting a view of human affairs far beyond the normal acceptances of optimism
or pessimism. In the leitmotifs for the woman forced to give herself to a ruler
she hated and for the man unable to control his baser passions, musical members
of the audience could detect a fatality, a sense that even the most individual
characters were indissolubly functions of their environment, just as individual
notes formed part of the greater harmony. The stylised acting of the performers
reinforced this interpretation.
Some
entrances were politely applauded by the audience, others observed without
especial pleasure. The actors were well rehearsed in their roles, but not all
by any means commanded the same presence as the principals.
Figures
of state, figures of noble families, figures of the church, allegorical figures
representing phagors and monsters, together with the various humours of Love,
Hatred, Evil, Passion, Fear, and Purity, played their parts on the boards and
were gone.
The
stage emptied. Darkness fell. The music died.
But
Luterin Shokerandit's drama was just beginning.
Such
was the nature of grass that it continued to grow despite the wind. It bowed to
the wind. Its roots spread under the soil, anchoring it, leaving no room for
other plants to find lodgement. The grass had always been there. It was the
wind which was more recent and the bite in it.
The
great exhalations from the north carried with them a fast-moving sky,
comprising a patchwork of black and grey cloud. Over distant high ground the
clouds spilled rain and snow. Here, across the steppelands of Chalce, they
purveyed nothing worse than a neutral obscurity. That neutrality found an echo
in the monotony of the terrain.
A
series of shallow valleys opened one into the next, without definite feature.
The only movement to be seen was among the grasses. Some tufts bore
insignificant yellow flowers which rippled in the wind like the fur of a supine
animal. The sole landmarks were occasional stone pillars marking land-octaves.
The south-facing sides of these stones sometimes bore lichens, yellow and grey.
Only
keen eyes could have discerned minute trails in the grass, used by creatures
which appeared at night or during dimday, when only one of the two suns was
above the horizon. Solitary hawks, patrolling the sky on motionless wings,
explained the lack of daytime activity. The widest trail through the grasslands
was carved by a river which flowed southwards towards the distant sea. Deep and
sluggish in movement, its waters appeared partly congealed. The river took its
colour from the tatterdemalion sky.
From
the north of this inhospitable country came a flock of arang. These long-legged
members of the goat family loosely followed the tedious bends of the river.
Curly-horned dogs kept the arang closely grouped. These hardworking asokins
were in turn controlled by six men on hoxney-back. The six sat or stood in
their saddles to vary their journey. All were dressed in skins lashed about
their bodies with thongs.
The
men frequently looked back over their shoulders, as if afraid of pursuit.
Keeping up a steady pace, they communicated with their asokins by whoops and
whistles. These encouraging signals rang through the hollow spaces round about,
clear above the bleat of the arang. However often the men glanced back, the
drab northern horizon remained empty.
The
ruins of a place of habitation appeared ahead, nestling in an elbow of the
river. Scattered stone huts stood roofless. A larger building was no more than
a shell. Ragged plants, taking advantage of the windbreak, grew about the
stones, peering from the blank window sockets.
The
arangherds gave the place a wide berth, fearing plague. A few miles farther on,
the river, taking a leisurely curve, served as a boundary which had been in
dispute for centuries, perhaps for as long as there had been men in the land.
Here began the region once known as Hazziz, northernmost land of the North
Campannlatian Plain. The dogs channelled the arang along beside the river,
where a path had been worn. The arang spread into a fast-moving line, face to
tail.
They
came in time to a broad and durable bridge. It threw its two arches across the
wind-troubled face of the water. The men whistled shrilly, the asokins
marshalled the arang into a bunch, preventing them crossing the bridge. A mile
or two away, lying against the northern bank of the river, was a settlement
built in the shape of a wheel. The name of the settlement was Isturiacha.
A
bugle sounded from the settlement, telling the arangherds that they had been
sighted. Armed men and black Sibornalese cannon guarded the perimeter.
"Welcome!"
shouted the guards. "What did you see to the north? Did you see the
army?"
The
arangherds drove their animals into pens already awaiting them.
The
stone farmhouses and barns of the settlement had been built as a fortification
along its perimeter. The farms, where cereals and livestock were raised, lay in
the middle. At the hub of the circle, a ring of barracklike offices surrounded
a tall church. There was continual coming and going in Isturiacha, which
increased as the herdsmen were taken into one of the
central buildings to refresh themselves after their journey across the steppes.
On
the south side of the bridge, the plain was more varied in contour. Isolated
trees betokened increased rainfall. The ground was stippled with fragments of a
white substance, which from a distance resembled crumbling stone. On closer
inspection the fragments proved to be bone. Few pieces measured more than six
inches in length. Occasionally a tooth or wedge of jawbone revealed the remains
to be those of men and phagors. These testimonies to past battles stretched
across miles of plain.
Over
the immobility of this doleful place rode a man on yelk-back, approaching the
bridge from the south. Some way behind him followed two more men. All three
wore uniform and were equipped for war.
The
leading rider, a small and sharp-featured man, halted well before he reached
the bridge, and dismounted. He led his animal down into a dip and secured it to
the trunk of a flat-topped briar tree before climbing to the level, where he
stood peering through a spyglass at the enemy settlement ahead.
The
other two men presently joined him. They also dismounted and tied their yelk to
the roots of a dead rajabaral. Being of senior rank, they stood apart from the
scout.
"Isturiacha",
said the scout, pointing. But the officers spoke only to each other. They too
scrutinised Isturiacha through a spyglass, conferring together in low tones. A
cursory reconnaissance was made.
One
officer an artillery
expert remained on watch
where he was. His brother officer galloped back with the scout to pass
information to an army which advanced from the south.
As
the day passed, the plain became broken by lines of men some mounted, many more on foot interspersed by wagons, cannon, and the
impedimenta of war. The wagons were drawn by yelk or the less sturdy hoxney.
There were columns of soldiers marching in good order, contrasting with baggage
trains and women and camp followers in no order at all. Above a number of the
marching columns waved the banners of Pannoval, the city under the mountains,
and other flags of religious import.
Further
back came ambulances and more carts, some carrying
field kitchens and provisions, many more loaded with fodder for the animals
involved in this punitive expedition.
Although
these hundreds and thousands of people functioned like cogs in the war machine,
nevertheless each underwent incidents peculiar to his or her self, and each
experienced the adventure through his or her limited perceptions.
One
such incident occurred to the artillery officer who waited with his mount by
the shattered rajabaral tree. He lay silent, watching his front, when the
whinnying of his yelk made him turn his head. Four small men, none coming
higher than his chest, were advancing on the tethered mount. They evidently had
not observed the officer as they emerged from a hole in the ground at the base
of the ruined tree.
The
creatures were humanoid in general outline, with thin legs and long arms. Their
bodies were covered in a tawny pelt, which grew long about their wrists, half
concealing eight-fingered hands. The muzzles of their faces made them resemble
dogs or Others.
"Nondads!"
the officer exclaimed. He recognised them immediately, although he had seen
them only in captivity. The yelk plunged about in terror. As the two leading
Nondads threw themselves at its throat, he drew his double-barrelled pistol, then paused.
Another
head thrust itself up between the ancient roots, struggled to get its shoulders
free, and then rose, shaking soil from its thick coat and snorting.
The
phagor dominated the Nondads. Its immense box-head was crowned by two slender
horns sweeping backwards. As the bulk of it emerged from the Nondad hole, it
swung its morose bull face between its shoulders, and its eyes lit on the
crouching officer. Just for a moment, it paused without movement. An ear
flicked. Then it charged at the man, head down.
The
artillery officer rolled onto his back, steadied the pistol with both hands,
and fired both barrels into the belly of the brute. An irregular golden star of
blood spread across its pelt, but the creature still came on. The ugly mouth
opened, showing spade-like yellow teeth set in yellow gums. As the officer
jumped to his feet, the phagor struck him full force. Coarse three-fingered
hands closed round his body.
He
struck out again and again, hammering the butt of his gun against the thick
skull.
The
grip relaxed. The barrel body fell to one side. The face struck the ground.
With an enormous effort, the creature managed to regain its feet. It bellowed.
Then it fell dead, and the earth shook.
Gasping,
choking on the thick milky stench of the ancipital, the officer pulled himself
to his knees. He had to steady himself with a hand on the phagor's shoulder. In
amid the thick coat of the body, ticks flicked hither and thither, undergoing a
crisis of their own. Some climbed onto the officer's sleeve.
He
managed to stagger to his feet. He trembled. His mount trembled nearby,
bleeding from lacerations at its throat. Of the Nondads there was no sign; they
had retreated into their underground warrens, into the domain they knew as the
Eighty Darknesses. After a while, the artillery officer was sufficiently master of himself to climb into the saddle. He had heard of
the liaison between phagors and Nondads, but had never expected to confront an
example of it. There could be more of the brutes beneath his feet...
Still
choking, he rode back to find his unit.
The
expedition mounted from Pannoval, to which the officer belonged, had been
operating in the field for some while. It was engaged in wiping out Sibornalese
settlements established on what Pannoval claimed as its own territory. Starting
at Roonsmoor, it had carried out a series of successful forays. As each enemy
settlement was crushed, the expedition moved farther north. Only Isturiacha
remained to be destroyed. It was now a matter of timing before the small summer
was over.
The
settlements, with their siege mentality, rarely assisted each other. Some were
supported by one Sibornalese nation, some by another. So they fell victims to their destroyers one by one.
The
dispersed Pannovalan units had little more to fear than occasional phagors,
appearing in even greater numbers as the temperatures on the plains declined.
The experience of the artillery officer was not untypical.
As
the officer rejoined his fellows, a watery sun emerged from scudding cloud to
set in the west amid a dramatic display of colour. When it was quenched by the
horizon, the world was not plunged into darkness. A second sun, Freyr, burned
low in the south. When the cloud formations parted about it, it threw shadows
of men like pointed fingers to the north.
Slowly,
two traditional enemies were preparing to do battle. Far behind the figures
toiling on the plain, to the southwest, was the great city of
Of
the many nations of Campannlat, several owed allegiance through dynastic or
religious ties with Pannoval. Coherence, however, was always temporary, peace
always fragile; the nations warred with each other. Hence the name by which
Campannlat was known to its external enemy: the Savage Continent.
Campannlat's
external enemy was the northern continent of Sibornal. Under the pressure of
its extreme climate, the nations of Sibornal preserved a close unity. The
rivalries under the surface were generally suppressed. Throughout history, the
Sibornalese nations pressed southwards, across the land-bridge of Chalce, to
the more productive meadows of the Savage Continent.
There
was a third continent, the southern one of Hespagorat. The continents were
divided, or almost divided, by seas occupying the temperate zones. These seas
and continents comprised the planet of Helliconia, or Hrl-Ichor Yhar, to use
the name bestowed on it by its elder race, the ancipitals.
At
this period, when the forces of Campannlat and Sibornal were preparing for a
last battle at Isturiacha, Helliconia was moving towards the nadir of its year.
As
a planet of a binary system, Helliconia revolved about its parent sun, Batalix,
once every 480 days. But Batalix itself revolved about a common axis with a
much larger sun, Freyr, the major component of the system. Batalix was now
carrying Helliconia on its extended orbit away from the greater star. Over the
last two centuries, the autumn that long decline from summer had intensified. Now Helliconia was poised on the brink of the
winter of another Great Year. Darkness, cold, silence, waited
in the centuries ahead.
Even
the lowest peasant was aware that the climate grew steadily worse. If the weather
did not tell him as much, there were other signs. Once more the plague known as
the Fat Death was spreading. The ancipitals, commonly referred to as phagors,
scented the approach of those seasons when they were most comfortable, when
conditions returned most closely to what they once had been. Throughout the
spring and summer, those ill-fated creatures had suffered under the supremacy
of man: now, at the chill end of the Great Year, as the numbers of mankind
began to dwindle, the phagors would seize their chance to rule again unless humankind united to stop them.
There
were powerful wills on the planet, wills which might move the mass of people
into action. One such will sat in Pannoval, another, even harsher, in the
Sibornalese capital of Askitosh. But at present those wills were most
preoccupied with confounding each other.
So
the Sibornalese settlers in Isturiacha prepared for siege, while looking
anxiously to see if reinforcement would come from the north. So the guns from
Pannoval and her allies were wheeled into position to aim at Isturiacha.
Some
confusion reigned both at the front and the rear of the mixed Pannovalan force.
The elderly Chief Marshal in charge of the advance was powerless to stop units
who had looted other Sibornalese settlements from heading back to Pannoval with
their spoils. Other units were summoned forward to replace them. Meanwhile, the
artillery situated inside the walls of the settlement began to bombard the
Pannovalan lines.
Bruum. Bruum. The short-lived explosions burst
among the contingent from Randonan, which had come from the south of the Savage
Continent.
Many
nations were represented in the ranks of the Pannovalan expeditionary army.
There were ferocious skirmishers from Kace, who marched, slept, and fought with
their dehorned phagors; tall stone-faced men of Brasterl, who came kilted from
the Western Barriers; tribes from Mordriat, with their lively timoroon mascots;
together with a strong battalion from Borldoran, the Oldorando-Borlien Joint
Monarchy Pannoval's
strongest ally. A few amid their number presented the squat shape of those who
had suffered the Fat Death and lived.
The
Borldoranians had crossed the
The
argument grew hot while shells from Isturiacha exploded nearby. The commandant
of the Borldoranian battalion strode off to make complaint to the Chief
Marshal. This commandant was a jaunty man, young to command, with a military
moustache and a concave back, by name Bandal Eith Lahl.
With
Bandal Eith Lahl went his pretty young wife, Toress Lahl. She was a doctor, and
also had a complaint for the old Chief Marshal a complaint about the poor standards of hygiene. She walked
discreetly behind her husband, behind that rigid back, letting her skirts trail
on the ground.
They
presented themselves at the Marshal's tent. An aide-de-camp emerged, looking
apologetic.
"The
Marshal is indisposed, sir. He regrets that he is unable to see you, and hopes
to listen to your complaint another day."
"Another
day!" exclaimed Toress Lahl. "Is that an expression a soldier should
use in the field?"
"Tell
the Marshal that if he thinks like that," Bandal Eith Lahl said, "our
forces may not live to see another day."
He
made a bold attempt to tug off his moustache before turning on his heel. His
wife followed him back to their lines to find the Borldoranians also under fire from Isturiacha. Toress
Lahl was not alone in noticing the ominous birds already beginning to gather
above the plain.
The
peoples of Campannlat never planned as efficiently as those of Sibornal. Nor
were they ever as disciplined. Nevertheless, their expedition had been well
organized. Officers and men had set out cheerfully, conscious of their just
cause. The northern army had to be driven from the southern continent.
Now
they were less buoyant in mood. Some men, having women with them, were making
love in case this was their last opportunity for that pleasure. Others were
drinking heavily. The officers, too, were losing their appetites for just
causes. Isturiacha was not like a city, worth the taking: it would hold little
except slaves, heavy-bodied women, and agricultural implements.
The
higher command also was depressed. The Chief Marshal had received word that
wild phagors were now coming down from the High Nyktryhk that great aggregate of mountain
ranges to invade the
plains; the Chief Marshal suffered a fit of coughing as a result.
The
general feeling was that Isturiacha should be destroyed as soon as possible,
and with as little risk as possible. Then all could return quickly to the
safety of home.
So much for the general feeling.
The fainter of the suns, Batalix, rose again, to reveal a sinister addition to
the scene.
A
Sibornalese army was approaching from the north.
Bandal
Eith Lahl jumped onto a cart to peer through a spyglass at the distant lines of
the enemy, indistinct in the light of a new day.
He
called to a messenger.
"Go
immediately to the Chief Marshal. Rouse him at all costs. Instruct him that our
entire army must wipe out Isturiacha immediately, before their relieving army
arrives. "
The
settlement of Isturiacha marked the southern end of the great Isthmus of
Chalce, which connected the equatorial continent of Campannlat with the
northern continent of Sibornal. Chalce's mountainous backbone lay along its
eastern edge. Progress back or forth from one continent to the other entailed a
journey through dry steppeland, which extended in the rain shadow of the
eastern mountains from Koriantura in the north, safe in Sibornal, all the way
down to perilous Isturiacha.
The
kind of mixed agriculture practised by the Campannlatians had no place in the
grasslands, and consequently their gods no foothold. Whatever emerged from that
chill region was bad for the Savage Continent.
As
fresh morning wind dispersed the mist, columns of men could be counted. They
were moving over the undulant hills north of the settlement by the river tracks
along which the arangherds had come the previous day. The soaring birds above
the Pannovalan force could, with the merest adjustment of their wingtips, be hovering above the new arrivals in a few minutes.
The
sick Pannovalan Marshal was helped from his tent and his gaze directed
northwards. The cold wind brought tears to his eyes; he mopped absently at them
while regarding the advancing foe. His orders were given in a husky whisper to
his grim-faced aide-de-camp.
The
hallmark of the advancing foe was an orderliness not to be found among the
armies of the Savage Continent. Sibornalese cavalry moved at an even pace,
protecting the infantry. Straining animal teams dragged artillery pieces
forward. Ammunition trains struggled to keep up with the artillery. In the rear
rattled baggage carts and field kitchens. More and more columns filled the dull
landscape, winding southwards as if in imitation of the sluggish river. No one
among the alarmed forces of Campannlat could doubt where the columns came from
or what they intended.
The
old Marshal's aide-de-camp issued the first order. Troops and auxiliaries, irrespective
of creed, were to pray for the victory of Campannlat in the forthcoming
engagement. Four minutes were to be dedicated to the task.
Pannoval
had once been not merely a great nation but a great religious power, whose
C'Sarr's word held sway over much of the continent and whose neighbouring
states had sometimes been reduced to satrapy under the sway of Pannovalan
ideology. Four hundred and seventy-eight years before the confrontation at
Isturiacha, however, the Great God Akhanaba had been destroyed in a now
legendary duel. The God had departed from the world in a pillar of flame,
taking with him both the then King of Oldorando and the last C'Sarr, Kilandar
IX.
Religious
belief subsequently splintered into a maze of small creeds. Pannoval, in this
present year of 1308, according to the Sibornalese calendar, was known as the
Country of a Thousand Cults. As a result, life for its inhabitants had become
more uncomfortable, more uncertain. All the minor deities were called upon in
this hour of crisis, and every man prayed for his own survival.
Tots
of fiery liquor were issued. Officers began to goad their men into action.
"Battle
Stations" sounded raggedly from bugles all over the southern plain. Orders
went out to attack the settlement of Isturiacha immediately and to overwhelm it
before the relieving force arrived. Whereupon a rifle brigade
began almost at once to cross the bridge in a businesslike way, ignoring
shellfire from the settlement.
Among
the conscripts of Campannlat, whole families clustered together. Men with
rifles were accompanied by women with kettles, and the women by children with
teething troubles. Along with the military chink of bayonet and chain went the
clank of dishpans as
later the shrieks of the newly weaned would merge with the cries of the
injured. Grass and bone were trampled underfoot.
Those
who prayed went into action along with those who scorned prayer. The moment was
come. They were tense. They would fight. They feared to die this day yet life had been given them by
chance, and luck might yet save that life. Luck and cunning.
Meanwhile
the army from the north was hastening its progress southwards. A strictly disciplined army, with well-paid officers and trained
subordinates. Bugle calls sounded, the snare drum set the pace of
advance. The banners of the various countries of Sibornal were displayed.
Here
came troops from Loraj and Bribahr; tribes from Carcampan and primitive Upper
Hazziz, who kept the orifices of their bodies plugged on the march, so that
evil spirits from the steppes should not enter them; a holy brigade from
Shivenink; shaggy highlanders from Kuj-Juvec; and of course many units from
Uskutoshk. All were banded together under the dark-browed, dark-visaged
Archpriest-Militant, famed Devit Asperamanka, who in his office united Church
and State.
Among
these nations trudged phagor troops, sturdy, sullen, grouped into platoons,
corniculate, bearing arms.
In
all, the Sibornalese force numbered some eleven thousand. The force had moved
down from Sibornal, travelling across the steppelands which lay as a rumpled
doormat before Campannlat. Its orders from Askitosh were to support what
remained of the chain of settlements and strike a heavy blow against the old
southern enemy; to this end, scarce resources had been assembled, and the
latest artillery.
A
small year had passed while the punitive force gathered. Although Sibornal
presented a united face to the world, there were dissentions within the system,
rivalries between nations, and suppressions on the highest level. Even in the
choosing of a commander, indecision had made itself felt. Several officers had
come and gone before Asperamanka was appointed some said by no less than the Oligarch himself. During this
period, settlements which the expedition had been designed to relieve had
fallen to Pannovalan onslaught.
The
vanguard of the Sibornalese army was still a mile or so from the circular walls
of Isturiacha when the first wave of Pannovalan infantry went in. The settlement
was too poor to employ a garrison of soldiers; its farmers had to defend
themselves as best they could. A quick victory for Campannlat seemed certain.
Unfortunately for the attacking force, there was the matter of the bridge
first.
Turmoil
broke out on the southern bank. Two rival units and a Randonanese cavalry
squadron all tried to cross the bridge at the same time. Questions of
precedence arose. There was a scuffle. A yelk slipped with its rider from the
bank and fell into the river. Kaci claymores clashed with Randonanese
broadswords. Shots were fired.
Other
troops attempted to cross the waters by ropeline, but were defeated by the
depth of the water and its surly force.
A
conflict of mind descended on everyone involved in the confusion at the bridge except possibly for the Kaci, who
regarded battles as an opportunity to consume huge libations of pabowr, their
treacherous national drink. This general uncertainty caused isolated
misadventures. A cannon exploded, killing two gunners.
A yelk was wounded and ran amok, injuring a lieutenant from Matrassyl. An
artillery officer plunged from his steed into the river, and was found, when
dragged out, to exhibit symptoms of illness which none could mistake.
"The plague!" The news
went round. "The Fat Death."
To
everyone involved in the operations, these terrors were real, these situations
fresh. Yet all had been enacted before, on this very sector of the
As
on earlier occasions, nothing went exactly as planned. Isturiacha did not fall
to its attackers as punctually as was expected. The allied members of the
southern army quarrelled among themselves. Those who attacked the settlement
found themselves attacked; an ill-organised running battle took place, with
bullets flying and bayonets flashing.
Nor
were the advancing Sibornalese able to retain the military organisation for
which they were renowned. The young bloods decided to dash forward to relieve
Isturiacha at all costs. The artillery, dragged over two hundred miles in order
to bombard Pannovalan towns, was now abandoned, shelling being as likely to
kill friendly as enemy troops.
Savage
engagements took place. The wind blew, the hours passed, men died, yelk and
biyelk slipped in their own blood. Slaughter mounted. Then a unit of Sibornalese
cavalry managed to break through the melee and capture the bridge, cutting off
those of the enemy attacking Isturiacha.
Among
the Sibornalese moving forward at that time were three national units: the
powerful Uskuti, a contingent from Shivenink, and a well-known infantry unit
from Bribahr. All three units were reinforced by phagors.
Riding
with the forward Uskuti force went Archpriest-Militant Asperamanka. The supreme
commander cut a distinguished figure. He was clad in a suit of blue leather with
heavy collar and belt, and his feet were shod in black leather turnover boots,
calf-high. Asperamanka was a tall, rather ungainly man, known to be soft-spoken
and even sly when not issuing commands. He was greatly feared.
Some
said of Asperamanka that he was an ugly man. True, he had a large square head,
in which was set a remarkably rectangular face, as if his parents had had their
geometries at cross purposes. But what gave him distinction was a permanent
cloud of anger which appeared to hover between the brows, the bridge of the
nose, and the lids, which shielded a pair of dark eyes ever on the watch. This
anger, like a spice, flavoured Asperamanka's least remark. There were those who
mistook it for the anger of God.
On
Asperamanka's head was an ample black hat and, above the hat, the flag of the
Church and of God the Azoiaxic.
The
Shiveninki and the Bribahr infantry poured forward to do battle with the enemy.
Judging that the day was already turning in Sibornal's favour, the
Archpriest-Militant beckoned his Uskuti field commander to one side.
"Just
allow ten minutes until you go in," he said.
The
field commander protested impatiently, but was overruled.
"Hold
back your force," said Asperamanka. He indicated with a black glove the
Bribahr infantry, firing steadily as they advanced. "Let them bleed a
little."
Bribahr
was currently challenging Uskutoshk for supremacy among the northern nations.
Its infantry now became involved in a desperate hand-to-hand engagement. Many
men lost their lives. The Uskuti force still held back.
The
Shiveninki detachment went in. Underpopulated Shivenink was reputed the most
peaceable of the northern nations. It was the home of the Great Wheel of
Kharnabhar, a holy place; its honours in battle were few.
A
mixed squadron of Shiveninki cavalry and phagor troops was now commanded by
Luterin Shokerandit. He bore himself nobly, a conspicuous figure, even among
many flamboyant characters.
Shokerandit
was by now thirteen years and three tenners old. More than a year had passed
since he had said good-bye to his bride-to-be, Insil, on leaving Kharnabhar for
military duties in Askitosh.
Army
training had helped remove from his body the last traces of the weight he had
gained during his period of prostration. He was as slender as he was upright,
generally carrying himself with a mixture of swagger and apology. Those two
elements were never far from his manner, betokening an insecurity he sought to
hide.
There
were some who claimed that the young Shokerandit had attained his rank of
lieutenant ensign only because his father was Keeper of the Wheel. Even his
friend Umat Esikananzi, another ensign, had wondered aloud how Luterin would
conduct himself in battle. There remained something in Luterin's manner perhaps an aftereffect of that eclipse
which had followed his brother's death which could distance him from his friends. But in the saddle of
his yelk he was the picture of assurance.
His
hair grew long. His face was now thin, hawklike, his eye clear. He rode his
half-shaven yelk more like a countryman than a soldier. As he urged his
squadron forward, the excitement tightening his expression made him a leader to
follow.
Driving
his beast forward to the disputed bridge, Luterin rode close enough to
Asperamanka to hear the commander's words "Let them bleed a little."
The
treachery of it pierced him more than the shrilling bugle. Forcing through the
press, spurring on, he raised a gloved fist.
"Charge!"
he called.
He
waved his own squadron forward. Their lily-white banner bore the great hierogram
of the Wheel, its inner and outer circles connected by wavy lines. It flew with
them, unfurled above their heads as they surged towards the foe.
Later,
when the struggle was over, this charge by Shokerandit's squadron was reckoned
one of its pivotal moments.
As
yet, however, the fight was far from won. A day passed, and still the fighting
continued. The Pannovalan artillery got itself marshalled at last and began a
steady bombardment on the Sibornalese rear, causing much damage. Their fire
prevented the Sibornalese guns from pulling forward. Another artilleryman went
down with the plague, and another.
Not
all the settlers in Isturiacha had been employed shooting down Pannovalans. The
wives and daughters, every bit as hardy as their menfolk, were dismantling a
barn and ripping out its planking.
By
next Batalix-rise, they had built two stout platforms, which were thrown across
the river. A cheer rose from the Sibornalese. With thunderous sound, metal-shod
yelk of the northern cavalry crossed the new bridges and burst among the ranks
of Pannoval. Camp followers who, an hour before, had considered themselves safe
were shot down as they fled.
The
northerners spread out across the plain, widening their front as they went.
Piles of dead and dying marked their progress.
When
Batalix sank once more, the fight was still undecided. Freyr was below the
horizon, and three hours of darkness ensued. Despite attempts by officers of
both camps to continue the fighting, the soldiery sank to the ground and slept
where they were, sometimes no more than a spear's throw from their opponents.
Torches
burned here and there over the disputed ground, their sparks carried away into
the night. Many of the wounded gave up the ghost, their last breath taken by
the chill wind rolling over them. Nondads crept from their burrows to steal
garments from the dead. Rodents scavenged over the spilt flesh. Beetles dragged
gobbets of intestine into their holes to provide unexpected banquets for their
larvae.
The
local sun rose again. Women and orderlies were about, taking food and drink to
the warriors, offering words of courage as they went. Even the unwounded were
pale of face. They spoke in low voices. Everyone understood that this day's
fighting would be decisive. Only the phagors stood apart, scratching
themselves, their cerise eyes turned towards the rising sun; for them was
neither hope nor trepidation.
A
foul smell hung over the battlefield. Filth unnamed squelched underfoot as fresh
lines of battle were drawn up. Advantage was taken of every dip in the land,
every hummock, every spindly tree. Sniping began again. The fighting
recommenced, wearily, without the previous day's will. Where human blood was
voided it was red, where phagor, gold.
Three
main engagements took place that day. The attack on the Isturiachan perimeters
continued, with the Pannovalan invaders managing to occupy and defend a quarter
of the settlement against both the settlers and a detachment from Loraj. A manoeuvre
by Uskuti forces, eager to make amends for their previous delay, was held south
of the bridge, and involved sections of either army; long lines of men were
crawling and sniping at each other before engaging in hand-to-hand fighting.
Third, there were prolonged and desperate skirmishes taking place in the
Campannlatian rear, among the supply wagons. Here Luterin Shokerandit's force
again set the pace.
In
Shokerandit's contingent, phagors stood side by side with humans. Both stalluns
and gillots the latter
often with their offspring in attendance fought, and male and female died together.
Luterin
was gathering honour to his family's name.
This
was the beginning of the rout of the Savage Continent.
Before
the forces from Pannoval itself began to retreat, Pannoval's doubtful allies cast
about for a safe way home. The battalion from Borldoran had the misfortune to
straggle across the path of Shokerandit, and came under attack. Bandal Eith
Lahl, their commander, valiantly called on his men to fight. This the
Borldoranians did, taking refuge behind their wagons. A gun battle ensued.
The
attackers set fire to the wagons. Many Borldoranians were slain. There came a
lull in the firing, during which the noise of other encounters reached the ears
of the protagonists. Smoke floated over the field, to be whipped away by the
wind.
Luterin
Shokerandit saw his moment. Calling to the squadron, he dashed forward, Umat
Esikananzi at his side, throwing himself at the Borldoranian position.
In
the wilds of his homeland, Luterin was accustomed to hunting alone, lost to the
world. The intense empathy between hunter and hunted was familiar to him from
early childhood. He knew the moment when his mind became the mind of the deer,
or of the fierce-horned mountain goat, the most difficult of quarries.
He
knew the moment of triumph when the arrow flew home
and, when the beast died, that mixture of joy and
remorse, harsh as orgasm, which wounded the heart.
How
much greater that perverted victory when the quarry was human! Leaping a
barricade of corpses, Luterin came face to face with Bandal Eith Lahl. Their
gazes met. Again that moment of identity! Luterin fired first. The Borldoranian
leader threw up his arms, dropping his gun, doubling forward to clutch his
intestines as they burst outwards. He fell dead.
With
the death of their commander, the Borldoranian opposition collapsed. Lahl's
young wife was taken captive by Luterin, together with valuable booty and
equipment. Umat and other companions embraced him and cheered before seizing
what loot they could gather.
Much
of the booty the Shiveninki gathered was in the form of supplies, including hay
for the animals, to ease the return of the contingent to their distant home in
the Shivenink Chain.
On
all quarters of the field, the forces of the south suffered mounting defeat.
Many fought on when wounded, and continued to fight when hope had gone. It was
not courage they lacked, but the favour of their countless gods.
Behind
the Pannovalan defeat lay a history of unrest
extending over long periods. During the slow deterioration of climate, as life
became harder, the Country of a Thousand Cults was increasingly at odds with
itself, with one cult opposed to another.
Only
the fanatical corps of Takers had the power to maintain order in
The
Takers and their rigid discipline had become a byword over the centuries; their
presence on the field might have turned the tide of defeat. But in these
troublous times, the Iron Formations judged it best to remain close to home.
At
the end of that dire day, wind still blew, artillery still boomed, men still
fought. Groups of deserters wended their way southwards, towards the sanctuary
of the Quzints. Some were peasants who had never held a gun before. The forces
of Sibornal were too exhausted to pursue defeated foes. They lit camp fires and
sank down into the daze of battle slumber.
The
night was filled with isolated cries, and with the creak of carts making their
way to safety. Yet even for those who retreated to distant Pannoval, there
remained other dangers, fresh afflictions.
Enmeshed
in their own affairs, the human beings had no perception of the plain as other
than an arena on which they made war. They did not see the place as a network
of interrelated forces involved in the continual slow mechanisms of change, its
present form being merely the representative of a forgotten series of plains
stretching into the remote past. Approximately six hundred species of grass
clothed the
The
high silica content of the grasses demanded teeth clad in strongly resistant
enamel. Impoverished as the plain looked to a casual human
glance, the seeds of the grass represented highly nutritious packages nutritious enough to support numerous rodents and other
small mammals. Those mammals formed the prey of larger predators. At the
top of that food chain was a creature whose omnivorous capabilities had once
made it lord of the planet. Phagors ate anything, flesh or grass.
Now
that the climate was more propitious to them, free phagors were moving into
lower ground. To the east of the equatorial continent stood
the mass of the High Nyktryhk. The Nyktryhk was far more than a barrier
between the central plains and the horizons of the
Ancipital
components who had lived the long centuries of summer
in the high grasslands secure from man's depredations were descending to more
abundant slopes as their refuges were assailed by the furies of oncoming
winter. Their populations were building up in the labyrinthine Nyktryhk
foothills.
Some
phagor communities were already venturing into territories traversed by
mankind.
Into
the area of battle, under cover of darkness, rode a company of phagors,
stalluns, gillots, and their offspring, in all sixteen strong. They were
mounted on russet kaidaws, their runts clinging tight against their parents,
half smothered in their rough pelages. The adults carried spears in their
primitive hands. Some of the stalluns had entwined brambles between their
horns. Above them, riding the chilly night air, flew
attendant cowbirds.
This
group of marauders was the first to venture among the weary battle lines.
Others were not far behind.
One
of the carts creaking towards Pannoval through the darkness had stuck. Its
driver had attempted to drive it straight through an uct, a winding strip of
vegetation which broke the plain in an east-west direction. Although much
reduced from its summer splendour, the uct still represented a palisade of
growth, and the cart was wedged with saplings between both axles.
The
driver stood cursing, attempting by blows to make his hoxneys budge.
The
occupants of the carts comprised eleven ordinary soldiers, six of them wounded,
a hoxney-corporal, and two rough young women who served as cooks, or in any
other capacity required. A phagor slave, dehorned, chained, marched behind the
vehicle. So overcome by fatigue and illnesses was this
company that they fell asleep one on top of the other, either beside the cart
or in it. The luckless hoxneys were left to stand between the shafts.
The
kaidaw-phagor component came out of the night, moving in single file along the
straggling line of the uct. On reaching the cart, they bunched closer together.
The cowbirds landed in the grass, stepping delicately together, making noises
deep in their throats, as if anxiously awaiting events.
The
events were sudden. The huddled band of humans knew nothing until the massive
shapes were on them. Some phagors dismounted, others struck from their saddles
with their spears.
"Help!"
screamed one of the doxies, to be immediately silenced with a thrust to the
throat. Two men lying half under the cart woke and attempted to run. They were
clubbed from behind. The dehorned phagor slave began to plead in Native
Ancipital. It too was despatched without ceremony. One of the wounded men
managed to discharge a pistol before he was killed.
The
raiders picked up a metal pot and a sack of rations from the cart. They secured
the hoxneys on trailing leads. One of them bit out the throat of the
groom-corporal, who was still living. They spurred their massive beasts on into
the expanses of the plain.
Although
there were many who heard the shot and the cries, none on that vast battlefield
would come to the aid of those on the cart. Rather, they thanked whatever deity
was theirs that they themselves were not in danger, before sinking back into
the phantasms of battle slumber.
In
the morning by dim first light, when cooking fires were started and the murders
discovered, it was different. Then there was a hue and cry. The marauders were
far away by that time, but the torn throat of the groom-corporal told its own
tale. The word went round. Once more that ancient figure of dread horned ancipital riding horned kaidaw was loose in the land. No doubt of
it: winter was coming, old terror-legends were
stirring.
And
there was another dread figure, just as ancient, even more feared. It did not
depart from the battlefield. Indeed, it thrived on the conditions, as if
gunpowder and excreta were its nectar. Victims of the Fat Death were already
showing their horrifying symptoms. The plague was back, kissing with its
fevered lips the lips of battlewounds.
Yet
this was the dawn of a day of victory.
In
Luterin Shokerandit's mind, the sense of victory was mingled with many other
emotions. Pride like a shrill of trumpets moved in him when he reflected that
he was now a man, a hero, his courage proved beyond everyone's doubt but his
own. And there was the excitement of knowing that he now had within his
clutches a beautiful and powerless woman. Yet not entirely silenced was the
continual unease of his thoughts, a flow so familiar that it was part of him.
The flow brought before him continually the question of his duty to his
parents, the obligations and restrictions at home, the loss of his brother still painfully unexplained the reminder that he had lost a year in
prostrating illness. Doubt, in short, which even the sense of victory would not
entirely still. That was Luterin's perceptual universe at thirteen years; he
carried about with him an uncertainty which the scent, the voice, of Toress
Lahl by turn soothed and aroused. Since he had no one in whom he could confide, his strategy was to suppress, to behave as if all were
well.
So
at first light, he threw himself gladly back into action. He had discovered
that danger was a sedative.
"One
last assault," said Archpriest-Militant Asperamanka. "Then the day
will be ours." His face of anger moved among the thousand other grim
faces, dry of lip, again preparing to fight.
Orders
were shouted, phagors mustered. Yelk were watered. Men spat as they swung
themselves again into the saddle. The plain lightened with Batalix-dawn and
human suffering again took on movement. The rise of the greater luminary was a
more gradual event: weakening Freyr could not climb far above the horizon.
"Forward!"
In went the cavalry at walking pace, infantry behind. Bullets flew. Men
staggered and fell.
The
Sibornalese attack lasted a little under the hour. Pannovalan morale was
sinking fast. One by one, its units fell into retreat. The Shiveninki force
under Luterin Shokerandit moved off in pursuit, but was recalled; Asperamanka
had no wish to see this young lieutenant acquire yet more glory. The army of
the north withdrew to the northern side of the river. Its wounded were taken to Isturiacha, to a field ambulance established
in some barns. Tenderly, the broken men were laid to bleed on straw.
As
the opponents withdrew from the plain, the cost of battle could clearly be
seen. As if in a gigantic shipwreck, pallid bodies lay strewn upon their last
shore. Here and there, an overturned wagon burned, its smoke carrying thin
across the soiled ground.
Figures
moved among the dead. A Pannovalan artillery officer was one of them, scarcely
recognisable. Sniffing at a corpse like a dog, he wrenched at its jacket until
the sleeve came off. He commenced to chew at the arm. He ate in snatches, face
distorted, raising his head to look about as he chewed each mouthful.
He
continued to chew and stare even when a rifleman approached. The latter raised
his weapon and fired at short range. The artillery officer was blown backwards,
to lie motionless with arms outspread. The rifleman, with others similarly
detailed, moved slowly about the death-field, shooting the devourers of
corpses. These were the unfortunates who had contracted the Fat Death and, in
the throes of bulimia, were driven to feast on the dead. Plague victims were
reported on both sides.
As
the main body of the Pannovalan army made its untidy retreat, it left behind a
detail of monumental masons.
The
masons had no victory to celebrate. Nevertheless, their trade had to be
exercised. Back in Pannoval, the defeated commanders would be bound to claim a
victory. Here, at the limits of their territory, the lie had to be reinforced
in stone.
Although
the plain offered no quarries, the masons found a ruinous monument near at
hand. They demolished it and carried its separate stones nearer to the bridge
by the sullen river.
These
guildsmen took pride in their craft. With practised care, they re-erected the
monument almost stone for stone on its new site. The master-mason carved upon
the base of the monument the name of the place and the date, and, in grander
lettering, the name of the old Chief Marshal.
All
stood back and regarded the stonework with pride before returning to their
wagon. None who executed this act of practical piety realised that he had
demolished a monument commemorating a similar battle fought here eons ago.
The
gaunt Sibornalese watched with satisfaction as the defeated enemy withdrew southwards.
They had sustained heavy losses, and it was clear there was nothing to be
gained by pressing on farther as had once been planned; their other settlements
had been wiped out, as refugees in Isturiacha reported.
Those
who survived the battle felt relief that the challenge was behind them. Yet
there was also a sense in some quarters that the engagement had been a
dishonourable thing dishonourable
and even paltry, after the months of training and preparation which had
preceded it. For what had it been fought? For ground that would now have to be
conceded? For honour?
To
quell such doubts, Asperamanka announced a feast to be held that evening in
celebration of the Sibornalese victory. Some arang, newly arrived in
Isturiacha, would be slaughtered; they and supplies captured from the enemy
would provide the fare. The army rations, needed for the journey home, would
not be touched.
Preparations
for this celebration went forward even while the dead were being buried in
nearby consecrated ground. The graves lay in a great shallow vale, open to the
wide skies, where aromas of cooking wafted over the corpses.
While
the settlers were busy, the army was content to rest. Their trained phagors
sprawled with them. It was a day for grateful sleep. For
binding of wounds. For repairs to uniforms, boots,
harness. Soon they would have to be on the move again. They could not
remain in Isturiacha. There was not enough food to support an idle army.
Towards
the end of the day, the smells of woodsmoke and roasting meats overcame the
lingering stench of the battlefield. Hymns of thanksgiving were offered up to
God the Azoiaxic. The men's voices, and the ring of
sincerity in them, brought tears to the eyes of some women settlers, whose
lives had been saved by these same hymn singers. Rape and captivity would have
been their lot after a Pannovalan invasion.
Children
who had been locked in the church of the Formidable Peace while danger
threatened were now released. Their cries of delight brightened the evening.
They clambered among the soldiery, chuckling at the attempts of the men to get
drunk on weak Isturiachan beer.
The
feast began according to the omens, as dimday snared the world. The roast arang
were attacked until nothing but the stained cages of their ribs remained. It
was another memorable victory.
Afterwards,
three solemn elders of the settlement council approached the
Archpriest-Militant and bowed to him. No hand touching took place since
Sibornalese of high caste disapproved of physical contact with others.
The
elders thanked Asperamanka for preserving the safety of Isturiacha, and the
senior among them said formally, "Revered sire, you understand our
situation here is that of the last and southernmost settlement of Sibornal.
Once there were/continued other settlements farther into Campannlat, even as
far as Roonsmoor. All have been overwhelmed by the denizens of the Savage
Continent. Before your army will/must retire to our home continent, we beseech
you on behalf of all in Isturiacha to leave a strong garrison with us, that we
may not/avoidance suffer the same fate as our neighbours."
Their
hairs were grey and sparse. Their noses shone in the light of the oil lamps.
They spoke in a high dialect larded with slippery tenses, past continuous,
future compulsive, avoidance-subjunctive, and the Priest-Militant responded in
similar terms, while his gaze evaded theirs.
"Honoured
gentlemen, I doubt if you can/will/could support the extra mouths you request.
Although this is the summer of the small year, and the weather is clement, yet
your crops are poor, as I perceive, and your cattle appear starved." The
thundercloud was dark about Asperamanka's brow as he spoke.
The
elders regarded each other. Then all three spoke simultaneously.
"The
might of Pannoval will return against us."
"We
pray/praying every day for better climates as before."
"Without a garrison we die/will/unavoidable."
Perhaps
it was the use of the archaic fatalistic future which made Asperamanka scowl.
His rectangular face seemed to narrow; he stared down at the table with pursed
lips, nodding his head as if making some sly pact with himself.
It
was by Asperamanka's command that young Lieutenant Shokerandit sat next to him
in a place of honour, so that some of the latter's glory might be deflected to
his commander. Asperamanka turned his head to Shokerandit and asked,
"Luterin, what reply would/dare you give these elders to their request in high dialect or otherwise?"
Shokerandit
was aware of the danger lurking in the question.
"Since
the request comes not from three mouthpieces but from all the mouths in
Isturiacha, sire, it is too large for me to answer. Only your experience can
discover the fit reply."
The
Priest-Militant cast his gaze upwards, to the rafters and their long shadows,
and scratched his chin.
"Yes,
it could be said that the decision is mine, to speak for the Oligarchy. On the
other hand, it could be said that God has already decided. The Azoiaxic tells
me that it is no longer possible to maintain this settlement, or the ones to
the north of it."
"Sire "
He
raised one triangular eyebrow in his rectangular face as he addressed the
elders.
"The
crops fail year by year despite all prayer can do. That's a matter of common
record. Once these southern settlements of ours grew vines.
Now you are hard put to it to raise barley and mouldy potatoes. Isturiacha is
no longer our pride but our liability. It is best that the settlement be
abandoned. Everyone should leave when the army leaves, two days from now. In no
other way can you escape eventual starvation or subjection to Pannoval."
Two
of the leaders had to prop up the third. Consternation broke out among all who
overheard this conversation. A woman rushed to the Priest-Militant and clasped his
stained boots. She cried that she had been born in Isturiacha, together with
her sisters; they could not contemplate leaving their home.
Asperamanka
rose to his feet and rapped on the table for attention. Silence fell.
"Let
me make this matter clear to you all. Remember that my rank entitles me no, forces me to speak on behalf of both Church and
State. We must be under no illusions. We are a practical people, so I know that
you will accept what I say. Our Lord who existed before life, and round whom
all life revolves, has set this generation's steps on a stoney path. So be it.
We must tread it gladly because it is his will.
"This
gallant army who celebrates with you tonight, these brave representatives from all
our illustrious nations, must start almost immediately northwards again. If the
army is not on the move, it will starve from lack of fodder. If it remains here
in Isturiacha, it will starve you with it. As farmers you understand the case.
These are laws of God and nature. Our first intention was to press on to
conquer Pannoval; such was our charge from the Oligarch. Instead, I must start
my men homewards in two days, neither more nor less."
One
of the elders asked, "Why such a sudden change of plan, Priest-Militant,
when yours was the victory?"
The
rectangular face managed a horizontal smile. He looked about at the greasy
faces, lit by firelight, hanging on his words, while he timed his utterance
with the instinct of a preacher.
"Yes,
ours was the victory, thanks be to the Azoiaxic, but
the future is not ours. History stands against us. The settlements to the south
where we hoped we might find support and supplies are wiped out, destroyed by a
savage enemy. The climate deteriorates faster than we judged you see how Freyr scarce rises from
his bed these days. My judgement is that Pannoval, that heathen hole, lies too
far for victory, and near enough only for defeat. If we continued there, none
of us would return here.
"The
Fat Death spreads from the south. We have it among us. The most courageous
warrior fears the Fat Death. Nobody goes into battle with such a companion by
his side.
"So
we bow to nature and return home to report our victory to the Oligarchy in
Askitosh. We leave, as I have said, in fifty hours. Use that
time, settlers, use it well. At the end of that period, those of you who
have decided to return to Sibornal with your families will be welcome to come
north with us, under the army's protection.
"Those
who decide to stay may do so and die in Isturiacha. Sibornal will not, cannot return here.
Whatever you decide, you have fifty hours to do it in, and God bless you
all."
Of
the two thousand men, women, and children in the settlement, most had been born
there. They knew only the harsh life of the open fields or in the case of the more privileged
men of the hunt. They
feared leaving their homes, they dreaded the journey to Sibornal across the
steppes, and they even misdoubted the sort of reception they might receive at
the frontier.
Nevertheless,
when the case was put to them by the elders at a meeting in the church, most
settlers decided to leave. For longer than anyone could recall, the climate had
been worsening, year by small year, with few remissions. Year by year,
connections with the northern homeland had become more tenuous, and the threat
from the south greater.
Tears
and lamentations filled the camp. It was the end of all things. All that they
had worked for was to be abandoned.
As
soon as Batalix rose, slaves were sent off into the fields to gather in all the
crops they could, while the households packed their worldly goods. Scuffles
broke out between those who intended to leave and a smaller group who intended
to stay at all costs; the latter shouted that the crops should be preserved.
Three
kinds of slaves were driven out to labour in the fields. There were the
phagors, dehorned, who served as something between a slave proper and a beast
of burden. Then there were the human slaves. Lastly there were slaves of
non-human stock, Madis, or, more rarely, Driats. Both humans and non-humans
were regarded as dishonoured persons, male or female. They were the socially
dead.
It
counted as a sign of rank to keep slaves; the more slaves, the higher the
ranking. The many Sibornalese who did not keep slaves looked with envy on those
who did, and aspired to own at least a phagor. In easier times, slaves in the
cities of Sibornal had often been maintained in idleness, almost as if they
were pets; in the settlements, slaves and owners worked side by side. As times
grew harsher, the attitudes of the owners changed. Slaves became drudges,
except in rare cases. The slaves of the settlement, when they returned from the
fields, were now put to building carts, and given other tasks beyond their
competence.
When
the Priest-Militant's stipulated two days were up, bugles were sounded and
everyone had to assemble outside the confines of the settlement.
The
quartermasters of the Sibornalese army had set up field kitchens and baked
bread for the start of the homeward trek. Rations were going to be short. After
a conference, the chiefs of staff announced that the settlers heading north
must shoot their slaves or set them free, in order to cut down the number of
mouths to be fed. From this order, ancipitals were spared, on the grounds that
they could double as beasts of burden and were able to forage for their own
food.
"Mercy!"
cried both slaves and masters. The phagors stood motionless.
"Kill
off the phagors," some men said, with bitterness.
Others,
remembering old history, replied, "They were once our masters . . ."
The
settlers were now under military law. Protests were of no avail. Without their
slaves, householders would be unable to transport many of their goods; still
the slaves had to go. Their usefulness had expired.
Over
a thousand slaves were massacred in an old riverbed near the settlement. The
corpses were given casual burial by phagors, while hordes of carrion birds
descended, perching on nearby fences in silence, awaiting their chance. And the
wind blew as before.
After
the wailing a terrible silence fell.
Asperamanka
stood watching the ceremony. As one of the women of the settlement passed near
him, weeping, he was moved by compassion and placed a hand on her shoulder.
"Bless
you, my daughter. Do not grieve."
She
looked up at him without anger, her face blotched by crying. "I loved my
slave Yuli. Is it not human to grieve?"
Despite
the edict, many slaves were spared by their owners, especially those who were
sexually used. They were concealed or disguised, and assembled with the
families for the journey. Luterin Shokerandit protected his own captive, Toress
Lahl, giving her trousers and a fur cap to wear as a disguise. Without a word,
she tucked her long chestnut hair into the confines of the cap and went to hold
Luterin's yelk by its bridle.
The
marching columns began to form up.
While
this bustle was afoot and carts were being overloaded and arrangements were
being made for the wounded, six arangherds left slyly, climbing the perimeter,
and made off over the plain with their dogs. Theirs was the wild free life.
Asperamanka
stood alone by his black yelk, thinking his dark thoughts. He called an orderly
to fetch Lieutenant Shokerandit to him.
Luterin
arrived, looking, in his unease, very immature.
"Have
you two reliable men on reliable mounts, Lieutenant Shokerandit? Two men who
would travel fast? I wish news of our victory to get to the Oligarch by the
fastest means. Before he hears from other sources."
"I
could find two such men, yes. We from Kharnabhar are great riders."
Asperamanka
frowned, as if this news displeased him. He produced a leather wallet, which he
then tucked under one arm.
"This
message must be taken by your reliable men to the frontier town of
"Sire,
I will."
The
wallet was pulled from under the arm and held out towards Shokerandit in a
blue-gloved hand. It was sealed with the Archpriest-Militant's seal and
addressed to the Supreme Oligarch of Sibornal, Torkerkanzlag II, in Askitosh,
Capital City of Uskutoshk.
Shokerandit
chose two reliable youths, well-known to him and like brothers back in
Shivenink. They left their comrades and their fighting phagors and mounted two
shorn yelk, with nothing more than packs of provisions and water at their
backs. Within the hour they were off across the grasslands, riding northwards
with the message for the dread Oligarch.
But
the Oligarch of Sibornal, ruling over his vast bleak continent, had spies
everywhere. Already a trusted man of his, placed close to the
Arch-priest-Militant Asperamanka, had ridden off with the news of the
engagement, for one particular interest of the Oligarch's was the progress of
the plague northwards.
It
was the time for farewells. The trek northwards began in some disorder. Each
unit started off with its carts, supply animals, phagors, and guns. Their noise
filled the shallow landscape. They jostled for the course they had traversed
only a few days earlier. The settlers leaving Isturiacha, many for the first
time in their lives, went in greatest disarray, clutching children and precious
possessions which had found no place on their overloaded carts.
Tearful
good-byes were called to those individuals who had made the decision to remain
behind. Those exiles stood outside the perimeter, stiff and upright, hands
upraised. In their bearing was a consciousness of playing the honourable role,
of defying fate a
consciousness, too, of the elemental forces slowly mounting against them. From
now on, only the Azoiaxic and their own competence would be their defence.
Luterin
Shokerandit sat at the head of the Shivenink force, aware of how his status had
changed since last he passed this way. He was now a hero. His captive, Toress
Lahl, disguised in her cap and breeches, was forced to ride behind him on his
yelk, clinging to his belt. The death of her husband still burned inside her,
so that she spoke no word.
In
her pain, Toress Lahl showed no fear of the yelk, a creature of mild habits but
ferocious aspect. Its horns curled about its shaggy head. Its eyes, shielded by
furry lids, gave the beast a watchful look. The curl of its heavy underlip
suggested that it despised all that it saw of human history.
The
settlement fell away behind the procession. A succession of wearyingly similar
valleys began to unfold ahead. The wind blew. The grass rustled.
Silence
closed over the procession. But one of the elders who had elected to leave
Isturiacha was a garrulous old man who enjoyed the sound of his own voice; he
urged his mount over until he was riding beside Shokerandit and his
lieutenants, and tried to pass the time of day with him. Shokerandit had little
to say. His mind was on the immediate future and the long journey back to his
father's house.
"I
suppose it really was the Supreme Oligarch who ordered Isturiacha to be
closed," he said.
No
response. He tried again. "They say the Oligarch is a great despot, and
that his hand is harsh over all Sibornal."
"Winter will be harsher," said one of the lieutenants,
laughing.
After
another mile, the elder said confidentially, "I fancy you young men do not
see eye-to-eye with Asperamanka ... I fancy that in his position you would have
ordered a garrison to stay and defend us."
"The
decision was not mine to make," Shokerandit said.
The
elder smiled and nodded, revealing his few remaining teeth. "Ah, but I saw
the expression on your face when he announced his ruling, and I thought to
myself in fact, I said it
to the others 'Now
there's a young man with a measure of mercy in him ... a saint,' I said . .
."
"Go
away, old man. Save your breath for the ride."
"But to break up a fine settlement just like that. In the old days, we used to send our food surplus back to
Uskutoshk. Then to break it up ... You'd think the Oligarch would be grateful.
We're all Sibornalese, are we not? You can't argue against that, can you?"
When
Shokerandit had been given, and failed to take, his chance to argue against it,
the elder wiped his mouth with the back of his hand and said, "Do you
think I was wise to leave, young sir? It was my home, after all. Perhaps we
should all have stayed. Perhaps another of the Oligarch's armies one with more generous impulses
towards its compatriots will
be coming this way again in a year or two . . . Well, this is a bitter day for
us, that's all I will say."
He
was turning his steed's head and about to ride off when Shokerandit reached out
suddenly and grasped the collar of his coat, almost unseating the old man.
"You
must know nothing of the world if you can't see the truth of the situation more
clearly than that! What I think of the Priest-Militant is immaterial. He gave
the only judgement possible. Work it out for yourself instead of airing your
grievances. You see what a multitude we are? By dimday, we shall have spread
out until we stretch from one horizon to the other. Feet, steeds, mouths to be
fed . . . the weather becoming more bleak . . . Work it out for yourself, old
man."
He
gestured over the moving multitude, gestured towards all the grey, black, and
russet backs of the soldiers, each back burdened with a pack containing a
three-day ration of hardtack, plus unspent ammunition, each back turned towards
the south and the pallid sun. The multitude spread wider and wider, to allow
the creaking carts more room. It moved with a dull entombed sound which the low
hills returned.
Among
the men riding went others on foot, often clinging to a saddlestrap. Some carts
were piled with equipment, others with wounded, who suffered at every jog of
the axle. Loaded phagors trudged by their masters, backs bent, eyes to the
ground; the ancipital fighting corps marched slightly apart with their strange
jointless stride.
The
halt that night was a confused affair. Not all the shouted orders and bugle
calls could discipline it. Units settled where they would, pitching
tents or not as the case was, to the inconvenience of other units seeking a
better site. Animals had to be fed and watered. The watering entailed sending
water carts off into the gloom to one side or the other, to seek out streams in
the hills. The mutter of men's voices, the restless movement of animals, were
never absent during the brief night.
The
clouds parted. It grew colder.
The
Shivenink contingent formed a close group. Being young, most of them clustered
about Luterin Shokerandit, preparing to drink the night away. Their canteens contained
the spirit they called yadahl, fermented from seaweed, ruby red in colour. In
yadahl they celebrated their recent victory, Luterin's heroism, and the
excitement of being on the plains rather than in the familiar mountains of home and the pleasure of simply being
alive, and anything else that entered their heads. Soon they were singing,
despite outcries from groups of would-be sleepers.
But
the yadahl did not inspire Luterin Shokerandit to sing. He moved apart from his
companions from Kharnabhar, his thoughts dwelling on his fair captive. Though
she had been married, he doubted if she was as old as he, despite her assured
manner; the women of the Savage Continent married young.
He
longed to possess her. And yet his parents had committed him to marry in
Kharnabhar. Why should that make a difference to what he did here, in the wilds
of Chalce? His friends would laugh at his scruples.
His
memories returned to the night before the Sibornalese army had left the
frontier town of
While
the rest of them had gone drinking and whoring, Luterin had walked the cobbled
streets alone. He had entered a deuteroscopist's shop, set in a square next to
an old theatre.
The
deuteroscopist had shown him many curious things, including a small object like
a bracelet, said to come from another world, and a tapeworm in a jar one
hundred inches long, which the deuteroscopist had charmed from the entrails of
a lady of quality (by using a small silver flute which he was prepared to sell
at a price).
"Have
I the courage for battle?" Luterin had asked the diviner.
Whereupon
the old man had become busy on Luterin's skull with calipers and other
measuring devices before saying finally, "You are either a saint or a
sinner, young master."
"That
was not my question. My question was, am I hero or coward?"
"It's
the same question. It needs courage to be a saint."
"And
none to be a sinner?" He thought of how he had not dared to join his
friends.
Much nodding of the hairy old head. "That needs courage too. Everything needs courage. Even that
tapeworm needed courage. Would you care to pass your life imprisoned in
someone's entrails? Even the entrails of a beautiful lady?
If I told you that such a fate lay in your future, would you be happy?"
Impatient
with his procrastination, Luterin said, "Are you going to give me an
answer to my question?"
"You
will answer it yourself very soon. All I will say is that you will display
great courage . . ."
"But?"
A smile that pleaded forgiveness.
"Because of your nature, young man. You will find
yourself both sinner and saint. You will be a hero, but I think I see that you
will behave like a scoundrel."
He
had recalled that conversation and the tapeworm all the way down to Isturiacha. Now he had become a hero, could he
dare to be a scoundrel?
As
he sat there, drinking but not singing, Umat Esikananzi grabbed him by the boot
and pulled him forcibly nearer the fire.
"Don't
be glum, old lad. We're still alive, we've played the hero you especially and soon we'll be back
home." Umat had a big puddingy face rather like his father's, but it
beamed now. "The world's a horribly empty place; that's why we're singing to fill it up with noise. But you've
got other things on your mind."
"Umat,
your voice is the most melodious I ever heard, including a vulture's, but I'm
going to sleep."
Umat
waved an admonitory finger. "Ah, I thought as much. That fair captive of
yours! Give her hell from me. And I promise not to tell Insil."
He
kicked Umat on the shin, "How Insil had the rotten luck to get a brother
like you I'll never know."
Taking
another swig of yadahl, Umat said cheerfully, "She's a girl, is Insil.
Come to think of it, she might be grateful to me if I took you by the scruff of
your neck and made you get a bit of practice in."
The
whole group roared with laughter.
Shokerandit
staggered to his feet and bid them good night. With an effort, he made for his
own pitch, close by a cart. Despite the stars overhead, it seemed very dark.
There was no aurora in these latitudes as there so often was in Kharnabhar.
Clutching
his canteen, he half fell against the bulk of his yelk, which was staked to the
ground by the tether burnt through its left ear. He went down on his knees and
crawled to where the woman was.
Toress
Lahl lay curled up small, hands grasping her knees.
She stared up at him without speaking. Her face was pale in the obscurity. Her
eyes reflected minutely the litter of stars in the sky above them.
He
caught hold of her upper arm and thrust the canteen at her.
"Drink
some yadahl."
Mutely
she shook her head, a small decisive movement.
He
clouted her over the side of the head and thrust the leather bottle in her
face. "Drink this, you bitch, I said. It'll put heart in you."
Again
the shake of head, but he took her arm and twisted it till she cried out. Then
she grasped the canteen and took a swallow of the fiery liquor.
"It's
good for you. Drink more."
She
coughed and spluttered over it, so that her spittle lighted on his cheek.
Shokerandit kissed her forcibly on the lips.
"Have
mercy, I beg you. You are not a barbarian." She spoke Sibish well enough,
but with a heavy accent, not unpleasant to his ear.
"You
are my prisoner, woman. No fine airs from you. Whoever you were, you are mine
now, part of my victory. Even the Archpriest would do with you as I intend,
were he in my boots . . ." He gulped at the liquid himself, heaved a sigh,
slumped heavily beside her.
She
lay tense; then, sensing his inertia, spoke. When not crying out, Toress Lahl
had a voice with a low liquid quality, as if there were a small brook at the
back of her throat. She said, "That elder who came to you this afternoon.
He saw himself going into slavery, as I see myself. What did you mean when you
said to him that your Archpriest gave the only judgement possible?"
Shokerandit
lay silent, struggling with his drunken self, struggling with the question,
struggling with his impulse to strike the girl for so blatantly trying to turn
the channel of his desires. In that silence, up from his consciousness rose an awareness darker than his wish to violate her, the
awareness of an immutable fate. He threw down more liquor and the awareness
rose closer.
He
rolled over, the better to force his words on her.
"Judgement,
you say, woman? Judgement is delivered by the Azoiaxic, or else by the Oligarch not by some biwacking holy man who
would see his own troops bleed to serve his ends." He pointed to his
friends carousing by the camp fire. "See those buffoons there? Like me,
they come from Shivenink, a good part of the round globe away. It's two hundred miles just to the frontiers of Uskutoshk.
Lumbered with all our equipment, with the necessity for foraging for food, we
cannot cover more than ten miles a day. How do you think we feed our stomachs
in this season, madam?"
He
shook her till her teeth rattled and she clung to him, saying in terror,
"You feed, don't you? I see your wagons carry supplies and your animals
can graze, can't they?"
He
laughed. "Oh, we just feed, do we? On what, exactly?
How many people do you think we have spread across the face of this land? The
answer is something like ten thousand humans and ahumans, together with seven
thousand yelk and whatever, including cavalry mounts. Each of those men needs
two pounds of bread a day, with an extra one pound of other provisions,
including a ration of yadahl. That adds up to thirteen and a half tons every
day.
"You
can starve men. Our stomachs are hollow. But you must feed animals or they
sicken. A yelk needs twenty pounds of fodder every day; which for seven
thousand head comes to sixty-two odd tons a day. That makes some seventy-five tons
to be carried or procured, but we can only transport nine tons . . ."
He
lay silent, as if trying to convert the whole prospect in his mind into
figures.
"How
do we make up the shortfall? We have to make it up on the move. We can
requisition it from villages on our route only there aren't any villages in Chalce. We have to live off the
land. The bread problem alone . . . You need twenty-four ounces of flour to
bake a two-pound loaf. That means six and a half tons of flour to be found
every day.
"But
that's nothing to what the animals eat. You need an acre of green fodder to
feed fifty yelk and hoxneys "
Toress
Lahl began to weep. Shokerandit propped himself on an elbow and gazed across
the encampment as he spoke. Little sparks glowed in the dark here and there
over a wide area, constantly obscured as bodies moved unseen between him and
them. Some men sang; others abased themselves and communicated with the dead.
"Suppose
we take twenty days to reach Koriantura at the frontier, then
our mounts will need to consume two thousand eight hundred acres of fodder.
Your dead husband must have had to do similar sums, didn't he?
"Every
day an army marches, it spends more time in quest of food than it does in
moving forward. We have to mill our own grain and there's precious little of anything but wild grasses and
shoatapraxi in these regions. We have to make expeditions to fell trees and
gather wood for the bakeries. We have to set up field bakeries. We have to
graze and water the yelk. . . . Perhaps you begin to
see why Isturiacha had to be left? History is against it."
"Well,
I just don't care," she said. "Am I an animal that you tell me how
much these animals eat? You can all starve, the lot of
you, for all I care. You got drunk on killing and now you're drunk on
yadahl."
In
a low voice, he said, "They didn't think I would be any good in battle, so
at Koriantura I was put in charge of animal fodder. There's an insult for a man
whose father is Keeper of the Wheel! I had to learn those figures, woman, but I
saw the sense in them. I grasped their meaning. Year by year, the growing
season is getting shorter just a day at either end. This summer is a disappointment to
farmers. The Isthmus of Chalce is famine-stricken. You'll see. All this
Asperamanka knows. Whatever you think of him, he's no fool. An expedition such
as this, which set out with over eleven thousand men, cannot be launched ever
again."
"So
my unfortunate continent is safe at last from your hateful Sibish
interference."
He
laughed. "Peace at a price. An army marching through the land is like a
plague of locusts and the
locusts die when there's no food in their path. That settlement will soon be
entirely cut off. It's doomed.
"The
world is becoming more hostile, woman. And we waste what resources we have. . .
."
Luterin
lay against her rigid body, burying his face in his arms. But before sleep and
drink overpowered him, he heaved himself up again to ask how old she was. She
refused to say. He struck her hard across the face. She sobbed and admitted to
thirteen plus one tenner. She was his junior by two tenners.
"Young
to be a widow," he said with relish. "And
don't think you'll get off lightly tomorrow night.
I'm not the animal fodder officer anymore. No talk tomorrow night, woman."
Toress
Lahl made no reply. She remained awake, unstirring, gazing miserably up at the
stars overhead. Clouds veiled the sky as Batalix-dawn drew near. Groans of the
dying reached her ears. There were twelve more deaths from the plague during
the night.
But
in the morning those who survived rose as usual, stretched their limbs, and
were blithe, joking with friends of this and that as they queued for their
rations at the bread wagons. A two-pound loaf each, she remembered bitterly.
There
was no soldier on that long trail homeward who would admit to enjoying himself.
Yet it was probable that everyone took some pleasure in the routine of making
and breaking camp, in the camaraderie, in the feeling that progress was being
made, and in the chance of being in a different place each day. There was
simple pleasure in leaving behind the ashes of an old fire and pleasure in
building a new one, in watching the young flames take hold of twigs and grass.
Such
activities, with the enjoyments they generated, were as old as mankind itself.
Indeed, some activities were older, for human consciousness had flickered
upward like young flames
taking hold amid the challenges of mankind's first long peregrination eastwards
from Hespagorat, when forsaking the protection of the ancipital race and the
status of domesticated animal.
The
wind might blow chill from the north, from the Circumpolar Regions of Sibornal,
yet to the soldiers returning home the air tasted good in their lungs, the
ground felt good beneath their feet.
The
officers were less lighthearted than their men. For the general soldiery, it
was enough to have survived the battle and to be returning home to whatever
welcome awaited them. For those who thought more deeply, the matter was more
complex. There was the question of the increasingly severe regime within the
frontiers of Sibornal. There was also the question of their success.
Although
the officers, from Asperamanka downwards, talked repeatedly of victory,
nevertheless, under that terrible enantiodromia which gripped the world, under
that inevitable and incessant turning of all things into their opposites, the
victory came to feel more and more like a defeat a defeat from which they were retreating with little to show but
scars, a list of the dead, and extra mouths to feed.
And
always, to heighten this oppressive sense of failure, the Fat Death was among
them, keeping pace easily with the fastest troops.
In
the spring of the Great Year was the bone fever, cutting down human
populations, pruning the survivors to mere skeletons.
In the autumn of the Year was the Fat Death, again cutting down human
populations, this time melding them into new, more compact shape.
So much and more was well enough understood, and accepted with fatalism. But
fear still sprang up at the very word "plague." And at such times,
everyone mistrusted his neighbour.
On
the fourth day, the forward units came across one of the two messengers whom
Shokerandit had sent ahead. His body lay face down in a gully. The torso had
been gnawed as if by a wild animal.
The
soldiers preserved a wide circle about the corpse, but seemed unable to stop
looking at it. When Asperamanka was summoned, he too looked long at the
dreadful sight. Then he said to Shokerandit, "That silent presence travels
with us. There is no doubt that the terrible scourge is carried by the phagors,
and is the Azoiaxic's punishment upon us for associating with them. The only
way to make restitution is to slay all ancipitals who are on the march with
us."
"Haven't
we had slaughter enough, Archpriest? Could we not just drive the ancipitals
away into the wilds?"
"And
let them breed and grow strong against us? My young hero, leave me to deal with
what is my business." His narrow face wrinkled into severe lines, and he
said, "It is more necessary than ever to get word swiftly to the Oligarch.
We must be met and given assistance as soon as possible. I charge you now,
personally, to go with a trusted companion and bear my message to Koriantura
for onward transmission to the Oligarch. You will do this?"
Luterin
cast his gaze on the ground, as he had often done in his father's presence. He
was accustomed to obeying orders.
"I
can be in the saddle within an hour, sir."
The
wrath that seemed always to lurk under Asperamanka's brow, lending heat to his
eyes, came into play as he regarded his subordinate.
"Reflect
that I may be saving your life by charging you with this commission, Lieutenant
Ensign Shokerandit. On the other hand, you may ride and ride, only to discover
that the silent presence awaits in Koriantura."
With
a gloved finger, he made the Sign of the Wheel on his forehead and turned away.
Koriantura
was a city of wealth and magnificence. The floors of its palaces were paved
with gold, the domes of its pleasure houses lined with porcelain.
Its
main church of the Formidable Peace, which stood centrally along the quaysides
from which much of the city's wealth came, was furnished with an exuberant
luxury quite foreign to the spirit of an austere god. "They'd never allow
such beauty in Askitosh," the Korianturan congregation was fond of saying.
Even
in the shabbier quarters of the city, which stretched back into the foothills,
there were architectural details to catch the eye. A love of ornamentation
defied poverty and broke out in an unexpected archway, an unpremeditated
fountain in a narrow court, a flight of wrought-iron balconies, capable of
lifting the spirits even of the humdrum.
Undeniably,
Koriantura suffered from the same divisions of wealth and outlook to be found
elsewhere. This might be observed, if in no other way, from the welcome given
to a rash of posters from the presses of the Oligarchy at present flooding the
cities of Uskutoshk. In the richer quarters, the latest proclamation might draw
forth an "Oh, how wise, what a good idea!";
while, at the other end of town, the same pronouncement would elicit merely an
"Eh, look what the biwackers are up to now!"
Most
frontier towns are dispiriting places, where the lees of one culture wait upon
the dregs of the next. Koriantura was an exception in that respect. Although
known at an earlier date in its history as Utoshki, it was never, as the old
name implied, a purely Uskutoshk city. Exotic peoples from the east, in
particular from Upper Hazziz and from Kuj-Juvec beyond the Gulf of Chalce, had
infiltrated it and given it an exuberance which most cities of Sibornal did not
possess, stamping that energy into its very architecture and its arts.
"Bread's
so expensive in Koriantura," went a saying, "because the opera
tickets are so cheap."
Then,
too, Koriantura was on an important crossroads. It pointed the way southwards,
south to the Savage Continent and war or no war its traders sailed easily to such ports as Dorrdal in Pannoval. It
also stood at one end of the frequented sea route which led to distant
Shivenink and the grainlands of Carcampan and Bribahr.
Then
again, Koriantura was ancient and its connections with earlier ages had not
been broken. It was still possible to find, in the antiquarian stalls of its
back streets, documents and books written in antique languages, detailing lost
ways of life. Every lane seemed to lead backwards into time. Koriantura had
been spared many of the disasters which afflict frontier towns. Behind it
stood, range on range, the foothills of the greater hills which in turn formed
a footstool to the
Koriantura
was easy to defend against everything but the impending winter.
Although
many military personnel were stationed in Koriantura, they had not succeeded in
downgrading it into a garrison town. Peaceful trade could prosper, and the arts
to which trade paid somewhat grudging homage. Which was why
the Odim family lived there.
The Odim business ranged along one of the wharfs on Climent Quay. The family house stood not far away, in an area that was neither the
smartest nor the shabbiest in town. The day's business done, Eedap Mun Odim,
chief support of his large family, saw his employees off the premises, checked
that the kilns were safe and the windows bolted, and emerged from a side door
with his first mistress.
The
first mistress was a vivacious lady by name Besi Besamitikahl. She held various
packages for Odim as he fussed over locking the door to his premises. When the
task was done to his satisfaction, he turned and gave her his gentle smile.
"Now
we go our separate ways, and I will see you at home soon."
"Yes,
master."
"Walk
fast. Watch out for soldiers on the way."
She
had only a short walk, round the corner and into
Eedap
Mun Odim kept a straight back against middle age. He tucked his beard inside
his suede coat. He had a rather grand walk: more of a strut, which he
emphasised despite the wind. He turned in at the church in time for service, as
he did every evening after business was done. There, like the good Uskuti round
him, he humbled himself before God the Azoiaxic. It was only a short service.
Besi
Besamitikahl, meanwhile, had reached the Odim house and knocked to be let in by
the watchman.
The
Odim mansion was the last in the street leading down to Climent Quay. From its
upper windows, good views were obtained of the harbour, with the
Besi
was an orphan who remembered neither of her parents, although rumour had it
that she was the daughter of a slave woman from far Dimariam. Some claimed that
this slave woman had been accompanying her master on a pilgrimage to Holy
Kharnabhar; he had kicked her out on the streets on discovering that she was
about to give birth. Whether true or not (Besi would say cheerfully), the story
had a ring of truth. Such things happened.
Besi
had survived her childhood by dancing in those same streets into which her
mother had been kicked. By that dancing, she had come to the notice of a
dignitary on his way to the Oligarch's court in Askitosh. After undergoing a variety
of abuses at the hands of this man, Besi managed to escape from the house in
which she was imprisoned with other women by hiding in an empty walrus-oil vat.
She
was rescued from the vat by a nephew of Eedap Mun Odim's, who traded on his
uncle's behalf in Askitosh. She so charmed this impressionable young man,
particularly when she played her trump card and danced for him, that he took
her in marriage. Their joy, however, was brief. Four tenners after their
wedding day, the nephew fell from the loft of one of his uncle's warehouses and
broke his neck.
As
orphan, ex-dancing girl, slave, other dubious things, and now widow, Besi
Besamitikahl had no standing in any respectable Uskuti community. Odim,
however, was a Kuj-Juveci, and a mere trader. He protected Besi not least from the scorn of her
relations by marriage and
so discovered that the girl could think as well as employ her more obvious
talents. Since she still had her beauty, he adopted her as first mistress.
Besi
was grateful. She became rather plump, tried to look less flighty, and assisted
Odim in the countinghouse; in time, she could supervise the complex business of
ordering his cargoes and scrutinising bills of lading. The days of the
Oligarch's court and the walrus oil were now far behind her.
After
a brief exchange with the watchman, she climbed the winding stair to her own
room.
She
paused at one of the tiny kitchens on the second floor, where an old
grandmother was busy preparing supper with a maidservant. The old woman gave
Besi a greeting, then turned back to the business of
making pastry savrilas.
Lamplight
gleamed on pale and honey-coloured forms, the simple shapes of bowls and jugs,
plates, spoons and sieves, and on dumpy bags of flour. The pastry was being
rolled wafer-thin, as mottled old hands moved above its irregular shape. The
young maidservant leaned against a wall, looking on vacantly, pulling at her
lower lip. Water in a skillet hissed over a charcoal fire. A pecubea sang in
its cage.
What
Odim said could not be true: that everyday life in Koriantura was threatened not while the grandmother's capable
hands continued to turn out those perfect half-moon shapes, each with a dimpled
straight edge and a twist of pastry at one end. Those little pillows of
pleasure spoke of a domestic contentment which could not be shattered. Odim
worried too much. Odim always worried. Nothing would happen.
Besides,
tonight Besi had someone other than Odim on her mind. There was a mysterious
soldier in the house, and she had glimpsed him that morning.
All
the lower and less favoured rooms were occupied by Odim's many relatives. They
constituted almost a small township. Besi held little communication with any of
them except the old grandmother, resenting the way they sponged off Odim's good
nature. She patrolled through their rooms with her nose in the air, tilting
that organ at an angle which enabled her to see what was happening in those
enervating abodes.
Here
basked remote female Odims of great age, grown monstrous on sloth; younger
female Odims, their figures flowing like loose garments under the impact of
bearing multitudinous small Odims; adolescent female Odims, willowy, reeking of
zaldal perfume, frugal in all but the spots and pallors of indoor life; and the
multitudinous small Odims themselves, clad in bright frocks or frocklets, so
that boy could scarcely be distinguished from girl, should anyone wish to do
so, scurrying, sicking, scuttling, squabbling, suckling, screaming, sulking, or
sleeping.
Scattered here and there like cushions, overwhelmed by the
preponderance of femininity, were a few Odim males. Castrated by their dependence on Eedap Mun Odim, they were vainly
growing beards or smoking veronikanes or bellowing orders never to be complied
with, in an effort to assert the ascendancy of their sex. And all these
relations and interrelations, of whatever generation, bore, in their sallow
skin colour, their listless eye, their heaviness of jowl, their tendency if an avalanche may be so termed towards corpulence, flatulence, and
somnolence, such a family resemblance that only loathing prompted Besi to
distinguish one odious Odim from the next.
Yet
the Odims themselves made clear distinctions. Despite their superabundance,
they kept each to their own portion of whatever room they occupied, squabbling
luxuriously in corners or lounging on clearly defined patches of carpet. Narrow
trails were traced out across each crowded chamber, so that any child venturing
onto the territory of a rival, even that of a mother's sister, might expect a
clout straight off, no questions asked. At night, brothers slept in perfect and
jealously-guarded privacy within two feet of their voluptuous sisters-in-law.
Their tiny portions of real estate were marked off by ribbons or rugs, or
draperies hung from lines of string. Every square yard was guarded with the
ferocity normally lavished on kingdoms.
These
arrangements Besi viewed with jaundiced eye. She saw how the murals on the
walls were becoming besmirched by her master's vast family; the sheer fattiness
of the Odims was steaming the delicate tones from the plaster. The murals
depicted lands of plenty, ruled over by two golden suns, where deer sported
amid tall green trees, and young men and women lay by bushes full of doves,
dallying or blowing suggestively on flutes. Those idylls had been painted two
centuries ago, when the house was new; they reflected a bygone world, the
vanished valleys of Kuj-Juvec in autumn.
Both
the paintings and their pending destruction fed Besi's mood of discontent; but
what she was chiefly seeking was a place where she could enjoy a little privacy
away from her master's eye. As she completed her tour in increasing disgust,
she heard the outside door slam and the watchdog give its sharp bark.
She
ran to the stairwell and looked down.
Her
master, Eedap Mun Odim, was returning from worship, and setting his foot on the
lowest stair. She saw his fur hat, his suede coat, the shine of his neat boots,
all foreshortened. She caught glimpses of his long nose and his long beard.
Unlike all his relations, Eedap Mun Odim was a slender man, a morsel; work and
money worries had contained his waistline. The sole pleasures he allowed
himself were those of the bedchamber, where as Besi knew he kept a cautious mercantile tally of them and entered them in a
little book.
Uncertain
what to do, she stood where she was. Odim drew level and glanced at her. He
nodded and gave a slight smile.
"Don't
disturb me," he said, as he passed. "I shall not want you
tonight."
"As
you please," she said, employing one of her well-worn phrases. She knew
what was worrying him. Eedap Mun Odim was a leading light in the porcelain
trade, and the porcelain trade was in difficulties.
Odim
climbed to the top of the house and closed his door. His wife had a meal
prepared; its aromas filtered through the house and down to those quarters
where food was less easily come by.
Besi
remained on the landing, in the dusk among the odours of crowded lives,
half-listening to the noises all round her. She could hear, too, the sound of
military boots outside, as soldiers marched along the Climent Quay. Her
fingers, still slender, played a silent tune on the bannister rail.
So
it was that she stood concealed from anyone on the floors below her. So it was
that she saw the old watchman creep from his lair, look furtively about, and
slink out the door. Perhaps he was going to find out what the Oligarch's soldiery were doing. Although Besi had taken care to
befriend him long ago, she knew the watchman would never dare let her out of
the house without Odim's permission.
After
a moment, the door opened again. In came a man of military bearing, whose wide
bar of moustache neatly divided his face along its horizontal axis. This was
the man who had provided the secret motive for Besi's inspection of her domain.
It was Captain Harbin Fashnalgid, their new lodger.
The
watchdog came rushing out of the watchman's lair and began to bark. But Besi
was already moving swiftly down the stairs, as nimbly as a plump little doe
down a steep cliff.
"Hush,
hush!" she called. The dog turned to her, swinging its black jowls around
and making a mock charge to the bottom of the stairs. It thrust out a length of
tongue and spread saliva across Besi's hand without in any way relaxing its
menacing scowl.
"Down,"
she said. "Good boy."
The
captain came across the hall and clutched her arm. They stared into each
other's eyes, hers a deep deep brown, his a startling
grey. He was tall and slim, a true pure Uskuti, and unlike the proliferating
Odims in every way. Thanks to the Oligarch's troop movements, the captain had
been billeted on Odim the previous day, and Odim had reluctantly made room for
him among his family on the top floor. When the captain and Besi clapped eyes
on each other, Besi whose
survival through a hazardous life had had something to do with her
impressionability had
fallen in love with him straight away.
A
plan came immediately into her mind.
"Let's
have a walk outside," she said. "The watchman's not here."
He
held her even more tightly.
"It's
cold outside."
All
he needed was her slight imperious shake of the head, and then they moved
together to the door, looking up furtively into the shadows of the staircase.
But Odim was closeted in his room and one woman or another would be playing a binnaduria
and singing him songs of forsaken fortresses in Kuj-Juvec, where maidens were
betrayed and white gloves, dropped one fateful dimday, were forever treasured.
Captain
Fashnalgid put his heavy boot to the chest of the hound which had shown every sign of
following them away from captivity and whisked Besi Besamitikahl into the outside world. He was a man
of decision in the realm of love. Grasping her arm firmly, he led her across
the courtyard and out of the gate where the oil lamp burned.
As
one they turned to the right, heading up the cobbled street.
"The
church," she said. Neither said another word, for the cold wind blew in
their faces, coming from the
In
the street, winding upwards with it, went a line of pale dogthrush trees, wan
between the two enclosing stone cliffs of houses. Their leaves flapped in the
wind. A file of soldiers, muffled, heads down, walked on the other side of the
road, their boots setting up echoes. The sky was a sludgy grey which spread to
everything beneath it.
In
the church, lights burned. A congregation cried its evensong. Since the church
had a slightly bohemian reputation, Odim never came here.
Outside its walls, tall man-high stones stood in rows, more correct than
soldiers, commemorating those whose days beneath the sky were done. The furtive
lovers picked their way among the memorials and hid against a shadowy sheltered
wall. Besi put her arms round the captain's neck.
After
they whispered to each other for some while, he slid a hand inside her furs and
her dress. She gasped at the cold of his touch. When she reciprocated, he
grunted at the chill of her hand. Their flesh seemed ice and fire alternately,
as they worked closer together. Besi noticed with approval that the captain was
enjoying himself and in no great hurry. Loving was so easy, she thought, and
whispered in his ear, "It's so simple . . ." He only burrowed deeper.
When
they were united, he held her firmly against the wall. She let her head roll
back against the rough stone and gasped his name, so newly learned.
Afterwards,
they leaned together against the wall, and Fashnalgid said matter-of-factly,
"It was good. Are you happy with your master?"
"Why
ask me that?"
"I
hope one day to make something of myself. Maybe I could buy you, once this
present trouble's over."
She
snuggled against him, saying nothing. Life in the army was uncertain. To be a
captain's chattel was a steep step down from her present security.
He
brought a flask from his pocket and drank deeply. She smelt the tang of spirits
and thought, Thank God Odim doesn't booze. Captains are all drinkers . . .
Fashnalgid
gasped. "I'm not much catch, I know that. The fact is, girl, I'm worried
about this errand I'm on. They've landed me with a real sherber this time, my
scab-devouring regiment here. I reckon I'm going mad."
"You're
not from Koriantura, are you?"
"I'm
from Askitosh. Are you listening to me?"
"It's
freezing. We'd better get back."
Grudgingly,
he came along, taking her arm in the street, which made her feel like a free
woman.
"Have
you heard the name of Archpriest-Militant Asperamanka?"
With
the wind about her head, she gave him only a nod. He wasn't as romantic as she
had hoped. But she had been to listen to the Priest-Militant just a tenner
earlier, when he had held an outdoor service in one of the city squares. He had
spoken so eloquently. His gestures had been pleasing and she had enjoyed
watching. Asperamanka! What a gift of the gab! Later, she and Odim had watched
him lead his army through the city and out by the East Gate. The guns had
shaken the ground as they passed. And all those young men
marching off
"The
Priest-Militant took my oath of fealty to the Oligarchy when I was made
captain. That's a while ago." He smoothed his heavy moustache. "Now
I'm really in trouble. Abro Hakmo Astab!"
Besi
was deeply disgusted to hear this curse spoken in her presence. Only the lowest
and most desperate would use it. She tugged her arm from his and quickened her
pace down the street.
"That
man has won a great victory for us against Pannoval. We heard about it in the
mess at Askitosh. But it's being kept secret. Secrets . . .
Sibornal lives on sherbing secrets. Why do you think they should do
that?"
"Can
you tip our watchman so that he doesn't make a fuss to Odim?" She paused
as they got to the outer gate. A new poster had been pasted up there. She could
not read it in the dark, and did not wish to.
As
Fashnalgid felt in his pocket for money as she requested, he said, in a flat
way that seemed characteristic, "I have been posted to Koriantura to help
organise a force which will ambush the Priest-Militant's army when it returns
from Chalce. Our orders are to kill every last man, including Asperamanka. What
do you make of that?"
"It
sounds awful," Besi said. "I'd better go in first in case there's
trouble."
Next
morning, the wind had dropped, and Koriantura was enveloped in a soft brown
fog, through which the two suns gleamed intermittently. Besi watched the thin,
parched form of Eedap Mun Odim as he ate breakfast. She was allowed to eat only
when he had finished. He did not speak, but she knew that he was in his usual
resigned good humour. Even while she recollected the pleasures that Captain
Fashnalgid could offer, she knew that she was, despite everything, fond of
Odim.
As
if to test out his humour, he allowed upstairs one of his distant relations, a
second cousin who professed to be a poet, to speak to him.
"I
have a new poem, cousin, an Ode to History," said the man, bowing, and
began to declaim.
"Whose
is my life? Is history
To
be considered property
Only
of those who make it?
May
not my finer fancy take it
Into
my heart's morality
And
shape it just as it shapes me?"
There
was more of the same. "Very good," said Odim, rising and wiping his
bearded lips on a silken napkin. "Fine sentiments, well displayed. Now I
must get down to the office, if you will excuse me refreshed by your ornamental thoughts."
"Your
praise overwhelms me," said the distant cousin, and withdrew.
Odim
took another sip of his tea. He never touched alcohol.
He
summoned Besi to his side as a servant came forward to help him into his
outdoor coat. His progress down the stairs, Besi obediently following, was
slow, as he underwent the barrage of his relations, those Odims who squawked
like starlings on every stair, cajoling but not quite begging, jostling but not
quite pushing, touching but not quite impacting, calling but not quite
shrieking, lifting tiny befrocked Odims for inspection but not exactly
thrusting them in his face, as he performed his daily spiral downwards.
"Uncle,
little Ghufla can do his arithmetic so well . . ."
"Uncle,
I am so shamed that I must tell you of yet another infidelity when we are
private together."
"Darling
Unky, stop a while while I tell you of my terrifying dream in which some
terrible shining creature like a dragon came and devoured us all."
"Do
you admire my new dress? I could dance in it for you?"
"Have
you news from my creditor yet, please?"
"Despite
your orders, Kenigg kicks me and pulls my hair and makes my life a misery,
Unky. Please let me be your servant and escape him."
"You
forget those who love you, darling Eedap. Save us from our poverty, as we have
pleaded so often."
"How
noble and handsome you look today, Unk Eedap . . ."
The
merchant showed neither impatience at the constant
supplications nor pleasure at the forced compliments.
He
pushed slowly through the thickets of Odim flesh, the odours of Odim sweat and
perfume, saying a word here and there, smiling, permitting himself once to
squeeze the mangolike breasts proffered by a young great-niece, sometimes even
going so far as to press a silver coin into a particularly protruding hand. It
was as if he considered and
indeed he did that life
could be got through only by sufferance, dispensing as few advantages to others
as possible but nevertheless retaining a general humanity for the sake of one's
self-respect.
Only
when he was outside, as Besi closed the gate after him, did Odim display emotion.
There, pasted to his wall, were two posters. He made a convulsive clutch at his
beard.
The
first poster warned that the PLAGUE was threatening the lives of the citizens
of Uskutoshk. The PLAGUE was particularly active in ports, and most especially
in THE RENOWNED AND ANCIENT CITY OF KORIANTURA. Citizens were warned that
public meetings were henceforth banned. More than four people gathering
together in public places would be subject to severe punishment.
Further
regulations designed to restrict the spread of the FAT DEATH would be
introduced shortly. BY ORDER OF THE OLIGARCH.
Odim
read this notice through twice, very seriously. Then he turned to the second
poster.
THE RESTRICTIONS OF PERSONS IN ABODES ACT. After several clauses in obscurantist language, a bolder clause
stood out:
THESE LIMITATIONS as regards houses, demesnes, lodgings, rooms,
and other Dwellings apply in particular to any household where the Householder
is not of Uskuti blood. Such Persons are shown to be particularly liable to
conduct the Spread of the Plague. Their numbers will henceforth be limited to
One Person per Two Square Metres floorspace. BY ORDER OF THE
OLIGARCH.
The
announcement was not unexpected. It was aimed at doing away with the more
bohemian quarters of the city, where the Oligarchy found no favour. Odim's
friends on the local council had warned him of its coming.
Once
more, the Uskuti were demonstrating their racial prejudices prejudices of which the Oligarchy was
quick to take advantage. Phagors had been banned from walking untended in
Sibornalese cities long ago.
It
made no difference that Odim and his forebears had lived in this city for
centuries. The Restrictions of Persons in Abodes Act rendered it impossible for
him to protect his family any longer.
Looking
quickly about him, Odim tore the poster from the wall, screwed it up, and
thrust it under his suede coat.
This
action alarmed Besi almost as much as the captain's oath had done the previous
evening. She had never seen Odim step outside the law before. His unswerving
obedience to what was legal was well-known. She gasped and stared at him with
her mouth open.
"The
winter is coming," was all he said. His face was drawn into bitter lines.
"Take
my arm, girl," he said huskily. "We shall have to do something . .
."
The
fog rendered the quayside a place of beauty where a copse of swaying masts
floated in the sepia glow. The sea lay entranced. Even the customary slap of
rigging against mast was silent.
Odim
wasted no time admiring the view, turning in at the substantial arcade above
which a sign bore the words ODIM FINEST EXPORT PORCELAINS. Besi followed him
past bowing clerks into his inner sanctum.
Odim
stopped abruptly.
His
office had been invaded. An army officer stood there, warming himself before
the lignite fire and picking his teeth with a match. Two armed private soldiers
stood close, their faces impervious in usual bodyguard fashion.
By
way of greeting, the major spat the match on the floor and tucked his hands
behind his back. He was a tall man in a lumpy coat. He had grey in his hair and
a lumpish protruding mouth, as if his teeth, imbued with true military spirit,
were waiting to burst through his lips and bite a civilian.
"What
can I do for you?" asked Odim.
Without
answering the question, the major announced himself in a way that exercised his
teeth prominently.
"I
am Major Gardeterark of the Oligarch's First Guard. Well-known,
not liked. From you I will have a list of all times of sailing for ships
in which you have an interest. Today and coming week."
He spoke in a deep voice, giving each syllable an equal weight, as if words
were feet to be firmly planted on a long march.
"I
can do that, yes. Will you sit and take some tea?"
The
major's teeth moved a little further forward.
"I
want that list, nothing else."
"Certainly, sir. Please make
yourself comfortable while I get my chief clerk "
"I
am comfortable. Don't delay me. I have waited six minutes for your arrival as
it is. The list."
Whatever
its disadvantages, the northern continent of Sibornal had reserves of minerals
and seams of lignite unmatched elsewhere. It also boasted a variety of clays.
Both
china and glass drinking vessels had been in regular use in Koriantura while
the little lords of the Savage Continent were still quaffing their rathel from
wooden bowls. As early as the spring of the Great Year, potteries as far afield
as Carcampan and Uskutoshk were producing porcelains fired in lignite-fuelled
kilns at temperatures of 1400° C. Through the centuries, these fine wares were
increasingly sought after and collected.
Eedap
Mun Odim took little part in porcelain manufacture, though there were auxiliary
kilns on his premises. He exported fine china. He exported the local, prized
Korianturan porcelain to Shivenink and Bribahr, but mainly to ports in
Campannlat, where, as a man of Kuj-Juveci descent, he was more welcome than his
Sibornalese competitors. He did not own the ships which carried his wares. He
made his business from the entrepreneurial trade, and from banking and
financing; he even lent money to his rivals and made a profit.
Most
of his wealth came from the Savage Continent, from ports along its northern
coastline, from Vaynnwosh, Dorrdal, Dowwel, and from even farther afield,
Powachet and Popevin, where his competitors would not trade. It was precisely
this adventurous element of Odim's business which made his hand tremble
slightly as he handed his sailing timetable over to the major. He knew without
being told that foreign names would be bad for the soldier's liver.
The
gaze of the major, as brown and foggy as the air outside, travelled down the
printed page.
"Your
trade goes mainly to alien ports," he said at last, in the leathery voice.
"Those ports are all thick with the plague. Our great Oligarch,
whom the Azoiaxic preserve, fights to save his peoples from the plague, which
has its source in the Savage Continent. There will be no more sailings
for any Campannlat port from now on."
"No
more sailings? But you can't "
"I
can, and I say no more sailings. Until further notice."
"But
my trade, my business, good sir . . ."
"Lives
of women and children are more important than your trade. You are a foreigner,
aren't you?"
"No.
I am not a foreigner. I and my family have lived in Uskutoshk for three generations."
"You're
no Uskutoshi. Your looks, your name, tell me that."
"Sir! I am Kuj-Juveci only
by distant origins."
"From
today, this city is under military law. You obey orders, understand? If you
don't, if one of your cargoes leaves this port for foreign parts, you are
liable to be tried by military court and sentenced . . ."
The
major let the words hang in the air before adding two further words in his best
leather: ". . . to death."
"It
will mean ruin to me and my family," Odim said, trying to wrench a smile
out of himself.
The
major beckoned to one of the privates, who produced a document from his tunic.
The
major flung it on the table.
"It's
all down there. Sign it to prove you've understood." He let his teeth air
while Odim blindly signed, before adding, "Yes, as a foreigner, you report
every morning in future to my under officer in charge of this whole area. He
has just established an office in the warehouse next door, so you've not far to
go."
"Sir,
let me repeat, I am not a foreigner. I was born round the corner. I am chairman
of the local trades committee. Ask them."
As
he made a supplicatory gesture, the wadded-up poster fell from under his coat.
Besi stepped forward and put it carefully on the fire. The major ignored her,
as he had all along. He merely stuck his tongue between teeth and upper lip, as
if considering Odim's impertinence, and then said, "You report every
morning in future to my under officer, as I just said. He's Captain Fashnalgid
and he is next door." At the mention of this name, Besi leant over the
fire. It must have been the flames from the burning poster which caused a brief
ruddiness in her cheeks.
When
Major Gardeterark and his escort had left, Odim shut the door into the packinghouse
and sat down by the fire. Very slowly he leaned forward, picked a chewed match
from the carpet, and tossed it to the back of the grate. Besi knelt beside him
and held his hand. Neither spoke for a long while.
At
last Odim said, with an attempt at brightness, "Well, my dear little Besi,
we are in difficulty. How can we meet it? Where can we all live? Here,
possibly. Perhaps we could do away with that kiln we scarcely use and house
some relations in there. The room could be made nice . . . But if I am not
allowed to trade, then . . . well, ruin faces us all. They know that, the
scoundrels. These Uskuti would have us all for slaves . . ."
"Wasn't
he horrible, that man? His eyes, his teeth . . . like a crab."
Odim
sat up in his chair and clicked his fingers. "One stroke of luck, though.
First, we start work with this Fashnalgid in the next warehouse. By good
fortune, that very captain is at present billeted with me you may have caught a glimpse of him.
He reads books and perhaps he's civilised. And my wife feeds him well. Perhaps
we could persuade him to help us."
He
lifted up Besi's chin so that she was forced to look him in the eye.
"Always
something can be done, my chick. Go round to this nice Captain Fashnalgid and
invite him here. Say I have a present for him. He'll bend the regulations for
us, for sure. And, Besi . . . he's as ugly as a mountain devil, but never mind.
Very very sweet to him, eh, chick? As
sweet as you can be, and that's very sweet. Even a little tempting you know? Even if
you have to go to the limit. Our lives depend on such things . . ."
He
tapped his long nose and smiled coaxingly.
"Run
along, my dove. And remember stop at nothing to win him over."
The
Restrictions of Persons in Abodes Act met with the mixed reception customary
for proclamations from the Oligarchy. In the more privileged sectors of the
city people nodded their heads and said, "How wise what a good idea." Nearer the
docks, they exclaimed, "So that's what the biwackers are up to now!"
Eedap
Mun Odim gave no overt expression to his dismay when he returned to his crowded
five-storey home. He knew that the police would call soon enough to inform him
that he was contravening the new law.
That
night, he patted his children, settled his modest anatomy beside the slumbrous
bulk of his wife, and prepared his mind for pauk. He had said nothing to his
spouse, knowing that her display of anguish, her tears, her undoubted rushing
from one end of the room to the other, kissing her three children with huge hydropic
kisses en route, would do nothing to resolve the problem. As her breath became
as regular as a balmy breeze over the autumn valleys of Kuj-Juvec, Odim
gathered together his inner resources and underwent that small death which
forms the entrance gate to pauk.
For
the poor, the troubled, the persecuted, there was always that refuge: the
trance state of pauk. In pauk lay communication with those of the family whose
life on earth was ended. Neither State nor Church had jurisdiction over the
region of the dead. That vast dimension of death placed no restriction on
persons; nor did God the Azoiaxic prevail there. Only gossies and the more
remote fessups existed in orderly oblivion, sinking towards the unrisen sun of
the Original Beholder, she who took to her bosom all who lived.
Like
a feather, the tremulous soul of Eedap Mun Odim sank down,
to hold what intercourse it might with the gossie of its father, recently
departed the world above.
The
father now resembled a kind of ill-made gilt cage. It was difficult to see it
through the obsidian of nonexistence, but Odim's soul made its obeisances, and
the gossie twinkled a little in response. Odim poured out his troubles.
The
gossie listened, expressing consolation in little dreadful gasps of bright
dust. It in its turn communed with the guttering ranks of ancestors below it.
Finally it uttered advice to Odim.
"Gentle
and beloved son, your forebears honour you for your tender duty towards our
family. Family must rely upon family, since governments do not comprehend
families. Your good brother Odirin Nan lives distantly from you, but he, like
you, shares an abiding fondness for our poor people. Go to him. Go to Odirin
Nan."
The
voiceless voice sank away in an eddy. To which Odim faintly responded that he
loved his brother Odirin Nan, but that brother lived in far Shivenink; might it
not be better instead to cross the mountains and return to a remote branch of
the family which still lived in the vales of Kuj-Juvec?
"These
here with me who still can make voice advise no return
to Kuj-Juvec. The way over the mountains becomes more hazardous every month, as
new arrivals here report." The tenuous framework guttered even as it
spoke. "Also, the valleys are becoming stonier, and the cattle herds grow
thin of flank. Sail westwards to your brother, beloved one, most dutiful of
young men. Be advised."
"Father,
to hear the melody of your voice is to obey its music."
With
tender expressions on either side, the soul of Odim drifted upwards through
obsidian, like an ember through a starry void. The ranks of past generations
were lost to view. Then came the pain of finding a
feeble human body lying inert on a mattress, and seeking entry to it.
Odim
returned to his mortal body, weakened by the excursion but strengthened by the
wisdom of his father. Beside him, his ample wife breathed on, undistressed in
her sleep. He put an arm about her and snuggled into her warmth, like a child
against its mother.
There
were those lovers of
secrecy who rose almost
at the time that Odim was settling to sleep. There were those lovers of night who liked to be about before dawn, in
order to get ahead of their fellow men. There were those lovers of chill whose constitutions were such that
they found satisfaction in the small hours when human resistance is at its
lowest.
At
the chime of three in the morning, Major Gardeterark stood in his leather
trousers, keeping a watchful eye on his reflection in the mirror while he
shaved.
Major
Gardeterark would have no nonsense with pauk. He regarded himself as a
rationalist. Rationalism was his creed, and his family's. He had no belief in
the Azoiaxic Church
Parade was a different matter and less than a belief in pauk. It would never occur to the major
that his thinking had confined him to an umwelt of living obsidian, through
which no light shone.
At
present, with each stroke of his cut-throat razor, he contemplated how to make
miserable the lives of the inhabitants of Koriantura, as well as the existence
of his under officer, Captain Harbin Fashnalgid. Gardeterark believed he had
rational family reasons for hating Fashnalgid, over and above the motive of the
latter's inefficiency. And he was a rational man.
A
great king had once ruled in Sibornal, before the last Weyr-Winter. His name
had come down as King Denniss. King Denniss's court had been held in Old
Askitosh, and his retreat had been in the mighty edifices now known as the
Autumn Palaces. So legend had it.
To
his court, King Denniss had summoned learned men from all quarters of the
globe. The great king had fought for Sibornal's survival through the grim
centuries of Weyr-Winter, and had launched an invasion force across the seas to
attack Pannoval.
The
king's scholars had compiled catalogues and encyclopaedias. Everything that
lived had been named, listed, categorised. Only the slow-pulsed world of the
dead had been excluded, in deference to the Church of the Formidable Peace.
A
long period of confusion followed the death of King Denniss. The winter came.
Then the great families of the seven Sibornalese nations had joined together to
form an Oligarchy, in an attempt to rule the continent on rational and
scientific lines, as proposed by King Denniss. They had sent learned men abroad
to enlighten the natives of Campannlat, even as far afield as the old cultural
centre of Keevasien, in the southwest of Borlien.
The
autumn of the present Great Year had witnessed one of the most enlightened of
the Oligarchy's decrees. The Oligarchy had altered the Sibornalese calendar.
Previously, Sibornalese nations, with the exception of backwaters like
Henceforth,
the small years were numbered as the astronomers directed, in precedence
following the small year in which Helliconia and its feebler luminary, Batalix,
were most distant from Freyr: in other words, the year of apastron.
There
were 1825 small years, each of 480 days, in a Great Year. The present year, the
year of Asperamanka's incursion into Chalce, was 1308 After Apastron. Under
this astronomical system, nobody could forget where they stood with regard to
the seasons. It was a rational arrangement.
And
Major Gardeterark rationally finished shaving, dried his face, and commenced in
a rational way to brush his formidable teeth, allowing so many strokes for each
tooth in front, so many for each behind.
The
innovation of the calendar alarmed the peasantry. But the Oligarchy knew what
it was doing. It became secretive; it amassed secrets. It deployed its agents
everywhere. Throughout the autumn it developed a secret police force to watch
over its interests. Its leader, the Oligarch, gradually became a secret person,
a figment, a dark legend hovering over Askitosh, whereas or so the stories said King Denniss had been loved by his
people and seen everywhere.
All
the acts and edicts promulgated by the Oligarchy were backed by rational
argument. Rationality was a cruel philosophy when practised by the likes of
Gardeterark. Rationality gave him good reason for bullying people. He drank to
rationality every evening in the mess, sinking his huge teeth deep over the rim
of his glass as the liquor ran down his throat.
Now,
having finished his toilet, he allowed his servant to help him into his boots
and greatcoat. Rationally clad, he went out into the frosty predawn streets.
His
under officer, Captain Harbin Fashnalgid, was not rational, but he drank.
Fashnalgid's
drinking had begun as an amiable social habit, indulged in with other young
subalterns. As Fashnalgid's hatred of the Oligarch grew, so did his need for
drink. Sometimes, the habit got out of hand.
One
night, back in the officers' mess in Askitosh, Fashnalgid had been peaceably
drinking and reading, ignoring his fellow men. A hearty captain by the name of
Naipundeg halted by Fashnalgid's chair and laid his hoxney-crop across the open
page of the book.
"Always
reading,
Closing
the volume, Fashnalgid said in his flat voice, "This is not a work you
would have come across, Naipundeg. It's a history of sacred architecture
through the ages. I picked it up from a stall the other day. It was printed
three hundred years ago, and it explains how there are secrets that we in these
later days have forgotten. Secrets of contentment, for
example. If you're interested."
"No,
I'm not interested, to be frank It sounds wretchedly
dull."
Fashnalgid
stood up, tucking the little book into a pocket of his uniform. He raised his
glass and drained it dry. "There are such blockheads in our regiment. I
never meet anyone interesting here. You don't mind me saying that? You're proud
of being a blockhead, aren't you? You'd find any book not about filth dull,
wouldn't you?"
He
staggered slightly. Naipundeg, himself far gone in drink, began to bellow with
rage.
It
was then that Fashnalgid blurted out his hatred of the Oligarchy, and of the
Oligarch's increasing power.
Naipundeg,
throwing another tumbler of fiery liquor down his throat, challenged him to a
duel. Seconds were summoned. Supporting their primaries, they jostled them into
the grounds of the mess.
There
a fresh quarrel broke out. The two officers drove off their seconds and blazed
away at each other.
Most
of the bullets flew wild.
All
except one.
That
bullet hit Naipundeg's face, shattering the zygomatic bone, entering the head
by way of the left eye, and leaving through the rear of the skull.
In
that casual military society, Fashnalgid was able to pass off the duel as an
affair of honour regarding a lady. The court-martial convened under
Priest-Militant Asperamanka was easily satisfied; Naipundeg, an officer from
Bribahr, had not been popular. Fashnalgid was exonerated of blame. Only
Fashnalgid's conscience remained unappeased; he had killed a fellow officer.
The less his drinking companions blamed him, the more he judged himself guilty.
He
applied for leave of absence and went to visit his father's estates in the
undulating countryside to the north of Askitosh. There he intended to reform,
to become less prodigal with women and drink.
The
estate had seemed a paradise to
Harbin
Fashnalgid had often grieved that he was ineffectual. He could not exert his
will. He was too modest to realise how many people, women especially, liked him
for this trait. In a more lenient age, he would have been a great success.
But
he was observant. Within two days, he had noticed that his youngest brother had
a quarrel with his wife. Perhaps the difference between them was merely
temporary. But Fashnalgid began offering the woman sympathy. The more he talked
to her, the weaker became his resolve to reform. He worked on her. He spun her
exaggerated tales about the glamour of military life, at the same time touching
her, smiling at her, and feigning a great sorrow which was only part feigned.
So he won her confidence and became her lover. It was absurdly easy.
It
was an irrational way to behave.
Even
in that rambling two-storey parental house, it was impossible that the affair
should remain secret. Intoxicated by love, or something like it, Fashnalgid
became incapable of behaving with discretion. He lavished absurd gifts on his
new partner a wicker
hammock; a two-headed goat; a doll dressed as a soldier; an ivory chest crammed
with manuscript versions of Ponipotan legends; a pair of pecubeas in a gilt
cage; a silver figurine of a hoxney with a woman's face; a pack of playing
cards in ivory inlaid with mother-of-pearl; polished stones; a clavichord;
ribbons; poems; and a fossilized Madi skull with alabaster eyes.
He
hired musicians from the village to serenade her.
The
woman in her turn, driven to ecstasies by the first man in her life who knew
nothing about the planting of potatoes and pellamountain, danced for him on his
verandah in the nude, wearing only the bracelets he gave her, and sang the wild
zyganke.
It
could not last. A lugubrious quality in the countryside could not tolerate such
exuberance. One night, Fashnalgid's two brothers rolled up their sleeves,
rushed into the love nest, kicked over the clavichord, and bounced Fashnalgid
out of the house.
"Abro
Hakmo Astab!" roared Fashnalgid. Not even the labourers on the estate were
allowed to employ that vile expression aloud.
He
picked himself up and dusted himself down in the darkness. The two-headed goat
chewed at his trousers.
Fashnalgid
stationed himself under his old father's window, to shout insults and
supplications. "You and Mother have had a happy life, damn you. You're of
the generation which regarded love as a matter of will. 'Will marks us from the
animal, and love from lovelessness,' as sayeth the poet. You married equally
for life, do you hear, you old fool? Well, things are
different now. Will's given way to weather . . .
"You
have to grab love when you can now. . . . Didn't you have a parental duty to
make me happy? Eh? Reply, you biwacking old loon. If
you've been so sherbing happy, why couldn't you have given me a happy
disposition? You've given me nothing else. Why should I always be so
miserable?"
No
answer came from the dark house. A doll dressed as a soldier sailed from one of
the windows and struck him on the side of the head.
There
was nothing for it but to return to his regiment in Askitosh. But news travelled
fast among the landed families. Scandal followed Fashnalgid. As ill fortune
would have it, Major Gardeterark was an uncle of the woman he had disgraced, of
that very woman who had so recently danced naked on his verandah and sung the
wild zyganke. From then on, Harbin Fashnalgid's position in the regiment became
one of increasing difficulty.
His
money went on obscure books as well as women and drink. He was accumulating a
case against the Oligarchy, discovering just how the authoritarian grip on the
Northern Continent had increased over the sleepy centuries of autumn. Searching
through the rubbish in an antiquarian's attic, he came across a list of
entitlements of Uskuti estates of over a certain annual income; the Fashnalgid
estate was listed. These estates had "pledged assignments to the
Oligarchy." This phrase was not explained.
Fashnalgid
fulfilled his military duties while brooding over that phrase. He became
convinced that he was himself part of the property assigned.
Between
bouts of drinking and wenching, he recalled some of his father's boasts. Had
not the old man once claimed to have seen the Oligarch himself? Nobody had seen
the Oligarch. There was no portrait of the Oligarch. No vision of the Oligarch
existed in Fashnalgid's mind, except possibly a pair of great claws reaching
over the lands of Sibornal.
After
garrison duties one evening, Fashnalgid ordered his personal servant to saddle
up his hoxney and rode furiously out to his father's estate.
His
brothers snarled at him like curs. Nor was he allowed as much as a glimpse of
his light of love, except for a bare arm disappearing round a door as she was
dragged away. He recognised the bracelets on the lovely wrist. How they had
rattled when she danced!
His
father lay on a day sofa, covered in blankets. The old man was scarcely able to
answer his son's questions. He rambled and procrastinated. Sadly, Fashnalgid
recognised his own portrait in his father's lies and pretences. The old man
still claimed once to have seen Torkerkanzlag II, the Supreme Oligarch. But
that had been over forty years ago, when his father was a youth.
"The
titles are arbitrary," the old man said. "They are intended to
conceal real names. The Oligarchy is secret, and the names of the Members and
the Oligarch are kept secret, so that no one knows them. Why, they don't know
each other . . . Just as well . . ."
"So
you never met the Oligarch?"
"No
one ever claimed to have met him. But it was a special occasion, and he was in
the next room. The Oligarch himself. So it was said at
the time. I know he was there, I've always said so. For all I know, he could be
a gigantic lobster with pincers stretching to the sky, but he was certainly
there that day and had I
opened the door, I would have seen him, pincers and all . . ."
"Father,
what were you doing there, what was this special occasion?"
"Icen
Hill, it's called. Icen Hill, as you know. Everyone knows where it is, but even
the Members of the Oligarchy don't know each other. Secrecy is important.
Remember that,
"When
were you at Icen Hill? Did you assign a tithe of this estate to the Oligarchy?
I must know."
"Duties,
boy, there are duties. Not just buying women dolls and poems. The estate is
entitled to protection if you assign it. Winter's coming, you need to look
ahead. I'm getting old. Security . . . There's no need for you to be upset. It
was agreed before you were born. I was someone then, more than you'll ever be you should be a major by now, son,
but from what I hear from the Gardeterarks. . . .
That's why I signed the agreement that my firstborn son should serve in the Oligarch's
army, in the defence of that state act, when I "
"You
sold me into the army before I was born?" Fashnalgid said.
"
"You
sold me into the army? What precisely did you get in return?"
"Peace
of mind. A sense of duty. Security, as I said, only
you weren't listening. Your mother approved. You ask her. It was her
idea."
"Beholder
. . ." Fashnalgid went and poured himself a drink. As he was throwing the
liquid down his throat, his father sat up and said in a distinct voice, "I
received a promise."
"What
sort of a promise?"
"The future. The safety of our estate.
"You
sold me. Father, you sold
your son like a slave. . . ." He began to weep and rushed from the house.
Without looking back, he galloped away from the place where he had been born.
A
few months later, he was posted with his battalion to Koriantura, under his
enemy, Major Gardeterark, and ordered to prepare a warm reception for
Asperamanka's returning army.
Throughout
recorded time, Sibornal had existed more unitedly than had the rabble of
nations which comprised Campannlat. The nations of the northern continent had
their differences, but remained capable of uniting in the face of an external
threat.
In
milder centuries, Sibornal was a favoured continent. From early in spring of
the Great Year, Freyr rose and never set, permitting the northern lands to
develop early. Now that the Year was declining, the Oligarchy was busy
tightening the reins of its power bringing in its own kind of darkness.
Both
Oligarchy and common people understood that winter, setting in steadily, could
burst society apart like a frozen water pipe. The disruptions of cold, the
failure of food supplies, could spell the collapse of civilisation. After
Myrkwyr, only a few years away, darkness and ice would be upon the land for
three and a half local centuries: that was the Weyr-Winter, when Sibornal
became the domain of polar winds.
Campannlat
would collapse under the weight of winter. Its nations could not collaborate.
Whole peoples would revert to barbarism. Sibornal, under more severe
conditions, would survive through rational planning.
Still
seeking consolation, Harbin Fashnalgid consorted with priests and holy men. The
Church was a reservoir of knowledge. There he discovered the answer to
Sibornal's survival. Obsessed as he was with his virtual exile from his
father's estates, from those fields and woods where his brothers laboured, the
answer had the force of revelation. It was not to the land that Sibornal would
turn in extremity.
The
huge continent was so largely covered by polar ice that it might best be
regarded as a narrow circle of land facing sea. In the seas lay Sibornal's
winter salvation. Cold seas held more oxygen than warm ones. Come winter, the
seas would swarm with marine life. The durable food chains of the ocean would
yield their plenty even
when ice covered those estates of his family from which he had been banished.
The
awful working of history gnawed at Fashnalgid. He was used to thinking in
periods of days or tenners, not in decades and centuries. He fought his
disposition to drink and took to spending as much time with priests as with
whores. A Priest-Servitant attached to the military chapel in the Askitosh
barracks became his confidant. To this priest, Fashnalgid one day confessed his
hatred of the Oligarchy.
"The
Church also hates the Oligarchy," said the priest mildly. "Yet we
work together. Church and State must never be divided. You resent the Oligarchy
because, through its pressures, you had to enter the army. But the flaws in
your character under which you labour are yours not the army's, not the Oligarchy's."
"Praise
the Oligarchy for its positive aspects. Praise it for its continuity and
benevolent power. It is said that the Oligarchy never sleeps. Rejoice that it
watches over our continent."
Fashnalgid
kept silent. He took a while to understand why the priest's answer alarmed him.
It came to him that "benevolent power" was a contradiction in terms.
He was an Uskuti, yet he had been virtually sold into the slavery of the army. As for the Oligarchy not sleeping: anyone who went without sleep
was by definition inhuman, and therefore as opposed to humanity as the phagors.
It
was a while later that he realised the priest had spoken of the Oligarchy in
the same terms he might have used for God the Azoiaxic. The Azoiaxic also was
praised for his continuity and his benevolent power. The Azoiaxic also watched
over the continent. And was it not claimed that the Church never slept?
From
that moment on, Fashnalgid ceased to attend church, and was more confirmed than
ever in his opinion that the Oligarchy was monstrous.
The
Oligarch's First Guard had escaped being sent with Asperamanka's punitive
expedition to
Fashnalgid
had dared to question Major Gardeterark on the reasons for the move.
"The
Fat Death is spreading," said the major brusquely. "We don't want any
rioting in the frontier towns, do we?" His dislike of his junior officer
was such that he would look him not in the eyes but in the moustache.
On
his last evening in Askitosh, Fashnalgid was with a woman he currently
favoured, by name Rostadal. She lived in an attic only a few streets from the
barracks.
Fashnalgid
liked Rostadal and pitied her. She was a displaced person. She had come from a
village in the north. She had nothing. No possessions. No political or
religious beliefs. No relations. She still managed to be kind, and made her
little rented room homely.
He
sat up suddenly in bed and said, "I'll have to go, Rostadal. Get me a
drink, will you?"
"What's
the matter?"
"Just
get me a drink. It's the weight of misery. I can't stay."
Without
complaint, she slipped out of bed and brought him a glass of wine. He threw it
down his throat.
She
looked down at him and said, "Tell me what's worrying you."
"I
can't. It's too terrible. The world's full of evil." He began dressing. She
slipped into her soiled heedrant, wordless now, wondering if he would pay her.
There was only an oil lamp to light the scene.
After
lacing up his boots, he collected the book he had set by the bedside and put
down some sibs for her. His look was one of misery. He saw her fright but could
do nothing to comfort her.
"Will
you come back,
He
looked up at the cracked ceiling and shook his head. Then he went out.
A
spiteful rain fell over Askitosh, setting its gutters foaming. Fashnalgid took
no notice. He walked briskly through the deserted streets, trying to wear out
his thoughts.
On
the previous night, a messenger on an exhausted yelk had ridden through these
same streets. He rode to the army headquarters at the top of the hill. Although
the incident had been hushed up, the officers' mess soon heard about it. The
messenger was an agent of the Oligarch. He brought a report concerning
Asperamanka, announcing the victory of the latter's forces against the combined
armies of Campannlat, and the relief of Isturiacha. Asperamanka, said the
report, was expecting a triumphal reception on his return to Sibornal.
The
messenger bearing this letter dismounted in the square and fell flat on his
face. He was suffering all the symptoms of the Fat Death. A senior officer shot
the man as he lay.
Only
an hour or two later, Fashnalgid's mother came to him distraught in a dream,
saying, "Brother shall slay brother." He was himself dangling from a
hook.
Two
days passed and Fashnalgid was posted to Koriantura.
As
he took his orders from Major Gardeterark, he saw clearly the plan the Oligarch
had devised. There was one factor which would disrupt the scheme for carrying
Sibornal through the Weyr-Winter. That factor was more divisive even than the
cold: the Fat Death. In the madness the Fat Death carried with it, brother
would devour brother.
The
death of his midnight messenger warned the Oligarch that the return of
Asperamanka's army would bring the plague from the Savage Continent. So a
rational decision had been arrived at: the army must not return. The First
Guard, of which Fashnalgid was an officer, was in Koriantura for one reason
only: to annihilate Asperamanka's army as it approached the frontier. The
antiplague regulations, the Restrictions of Persons in Abodes Act, imposed on
the city and on Eedap Mun Odim, were moves to make the massacre when it came
more acceptable to the population.
These
terrible reflections ran through Harbin Fashnalgid's head as he lay in his
billet under Odim's roof. Unlike Major Gardeterark, he was not an early riser.
But he could not escape into sleep from the vision in his head. The Oligarchy
he now saw as a spider, sitting somewhere in the darkness, sustaining itself
through the ages at whatever cost to ordinary people.
That
was the implication behind his father's remark that he had bought the promise
of the future. He had bought it with his son's life. His father had ensured his
own safety as an ex-Member of the Oligarchy, at no matter what expense to others.
"I'll
do something about it," Fashnalgid said, as he finally dragged himself out
of bed. Light was filtering through his small window. All round him, he could
hear Odim's vast family beginning to stir.
"I'll
do something about it," he said as he dressed. And when, a few hours
later, the girl Besi Besamitikahl entered his office, he read in the
unconscious gestures of her body a willingness to do his will. In that moment,
he saw how he might make use of her and Odim to disrupt the Oligarch's plan and
save Asperamanka's army.
The
escarpment to the east of Koriantura, which tumbled down to the Isthmus of
Chalce, marked the point where the continents of Sibornal and Campannlat
joined. The broken land south of the escarpment through which any army must make its way if approaching Uskutoshk was bounded to the west by marshes
which led eventually to the sea, and was terminated after a few miles by the
Ivory Cliffs, standing like sentries before the steppes of Chalce.
Harbin
Fashnalgid and the three common soldiers under him reined their yelk at the
foot of the Ivory Cliffs and dismounted. They discovered a cave from which to
shelter from the stiff breeze, and Fashnalgid ordered one of the men to light a
small fire. He himself took a pull from a pocket flask.
He
had already made some use of Besi Besamitikahl. She had shown him a way through
the back alleys of Koriantura which curved downhill. The route avoided the rest
of the First Guard mustering along the ramparts of the escarpment. Fashnalgid
was now technically a deserter.
He
gave a little misleading information to his detail. They would wait here until
Asperamanka's army came from the south. They were in no danger. He had a
special message from the Oligarch for Asperamanka himself.
They
tethered their yelk in lying positions so that they could crouch against the
animals and derive benefit from their body warmth. There they waited for
Asperamanka. Fashnalgid read a book of love poetry.
Several
hours elapsed. The men began to complain to each other. The fog cleared, the
sky became a hazy blue. In the distance, they heard the sound of hoofs. Riders
were approaching from the south.
The
Ivory Cliffs were the bastions of the inhospitable spine of the highlands which
curled about the
Fashnalgid
stuffed the poetry volume into his pocket and jumped up.
He
felt as so often in the
past the feebleness of
his own will. The hours of waiting, not to mention the languorous tenor of the verse,
had sapped his determination to act. Nevertheless, he gave crisp orders to his
men to position themselves out of sight and stepped from concealment. He
expected to see the vanguard of an army. Instead, two riders appeared.
The
riders came on slowly. Both slumped wearily in the saddles of their yelk. They
were in army uniform, the yelks were half-shaved, in
the military fashion. Fashnalgid ordered them to halt.
One
of the riders dismounted and came forward slowly. Although he was little more
than a stripling, his face was grey with dust and fatigue. "Are you from
Uskutoshk?" he called, in a hoarse voice.
"Yes,
from Koriantura. Are you of Asperamanka's army?"
"We're
a good three days ahead of the main body. Maybe more."
Fashnalgid
considered. If he let them through, the two riders would be stopped by Major
Gardeterark's lookouts, and might reveal his whereabouts. He did not consider
himself capable of shooting them in cold blood why, this young fellow was a lieutenant ensign. The only way to
halt them was to tell them of the fate which hung over the army, and enlist
their cooperation.
He
stepped one pace nearer the lieutenant. The latter immediately produced a
revolver and braced it against his crooked left arm to aim. As he squinted down
the barrel, he said, "Come no nearer. You have other men with you."
Fashnalgid
spread wide his hands. "Look, don't do that. We mean you no harm. I want
to talk. You look as if you might like a drink."
"We'll
both stay where we are." Without ceasing to squint down his gun barrel,
the lieutenant called to his companion, "Come and get this man's
gun."
Licking
his lips nervously, Fashnalgid hoped that his men would come to his rescue; on
the other hand, he hoped they would not, since that might lead to his being
shot. He watched the second rider dismount. Boots, trousers,
cloak, fur hat. Face pale, fine-featured, beardless. Something in her
movements told Fashnalgid, an expert in such matters, that this was a woman.
She came hesitantly towards him.
As
she got to him, Fashnalgid pounced, grasping her outstretched wrist, twisting
her arm and swinging her violently about. Using her as a shield between him and
the other man, he pulled his own gun from its holster.
"Throw
your weapon down, or I'll shoot you both." When his order was obeyed,
Fashnalgid called to his men. The soldiers emerged cautiously, looking
unwarlike.
The
rider, having dropped his gun, stood confronting Fashnalgid. Fashnalgid, still
pointing his revolver, reached inside his captive's coat with his left hand,
and had a feel of her breasts.
"Who the sherb are you?" He burst out laughing, even as the woman began to weep.
"You're evidently a man who likes to ride with his creature comforts . . .
and a well-developed creature it is."
"My
name is Luterin Shokerandit, Lieutenant. I am on an urgent mission for the
Supreme Oligarch, so you'd better let me through."
"Then
you're in trouble." He ordered one of his men to collect Shokerandit's
pistol, turned the woman about, and removed her hat so that he could get a
better look at her. Toress Lahl stood before him, her eyes heavy with anger. He
patted her cheek, saying to Shokerandit, "We have no quarrel. Far from it. I have a warning for you. I'll put my gun away
and we will shake hands like proper men."
They
shook hands warily, looking each other over. Shokerandit took Toress Lahl's arm
and drew her beside him, saying nothing. As for Fashnalgid, the feel of breasts
had heartened him; he was beginning to congratulate himself on his handling of
a difficult situation when one of his men, keeping lookout, called that riders
were approaching from the north, from the direction of Koriantura.
A
line of mounted men was nearing the Ivory Cliffs, a banner flying in its midst.
Fashnalgid whipped a spyglass from his coat pocket and surveyed the advance.
He
uttered a curse. Leading the advance was none other than his superior, Major
Gardeterark. Fashnalgid's first thought was that Besi had betrayed him. But it
was more likely that one of the citizens of Koriantura had seen him leaving the
city and reported the fact.
The
figures were still some distance away.
He
had no doubt what his fate would be if he was caught, but there was still time
to act. His manner as much as his words persuaded Shokerandit and the woman
that they would be safer joining him than trying to escape particularly when Fashnalgid offered
them two of his fresh yelk to ride. Shouting to his men to stand their ground
and tell the major that there was a large body of armed men at the other end of
the Cliffs, Fashnalgid flung himself onto his yelk and galloped off at full
speed, Shokerandit and Toress Lahl following. He kicked one of the unmounted
yelk before him.
Some
way along the narrow defile of the Cliffs was a side passage. Fashnalgid drove
the unmounted yelk straight forward, but led the other down the defile. He
calculated that the sound of the escaping yelk would lead the enemy force to
ride straight on.
The
defile dwindled to a mere fissure. By setting their mounts determinedly
forward, they could scramble up the crumbling slope onto higher ground. They
emerged in a confusion of broken rock where small trees and bushes, arched over
by the prevailing wind, pointed southwards. From somewhere below them came the thunder of the major's troop galloping past.
Fashnalgid
wiped the cold sweat from his brow and picked a course westward among the
rocks. Both the suns lay close in the sky, Freyr low as ever in the southwest,
Batalix sinking to the west.
The
three riders urged their mounts through a series of eroded buttes and round a
shattered boulder the size of a house, where there were signs of past human
habitation. In the distance, beyond where the land fell away, was the glint of
the sea. Fashnalgid halted and took a drink from his flask. He offered it to
Shokerandit, but the latter shook his head.
"I've
taken you on trust," he said. "But now that we have eluded your
friends, you had better tell me what is on your mind. My job is to get word to
the Oligarch as soon as possible."
"My
job is to evade the Oligarch. Let me tell you that if you present yourself
before him, you will probably be shot." He told Shokerandit of the
reception being arranged for Asperamanka. Shokerandit shook his head.
"The
Oligarchy ordered us into Campannlat. If you believe that they would massacre
us on our return, then you are plainly crazed."
"If
the Oligarch thinks so little of an individual, he will think no more of an
army."
"No
sane man would wipe out one of his own armies."
Fashnalgid
started to gesticulate.
'You
are younger than I. You have less experience. Sane men do the most damage. Do
you believe that you live in a world where men behave with reason? What is
rationality? Isn't it merely an expectation that others will behave as we do?
You can't have been long in the army if you believe the mentalities of all men
are alike. Frankly, I think my friends mad. Some were driven mad by the army,
some were so mad they were attracted to that area of idiocy, some simply have a
natural talent for madness. I once heard Priest-Militant Asperamanka preach. He
spoke with such force that I believe him to be a good man. There are good men .
. . But most officers are more like me, I can tell you reprobates that only madmen would
follow."
There
was silence after this outburst, before Shokerandit said coldly, "I
certainly would not trust Asperamanka. He was prepared to let his own men
die."
" 'Wisdom to madness quickly
turns, If suffering is all one learns,' " quoted Fashnalgid, adding,
"An army carrying plague. The Oligarchy would be happy to be rid of it,
now there's little danger of an attack from Campannlat. Also, it suits Askitosh
to get rid of the Bribahr contingent. . . ."
As
if there was nothing more to be said, Fashnalgid turned his back on the other
two and took a long swig from his flask.
As
Batalix descended towards the strip of distant sea, clouds drew across the sky.
"So
what do you propose doing, if we are not to be trapped between armies?"
Toress Lahl asked boldly.
Fashnalgid
pointed into the distance. "A boat is waiting across the marshes, lady,
with a friend of mine in it. That's where I'm going. You are free to come if
you wish. If you believe my story, you'll come."
He
swung himself up slowly into the saddle, strapped his collar under his chin,
smoothed his moustache, and gave a nod of farewell. Then he kicked his beast
into action. The yelk lowered its head and started to move down the rocky slope
in the direction of the distant glimmering sea.
Luterin
Shokerandit called after the disappearing figure, "And where's that boat
of yours bound for?"
The
wind stirring the low bushes almost drowned the answer that came back.
"Ultimately,
Shivenink . . ."
The
gaunt figure on its yelk moved down into a maze of marshes which fringed the
sea; whereupon birds rose up under the shaggy hoofs of the animal as small
amphibians disappeared underneath them. Things hopped in rain-pocked puddles.
Everything that could move fled from the man's path.
Captain
Harbin Fashnalgid's mood was too bleak for him even to question why mankind's
position should remain so isolated in the midst of all other life. Yet that
very question or rather a
failure to perceive the correct answer to the problem it posed had brought into existence a world
which moved above the planet in a circumpolar orbit.
The
world was an artificial one. Its designation was Earth Observation Station
Avernus. Circling the planet 1500 kilometres above the surface, it could be
seen from the ground as a bright star of swift passage, to which the
inhabitants of the planet had given the name Kaidaw.
On
the station, two families supervised the automatic recording of data from
Helliconia as it passed below them. They also saw to it that that data in all its richness, confusion, and
overwhelming detail was
transmitted to the planet Earth, a thousand light-years distant. To this end,
the EOS had been established. To this end, human beings from Earth had been
born to populate it. The Avernus was at this time only a few Earth years short
of its four thousandth birthday.
The
Avernus was an embodiment, cast in the most advanced technology of its culture,
of the failure to perceive the answer to that age-old problem of why mankind
was divorced from its environment. It was the ultimate token in that long
divorce. It represented nothing less than the peak of achievement of an age
when man had tried to conquer space and to enslave nature while remaining himself a slave.
For
this reason, the Avernus was dying.
Over
the long centuries of its existence, the Avernus had gone through many crises.
Its technology had not been at fault; far from it the great hull of the station, which had a diameter of one
thousand metres, was designed as a self-servicing entity, and small
servomechanisms scuttled like parasites over its skin, replacing tiles and
instruments as required. The servomechanisms moved swiftly, signalling to each
other with asymmetrical arms, like crabs on an undiscovered germanium shore,
communicating with each other in a language only the WORK computer which
controlled them understood. In the course of forty centuries, the
servomechanisms continued to serve. The crabs had proved untiring.
Squadrons
of auxiliary satellites accompanied the Avernus through space, or dived off in
all directions, like sparks from a fire. They crossed and recrossed in their
orbits, some no bigger than an eyeball, others complex in shape and design,
coming and going about their automatic business, the gathering of information.
Their metaphorical throats were parched for an ever flowing stream of data. When
one of them malfunctioned, or was silenced by a passing speck of cosmic debris,
a replacement floated free from the service hatches of the Avernus and took its
place. Like the crabs, the sparklike satellites had proved untiring.
And inside the Avernus. Behind
its smooth plastic partitioning lay the equivalent of an endomorphic skeleton
or, to use a more suitably dynamic comparison, a nervous system. This nervous
system was infinitely more complex than that of any human. It possessed the
inorganic equivalent of its own brains, its own kidneys, lungs, bowels. It was
to a large extent independent of the body it served. It resolved all problems
connected with overheating, overcooling, condensation, microweather, wastes,
lighting, intercommunication, illusionism, and hundreds of other factors
designed to make life tolerable physiologically for the human beings on the
ship. Like the crabs and the satellites, the nervous system had proved
untiring.
The
human race had tired. Every member of the eight families later reduced to six, and now reduced
to two was dedicated,
through whatever speciality he or she pursued, to one sole aim: to beam as much
information about the planet Helliconia as possible back to distant Earth.
The
goal was too rarified, too abstract, too divorced from the bloodstream.
Gradually,
the families had fallen victim to a sort of neurasthenia of the senses and had
lost touch with reality. Earth, the living globe, had ceased to be. There was
Earth the Obligation only, a weight on the consciousness, an anchor on the
spirit.
Even
the planet before their view, the glorious and changing balloon of Helliconia,
burning in the light of its two suns and trailing its cone of darkness like a
wind sock behind it, even Helliconia became an abstract. Helliconia could not
be visited. To visit it meant death. Although the human beings on its surface,
scrutinised so devotedly from above, appeared identical to Earthlings, they
were protected from external contact by a complex virus mechanism as untiring
as the mechanisms of the Avernus. That virus, the helico virus, was lethal to
the inhabitants of the Avernus at all seasons. Some men and women had gone down
to the planet's surface. They had walked there for a few days, marveling at the
experience. And then they had died.
On
the Avernus, a defeated minimalism had long prevailed. The attenuation of the
spirit had been embraced.
With
the slow crawl of autumn across the planet below, as Freyr receded day by day
and decade by decade from Helliconia and its sister planets as the 236 astronomical units of
periastron between Batalix and Freyr lengthened to the formidable 710 of
apastron the young on the
Observation Station rose up in despair and overthrew their masters. What though
their masters were themselves slaves? The era of asceticism was gone. The old
were slain. Minimalism was slain. Eudaemonism ruled in its stead. Earth had
turned its back on the Avernus. Very well, then Avernus would turn its back on
Helliconia.
At
first, blind indulgence in sensuality had been sufficient. Just to have broken
the sterile bonds of duty was glory enough. But and in that "but" lies possibly
the fate of the human race hedonism proved insufficient. Promiscuity proved as much of a dead
end as abstention.
Cruel
perversions grew from the sullied beds of the Avernus. Woundings, slashings,
cannibalism, pederasty, paedophilia, intestinal rape, sadistic penetrations of
infants and the ageing became commonplace. Flayings, public mass fornications,
buggery, irrumation, mutilation such was the daily diet. Libido
waxed, intellect waned.
Everything
depraved flourished. The laboratories were encouraged to bring forth more and
more grotesque mutations. Dwarfs with enlarged sex organs were succeeded by
hybrid sex organs imbued with life. These "pudendolls" moved with
legs of their own; later models progressed by labile or preputial musculature.
These reproductive leviathans publicly aroused and engulfed each other, or
overwhelmed the humans thrown into their path. The organs became more
elaborate, more aposematic. They proliferated, reared and tumbled, sucked,
slimed, and reproduced. Both those forms resembling priapic fungi and those
resembling labyrinthiform ooecia were ceaselessly active, their colours flaring
and fading according to their flaccidity or engorgement. In their later stages
of evolution, these autonomous genitalia grew enormous; a few became violent,
battering like multicoloured slugs at the walls of the glass tanks wherein they
spent their somewhat holobenthic existence.
Several
generations of Avernians venerated these strange polymorphs almost as if they
were the gods which had been banished from the station long ago. The next
generation would not tolerate them.
A
civil war, a war between generations, broke out. The station became a
battleground. The mutated organs broke free; many were destroyed.
The
fighting continued over several years and lifetimes. Many people died. The old
structure of families, stable for so long, based on patterns of long endurance
on Earth, broke down. The two sides became known as the Tans and the Pins, but
the labels had little reference to what had once existed.
The
Avernus, haven of technology, temple of all that was positive and enquiring in
mankind's intellect, was reduced to a tumbled arena, in which savages ran from
ambush at intervals to break each other's skulls
A
system of raised dykes covered the marshlands between Koriantura and Chalce
like a network of veins. Here and there, the dykes intersected. The
intersections were sometimes marked by crude gates, which prevented domestic
cattle from wandering. The tops of the dykes were flattened where animals and
men had worn paths; the sides of the dykes were covered in rough lush grass that
merged into reeds bearding the lips of ditches which ran with black water. The
land divided by these features squelched when walked upon. Heavy domestic
cattle crossed it with slow deliberation. They paused occasionally to drink
from dark open pools.
Luterin
Shokerandit and his captive woman were the only human figures to be seen for
miles. Their progress occasionally disturbed flocks of birds, which rose up
with a clatter, flew low, and suddenly folded up the fan of their winged cloud
to sink in unison back to earth.
As
the man drew nearer to the sea and the distance between him and the following
woman increased, so the little streams which flowed became more subject to the
sea and their waters more brackish. The slight babble they made was a pleasant accompaniment
to the plod-plod of the yelk's hoofs.
Shokerandit
halted and waited for Toress Lahl to catch up. He intended to shout to her, but
something stopped him.
He
was certain that the strange Captain Fashnalgid was lying about the reception
which awaited Asperamanka on the Koriantura ridge. To believe Fashnalgid was to
cast doubt on the integrity of the system by which Shokerandit lived. All the
same, a certain sincerity about the man made
Shokerandit cautious. Shokerandit's duty was to bear Asperamanka's message to
Koriantura, to the army headquarters there. It was therefore his duty also to
avoid possible ambush. The wisest course seemed to be to pretend to believe
Fashnalgid's story, and to escape from Chalce by boat.
The
light over the marshes was deceptive. Fashnalgid's figure had disappeared.
Shokerandit was not making the progress he wished. Though his mount followed
the trail along the top of the dykes, every step seemed sluggish and mired in
marsh.
"Keep
close to me," he called to Toress Lahl. His voice sounded thickly in his
head. He jerked the yelk forward again.
The
brownish rain had threatened earlier to turn into a regular Uskuti
up-and-downer, as the old phrase had it. Its shawls had now trailed away to the
south, leaving confused light patterns over the marshes. To some, the scene
might appear dismal; yet even in this marginal land, processes were at work which were vital to the health of those species which
contended for the mastery of Helliconia, the ancipitals and the humans.
In
the tidal waters which fed the pools to either side of the dykes, marine algae
flourished. They were similar to laminaria, and concentrated the iodine in the
water in their narrow brown fingers. The algae dissipated this chemical into
the air in the form of iodine compounds, notably methyl iodine. As the methyl
iodine decomposed back into iodine in the atmosphere, the circulation of the
winds carried it to every last corner of the globe.
The
ancipitals and humans could not live without iodine. Their thyroid glands
harvested it in order to regulate their metabolisms with iodine-bearing
hormones.
At
this time of the Great Year, after the trigger time of the Seven Eclipses, some
of those hormones were ensuring that the human species was more susceptible
than usual to the depredations of the helico virus.
As
if caught in a maze, his thoughts travelled round and round in familiar
patterns. Time and again, he recalled his celebrated exploits at Isturiacha but no longer with pride. His companions
had admired him for his courage; each bullet he had fired, each thrust of his
sword which had broken an enemy body now had a legendary glamour attached to
it. Yet he shrank in horror from what he had done, and from the exultation he
had felt while doing it.
And with the woman. On their
lonely journey north, he had possessed Toress Lahl. She had lain unresisting
while he had his way. He still rejoiced in the feel of her flesh,
and in his power over it. Yet he thought with remorse of his intended wife,
Insil Esikananzi, waiting back in Kharnabhar. What would she think if she saw
him lying with this foreign woman from the heart of the Savage Continent?
These
thoughts returned in distorted and fugitive shape until his skull ached. He had
a sudden memory of intruding on his mother when a child. He had run
thoughtlessly into her chamber. There stood that dim figure, closeted so
frequently in her own room (and more so since Favin's death). She was being
dressed by her handmaid, watching the process in her misty silver mirror in
which the cluster of her bottles of perfume and unguents was reflected like the
spires and domes of a distant city.
His
mother had turned to confront him, without reproach, without animation, without as far as he could remember a word. She was being helped into her
gown in preparation for some special grand reception. The gown was one that
learned associations of the Wheel had given her, embroidered all over with a
map of Helliconia. The countries and islands were depicted in silver, the sea
in a bright blue. His mother's hair, as yet undressed, hung down darkly, a
waterfall that flowed from the Northern Pole to the High Nyktryhk and beyond.
The gown buttoned down the back. He noticed as she stood there and the maid
stooped to do up the buttons that the city of
He
saw the thick clumps of marsh grass underfoot like coarse body hair. The grass
was getting closer in a puzzling way. He saw small amphibians hop away into
hair-fringed clefts, heard the tinkle of water travelling, watched
tiny pied daisies fall beneath the hoofs of the yelk as if they were stars
going into eclipse. The universe came to him. He was slipping from his saddle.
At
the last moment, he managed to pull himself upright and land on two feet. His
legs felt unfamiliar.
"What's
the matter with you?" Toress Lahl asked, riding up.
Shokerandit
found difficulty in moving his neck to look up at her. Her eyes were shielded
by her hat. Mistrusting her, he reached for his gun, then
remembered it was stashed in his saddle. He fell forward, burying his face in
the wet fur on his yelk's rump. He sank to the ground and felt himself sliding
down the side of the dyke.
A rigidity had seized him. A
disconnection between will and ability had taken place. Yet he heard Toress
Lahl dismount and come squelching down to where he lay sprawled.
He
was conscious of her arm about him, of her voice, anxious, seeking out his
sense. She was helping him up. His bones ached. He tried to cry out in pain,
but no noise emerged. The bone ache, the limb pain, crept into his skull. His
body twisted and contorted. He saw the sky swing on a hinge.
"You're
ill," Toress Lahl said. She could not bring herself to mention the dread
name of the disease.
She
dropped him and let him lie in the wet grasses. She stood looking round at the
vacancy of the marshes and at the distant bald hills from which they had come.
There were still moving banners of rain in the southern sky. Tiny crabs ran in
the streamlets at her feet.
She
could escape. Her captor lay powerless at her feet. She could shoot him with
his own gun as he lay. A return to Campannlat overland would be too perilous,
with an army approaching somewhere over the steppe. Koriantura was only a few
miles away to the northwest; the escarpment which marked the frontier could be
discerned as a smudge on the horizon. But that was enemy territory. The light
was fading.
Toress
Lahl walked a few paces back and forth in her indecision. Then she returned to
the prone figure of Luterin Shokerandit.
"Come
on, let's see what can be done," she said.
She
managed to get him back in the saddle with a struggle, climbing up behind him
and kicking the yelk into action. Her yelk followed in fits and starts, as if
preferring company to a night alone on the marshes.
Prompted
by anxiety, she urged increased speed out of her animal. As dusk closed in, she
caught a glimpse of Fashnalgid ahead, his figure silhouetted against the
distant sea. Raising Shokerandit's revolver, she fired it in the air. Birds
rose in flocks from the surrounding land, screaming as they escaped.
In
another half hour, night or its half-brother lay over the land, although
shimmering pools here and there picked up a reflection from the southwestern
horizon, just below which Freyr lurked. Fashnalgid could no longer be seen.
She
spurred on the yelk, supporting Shokerandit's body against hers.
Water
flooded in on either side of the raised path. Its noise was greater now, which
Toress Lahl believed indicated that the tide was rising.
She had never seen the sea before, and feared it. In the deceptive light, she
came on a small jetty before she knew it. A boat was moored there.
The
sallow sea lapped with a greedy sound on the mud. Glumaceous grasses and sedges
set up a ghostly rustle. Small waves slapped against the side of the dinghy.
There was no sign of any human being.
Toress
Lahl climbed from the yelk and eased Shokerandit down on a bank. Cautiously she
ventured onto the creaking jetty to which the dinghy was moored.
"Got you, then! Hold
still!"
She
gave a small scream as the shout came from beneath her feet. A man jumped out
from under the jetty and pointed his gun at her head.
She
smelled the spirits on his breath, saw his luxuriant moustache, and recognised
Captain Fashnalgid with relief. He gave a grunt of recognition,
expressing not so much pleasure or displeasure as an admission that life was
full of tiresome incidents, each demanding to be dealt with.
"Why
did you follow? Are you leading Gardeterark after you?"
"Shokerandit
is ill. Will you help me?"
He
turned and called towards the boat.
"Besi! Come out. It's
safe."
Besi
Besamitikahl, wrapped in her furs, emerged from under a tarpaulin where she had
been sheltering and came forward. She had listened almost without astonishment
as the captain, in one of his ranting moods, had outlined his scheme to snatch
Asperamanka from the wrath of the Oligarch as he dramatically put it. He would go such and such a way to meet
the Priest-Militant, and would ride with him to the coast, where Besi would
have a boat waiting. This boat would be lent by courtesy of Eedap Mun Odim. She
must not fail him. Life and honour were at stake.
Odim
had listened to this plan, as the girl related it, with delight. Once
Fashnalgid became involved in an illegal enterprise, he would be in Odim's
power. By all means he should have a little boat, with a boatman to crew her,
and Besi should sail round the bay and meet him and his holy companion.
Even
while these arrangements had been made, the laws of the Oligarch were pressing
down harder on the population. Day by day, street by street, Koriantura was
falling under military control. Odim saw all, said nothing, worried for his
herd of relations, and made his own plans.
Besi
now helped Toress Lahl to carry the stiff body of Luterin Shokerandit into the
boat. "Do we have to take these two?" she asked Fashnalgid, staring
down with disfavour at the sick man. "They are probably infectious."
"We
can't leave them here," Fashnalgid said.
"I
suppose you want us to take the yelks too."
The
captain ignored this remark and motioned to the boatman to cast off. The yelks
stood on the shore, watching them depart. One ventured forward into the mud,
slipped, and withdrew. They remained staring at the small boat as it faded away
over the water in the direction of Koriantura.
It
was cold on the water. While the boatman sat by the tiller, the Others crouched below the tarpaulin, out of the wind. Toress
Lahl was disinclined to talk, but Besi plied her with questions.
"Where
are you from? I can tell by your accent that you're not from here. Is this man
your husband?"
Reluctantly,
Toress Lahl admitted that she was Shokerandit's slave. I "Well, there are
ways out of slavery," said Besi feelingly. "Not many. I'm sorry for
you. You could be worse off if your master dies."
"Perhaps
I could find a boat in Koriantura which would take me back to Campannlat once Lieutenant Shokerandit is safe,
I mean. Would you help me?"
Fashnalgid
said, "Lady, there will be trouble enough for us when we get back to
Koriantura, without helping a slave to escape. You're a good-looking woman you should find a good billet."
Ignoring
this last remark, Toress Lahl said, "What kind of trouble?"
"Ah
. . . That is up to God, the Oligarch, and a certain Major Gardeterark to
devise," said Fashnalgid. He brought out his flask and took a long swig at
its contents.
With
some reluctance, he offered it round to the women.
From
under the tarpaulin, Shokerandit said, slowly but distinctly, "I don't
want to go through this again . . ."
Toress
Lahl rested a hand on his burning head.
Fashnalgid
said, "You'll find that life is essentially a series of repeat
performances, my fine lieutenant."
The
population of Sibornal was less than forty percent that of its neighbour
Campannlat. Yet communications between distant national capitals was generally
better than in Campannlat. Roads were good, except in backward areas like
Kuj-Juvec; since few centres of population were at a great distance from the
coast, seas acted as thoroughfares. It was not a difficult continent to govern,
given a strong will in the strongest city, Askitosh.
This
Will saw to it that the land and sea roads of the
continent were busy busy
with military preparation and with that forerunner of military preparation, the
poster. Posters appeared in towns and in the smallest hamlets, announcing one
new restriction after another. Often the announcements these posters bore came
in the guise of concern for the population: they were for the Prevention of the
Spread of Fat Death, or they were for the Limitation of Famine, or for the
Arrest of Dangerous Elements. But what they all boiled down to was the
Curtailment of Individual Liberty.
It
was generally supposed by those who worked for the Oligarchy that the Will
behind these edicts regulating the lives of the inhabitants of the northern
continent was that of the Supreme Oligarch, Torkerkanzlag II. No one had ever
seen Torkerkanzlag. If he existed, Torkerkanzlag confined himself to a set of
chambers within
Those
higher up the scale had their doubts about the Supreme Oligarch, and often
maintained that the title was an empty one, and that government was in the
hands of the Inner Chamber of the Oligarchy itself.
It
was a paradoxical situation. At the core of the State was an entity almost as
nebulous as the Azoiaxic One, the entity at the heart of the Church.
Torkerkanzlag was understood to be a name adopted on election, and possibly
used by more than one person.
Then
there were the obiter dicta supposed to filter down from the very lips the beak, some claimed of the Oligarch himself.
"We
may debate here in council. But remember that the world is not a debating
chamber. It more closely resembles a torture chamber."
"Do
not mind being called wicked. It is the fate of rulers. That the people want
nothing but wickedness you can ascertain by listening at any street
corner."
"Use
treachery where possible. It costs less than armies."
"Church
and State are brother and sister. One day we will decide which shall inherit
the family fortune."
Such
morsels of wisdom passed through the oesophagus of the Inner Chamber and into
the body politic.
As
for that Inner Chamber, it might be expected that those who belonged to it
would know the nature of the Will. Such was not the case. The Members of the
Inner Chamber they were
now in session and came masked were collectively even less sure of the nature of the Will than
the ignorant citizens living in the damp streets below the hill. So close to that
formidable Will were they that they had to fence it about with pretence. The
masks they wore were but an outer cover for a barrier of deviousness; these men
of power trusted each other so little that each had developed a posture with
regard to the nature of the Oligarch by which truth could not be distinguished much like insects which, if
predatory, disguise themselves as something innocuous whereby to deceive their
prey, or, if innocuous, as a poisonous species to deceive their predators.
Thus
it might be that the Member from Braijth, the capital city of
And
in the case of that Member from Braijth, in actual fact, the degree of his
deceitfulness could scarcely be judged, since, beneath the imposed continental
unity, guaranteed by many a solemn pact, Uskutoshk was at war with Bribahr, and
a force from Askitosh was besieging Rattagon (as far as it was possible to
besiege that island fortress).
Moreover,
other Members feigned to trust the Member from Braijth according to their
secret sympathies with his country's policy in daring to challenge the
leadership of Uskutoshk. Feigning was all. Their very sincerity was feigned.
No
one was secure in his understanding. With this they were collectively content,
finding security in believing that their fellow Members were even more deluded
than they were themselves.
Thus
the soul of the most powerful city on the planet had at its core a profound
obfuscation and confusion. It was with this confusion that they chose to meet
the challenge of the changing seasons.
The
Members were currently discussing the latest edict to descend from the unseen
hand of the Oligarch for their ratification. This was the most challenging
edict yet. The edict would prohibit the practice of pauk, as being against the
principles of the Church.
If
the required legislation was passed, it would entail in practice the stationing
of soldiery in every hamlet throughout the continent in order to enforce the
prohibition. Since the Members considered themselves learned, they approached
the subject by leisurely discourse. Their lips moved thinly under their masks.
"The
edict brings under consideration our very nature," said the Member for the
city of
"It
is necessary for us to prepare for the harsher, colder times to come. For that,
we must arm ourselves against the female principle in ourselves, and eradicate
it from the population. We must strike at this pernicious cult of the Original
Beholder. We must banish pauk. I trust that what I say merely elucidates the
wisdom behind this fresh and inspired edict of the Will.
"Furthermore,
I would go so far as to claim "
Most
of the Members were old, were accustomed to being old, had
persisted in being old for a long while. They met in an ancient room in which
all items, whether iron or wood, had been polished over the centuries by a host
of slaves until they shone. The iron table at which they propped themselves,
the bare floor beneath their slippered feet, the elaborately wrought chairs on
which they sat, all gleamed at them. The austere iron panelling on the walls
threw back distorted reflections of themselves. A fire glowed in the prison of
its grate, sending more smoke than flame through the bars; because it did
little to remove the chill of the chamber, the Members were well shrouded in
felts, like mummers in an ancient play. The one furnishing to relieve this
gloomy brightness was a large tapestry which decked one wall. Against a scarlet
background, a great wheel was depicted being rowed through the heavens by
oarsmen in pale blue garments; each oarsman smiled towards an astonishing
maternal figure from whose nostrils, mouth, and breasts spurted the stars in
the sky. This ancient fabric lent a touch of grandeur to the room.
While
one or other of their number held forth, the Members sipped at pellamountain
cordial and stared down at their fingernails or out through the slit windows,
which provided glimpses of an Askitosh sliced into small vertical sections.
"Some
claim that the myth of the Original Beholder is a poetical image of the
self," said the Member from the distant
"Danger
or not, the people must bend to the will of the Oligarch, or the Weyr-Winter
will destroy them. We must be cured of our self. Only obedience will see us
through three and a half centuries of ice. . . ." This platitude came from
the other end of the iron table, where reflections and shadows merged.
The
view of Askitosh was executed in sepia monochrome. The city was enfolded in one
of the famous "silt mists," a thin curtain of cold dry air which
descended on the city from the plateaux ranged behind it. To this was added the
smoke rising from thousands of chimneys, as the Uskuti endeavoured to keep
themselves warm. The city faded under a shadow partly of its own making.
"On
the other hand, communication with our ancestors in the pauk state does much to
fortify our selves," said one greybeard. "Particularly
when in adversity. I mean, I imagine that few of us here have not
derived comfort from communication with the gossies."
In
a querulous voice, a Member from the Lorajan port of Ijivibir said, "By
the by, why have our scientists not discovered how it is that gossies and
fessups are now friendly to our souls, whereas as well authenticated
testaments tell they were
once always hostile? Could it be a seasonal change, do you think friendly in winter and summer,
hostile in spring?"
"The
question will be rendered immaterial if we abandon the gossies and fessups to
their own devices by promulgating the edict before us," replied the Member
from Juthir.
Through
the narrow windows could be seen the roofs of the government printing press where,
after only a day or two of further discussion, the edict of the Supreme
Oligarch Torkerkanzlag II was turned into print. The posters that fell in their
thousands from the flatbed presses announced in bold type that hereafter it
would be an Offence to Go into Pauk, whether Secretly
or in Company with Others. This was explained as another precaution against the
Encroaching Plague. Penalty for contravening the law, One
Hundred Sibs and, for a Second Offence, Life Imprisonment.
Within
Askitosh itself was a rail transport system worked by
steam cars which pulled carriages at the rate of ten or twelve miles an hour.
The cars were dirty but dependable, and the system was being extended outside
the city. These cars took bundles of the posters to distribution points on the
fringes of the city, and to the harbour, whence they were distributed by ship
to all points of the compass.
Thus
bundles soon arrived at Koriantura. Bill stickers ran about the town, pasting
up the terms of the new law. One of those posters was stuck to the wall of the
house where Eedap Mun Odim's family had lived for two hundred years.
But
that house was now empty, abandoned to the mice and rats. The front door had
slammed for the last time.
Eedap
Mun Odim left the family house behind him with his usual stiff little walk. He
had his pride: his face betrayed nothing of the griefs he felt.
On
this special morning, he took a circuitous route to Climent Quay, going by way
of
He
was conscious with every step that this was the last time in his life that he
would walk the streets of Koriantura. Throughout all the
long past years, his Kuj-Juveci background had led him to think of it as a
place of exile; only now did he realise how much it had been home.
His
preparations for departure had been made to the best of his ability;
fortunately, he still had one or two Uskuti friends, fellow merchants, who had
helped him.
This
was an area of small craftsmen silversmiths, watchmakers, bookbinders, and artists of various
kinds. To one side of the street stood a small theatre where extraordinary
plays were produced, plays which could not fill the theatres in the centre of
town: plays trafficking in magic and science, fantasies dealing with both
possible and impossible things (for both sorts were much alike), tragedies
dealing with broken teacups, comedies dealing with wholesale slaughter. Also satires. Irony and satire were things the authorities
could neither understand nor abide. So the theatre was often closed. It was
closed at present, and the street looked the drabber for it.
In
A
phagor let Odim into the house. There were many phagors in
Jheserabhay
sat wrapped in an old-fashioned heedrant, feet up on a sofa, close to a
portable iron stove. Beside him rested a picture album. He rose slowly to
welcome Odim. Odim sat on a velvet chair facing him, and Gagrim stood behind
the chair, clutching the bag.
The
old painter shook his head gloomily when he heard Odim's news.
"Well,
it's a bad time for Koriantura and no mistake. I've never known worse. It's a
poor thing, Odim, that you should be forced to leave because things are so
difficult. But then, you never really belonged here, did you you and your family."
Odim
made no gesture. He said slowly, without thinking, "Yes, I do belong here,
and your words amaze me. I was born here, within this very mile, and my father
before me. This is my home as much as yours, Jhessie."
"I
thought you were from Kuj-Juvec?"
"Originally
my family was from Kuj-Juvec, yes, and proud of it. But I am both a Sibornalese
and a Korianturan, first and foremost."
"Why
are you leaving then? Where are you going? Don't look so offended. Have a cup
of tea. A veronikane?"
Odim
soothed his beard. "The new edicts make it impossible to stay. I have a
large family, and I must do the best I possibly can for them."
"Oh,
yes, yes, so you must. You have a very large family, don't you? I'm against
that sort of thing myself. Never married. No
relations. Always stuck to my art. I've been my own
master."
Narrowing
his eyes, Odim said, "It's not only Kuj-Juveci families which get large.
We're not primitive, you know."
"My
dear old friend, you are sensitive today. I was levelling no accusations. Live
and let live. Where are you going?"
"That I would rather not say. News gets about, whispers become shouts."
The
artist grunted. "I suppose you're going back to Kuj-Juvec."
"Since
I have never in my life been there, I cannot go back there."
"Someone
was telling me that your house is full of murals of that part of the world. I
hear they are rather fine."
"Yes,
yes, old but fine. By a great artist who never made a name for himself. But it
is my house no more. I had to sell it, lock, stock, and barrel."
"Well
then ... I hope you got a good price?"
Odim
had been forced to accept a miserable price, but he rationed himself to one
word: "Tolerable."
"I
suppose I shall miss you, though I've got out of the habit of seeing people. I
hardly ever go over to the theatre now. This north wind gets into my old
bones."
"Jhessie,
I have enjoyed your friendship over twenty-five years, give or take a tenner. I
have also much appreciated your work; maybe I never paid you enough. Although I
am only a merchant, nevertheless I appreciate artistry in others, and no one in
all Sibornal has depicted birds on porcelain so finely
as you. I wish to give you a parting present, something too delicate to travel,
which I think you will appreciate. I could have sold it in the auctions but I
thought you made a worthy recipient."
Jheserabhay
struggled into a sitting position and looked expectant. Odim motioned to his
slave to open the bag. Gagrim lifted out an article which he handed to Odim.
Odim raised the article and held it temptingly before the artist's eyes.
The
clock was of the shape and size of a goose's egg. Its dial showed the
twenty-five hours of the day round the outer circle, with the forty minutes of
the hour inside, in the traditional way. But on the hour, when striking and the mechanism could be made to
strike at any time by pressing a button the clock revolved, so that a second, rear, face was briefly
revealed. The rear face also had two hands, the outer indicating the week,
tenner, and season of the small year, and the inner the season of the Great
Year.
The
faces were enamel. The egg was of gold. It was clutched, top and bottom, by a
figure in jade, the ample figure of the Original Beholder, seated on a bank
which formed the base of the clock. To one side of her, wheat grew; to the
other, glaciers. The finish of the whole was exquisite, the detail perfect: the
toes which peeped from the Beholder's sandals had discernible nails.
Reaching
out his old seamed hands, Jheserabhay took the clock and examined it for a long
time without speaking. Tears came to his eyes.
"It's
a thing of beauty, no less. The workmanship is wonderful. And I can't recognise
its provenance. Is it from Kuj-Juvec?"
Odim
bridled up immediately. "We barbarians are excellent craftsmen. Didn't you
know we live in sherb but spend our life killing people and turning out
exquisite artwork? Isn't that the idea you proud Uskuti have of us?"
"I
didn't mean to offend you, Odim."
"Well,
it is from Juthir, if you must know, our capital city.
Take it. It will cause you to remember me for five minutes." As he said
this, he turned away and looked out the window. A file of
soldiers under a noncommissioned officer were searching a house
opposite. As Odim watched, two of them brought a man out into the square. The
man hung his head, as if ashamed to be seen in such company.
"I'm
really sorry you are going, Odim," said the artist, placatingly.
"Evil
is loose in the world. I have to go."
"I
don't believe in evil. Mistakes, yes. Not evil."
"Then
perhaps you are afraid to believe it exists. It exists wherever men are. It's
in this very room. Good-bye, Jhessie."
He
left the old man clutching the clock and trying to rise from his dusty chair.
Odim
looked round warily before leaving the shelter of the house where Jheserabhar
had his apartment. The file of soldiers had disappeared with their prisoner. He
stepped briskly in the Court, dismissing the encounter with the artist from his
mind. These Uskuti were always hard to deal with, after all. It would be a
relief to get away from them.
He
was all prepared to go. Everything had been done legally, if hastily. Since
Besi Besamitikahl had collected the deserter Captain Fashnalgid in the dinghy,
two days earlier, Odim had concentrated on getting his affairs in order. He had
sold his house to an unfriendly relation and his export business to a friendly
rival. He had purchased a ship with Fashnalgid's aid. He would join his brother
in distant Shivenink. It would be a pleasure to see Odirin again; they could
help each other now that they were not as young as they had been. . . .
Struggle
is the true guise of hope, Odim said to himself, straightening his back and
walking a little faster. Don't give up. Life will be easier, winter or no
winter. You must cease to think only of money. Your mind is dominated by the
mighty sib. This adversity will be good for you. In Shivenink, with Odirin's
help, I'll work less hard. I will paint pictures like Jheserabhay. Perhaps I
will become famous.
Nourishing
similar warming thoughts, he turned onto the quay. His soliloquy was shattered
by a steam gun trundling slowly by. It was heading eastwards. Word had spread that
a great battle was soon to commence; it was another reason for leaving the city
as fast as possible. The gun was so heavy that it shook the ground as it
rattled over the cobbles. Its fiendish engine, pistons pumping, belched out
smoke. Small boys ran beside it, shouting in delight.
The
steam gun followed Odim along Climent Quay, its heavy barrel pointing in his
general direction. With a sense of relief, he turned in at Odim Finest Export
Porcelains, Gagrim pressing hard at his heels.
The
showroom and warehouse were in confusion, mainly because nobody was doing any
work. Hired workers and slaves alike had seized on the opportunity to do
nothing. Many of them hung about the door, watching the gun go by. In their
reluctance to step aside, they revealed a lack of respect for their ex-boss.
Never
mind, he said to himself. We will sail on the afternoon's tide, and then these
people can do what they like.
A
messenger came up and told him that the new owner of the premises was upstairs
and would like to see him. A hint of danger ran through Odim's mind. It seemed
unlikely that the new owner should be here, since the hand-over was not
officially operative until midnight, according to the terms of the contract.
But he told himself not to be anxious, and mounted the stairs with
determination. Gagrim followed behind.
The
reception room was an elegantly furnished gallery with windows overlooking the
harbour. On the walls hung tapestries and a series of miniatures which had
belonged to Odim's grandfather. Examples of Odim porcelain services lay about
on polished tables. This was where special customers were brought and the
firm's most important business transacted.
This
morning, only one special customer stood in the low room, and his uniform
indicated that his business was unlikely to be pleasurable.
Major
Gardeterark stood with his back to the window, head thrust forward, heavy
protruding mouth and lips swivelling in the direction of Eedap Mun Odim. Behind him stood a pale Besi Besamitikahl.
"Come
in," he said. "Close the door."
Odim
stopped so abruptly on the threshold that Gagrim bumped into him. Major
Gardeterark was contained within his huge greatcoat, a garment of coarse
texture with buttons like flambreg eyes positioned on it at intervals as if on
metallic sentry go, and pockets which stuck out like boxes. It was in every way
a coat that might go about its master's business if its master were ever posted
out of it. Gardeterark, however, was very much on duty, and watched from among
his buttons as Odim closed the door as instructed.
What
most frightened Odim was not so much the major as the sight of Besi beside him. One look at the girl's pale face told Odim that she had
been forced to give away his secrets. His mind flew immediately to the secrets
he had been prevailed upon to hide on these premises: Harbin Fashnalgid,
officially posted as a deserter; a lieutenant from the army of the enemy, now
suffering from the Fat Death; and a Borldoranian girl, a slave, who was nursing
the lieutenant. He knew that what to him was simple humanity in Gardeterark's
bulging eyes was a fatal list of crimes.
Anger
burned in Odim's slender frame. He was frightened but the anger overcame the
fear. He had loathed this odious, cold officer ever since the moment when he
had found him downstairs, bloated with his own power. The creature could not be
allowed to interfere with Odim's plans to take everyone away to safety.
Nodding
his head towards Besi, Gardeterark said, "This slave woman tells me that
you are harbouring an army deserter, by name Fashnalgid."
"He
was here waiting. He forced me " Besi began. Gardeterark brought up his gloved hand, which
featured several buttons, and struck her across the face.
"You
are hiding this deserter on the premises," he said. He took a step towards
Odim, at no time glancing at the girl, who had subsided against the wall,
clutching her mouth.
Gardeterark
produced from one of his boxes a pistol, and pointed it at Odim's stomach.
"You are under arrest, Odim, you foreign sherb. Take me to where you are
concealing Fashnalgid."
Odim
clutched his beard. Although the sight of Besi being struck had frightened him
with its violence, it had also stiffened his resolve. He gave the major a blank
stare.
"I
don't know who you mean."
Prominent
yellow teeth came into view, framed between lips which immediately squeezed
shut again. It was the major's patent way of smiling.
"You
know who I mean. He lodged with you. He went on an expedition into Chalce with
this woman of yours, no doubt with your connivance. He is to be arrested for
desertion. A wharf hand witnessed him come in here. Lead me to him or I'll have
you taken to headquarters for questioning."
Odim
stepped back.
"I'll
take you to him."
At
the far end of the gallery was a door into the rear areas of the building. As
Gardeterark followed Odim, he pushed aside one of the tables obstructing his
easy passage. The chinaware fell to the floor and shattered.
Odim
made no sign. He signalled Gagrim forward. "Unlock this door."
"Your
slave can stay behind," Gardeterark said.
"He
carries the keys during the day."
The
keys were in Gagrim's pocket, secured by a chain to his belt. He unlocked the
door with trembling hand, letting the two men through.
They
were in a passage leading to the rear offices. Odim led the way. They went down
the passage and turned left, where four steps led up to a metal door. Odim
gestured to the slave to unlock it. An especially large key was needed.
Once
through it, they emerged on a balcony overlooking a yard. Most of the yard was occupied
by cartloads of wood and two old-fashioned kilns. The kilns were generally
unused; one was at present being fired to meet an emergency order from the
local garrison, for whom no great finesse was needed. Otherwise, most of the
Odim porcelain came from companies situated elsewhere in Koriantura.
Four company phagors stood about, tending the active kiln. It was old and
inefficiently insulated, and the heat and smoke from it filled the yard.
"Well?"
Gardeterark prompted as Odim hesitated.
"He's
in a loft over there," Odim said, pointing across the yard. Their balcony
was connected to the loft he indicated by a catwalk which spanned the yard. It
was almost as ancient as the kilns below; its single wooden railing was rickety
and sooted up by smoke from below.
Odim
started cautiously across the catwalk. Halfway across, as the smoke billowed
up, he paused, steadying himself with one hand on the
rail. "I'm feeling ill ... I'd better go back," he said, turning
towards the major. "Look at the kiln."
Eedap
Mun Odim was not a violent man. All his life, he had hated force. Even signs of
anger disgusted him his
own anger not least. He had schooled himself to politeness and obedience,
following the example of his parents. Now he threw away his training. He
brought his arms round with a wide swinging movement,
hands clasped together, and as Gardeterark glanced down, caught him on the back
of his neck.
"Gagrim!" Odim called.
His slave never moved.
Gardeterark
staggered with his side against the rail and tried to bring up the gun. Odim
kicked him on the knee and butted him in the chest. The officer seemed twice
his size, the greatcoat impenetrable.
He
heard the rail crack, heard the revolver explode, felt Gardeterark begin to
fall, dropped to the catwalk on hands and knees to save himself
from going too.
Gardeterark
gave a terrible cry as he fell.
Odim
watched him go, arms flailing, his animal mouth open.
It was not far to fall. He hit the middle of the dual-chamber kiln which was being
fired. The roof of the kiln was strewn with loose brick and rubble. Cracks ran
across it, widening, flaring red. As the heat came up, Odim pulled himself flat
on the catwalk to avoid burning.
Screaming,
the major made an attempt to get to his feet. The greatcoat smouldered like an
old shed. His leg plunged into one of the cracks in the roof. The arch
collapsed. Fire spewed upwards like splashing liquid. The temperature inside
the kiln was over eleven hundred degrees. Gardeterark, already burning, plunged
down into it.
Afterwards,
Odim had no idea how long he lay on the catwalk. It was Besi, with her split
mouth, who ventured along the walk and helped him
return to the gallery. Gagrim had fled.
She
was hugging him and wiping his burnt face with a cloth. He realised that he was
saying to her over and over, "I killed a man."
"You
saved us all," she said. "You were very brave, my darling. Now we
must get into the ship and sail as soon as possible, before anyone discovers
what has happened."
"I
killed a man, Besi."
"Say
rather that he fell, Eedap." She kissed him with her burst lips and began
to cry. He clutched her as he never had before in daylight, and she felt his
thin, hard body tremble.
So
ended the well-organised part of Eedap Mun Odim's life. From now on, existence
would be a series of improvisations. Like his father before him, he had
attempted to control his small world by keeping accurate accounts, by balancing
ledgers, by cheating no one, by being friendly, by conforming in every way he
could. At one stroke, all that was gone. The system had collapsed.
Besi
Besamitikahl had to assist him across the quayside to the waiting ship. With
them went two others, whose lives had been equally disrupted.
Captain
Harbin Fashnalgid had seen his own face crudely portrayed on a red poster as he
stepped ashore with Besi, after they had sailed the twenty miles from the jetty
in the marshlands. The poster was newly arrived from the local printing works
commandeered by the army, and still glistened with the bill sticker's glue. For
Fashnalgid, Odim's ship served the purpose, not only of escaping from
Uskutoshk, but of staying close to Besi. Fashnalgid had decided that if he were
to reform his life, then he needed a courageous, constant woman to look after
him. He stepped up the gangplank briskly, longing to be free of the army and
its shadow.
Behind
him followed Toress Lahl, widow of the great Bandal Eith Lahl, recently killed
in battle. Since her husband's death and her capture by Luterin Shokerandit,
her life had become quite as disoriented as Odim's or Fashnalgid's. She now
found herself in a foreign port, about to sail for another foreign port. And
her captor lay already in the ship, tied down while he underwent the agony of
the Fat Death. She might elude him; but Toress Lahl knew of no way in which a
woman of Oldorando could return home safely from Sibornal. So she remained to
tend Shokerandit, hoping to earn his gratitude thereby if he survived the
plague.
Of
the plague, she had less fear than the others. Back home in Oldorando, she had
worked as a doctor. The word that inspired fear and curiosity in her was the
name of Shokerandit's homeland, Kharnabhar, a word which embodied legend and
romance when spoken from the distance of Borldoran.
To
acquire his ship, Odim had worked through intermediaries, local friends who
knew useful people in the Priest-Sailors Guild. The money from the sale of his
house and company had all gone to purchase the New Season. It now lay moored alongside Climent Quay, a two-masted
brig of 639 tons, square-rigged on fore- and main-masts. The vessel had been
built twenty years earlier, in Askitosh shipyards.
Loading
was complete. The New Season
contained, besides such provisions as Odim could lay his hands on at short
notice, a herd of arang, fine Odim porcelain services, and a sick man bearing
the plague, with a slave woman to tend him.
Odim
had managed to get clearance from the quay-master, an old acquaintance of his
who had been paid liberally across Odim cargoes for many years. The captain of
the vessel was persuaded to compress into the shortest possible time all the
ceremonies recommended by deuteroscopists and hieromancers for an auspicious
voyage. A cannon was fired to mark the departure of a
ship from Sibornal.
A
brief hymn was sung on deck to God the Azoiaxic. With tide and wind set fair, a
gap widened between ship and Climent Quay. The New Season began its voyage for distant Shivenink.
On
the Avernus, fleet Kaidaw of Helliconian skies, the monotony of barbarism
descended. Eedap Mun Odim was rightly proud of the craftsmanship embodied in
the Kuj-Juvecian clock he presented to Jheserabhay; the very narrowness of
societies such as Kuj-Juvec gives their art a concentrated vitality. But the
barbarism prevailing on the Avernus produced nothing but smashed skulls,
ambushes, tribal drumming, simian mirth.
The
many generations which had served under Avernian civilisation had often
expressed a longing to escape from the sense of futility, from a doctrine of
minimalism, imposed by the concept of Obligation Earth. Some had preferred
death on Helliconia to a continuation of Avernian order. They would have said, if asked, that they preferred barbarism to civilisation.
The
boredom of barbarism was infinitely greater than the restraints of
civilisation. The Pins and the Tans had no respite from fear and deprivation.
Surrounded by a technology which was in many respects self-governing, they were
little better off than many of the tribes of Campannlat, caught between marsh
and forest and sea. Barbarism let loose their fears and curtailed their
imaginations.
The
sections of the station which had suffered greatest damage were those most
intimately connected with human activity, such as the canteens and restaurants,
and the protein-processing plants which supplied them. The crop fields
dominating the inside of the spherical hull were now battlefields. Man hunted
man for food. The great perambulant pudendolls, those genital monstrosities
created from a perverted genetic inheritance, were also tracked down and eaten.
The
automated station continued to flash images on internal screens from the living
world below continued,
indeed, to vary the interior weather, so that humanity was not bereft of that
eternal stimulus.
The
surviving tribes were no longer capable of making the old connections. The
images they received of hunters, kings, scholars, traders, slaves, had become
divorced from their contexts. They were received as visitants from another
world, gods or devils. They brought only wonder into the hearts of those whose
forebears had studied them with disdain.
The
rebels of the Avernus a
mere dissident handful at the onset had launched out for greater freedoms than they imagined they
enjoyed. They had beached themselves on the shores of a melancholy existence.
The rule of the head was taken over by the belly.
But
the Avernus had a duty which took precedence over tending its inhabitants. Its
first duty was to transmit a continuous signal back to the planet Earth, a
thousand light-years away. Over the eventful centuries of the
Observation Station's existence, that signal, with its freight of information,
had never faltered.
The
signal had formed an artery of data, fed back to Earth according to the
original plan of a technocratic elite responsible for
the grandiose schemes of interstellar exploration. The artery never ran dry,
not even when the inhabitants of the Avernus reduced themselves to a state
close to savagery.
The
artery never ran dry, but somewhere a vein had been cut. Earth did not always
respond.
Charon,
a distant outpost of the solar system, housed a receiving complex built across
the frigid methane surface of the satellite. At this station, on which the
nearest approaches to intelligent life were the androids which maintained it,
the Helliconia signals were analysed, classified, stored, transmitted
to the inner solar system. The outward process was far less complex, consisting
merely of a string of acknowledgements, or an order to the Avernus to increase
coverage of such and such an area. The news bulletins which had once been sent
outwards had long ago ceased, ever since someone pointed out the absurdity of
feeding the Avernus with items of news one thousand years old. Avernus knew and now cared nothing regarding events on Earth.
As
to those events: The crowded nations of Earth spent most of the twenty-first
century locked in a series of uncomfortable confrontations: East threatened West,
North threatened South, First World helped and cheated Third World. Growing
populations, dwindling resources, continuous localised conflicts, slowly
transferred the face of the globe into something approaching a pile of rubble.
The concept of "terrorist nation" dominated the mid-century; it was
at this time that the ancient city of
Those
who lived in the twenty-first century regarded their age as a melancholy one
despite exponential developments in technological and electronics systems. They
saw that every field and factory producing food was electronically protected or
physically patrolled. They felt the increasing regimentation of their life. Yet
the structure, the underlying system of civilisation, was maintained.
Restrictive though it was, it could be transcended.
Many
gifted individuals made the century a brilliant one, at least in retrospect.
Men and women arose from nowhere, from the masses, and won enormous fame by
their gifts. In their brilliance, their defiance of their underprivileged
environment, they lightened the hearts of their audience. When Derek Eric
Absalom died, it was said that half the globe wept. But his wonderful
improvised songs remained as consolation.
At
first, only two of Earth's nations were in competition beyond the confines of
the solar system. The number crept up to four and stopped at five. The cost of
interstellar travel was too great. No more could play, even in an age when
technology had become a religion. Unlike religion, the hope of the poor,
technology was a rich man's strategy.
The
excitements of interstellar exploration were relayed back to the multitudes of
Earth. Many admired intellectually. Many cheered for their own teams. The projects
were always presented with great solemnity. Great expenditures, great
distances, great prestige: these united to impress the
taxpayers back home in their ugly cities.
Occasional
automated starships were launched during the heyday of interstellar travel,
from approximately 2090 to 3200. These ships carried computer-stored colonists,
able to range vacuum continually until habitable worlds were discovered.
The
extrasolar planet on which mankind first set foot was solemnly named New Earth.
It was one of two moonless bodies orbiting Alpha Centauri C. "Arabia
Deserta writ large," said one commentator, but most settled for
comfortable awe as the monotonous landscapes of New Earth unrolled.
The
planet consisted mainly of sand and tumbled mountain ranges.
Its
one ocean covered no more than a fiftieth of the total land area. No life was
found on it, apart from some abnormally large worms and a kind of seaweed which
grew in the fringes of the salt sea. The air, though breathable, had an extremely low water-vapour content; human throats became
parched within a few minutes when breathing it. No rain ever fell on New
Earth's dazzling surface. It was a desert world, and had always been so. No
viable biosphere could establish itself.
Centuries
passed.
A base and rest centre were
established on New Earth. The exploration ships moved farther out. Eventually, they covered a sphere of
space with a diameter of almost two thousand light-years. This area, though
immense in the experience of a species which had only fairly recently tamed the
horse, was negligible as a proportion of the galaxy.
Many
planets were discovered and explored. None yielded life. Additional
mineral resources for Earth, but not life. Down in the gloomy miasmas of
a gas giant, writhing things were discovered which came and went in a manner
suggesting volition. They even surrounded the submersible which was lowered to
investigate them. For sixty years, human explorers tried to communicate with
the writhing things with
no success. At this period, the last whale in Earth's polluted oceans became
extinct.
On
some newly discovered worlds, bases were established and mining carried out.
There were accidents unreported
back home. The gigantic planet Wilkins was dismantled; fusion motors, roaring
through its atmosphere, converted its hydrogen to iron and heavier metals, and
the planet was then broken up. Energy was released as planned but rather more rapidly than planned. Lethal shortwave radiation
killed off all involved in the project. On Orogolak, war broke out between two
rival bases, and a short nuclear war was fought which turned the planet into an
ice desert.
There
were successes, too. Even New Earth was a success. Successful
enough, at least, for a resort to be set up on the edge of its chemical-laden
sea. Small colonies were established on twenty-nine planets, some of
which flourished for several generations.
Although
some of these colonies developed interesting legends
which contributed to Earth's rich store none was large or complex enough to
nourish cultural values which diverged from their parent system.
Space-going
mankind fell victim to many strange new maladies and
mental discomforts. It was a fact rarely acknowledged that every terrestrial
population was a reservoir for disease; a considerable proportion of the people
of all ethnic groups were unwell for a percentage of their days for unidentifiable reasons. SUDS
(Silent Untreated Disease Syndrome) now clamoured for identification. In
gravity-free conditions, SUDS proliferated.
What
had been untreated was long to prove incurable. Nervous systems failed,
memories developed imaginary life histories, vision became hallucinatory,
musculature seized up, stomachs overheated. Space dementia became an everyday
event. Shadowy frights passed across the vacuum-going psyche.
Despite
its discomforts and disillusions, infiltration of the galaxy continued. Where
there is no vision, the people perish and there was a vision. There was a vision that knowledge, for all
its dangers, was to be desired; and the ultimate knowledge lay in an
understanding of life and its relationship to the inorganic universe. Without
understanding, knowledge was worthless.
A
Chinese/American fleet was investigating the dust clouds of the Ophiuchus
constellation, seven hundred light-years from Earth. This region contained
giant molecular clusters, nonisotropic gravities, accreted planets, and other
anomalies. New stars were being created among the palls of inchoate matter.
An
astrophysics satellite attached to one of the computerborgoids of the fleet
obtained spectrographic readings on an atypical binary system some three
hundred light-years distant from the Ophiuchus clouds which revealed at least
one attendant planet supporting Earth-like conditions.
The
oddity of an ageing G4 yellow star moving about a common axis with a white
supergiant no more than eleven million years old had already engaged the
interest of the cosmologists attached to the Chinese/American fleet. The
spectroanalysis spurred them into active investigation.
The
supposedly Earth-like planet of the distant binary system was filed under the
appellation G4PBX/4582-4-3. Signals were despatched on their lengthy journey
through the dust clouds to Earth.
Berthed
inside the flagship of the fleet, then cruising the outer fringes of the
Ophiuchus dust clouds, was an automated colonising
ship. The ship was programmed and dispatched to G4PBX/4582-4-3. The year was
3145.
The
colonising ship entered the Freyr-Batalix system in 3600 A.D., to begin
immediately the task for which it was programmed, the establishment of an
Observation Station.
There
was G4PBX/4582-4-3, like something dreamed! Real, but beyond
belief, beyond even rejoicing.
As
signals from the new station flashed back to Earth, it became more and more
clear that the new planet's resemblance to Earth was close. Not only was it
stocked with innumerable varieties of life in the prodigal terrestrial manner and in heartening contrast to
previously discovered planets more, it supported an intriguing cline of semi-intelligent and
intelligent species. Among the intelligent species were a
humanlike being and a horned being something resembling a rough-coated
minotaur.
The
signals eventually reached Charon, on the margins of the solar system, where
androids fed the data to Earth, only five light-hours distant.
By
the middle of the fifth millennium, Earth's Modern Ages were in slow decline.
The Age of Apperception was a memory. For all but a few meritocrats in
positions of power, galactic exploration had become an abstraction, another
burden inflicted by bureaucracy. G4PBX/4582-4-3 changed all that. Ceasing to
feature merely as a mysterious body among three sister planets, it took on
colour and personality. It became Helliconia, the marvellous planet, the world
beyond the veils of darkness where life was.
Helliconia's
suns took on symbolic significance. Mystics remarked on the way in which
Freyr-Batalix seemed to represent those divisions of the human psyche
celebrated in Asian legend long ago:
Two birds always together in the peach tree:
One eats the fruit, the other watches it.
One bird's our individual Self, tasting all the world's gifts:
The other the universal Self, witnessing all and
wondering.
How
avidly the first prints of human and phagors, struggling out of a snowbound
world, were studied! Inexplicable thankfulness filled human hearts. A link with
other intelligent life had been forged at last.
By
the time the Avernus was built and established in orbit about Helliconia, by
the time it was stocked with the humans reared by surrogate mothers on the
colonising ship, the sphere of terrestrial-directed space activity was
contracting. The inhabited planets of the solar system were moving towards a
centralised form of government, later to evolve into COSA, the Co-System
Assemblage; their own byzantine affairs occupied them. Distant colonies were
left to fend for themselves, marooned here and there on semihabitable worlds
like so many Crusoes on desert islands.
Earth
and its neighbouring planets were by this time storehouses of undigested
information. While the materials brought back to Earth had been processed, the
knowledge had not been absorbed. The enmities which had existed since tribal
days, rivalries founded on fear and a lust for possession, remained dormant.
The dwindling of space squeezed them into new prominence.
By
the year 4901 A.D., all Earth was managed by the one company, COSA. Judicial
systems had yielded to profit and loss accounts. Through one chain of command
or another, COSA owned every building, every industry, every service, every
plant, and the hide of every human on the planet even those humans who opposed it. Capitalism had reached its
glorious apogee. It made a small percentage on every lungful of oxygen
breathed. And it paid out its stockholders in carbon dioxide.
On
Mars, Venus, Mercury, and the moons of Jupiter, human beings were more free free to found their own petty nations
and ruin their own lives their own way. But they formed a sort of second-class
citizenry of the solar system. Everything they acquired and acquisition still played a major
part in their lives they
paid for to COSA.
It
was in 4901 that this burden became too great, and in 4901 that a statesman on
Earth made the mistake of using the old derogatory term "immigrants"
about the inhabitants of Mars. And so it was in 4901 that nuclear war broke out
among the planets the War
over a Word, as it was called.
Although
records of those pre-apocalypse times are scarce, we do know that populations
then regarded themselves as too civilized to begin such a war. They had a dread
that some lunatic might press a button. In fact the buttons were pressed by
sane men, responding to a well-rehearsed chain of command. The fear of total
destruction had always been there. Nuclear weapons, once invented, cannot be
disinvented. And such are the laws of enantiodromia that the fear became the
wish, and missiles sped to targets, and people burned like candles, and silos
and cities erupted in an unexpungeable fire.
It
was a war between the worlds, as had been predicted. Mars was silenced for
ever. The other planets struck back with only a fraction of their total
firepower (and so were destroyed). Earth was hit by no more than twelve
10,000-megaton bombs. It was enough.
A
great cloud rose above the capital of La Cosa. Dust which comprised fragments
of soot, grains of buildings, flakes of bodies, vegetable and mineral, rose to
the stratosphere. A hurricane of heat rolled across the continents. Forests,
mountains, were consumed by its breath. When the initial fires died, when much
of the radioactivity sank to the despoiled ground, the cloud remained.
The
cloud was death. It covered all of the northern
hemisphere. The sunlight was blotted from the ground. Photosynthesis, the basis
of all life, could no longer take place. Everything froze. Plants died, trees
died. Even the grass died. The survivors of the strike found themselves
straggling through a landscape which came more and more to resemble
The
oceans did not freeze. But the cold, the dirt in the upper atmosphere, spread
like discharge over a sheet, poisoning the southern hemisphere as well as the
northern. Cold gripped even the favoured lands of the equator. Dark and chill
reigned on Earth. It seemed that the cloud was to be mankind's last creative
act.
Helliconia
was celebrated for its long winters. But those winters were of natural
occurrence: not nature's death, but its sleep, from which the planet would
reliably arouse itself. The nuclear winter held no promise of spring.
The
filthy aftermath of the war merged indistinguishably with another kind of
winter. Snow fell on hills which the so-called summer did not disperse; next
winter, more snow fell on what remained. The drifts deepened. They became
permanent. One permanent bed linked with another. One frozen lake generated
another. The ice reservoirs of the far north began to flow southward. The land
took the colour of the sky. The Age of Ice returned.
Space travel was forgotten. For Earthmen, it
had again become an adventure to travel a mile.
A spirit of adventure grew
in the minds of those who sailed in the New Season. The brig left the harbour
without incident, and soon was sailing westwards along the Sibornalese coast
with a fresh northeasterly in her canvas. Captain Fashnalgid found that he was
whistling a hornpipe.
Eedap
Mun Odim coaxed his portly wife and three children on deck. They stood in a
mute line, staring back at Koriantura. The weather had cleared. Freyr wreathed
itself in fire low on the southern horizon, Batalix shone almost at zenith. The
rigging made complex patterns of shadow on the deck and sails.
Odim
excused himself politely, and went over to where Besi Besamitikahl stood alone
in the stern. At first he thought she was seasick, until the movements of her
head told him she was weeping. He put an arm around her.
"It
hurts me to see my precious one waste her tears."
She
clung to him. "I feel so guilty, dear master. I brought this trouble on
you. . . . Never shall I forget the sight of that man . . . burning. . . . It
was all my fault."
He
tried to calm her, but she burst out with her story. Now she put the blame on
Harbin Fashnalgid. He had sent her out early in the day, when no ordinary
people were about, to buy some books, and she had been seized in the street by
Major Gardeterark.
"His biwacking books! And he
said that that was the last of his money. Fancy wasting the
last of your money on books!"
"And
the major what did he
do?"
She
wept again. "I told him nothing. But he recognised me as one of your
possessions. He took me into a room where there were other soldiers. Officers. And he made me ... made me dance for them. Then he
dragged me round to our offices . . . It's me that's to blame. I should never
have been fool enough to go out for those books. . . ."
Odim
wiped her eyes and made soothing noises. When Besi was calmer, he asked
seriously, "Have you a real affection for this Captain Harbin?"
Again
she clutched him. "Not any more."
They
stood in silence. Koriantura was sinking in the distance. The New Season was sailing past a cluster of
broad-beamed herring-coaches. The herring-coaches had their curtain nets out,
trawling for fish. Behind the fishermen were salters and coopers, who would gut
and preserve the catch as soon as it was hauled aboard.
Amid
sniffs, Besi said, "You'll never forget what happened when you when that man died on the kiln, will
you, dear master?"
He
stroked her hair. "Life in Koriantura is over. I have put everything that
belonged to Koriantura behind me, and would advise you to do the same. Life
will begin again when we reach my brother's home in Shivenink."
He
kissed her and returned to his wife.
The
next morning, Fashnalgid sought Odim out. His tall clumsy figure dominated
Odim's slender and tightly parcelled form.
"I'm
grateful to you for your kindness in taking me aboard," he said.
"You'll be paid in full when we get to Shivenink, I assure you."
"Don't
worry," Odim said, and said no more. He did not know how to deal with this
officer, now a deserter, except by his usual method of dealing with people through politeness. The ship was
crowded with people who had begged to be allowed aboard to escape the
oligarchic legislation; all had paid Odim. His cabin was stacked with treasures
of one sort of another.
"I
mean what I say you will
be paid in full," Fashnalgid repeated, looking heavily down at Odim.
"Good,
good, yes, thank you," said Odim, and backed away. Out of the corner of
his eye, he saw Toress Lahl coming on deck, and went over to her to escape from
Fashnalgid's attentions. Besi followed him. She had avoided Fashnalgid's gaze.
"How
is your patient?" Odim asked the Borldoranian woman.
Toress
Lahl leaned against the rail, closed her eyes, and took a few deep breaths. Her
pale, clear features had taken on a translucent quality under strain. The skin
below her eyes looked puckered and dirty. She said, without opening her eyes,
"He's young and determined. I believe he will live. Such cases generally
do."
"You
shouldn't have brought a plague case aboard. It endangers all our lives,"
Besi said. She spoke with a new boldness; she would never have dared speak out
previously in front of Odim: but on the voyage all relationships changed.
" 'Plague' is not the
scientifically exact term. The plague and the Fat Death are different things,
although we use the terms interchangeably. Obscene though the symptoms of the
Fat Death are, the majority of young, healthy people who contract it
recover."
"It
spreads like the plague, doesn't it?"
Without
turning her head to reply, Toress Lahl said, "I could not leave
Shokerandit to die. I am a doctor."
"If
you're a doctor, you should know the dangers involved."
"I
do, I do," said Toress Lahl. Shaking her head, she rushed from them and
hurried down the companionway below decks.
She
paused outside the door of the closet in which she kept Shokerandit. As she
rested her head on her arm, she was vouchsafed a glimpse of the turn her life
had taken, the misery in which she now lived, and the uncertainty which
surrounded all on the ship. What was the reason for this gift of consciousness,
which even phagors did not have, this awareness that one was aware, when it was
incapable of changing what one did?
She
was nursing the man who had taken her husband's lifeblood. And oh, yes, she felt it she was already infected with his
disease. She knew it could easily leap to everyone else in the confines of this
ship; the unsanitary conditions on the New
Season made it a haven for contagion. Why did life happen and was it possible that, even now, some
detached part of her was enjoying life?
She
unlocked the door, set her shoulder against its resistance, and entered the
closet. There she lived for the next two days, seeing no one, crawling only
rarely onto the deck for fresh air.
Besi
meanwhile had been given the task of supervising the many relations of Odim who
had been stowed in the main hold. Her chief support came from the old grannie who made the delectable pastry savrilas. This aged woman
still managed to cook on a small charcoal stove, filling the hold with
benevolent aromas, while at the same time soothing the anxieties of the family.
The
family lay about on boxes and ottomans and chests, indulging themselves in
their customary way even while complaining about the rigours of life at sea.
Theatrically,
they declaimed to Besi and to anyone who would listen, and was not
simultaneously declaiming, of the dangers of sea voyages. But Besi thought, And what of the dangers of plague! If it spreads to this
hold, how many of you poor vulnerable bodies will survive? She determined to
stay with them whatever happened, and secretly armed herself
with a small dagger.
Toress
Lahl remained isolated, speaking to no one, even when she crept up on deck.
On
the third morning, she saw small icebergs dotting the water. On the third
morning, with fever on her, she returned to her vigil as usual. The door was
more reluctant than ever to budge.
Luterin
Shokerandit was confined in a small irregular area in the bows of the New Season. A supporting pillar stood in
the middle of the space, leaving enough room only for a bunk to one side of it
and a bucket, a bale of hay, a stove, and four frightened fhlebihts, tethered
beneath the small porthole. The porthole admitted light enough for Toress Lahl
to see stains running across the floor and the gross figure tethered on the
lower bunk. She locked the door behind her, rested against it, and then took a
step closer to the prostrate figure.
"Luterin!"
He
stirred. Under his left arm, which she had strapped by the wrist against the
supports of the bunk, his head thrust a short way, tortoise-like, and one eye
opened, to regard her through a spike of hair. His mouth opened, making a
croaking noise.
She
fetched a ladle of water from a casket standing behind the stove. He drank.
"More
food," he said.
She
knew he would recover. These were the first words he had spoken since they had
carried him to this place on the New
Season. He was again capable of organized thought. Yet she dare not touch
him, although his wrists and ankles were tied securely.
On
the top of the stove lay the charred remains of the last fhlebiht she had
killed. She had dismembered it into joints with a cleaver, cooking it as best
she could over the charcoal. The corkscrew horns, the long white fleece of the
animal, lay with other rubbish in the corner.
As
she threw a joint over to him, Toress Lahl thought for the first time how good
the grilled meat looked. Shokerandit wedged it under an elbow and commenced to
gnaw at the meat. Ever and again he cast a glance up at her. There was no
longer the anger of madness in his eye. The bulimia had passed.
The
thought of his previous savage eating tormented her. She looked at his naked
limbs, gleaming with the sweat of his earlier struggles, and imagined how it
would be to sink her teeth into his flesh. She snatched the charred meat from
the stove.
Chains
and manacles lay ready. Toress Lahl fell to her knees and crawled to them,
securing herself to the central post with them. She locked her wrists together
and flung the key clumsily into one corner, out of reach. The halitus of the
place came to her, the stench of the man's body mingled with the smell of the
confined animals and the odour of their droppings, all flavoured with the fumes
from the charcoal. As she choked, a stiffness came on
her. She began to stretch as far as the chains would allow, knees out before
her in an ungainly position, head slowly rolling at the end of its neck. The
animal carcass was cradled under one arm as if it were a child.
The
man lay where he was, staring without movement. At last the woman's name came
to his lips and he called to her. Her gaze momentarily met his, but it was the
stare of an idiot and her eyeballs continued to roll.
Jaw
hanging open, Shokerandit wriggled to sit up. He was tightly bound to the bunk.
The wildest struggles of his delirium, when the helico virus had raged in his
hypothalamus, had not sufficed for him to break the leather thongs securing his
wrists and ankles.
As
he struggled, he found a pair of brass tongs with claws, such as were used for
handling lumps of red-hot charcoal, against his side. The implement was useless
for cutting his bonds. For a while he slept. Waking, he tried again to set
himself free.
He
called. Nobody would come. The fear of the Fat Death was too great. The woman
lay almost immobile against her pillar. He could prod her with his foot. The
animals bleated, turning restlessly on their straw. Their eyes glowed yellow in
the half dark.
Shokerandit
had been secured so that he lay face down. The stiffness was leaving his
joints. He was able to twist his head and look about. He inspected the webbing
of the bunk overhead. Halfway down the bed a wooden crossbar was inserted to
strengthen the structure. Into the crossbar a long-bladed dagger had been
driven.
Minutes
passed as he gazed awkwardly up at the dagger. Its handle was not far above
him, but he had no hope of grasping it, tied as he was. He was clear in his
mind that Toress Lahl had set it there before she succumbed to the disease. But why?
He
felt the brass tongs against his flesh. The connection came at once, and with
it a revelation of her cleverness. Wriggling, he managed to work the tongs down
the bunk until he could grasp them between his knees. Then came
an agony of contortion as he rotated his clenched knees and brought them up
under the dagger. He worked for an hour, two hours, sweating and groaning in
his pain, until at last he had the handle of the dagger secure between the
brass claws. Then it was only a matter of time until he worked the dagger free.
It
fell against his thighs. Shokerandit rested until he had recovered strength
enough to shuffle the blade up the bunk. At last he could take it in his teeth.
There
was the painful labour of sawing through one of the leather thongs, but it was
done eventually. Once he had one hand free, he was able to cut himself loose.
He lay back, panting. At last he climbed from the foetid bunk.
He
took a step or two and then collapsed weakly against the wooden pillar. Hands
on knees, he contemplated the figure of Toress Lahl, with its slow distorted
movements. Although his mind did not feel like his own, he understood her
devotion and her thought for him when she felt herself falling to the plague.
While under the madness of the fever, he would never have had the coordination
to get the dagger and release himself. Without the dagger, he would have been
unable to cut himself free when he recovered.
After
a rest, he stood up and felt his filthy body. He was changed.
He
had survived the Fat Death and was changed. The painful contortions to which he
had been subject had served to compress his spine; he was now, he estimated,
three or four inches shorter than he had been. His perverted appetite had
caused him to put on flesh. In that phase, he would have devoured anything, the
blanket on the bunk, his own faeces, rats, had Toress Lahl not fed him cooked
meat. He had no knowledge of how many animals he had devoured. His limbs were
thicker. He gazed down at his barrel chest in disbelief. He was now a smaller,
rounder, more thickset person. His weight had undergone a radical
redistribution.
But
he lived!
He
had come through the eye of the needle and lived!
No
matter what was involved, anything was better than death and dissolution. There
was a sort of marvellous sense to life, to the unconscious movements of
breathing, to the need for nourishment and defecation, to the ease of gesture,
to the casual thought so
often not tied to the present moment. It was a sense, a wisdom,
that even degradation and discomfort could not deny. Even as he rejoiced
in it, feelings of health pervaded him in the stinking closet.
As
if a curtain were drawn back, he saw again scenes from his youth in the
mountains of Kharnabhar, at the Great Wheel. He recalled his father and mother.
He reviewed again his heroism on the field of battle near Isturiacha. It came
back clear, washed, as if it had all happened to someone else.
He
recalled again striking down Bandal Eith Lahl.
Gratitude
filled him that the widow he had taken captive should not have left him to die.
Was it because he had not raped and beaten her? Or was the goodness of her
action quite independent of anything he had done?
He
bent down to look at her, sad to see her so grey, so overcome. He put an arm
about her, smelling her sharp, sick stink. Her lolling head came round as if to
rest against him. Her dry lips peeled back from her teeth, and she bit his
shoulder.
Shokerandit
pulled himself away from her. He handed her the meat at her feet. She took a
mouthful but could not chew. That would come later, as the full madness
developed.
"I'll
look after you," he told her. "I'm going up on deck to wash myself
and breathe some fresh air." His shoulder was bleeding.
How
long had it been? He dragged the door open. The ship was full of creaks, the
companion way of shifting shadows.
Rejoicing
in the newfound ease of his limbs, he climbed the companionway and looked about. The decks were empty. There was no one
at the wheel.
"Hello!"
he called. No one answered, yet furtive movement could be heard.
Alarmed,
he ran forward, still calling. A body lay half-naked by the mast. He stared
down at it. All the flesh of the chest and upper arm had been crudely hacked
away and oh, yes, he
could guess it eaten. . .
.
It
was not that Icen Hill was impressive as such features go; indeed, compared
with many of the hills in Sibornal, it was no more than a pimple. But it
dominated its flat surroundings, the outer rings of Askitosh.
When
the wind from the north brought rain on its breath, the water collected on the
roofs, fortifications, and spiteful spires of the castle and flung itself down
in gouts upon the population of Askitosh, as if conveying personal greetings
from the Oligarch.
One
advantage of this exposed position for the Oligarch and his Inner Chamber if for no one else was that news could be got rapidly to
the castle: not merely by the streams of messengers who laboured up the
slippery cobbles of the hill road, but by the tidings flashed by heliograph
from other distant eminences. A whole chain of signalling stations
was established which girded Sibornal, the main artery of information
adhering with fair precision to the line of latitude on which Askitosh lay.
Thus was brought to the Oligarch always assuming he existed news of the welcome accorded the victorious army returning through
Chalce to Koriantura.
That
army had halted below the escarpment where Chalce petered out before the brow
of Sibornal. It waited there until its stragglers caught up. For two days it
waited. Those who died of the plague were buried on the spot. Both men and
mounts were more gaunt than when they had set out from
Isturiacha, almost half a tenner earlier. But Asperamanka was still in command.
Morale was high. The troops cleaned themselves and their equipment, ready for a
triumphal entry into Uskutoshk. The military band polished its instruments and
practised its marches. Regimental flags were unfurled.
All
this was done under the concealed guns of the Oligarch's First Guard.
As
soon as Asperamanka's men moved forward, as soon as they were within range, the
Oligarch's artillery fired upon them. The steam guns began to pound. Bullets
rained down. Grenades exploded.
Down
went the brave men. Down went their yelks. Blood in their
mouths, faces in the dirt. Those who could scream,
screamed. The scene was enveloped in smoke and flying earth. People ran hither
and thither, at a loss to understand, rendered senseless by shock. The
glittering instruments ceased to play. Asperamanka shouted to his bugler to
sound retreat. Not a shot was fired back at their fellow countrymen.
Those
who survived this evil surprise lurked like wild beasts in the wilderness. Many
became speechless with shock.
"Abro
Hakmo Astab!" that at least they cried, the
forbidden Sibish curse which even soldiery hesitated to utter. It was a shout
of defiance to fate.
Some
survivors climbed into the windswept recesses of the mountains. Some lost their
way in the maze of marshland. Some banded together again, determined to recross
the grass desert and join forces with those who remained in Isturiacha.
Asperamanka. Using his smooth
tongue, he tried to persuade the broken groups to form up in units again. He was
foul-mouthed in return. Officers and men alike had lost faith in authority.
"Abro Hakmo Astab . . ." They uttered it to his stormy face.
Dire
circumstances called forth the ancient curse. Its true meaning was lost in
time, like its origins. A polite interpretation was that it recommended
befouling both suns. In the northern continent, crouched beneath the chill
breath of the Circumpolar Regions, men delivered the curse against the Azoiaxic and against all other gods remembered
or forgotten as if to call
down eternal darkness on the world.
"Abro
Hakmo Astab!" the defilement of the light.
Those who hurled the words at Asperamanka then slunk away. Asperamanka made no
further command. The thunder gathered below his brow, he tugged his cloak about
him, he prepared to look to his own salvation. Yet, as
a man of the Church, he felt the ancient curse lie heavy in his mind. He
perceived his own defilement.
This much information was carried back by an informer to the
Oligarch sitting in his stone hill in Askitosh. Thus the governor of men learned something of the effect of his
villainous welcome to Koriantura on Asperamanka's troops.
The
Oligarch's next step required little consideration. After the Inner Chamber had
deliberated, a poster went out to the farthest corners of the land. It
announced that a Plague-ridden Army, intent on spreading Disease and Death
throughout the Continent, had been bravely repelled at the Frontier. Let all
work harder by way of Celebration.
And
the old fisherwomen of Koriantura stood with arms akimbo, reading what was
written, and saying, "There you are, always 'work harder'. . . . How are
we supposed to work harder than we do?" And they bunched closer and looked
askance as units of the First Guard marched by, clattering westward in their
noisy boots.
And
the remains of that broken army in no-man's-land; it had yet another battle to
fight.
Ever since the death of the last C'Sarr of Campannlat, four hundred
and seventy-nine years earlier, the phagors had been gathering strength. Even before death-dealing Freyr had expanded to its fullest power
and waned again, the components had been growing in numbers. The human will to
check them had died in part with the C'Sarr. The more timid ancipitals, who
submitted to existence on the plains among the Sons of Freyr, had passed word
to the warlike contingents of the High Nyktryhk. The first marauders were out
and about earlier in this Helliconian winter.
A
group of ancipitals, mounted on kaidaws, could sweep like wind over the
grasslands which were so formidable to men. In part this was for a simple
reason: stallun, gillot, and kaidaw alike could eat the grass and survive on
that diet, where the fragile Sons of Freyr would perish.
Nevertheless,
the components of the High Nyktryhk kept away from the grasslands leading to
Sibornal unless some special objective lured them there. Sibornal was feared by
the ancipitals. In their pale harneys remained a memory of a terrible fly.
That
memory more of a
programme than a memory told
them that the chill regions of Sibornal were the resort of flies,
and of one fly in particular. That fly made almost intolerable the existence of
the countless head of flambreg which inhabited the plains below the Circumpolar
Regions. The yellow-striped fly lived on the flambreg herds, the female sinking
her ovipositor into the hide of the animals. There the larvae, when they
hatched, entered into the bloodstream, eventually to form pockets of putrefaction
under the skin until they were ready to burst forth into the world.
The
grubs grew as big as the end of a man's thumb. They finally chewed their way
through their host's hide, dropping to the ground to pupate.
It
might seem that this yellow-striped terror fulfilled no role in life except to
make miserable the lives of the flambreg. That was not so. No other animal
would venture into the territory ruled by the yellow-striped fly; and so the
domain of the flambreg did not become overgrazed in the normal course of
events.
Yet
the fly remained as a curse, a scourge to the flambreg who frequently galloped along the
most windswept ridges, careless of danger, in a vain attempt to escape their
fate. The ancipitals, descended from the flambreg, retained in their eotemporal
minds a record of that yellow-striped torment, and steered well clear of its
empire.
But
a broken human army wandering in the wilds of Chalce represented a special
objective to the ancipitals. Travelling into the wind, like the wind, with a
supply of spears and rifles in the quivers at their backs, they bore down on
the Sons of Freyr.
All
they encountered they killed. Even those phagors who served in Asperamanka's
army were mowed down with no compunction, and their eddre strewn across the
lands.
Some
groups of men maintained a semblance of military order. They formed up behind
their supply wagons and fired at the enemy in a disciplined way. Many phagors
fell.
Then
the marauders stood off awhile, watching the men deteriorate from thirst and
cold, before attacking again. They spared no one.
It
was useless for the soldiers to surrender. They fought to the last, or blew
their own brains out. Perhaps in them too was some kind of a racial memory:
that summer was the time of human supremacy, when Freyr was bright; that when
the long winter came, the ancipitals in their turn prevailed upon the globe, as
once they had before mankind arrived upon the scene. So they defended
themselves without hope, to die without help. The women who were with the men
died too.
But
sometimes the ammunition ran out and then the phagors, instead of killing
everyone, took the humans into slavery.
Although
the Oligarch did not know it, ancipitals proved his best ally. They eliminated
what was left of Asperamanka's once great army.
Such
phagor components as there were in Sibornal manifested a less warlike spirit.
They were largely composed of ancipital slaves who had escaped their masters,
or lowland phagors accustomed to generations of hard work and servility. These
creatures roamed the countryside in small bands, doing their best to avoid
human settlements.
Of
course anything vulnerable belonging to the Sons of Freyr became their target;
their deep-seated antagonism never died. When one such group sighted the brig New Season close to the coast, it became
the object of scrutiny. The group followed it as the ship drifted along the
bleak Loraj coast to the west of
Eight
gillots, a fillock, three ageing stalluns, and a runt comprised the band. All
but the runt were dehorned. They had with them as baggage animal a yelk which
was loaded with their chief items of diet, pemmican and a thick porridge. They
were armed.
Although
a stiff offshore wind blew the brig from the land, the coastal current, running
westwards, was slowly bringing it closer. The phagors paced it, mile by unweary
mile, as the distance between them lessened. They knew in their eddre that the
time would come when they could seize and destroy the vessel.
Visible
activity on board was intermittent. Several shots were fired one night. At
another time, a man was seen to run to the starboard rail, pursued by two
screaming women. Knives flashed in the hands of the women. The man threw
himself overboard, made some attempt to swim ashore, and drowned without a cry
in the cold sea.
Small
icebergs, sailing like swans, moved in a westward direction after spilling out
of
He
had locked the door, but sat clutching a small chopper. The bulimia engendered
by the Fat Death made everyone on ship a potential enemy. He used the chopper
occasionally to hack into the beams of the ship. The wood was needed to fuel
the small fire on which he roasted joints cut from the last flehbiht.
Shokerandit and Toress Lahl between them had all but devoured the four
long-legged goats in what he estimated was eight or nine days at sea.
The
Fat Death generally ran its course in about a week. By that time, the sufferer
was dead or on his way to recovery, faculties unimpaired but physiologically
altered. He watched as the woman struggled and thickened. In her fight to get
free, Toress Lahl had torn the clothes from herself, often using her teeth. She
had gnawed the upright to which she was secured. Her mouth was bruised and
bleeding. He looked at her with love.
The
time came when she was able to return his gaze. She smiled.
She
slept for some hours and then was better, with that feeling of well-being which
accompanies those who survive the Fat Death.
Shokerandit
untied her limbs and bathed her with a cloth and salt water in a bowl. She
kissed him as he tried to help her to her feet. She surveyed her naked form and
wept.
"I'm
like a barrel. I was so slim."
"It's
natural. Look at me."
She
stared at him through her tears and then laughed.
They
laughed together. He took in the marvellous architecture of her new body, still
gleaming from its wash, the beauty of her shoulders, breasts, stomach, thighs.
"These
are the proportions of a new world, Luterin," Toress Lahl said; he heard
her using his first name for the first time.
He
threw up his arms, scraping his knuckles on the bulkhead. "I'm relieved
that you survived."
"Because you looked after your captive."
It
was natural to wrap his arms about her, natural to kiss her bruised mouth, and
natural to sink with her to the deck on which they had recently wrestled with
agony. There they wrestled with sexual rejoicing.
Later,
he said to her, "You are no longer my captive, Toress Lahl. We are now
captives of each other. You are the first woman I have loved. I will take you
to Shivenink, and we will go into the mountains where my father lives. You
shall see the wonders of the Great Wheel of Kharnabhar."
She
was already beginning to forget what had happened, and answered indifferently.
"Even
in Oldorando we have heard of the Great Wheel. I will come with you if you say
so. The ship is very silent. Shall we see how the others fare? They may all be
sick with the plague Odim
and his vast brood, and the crew."
"Wait
here with me a little longer." Lying with his arms about her, looking down
into her dark eyes, he was reluctant to break the spell. At that time he was
incapable of distinguishing between love and restored health.
She
said briskly, "Back in Oldorando I was a doctor. It's my duty to tend the
sick." She turned her face from Luterin.
"Where
does the plague come from? From phagors?"
"From
phagors, we believe."
"So
our brave captain spoke the truth. Our army was going to be prevented by force
from returning to Sibornal, just in case we spread the plague; it was among us.
So what the Oligarch decreed was wise rather than evil."
Toress
Lahl shook her head. She began to comb her hair with slow strokes, luxuriously,
looking into a small mirror rather than at him as she spoke. "That's too
easy. What the Oligarch decreed is entirely wicked. To destroy life is always
wicked. What he did may not only be evil; it may prove ineffective too. I do
know something about the contagious nature of the Fat Death although since the Fat Death is
latent for most of the Great Year it is difficult to study. Knowledge
hard-learnt one year is forgotten by the next."
He
expected her to continue but she fell silent, continuing to regard her face
even when she had set down her comb, licking a finger to smooth her eyebrows.
"Be
careful what you say about the Oligarch. He knows more than we."
Then
she turned to look at him. Their regards met as she said with some emphasis,
"I don't have to respect your Oligarch. Unlike the Oligarchy, the Fat
Death has elements of mercy in its functioning. It's mainly the old and very
young who die of it: a majority of fit adults survive
over half. They successfully metamorphose, as we
do." She prodded him with a still moist finger, not without humour.
"We in our compact shapes represent the future, Luterin."
"Yet
half the population will die . . . whole communities destroyed . . . The
Oligarch wouldn't allow that to happen in Sibornal. He'd take strong measures "
She
gestured dismissively. "Such die-back has its merciful side at a time when
crops are failing and famine threatens. The healthy survivors benefit. Life
goes on."
He
laughed. "In fits and starts . . ."
She
shook her head as if suddenly impatient. "We must see who has survived on
the ship. I don't like the silence."
"I
hope to thank Eedap Mun Odim for his kindness."
"I
trust you will be able to."
They
stood close in the small stale room, gazing at each other through the
stramineous light. Shokerandit kissed her, although at the last moment she
moved her lips away. Then they ventured into the corridor.
The
scene was to come back to him much later. He would see then, as not at the
time, how much of herself Toress Lahl withheld from him. Physically, she was
very desirable to him; but her attitude of independence was more attractive to
him than he could then realise. Only when that independence was eroded by time
could they come to any true understanding.
But
Shokerandit's proper appreciation of that fact could scarcely be arrived at
while his whole outlook was based upon certain misunderstandings which left him,
whichever way he turned, insecure, unable to develop emotionally. His innocence
stood between him and maturity.
Shokerandit
went first. Beyond the companionway, the corridor led to the main hold, where
the relations of Odim had been settled. He went to listen at the door and heard
stealthy movement within. From the cabins on either side of the corridor came
silence. He tried the door of one, and knocked; it was locked, and no answer
came.
As
he emerged on deck, with Toress Lahl behind him, three naked men ran swiftly
into hiding. They left a female corpse spread-eagled beneath the mizzenmast. It
had been partially dismembered. Toress Lahl went over and looked at it.
"We'll
throw it overboard," Shokerandit said.
"No.
This woman is already dead. Leave her. Let the living be fed."
They
turned their attention to the situation of the New
Season itself. The ship, as their senses had told
them, was no longer in motion. The ocean currents had brought it slowly to
fetch up against the shore. The New Season was trapped against a tongue of sand which curled out from the
land.
Towards
the stern, a small cluster of icebergs had accumulated. At the bows, it would
be an easy matter to jump over the side and walk ashore without getting a foot
wet. The guardians of this spit of sand were two large rocks, one taller than
the masts of the ship, which stood on the shore, deflecting ocean tides. They
had probably been thrown to their present position by some long-gone volcanic
explosion, though nothing so dramatic as a volcano
could be seen inland. The coast offered a vista only of low cliffs, so tumbled
that they might have been an old wall part-demolished by cannon fire, and,
beyond the cliffs, mustard-coloured moorland, off which a chill wind blew,
bringing tears to the viewer's eyes.
Blinking
the water away, Shokerandit looked again at the larger rock. He was sure he had
seen movement there. In a moment, two phagors appeared, walking with their
curious glide away from the shore. It became apparent that they were going to
meet a group of four of their kind who materialised over a rise, dragging with
them the carcass of an animal of some kind. More phagors appeared from behind
the rock to greet the hunters.
The
original party of thirteen ancipitals had that morning met up with a second and
larger party, a party also comprising escaped slaves, as well as four phagors
who had served as transport animals in the Oligarch's soldiery. There were now
thirty-six phagors in all. They had a fire burning in a cavity in the landward
side of the rock, on which they intended to roast whole flambreg their hunting
party had speared.
Toress
Lahl looked at Shokerandit in dismay.
"Will
they attack us?"
"They
have a marked aversion to water, but they could easily get along that spit of
sand and board us. We'd better see if we can find any fit members of the crew and quickly."
"We
were the first to go down with the Fat Death, so we may be the first to
recover."
"We
must see if there are any weapons to defend the ship with."
Their
search of the ship horrified them. It had become a slaughterhouse. There had
been no escape from the plague. Those who had locked themselves into cabins
alone had succumbed and, in some cases, died alone. Where two or three had shut
themselves away, the first to show symptoms had perhaps been killed. Any
animals aboard had been killed and devoured, their remains fought over.
Cannibalism had prevailed in the large hold, where the Odim family was. Of
twenty-three members of the family, eighteen were already dead, killed mainly by
their relations. Of the five remaining alive, three were still suffering from
the madness of the disease and fled when shouted at. Two young women were able
to speak; they had undergone the full metamorphosis. Toress Lahl took them to
the safety of the closet where she and Shokerandit had sheltered.
The
hatches to the crew's quarters were locked in place. From below came animal
noises and a peculiar singsong, intoning endlessly
"He saw his fair maid's incision
O, that terminal vision . . .
O, that terminal vision . . ."
In
a forward storage cupboard, they discovered the bodies of Besi Besamitikahl and
the old grannie. Besi lay staring upwards, a puzzled expression frozen on her
face. Both were dead.
In
the forward hold, they came on some sturdy square boxes which had remained
untouched throughout the disaster which had overwhelmed the ship.
"Praise
be, cases of rifles," Shokerandit exclaimed. He
opened the nearest box and pulled away some sacking. There, each item wrapped
in tissue paper, lay a complete dinner set in purest porcelain, decorated with
pleasant domestic scenes. Other boxes contained more porcelain, the finest that
Odim exported. These were Odim's presents for his brother in Shivenink.
"This
will not keep the phagors off," Toress Lahl said, half laughing.
"Something
has to."
Time
seemed to be suspended as they wandered the bloodied ship. Because it was small
summer, the hours of Batalix's daylight were long. Freyr was rarely far above the
horizon, rarely far below. The cold wind blew continually. Once
a sound like thunder came with its breath.
After the thunder, silence. Only the dull pound of the sea, the occasional knock of a small ice
floe against the wooden hull. Then the thunder again,
this time clear and continuous. Shokerandit and Toress Lahl looked at
each other in puzzlement, unable to imagine what the noise was. The phagors
understood it without thought. For them, the noise of a flambreg herd on the
move was unmistakable.
The
flambreg lived in their millions below the skirts of the polar ice cap. Their
progeny filled the Circumpolar Regions. Loraj, of all the countries of
Sibornal, offered a variety of territories most suited to flambreg, with
extensive forests of the hardy eldawon tree, and a landscape of low rolling
hills and lakes. The flambreg, unlike yelk, were mildly carnivorous, with a
fondness for any rodents and birds they could catch. Their main diet was of
lichen, fungi, and grass, supplemented with bark. The flambreg also ate the
indigestible moss called flambreg moss by the primitive tribes of Loraj which
hunted them. The moss contained a fatty acid which protected the animals' cell
membranes from the effects of cold, enabling the cells to continue efficient
functioning at low temperatures.
A
herd of over two million individuals was nearing the coast. Many of the Loraj
packs were several times larger. This herd had emerged from an eldawon forest
and was running almost parallel with the sea. The ground shook under its multitudinous
hoofs.
On
the shore, the phagors showed signs of unease. Their crude cooking operations
were suspended. They marched back and forth, scanning the horizon, manifesting
a humanlike uncertainty.
Two
escape routes lay open to them. They could climb to the top of the house-sized
boulder, or they could attack and take possession of the ship. Either
alternative would save them from the approaching stampede.
There
was a living forerunner of the herd. Above the heaving shoulders of the animals
flew a cloud of midges, intent on drawing blood from the furry noses of the
flambreg. The midges were the enemies also of a fly the size of a queen wasp.
This fly now darted ahead into freer air. It appeared from nowhere and landed
smartly between the eyes of one of the phagors. It was a yellow-striped fly.
The
ancipital group broke into an uncharacteristic panic, rushing back and forth.
The individual whose face the fly had alighted on turned and ran straight into
the rock. He squashed the fly and laid himself out senseless.
The
rest of the group gathered together to confer on a plan of action. Some of the
newly arrived group carried with them a small and wizened emblem, an ancestor
in tether. This shrunken symbol of themselves, this illustrious and moth-eaten
great-grandstallun, though almost entirely transformed into keratin, was still
a degree or two from nonbeing. In it, some faint spark still served to focus
their attempts at ratiocination. Comprehension left their harneys. They
communed. The currents of their pale harneys entered into tether.
From
an area of total whiteness, a spirit emerged. It was no bigger than a rabbit.
The phagor whose ancestor it was said inwardly, "O sacred forebear, now
integrating with earth, here you see us in grave danger by the edge of the
drowning world. The Beasts-we-were run upon us and will trample us down.
Strengthen our arms, direct us from danger."
Through
their harneys the keratinous figure transmitted pictures the ancipitals knew
well, pictures flowing fast, one to another. Pictures of the
Circumpolar Regions with their ice, their bogs, their sombre enduring forests,
and of the teeming life that ran there, even there, on the edge of the ice cap.
The ice cap then much greater in extent, for Batalix ruled alone in the
heavens. Pictures of hunted creatures hiding in caves, making an alliance with
that mindless spirit called fire. Pictures of the humble Others
taken as pets. Terrifying pictures of Freyr roaming, coming mottled black down
the air-octaves, a giant spider-form, eddre-chilling.
The retreat of beautiful T'Sehn-Hrr, once silver in the tranquil skies. The Others proving themselves Sons of Freyr, running off earning
the mindless spirit fire on their shoulders. Many, many
ancipitals dying, in flood, in heat, in battle with the monkey-browed Sons of
Freyr.
"Go
fast, remember enmities. Retreat to safety of the wooden thing afloat on the
drowning world, kill all Sons of Freyr. Stay safe there against the running of
the Beasts-we-were. Be valiant. Be large. Hold horns high!"
The
tiny voice fled to lands beyond knowing. They thanked the great-grandstallun
with a deep churring in their throats.
They
would obey its word. For the voice was his and the voice was theirs and there
was no difference. Time and opinion had no place in their pale harneys.
They
advanced slowly on the beached ship.
It
was an alien thing to them. The sea was their dread. Water swallowed and
extinguished them. The ship was outlined against the smouldering orange of Freyr,
snoring just below the horizon, ready to leap from its hiding place in that
same hungry sea.
They
clutched their spears and moved with reluctant step towards the New Season.
The
sand crunched beneath their tread. All the while, their twitching ears picked
up the thunder of the approaching flambreg.
To
one side lay the icebergs, no taller than the runt which walked close to its
gillot. Some icebergs clung to the sides of the vessel; some, as if possessed
by a mysterious will, described slow intricate figures over the still sea,
ghostly in the dim light, their reflections caught as if in tether in the
water.
As the sand spit narrowed, so the ancipital group had to narrow
its front. Finally, two stalluns led the rest.
The ship loomed above them without movement.
Things
clattered and broke beneath the feet of the stalluns. They tried to halt, but
those behind pushed them forward. More breaking, more
clattering. Looking down, they saw the thin white shards beneath their
feet, and the whiteness stretching cracked all the way to the ship's hull.
"There
is ice and it breaks," they said to each other, using the continuous
present tense of Native Ancipital. "Go back or we fall into the drowning
world."
"We
must kill all Sons of Freyr, as it is said. Go forward."
"That we cannot do with the drowning world protecting
them."
"Go
back. Hold horns high."
Crouching
by the rail of the New Season, Luterin Shokerandit and Toress Lahl watched their enemies
shuffle back to the shore and seek for shelter by the rock.
"They
may return. We have to get the ship afloat as soon as possible,"
Shokerandit said. "Let's see how many of the crew have
survived."
Toress
Lahl said, "Before we leave the coast, we should kill some flambreg if
they get within range. Otherwise everyone is going to starve."
They
looked uneasily at each other. The thought crossed their minds that they sailed
with a cargo of the dead and the mad.
Standing
with their backs to the mainmast, they set up a great shout, which rolled away across
the wastes of water and land. After a pause, an answering cry came. They called
again.
A
man appeared from the forecastle, staggering. He had undergone the
metamorphosis, and presented the typical barrel-figure of a survivor. His
clothes were ill-fitting, his once boney face now broad and presenting a
curiously stretched appearance. They hardly recognised him as Harbin
Fashnalgid.
"I'm
glad you're alive," Shokerandit said, going towards him.
The
transformed Fashnalgid put out a warning hand and sat down heavily on the deck.
"Don't
come near me," he said. He covered his face with his hands.
"If
you are fit enough, we need help in getting the ship on course again,"
Shokerandit said.
The
other gave a laugh without looking up. Shokerandit saw that there was blood
caked on his hands and clothes.
"Leave
him to recover," Toress Lahl said. At this Fashnalgid uttered a harsh
cackle and started to shout at them, " 'Leave him
to recover!' How can a man recover? Why should he recover . . . I've been
through the last few days eating raw arang yes, and killing a man for the privilege of doing so ... Entrails everything . . . And now I find
Besi's dead. Besi, the dearest, truest girl there ever was . . . Why do I want
to recover? I want to be dead."
"You'll
feel better soon," said Toress Lahl. "You scarcely knew her."
"I'm
sorry about Besi," Shokerandit said. "But we have to get the ship on
course."
Fashnalgid
glared up at him. "That's typical of you, you skerming conformist! No
matter what happens, do what you're supposed to do. Let the ship rot, for all I
care."
"You're
drunk,
"Besi's
dead. What else matters?" He sprawled on the deck.
Toress
Lahl motioned to Shokerandit. They crept away.
They
took fire hatchets to break into cabins and went below.
As
Shokerandit reached the bottom of the companionway, a naked man threw himself
on him. Shokerandit went down on one knee and was seized by the throat. His
attacker an Odim relation snarled, more like a maddened animal
than a human being. He clawed at Shokerandit without any coherent attempt to
overcome him. Shokerandit stuck two knuckles in the man's eyes, straightened
his arm, and pushed hard. As the man fell away, he kicked him in the stomach,
jumped on him, and pinned him to the deck.
"Now
what do we do? Throw him to the phagors?"
"We'll
tie him up and leave him in a cabin."
"I'm
not taking any chances." He picked up the hatchet he had dropped and
clouted the prone man across the temple with the handle. The man went limp.
They
tackled the captain's cabin in the stern. The lock broke under their assault,
and they burst in. They found themselves in a comfortably appointed quarter
galley with windows opening above the water.
They
drew up short. A man with an old-fashioned bell-mouthed musket was sitting with
his back to the windows, aiming the gun at them.
"Don't
shoot," Shokerandit said. "We intend no harm."
The
man rose to his feet. He lowered the weapon.
"I
would have blasted you if you were loonies."
He
was proportioned in the unaccustomed thickset way. He had passed through the
Fat Death. They recognised him then as the captain. His officers lay about the
cabin, their hands tied. Some were gagged.
"We've
had a high old time here," said the captain. "Fortunately, I was the
first to recover, and we have lost only the first mate for eating purposes, that was, excuse
the expression. A few more hours and these officers will be back in
action."
"Then
you can leave them and see to the rest of your ship," said Shokerandit
sharply. "We're beached, and there's a threat from phagors ashore."
"How's
Master Eedap Mun Odim?" asked the captain, as he accompanied them from the
cabin, his gun under his arm.
"We
haven't found Odim yet."
They
found him later. Odim had locked himself in his cabin with a supply of water,
dried fish, and ship's biscuits as he felt the first fever upon him. He had
undergone the metamorphosis. He was now a few inches shorter, and of much more
rounded bulk than before. His characteristic straight-backed stance had
disappeared. He wore a floppy sailor's garb, his own clothes having become too
tight for him. Blinking, he emerged on deck like a hibernatory bear from its
cave.
He
looked round quickly frowning, as they hailed him. Shokerandit
approached slowly, well aware that it was he who had passed the Fat Death to
all aboard. He humbly reminded Odim of his name.
Ignoring
him, Odim went to the rail and gestured over the side of the ship. When he
spoke, his voice choked with rage.
"Look
at this barbarism! Some wretch has thrown my best plate overboard. It's an
atrocity. Just because there's illness on the ship, it doesn't excuse . . . Who
did it? I demand to know. The culprit is not going to sail with me."
"Well
. . ." said Toress Lahl.
"Er
. . ." said Shokerandit. He took a grip on himself and said, "Sir, I
have to confess that I did it. We were being attacked by phagors at the
time."
He
pointed to where phagors could be seen by the rock.
"You
shoot phagors, you do not throw precious plates at them, you imbecile,"
Odim said. He reined in his temper. "You were mad is that your excuse?"
"The
ship has no weapons with which to defend itself. We
saw that the phagors were going to attack they will try again if they get desperate. I threw the plate over
the side deliberately, to cover the sand spit. As I expected, the fuggies
believed they were treading on thin ice, and retreated. I'm sorry about your
porcelain, but it saved the ship."
Odim
said nothing. He stared down at the deck, up at the mast. Then he brought a
little black notebook out of his pocket and perused it. "That service
would have fetched a thousand sibs in Shivenink," he said in low tones,
darting swift glances at them.
"It
has saved all the rest of the porcelain on the ship," Toress Lahl said.
"Your other crates are intact. How is the rest of your family?"
Muttering
to himself, Odim made a pencilled note. "Perhaps more than a thousand . .
. Thank you, thank you ... I wonder when such fine
ware will again be manufactured? Probably not until the spring of next Great
Year, many centuries in the future. Why should any of us care about that?"
He
turned bemusedly, to shake hands with Shokerandit while looking elsewhere. "My gratitude for saving the ship."
"Now
we'll get it afloat again," said the captain.
The
noise of the flambreg herd was louder now. They turned to see the animals pour
by, not more than a mile inland. Odim disappeared unnoticed.
Only
later did they discover the reason for his slightly eccentric behaviour. It was
not his dear Besi's death alone which had unsettled Odim. Of his three
children, only the eldest boy, Kenigg, had survived the ravages of the Fat
Death. His wife was also dead. Little was found of her bar skull, torso, and a
pile of bones.
The
flotation was not to come about for several hours. With the captain and a few
crew on their feet again, some attempt was made to bring the ship back into
order. Those still sick were settled as comfortably as possible in the
surgeon's cabin. The injured were tended. The convalescent
were brought to fresh air. The dead were wrapped in blankets and lined
up in a row on the upper deck. The dead numbered twenty-eight. The survivors
were twenty-one in number, including the captain and eleven of his crew.
When
everyone had been accounted for and order prevailed, the fit assembled for a
service of thanksgiving for their survival to God the Azoiaxic, who ordered all
things.
In
their innocent hymns, they did not see that the complexity of their survival
was beyond the capacity of any local deity.
Helliconia was at this
period receding towards something like the original conditions which had
existed before its parent sun Batalix became locked into the gravitational
field of the A-type supergiant. The planet had then carried a remarkable number
of phyla, ranging in size from viruses to whales, while being denied the energy
levels or the complexity to support beings with that intensity of cellular
organisation required as building blocks for higher mental functions the
thinking, deducing, perceiving functions associated with full consciousness.
The ancipitals were Helliconia's supreme effort in this respect.
The ancipitals were a part
of the integrated living system of Helliconia's biosphere. One of the functions
of that systemic gestalt of which, needless to say, its component parts were
entirely unaware was to maintain optimum conditions for the survival
of all. As the yellow-striped fly could not live without the flambreg, so
ultimately, the flambreg could not live without the yellow-striped fly. All
life was interdependent.
The capture of Batalix by
the supergiant was only an event of the first magnitude and not a catastrophe
for Helliconian life, although it was catastrophic for many phyla and many
individuals. The impact of the capture was gradual enough for the biosphere to
sustain it. The planet looked after its own. Its moon was lost; its vital
processes continued, although through a disruption which brought storms and
blizzards raging for hundreds of years.
The fierce output of
high-energy radiation from the new sun caused more damage. More phyla were
eradicated, while others survived only through genetic mutation. Among the new
species were some which were, in evolutionary terms, hastily developed; they survived
in the new environment only at some cost to themselves. The assatassi in the
sea, which were born as maggots from the decaying bodies of their parents; the
yelk and biyelk, necrogenes which resembled mammals but were without wombs; and
human stock; these were among the new creatures which rose to abundance under
the energy-rich conditions which came about eight million years before the
present.
The new creatures were
products of the biospheric striving for unity, land cobbled into it at the time
of maximum change. Before its capture by Freyr, Helliconia's atmosphere had
contained a large amount of carbon dioxide, protecting its life with a
greenhouse effect, and producing a mean temperature of -7° C. After capture,
the atmospheric carbon dioxide was much reduced, combining at periastron with
water to form carbonate rocks. Oxygen levels increased to amounts suitable for
the new creatures: humans could not live in the oxygen-scarce Nyktryhk, as
phagors did. In the seas, greater concentrations of macromolecules led to
stepped-up activity all along the food chain. All these new parameters for
existence came within the regulatory functions of Helliconia's biosphere.
The humans, as the most
complex life form, were the most vulnerable. However they might rebel against
the idea, their corporate lives were never more than part of the equipoise of
the planet to which they belonged. In that, they were no different from the
fish, the fungi, or the phagors.
In order that they might
function at optimum efficiency in Helliconia's extremes, evolutionary pressure
had introduced a system for regulating the masses of the humans. The
pleomorphic helico virus had as its vector a species of arthropoda, a tick,
which transferred itself readily from phagor to human. The virus was endemic
during two periods of the Helliconian year, in the Spring
and in the late Autumn of the Great Year, with minor epicycles between these
cycles. These two pandemics were known as bone fever and the Fat Death.
Sexual dimorphism between
the sexes was negligible; but both sexes showed seasonal dimorphism. Male and
female could be said to average approximately one hundred and twelve pounds
over an entire Great Year. But spring and autumn brought dramatic variations in
body weight.
Survivors of the spring
scourge of bone fever weighed a lanky ninety-six pounds, and presented a
skeletal appearance to those who were brought up to the old way of things. This
decreased body weight was an inheritable factor. It persisted throughout the
generations as a crucial survival trait during the increasing heat. But the
effect slowly became less apparent, until populations achieved the median of
one hundred and twelve pounds.
Towards winter, the virus
returned, partly in obedience to glandular signals. Survivors of these attacks
increased in bulk, rather than losing it, generally gaining
an average of about fifty percent body weight. For a few generations, the
population averaged one hundred and sixty-eight pounds. They had transformed
from ectomorph at one extreme to endomorph at the other.
This pathological process
performed a vital function in preserving the human stock, with a side effect
which benefitted the entire biosphere. As the expanding energy quota of the
spring planet demanded a much more variegated biomass for efficient systemic
working, so the contracting energy quota of winter required a decrease in total
biomass. The virus culled the human population to conform with
the total food-chain organisation of the biosphere.
Human existence was not
possible without the virus, just as the flambreg herds would have ceased
ultimately to exist without the curse of the yellow-striped fly.
The virus destroyed. But
it was a life-giving destruction.
The
stiff breeze blew off the coast. The clouds parted, revealing Batalix overhead.
The sea sparkled, tossing up foam made of finest pearl. The New Season raced west by southwest, with
music in her shrouds.
Along
the Loraj coast on the north stood the
The
learned, who are always attracted to the past, lodged also in the Autumn
Palaces. For them, the Palaces were the greatest archaeological site in the
world, their ruinous cellars taproots to an earlier age of man. And what
cellarage! Mazes of almost infinite depth stretched down into the rock, as if
to syphon up warmth from the heart of Helliconia. Here were reckonings inscribed
on stone and clay, pot shards, skeletons of leaves from vanished forests,
skulls to be measured, teeth to be fitted to jawbones, middens, weapons
dissolving in rust . . . the history of a planet patiently awaiting
interpretation, yet as tantalisingly beyond complete comprehension as a
vanished human life.
The
Palaces lay pallid with distance, and the New Season passed them far to starboard.
The
depleted crew occasionally saw other ships. As they sailed by the
After
Clusit, the captain decided to make a landing on the coast. He was familiar
with these waters and determined to stock the ship with food before they made
the last part of the run for the Shivenink
This
part of Loraj was within the northern tropics and still fertile. Behind the
coast lay a glittering country of woods, lakes, rivers, and marshes, scarcely
inhabited by mankind. Behind that country stood ancient eldawon and caspiarn
forests, stretching all the way to the ice cap.
On
the shore, helmeted seals basked, roaring as the passengers and crew of the New Season walked among them. They
offered no resistance as they were clubbed to death. This clubbing was done
with an oar. The oar had to hit the creature under the jaw in the vulnerable
part of its throat. With its air passages blocked, the seal died of
suffocation. This took some while. The passengers averted their gaze while the
seals rolled in agony. Their mates often tried to help them, whimpering
pitifully.
The
heads of the seals were covered by something resembling a helmet. The helmet
was an adaptation of horns, the seals having been land animals in the distant
past, driven back into the oceans by the cold of Weyr-Winter. The adaptation
protected the ears and eyes of the creatures, as well as the skull.
As
the human party turned away from the seals they were killing, legged fish
heaved themselves out of the waves and rushed up the steeply shelving shingle.
They began attacking the dying seals, tearing chunks of their blubbery flesh.
"Hey!"
shouted Shokerandit, and struck out at the fish.
Some
scattered and ran under stones. One lay wounded by Shokerandit's blow. He
picked it up and showed it to Odim and Fashnalgid.
The
fish was the best part of a metre long. Its six "legs" were finlike.
It had a lantern jaw, behind which trailed a number of fleshy whiskers. As its
head flicked from side to side, jaw snapping, its
filmy grey eyes stared at its captor.
"See
this creature? It's a scupperfish," said Shokerandit. "Soon these
creatures will be coming ashore in the thousands. Most of them get eaten by
birds. The others survive and tunnel into the earth for safety. Later, they'll
become longer than snakes, once the Weyr-Winter's here."
"They're
Wutra's worms, that's what they're called," said
the captain. "Best throw it away, sir. They're not fit even for the
sailors to eat."
"The
Lorajans eat them."
The
captain said, deferentially but firmly, "Sir, the Lorajans do eat the
worms as a delicacy, that's true. They are poison nonetheless. The Lorajans
cook them with a poisonous lichen, and 'tis said that
the two poisons cancel each other out. I've eaten the dish myself, sir, when
wrecked on this coast some years past. But I still hate the sight and taste of
the things, and certainly don't want my men filling their bellies with
them."
"Very well."
Shokerandit flung the still wriggling scupperfish out to sea.
Cowbirds
and other sorts of birds were wheeling above them, screaming. The sailors cut
up six of the helmeted seals as quickly as possible and carried the chunks of
meat over to the jolly boat. The offal was left to the other predators.
Toress
Lahl was weeping in silence.
"Get
back in the boat," Fashnalgid said. "What are you weeping for?"
"What
a horrible place this is," the woman said, turning her face away.
"Where things with legs crawl from the sea and everything eats some other
living thing."
"That's
how the world is, lady. Jump in."
They
rowed back towards the ship, and the birds followed, crying, crying.
The
New Season hoisted sail and
began to move over the still water, its bows swinging towards Shivenink. Toress
Lahl tried to speak to Shokerandit, but he brushed her to one side; he and
Fashnalgid had matters to attend to. She stood by the rail, hand to brow,
watching the coastline dwindle.
Odim
came up and stood beside her.
"You
need not be sorrowful. We'll soon reach the safety of the
Her
tears burst forth again. "Do you believe in a god?" she asked,
turning a tear-stained face towards him. "You've undergone such sorrow
this voyage."
He
was silent before answering. "Lady, all my life until now I have lived in
Uskutoshk. I behaved like an Uskuti. I believed like an Uskuti. I conformed which means that I regularly
worshipped God the Azoiaxic, the God of Sibornal. Now that I have come away
from that place, or have been driven away, as one might say, I can see that I
am no Uskuti. What is more, I find I have absolutely no belief in God. At his
passing, I felt a weight lifting." He patted his chest in illustration.
"I can say this to you, since you are not an Uskuti."
She
gestured towards the shore they were leaving. "This hateful place . . .
those dreadful creatures . . . all I've been through . . . my husband killed in
battle . . . the gruesomeness of this ship . . . Everything just gets steadily
worse, year by year . . . Why wasn't I born in the spring? I'm sorry, Odim this isn't like me. . . ."
After
a pause, he said gently, "I understand. I've also undergone bereavement.
My wife, my younger children, dear Besi . . . But I speak to my wife's gossie
in pauk, and she comforts me. Do you not seek out your husband in pauk,
lady?"
She
said to him in a low voice, "Yes, yes, I sink down to his gossie. He is
not as I desire to see him. He comforts me and tells me I should find happiness
with Luterin Shokerandit. Such forgiveness . . ."
"Well?
Luterin is a pleasant young man, by all I see and hear."
"I
can never accept him. I hate him. He killed Bandal Eith. How can I accept
him?" She startled herself by her own antagonism.
Odim
shrugged his broad shoulders. "If your husband's gossie so advises you . .
."
"I
am a woman of principle. Maybe it is easier to forgive when you are dead. All
gossies speak with the same voice, sweet like decay. I may cease the habit of
pauk . . . I cannot accept the man who has enslaved me however tempting the terms he uses to
bribe me. Never. It would be hateful."
He
rested a hand on her arm. "All is hateful to you, eh? Yet perhaps you
should try to think as I do that a new life is being presented to us us exiles. I am twenty-five and five
tenners no chicken! You
are much younger. The Oligarch is supposed to have observed that the world is a
torture chamber. That is the case only for those who believe so.
"When we walked on the shore, killing off those seals only six out of thousands, after all! a feeling overcame me that I was being shaped for the winter season
in some wonderful way. I had put on flesh but I had shed the Azoiaxic.
. . ." He sighed. "I find difficulty talking profoundly. I'm
better at figures. I'm only a merchant, as you know, lady. But this
metamorphosis through which we have come it is so wonderful that we must, must, try to live in accord with
nature and her generous accountancy."
"And
so I'm supposed to yield to Luterin, is that it?" she said, giving him a
straight look.
A
smile turned the corner of his mouth. "Harbin Fashnalgid has a soft spot
for you also, lady."
As
they laughed, Kenigg, Odim's one surviving son, ran up to him and hugged him.
He stooped and kissed the boy on his cheek.
"You're
a marvellous man, Odim, I really think it," Toress Lahl said, patting his
hand.
"You
are marvellous too but
try not to be too marvellous for happiness. That's an old Kuj-Juvec
saving."
As
she nodded her head in agreement, a tear shone in her eye.
Worse
weather came in as the ship approached the coasts of Shivenink. Shivenink was a
narrow country consisting almost entirely of an enormous mountain range the Shivenink Chain, which had lent
its name to the nation. The range divided the territories of Loraj and Bribahr.
The
Shiveninki were peaceful, god-fearing people. Their rages had been drained by
the original chthonic angers which had built their mountains. In the recesses
of their natural fortress, they had built an artifact which embodied their
particular brand of holiness and determination, the Great Wheel of Kharnabhar.
This wheel had become a symbol, not merely to the rest of Sibornal but to the
rest of the globe as well.
Great
whales thrust their beaked heads up to observe the New
Season as it entered Shiveninki waters. Sudden snow
blizzards, battering the ship, almost immediately hid them from sight.
The
ship was in difficulties. The wind howled through its rigging, spray dashed across
the deck; the brig pitched from side to side as if in fury. In something like
darkness though the hour
was Freyr-dawn the
sailors were sent up the ratlines. In their new metamorphosed shape, they were
clumsy. To the yardarm they climbed, soaked, drenched, battered.
The unwilling sails were furled. Then back down to a deck ceaselessly awash.
With
the crew depleted, Shokerandit and Fashnalgid, together with some of Odim's
more able relations, helped to man the pumps. The pumps were amidships, just abaft
the mainmast. Eight men could work on each pump, four on either handle. There
was scarcely room for the sixteen together in the pump well. Since this part of
the main deck caught the worst of the seas breaking inboard, the pumpers were
constantly inundated. The men cursed and fought, the pumps wheezed like old
grandfathers, the waters smashed against them.
After
twenty-five hours the wind abated, the barometer steadied, the sea became less
mountainous. The snow fell silently, blowing off the land. Nothing could be
seen of the shore, yet its presence could be felt, as if some great thing lay
there, about to wake from its ancient sleep of rock. They all sensed it, and
fell silent. They looked for it, peering into the muffling snow, and saw
nothing.
Next
day brought improvement, a calm passage in the orchestration of the elements.
The
snow showers fell away across the green water. Batalix shone through overhead.
The sleeping thing was slowly revealed. At first only its haunches were
visible.
The
ship was reduced to toy dimensions by a series of great blue-green bastions
whose tops were lost in cloud. The bastions unfolded as the ship, again under
full sail, sped westwards. They were immense headlands, each greater than the
last. At sea level, pillars of gigantic proportions irresistibly suggested that
they had been sculpted by a hand with intent behind it; they supported brows of
rock which went almost vertically up. Here and there, trees could be observed,
clinging to folds in the rock. White horizontal veins of snow defined the
curves of each headland.
Cleft
between the headlands were deep bays pockets in which the mountains kept reserves of murk and storm.
Lightning played in these recesses. White birds hovered where the current raced
at their mouths. Strange sounds and resonances issued across the waters from
the veiled cavities, touching the minds of the humans like the salt that
lighted on their lips.
Fitful
bursts of sun, penetrating such bays, revealed at their far end cataracts of
blue ice, great waterfalls frozen as for eternity, which had tumbled down from
the high homes of rock, ice, hail, and wind concealed almost perpetually by
cloud.
Then a bay greater than the previous ones. A gulf, flanked by black walls. At its entrance,
perched on a rock where the highest seas could not overwhelm it, a beacon. This
token of human habitation reinforced the loneliness of the scene. The captain
nodded and said, "There's the
But
they sailed on, and the great bulk of the planet to their starboard seemed to
move with them.
Later,
the coast became more massive still, as they reached the waters off the
The
tall slopes of Shiven were shrouded in vegetation. Climbers hung down, falling
free as if in imitation of the many small waterfalls which began their descent
and never finished, whipped away by winds scouring the sheer faces.
Occasionally the clouds would part to reveal the great head of snow-clad rock
which climbed to the sky. This was the southern end of a mountain range which
curved northwards to join the enormous lava plateau sequences under the polar
ice cap.
Within
a comparatively few miles of where the ship sailed, the ridge of the peninsula
rose to heights of over six and a quarter miles above sea level. Far higher
than any mountain peaks on Earth, the Shivenink Chain rivalled the High
Nyktryhk of Campannlat in scale. It formed one of the grandest spectacles on
the planet. Shrouded in its own storms, its own climatic conditions, the great
chain revealed itself to few human eyes, except from the deck of a passing
ship.
Lit
by the almost horizontal rays of Freyr, the formation clad itself in
breathtaking lights and shadows. To the perceptions of the passengers, all
appeared brilliant, all new. They became uplifted just to regard such titanic
scenery. Yet what they beheld was ancient ancient even in terms of planetary formation.
The
heights that dominated them had come into being four thousand and more million
years earlier, when the unevolved Helliconian crust had been struck by large
meteors. The Shivenink Chain, the Western Barriers in Campannlat, as well as
distant mountains in Hespagorat, were remaining testaments to that event, forming
between them segments of a great circle comprising the ejecta material of a
single impact. The
For
day after day they sailed. As in a dream, the peninsula remained to starboard,
unchanging, as if it would never go away.
Once
they rounded a small island, a pimple in the ocean, which might have dropped
from the overhanging landmass. Although it looked a terrifying place on which
to live, the island was inhabited. A smell of wood smoke drifted out to the
ship; that and the sight of huts nestling among trees made the passengers long
for a spell ashore, but the captain would hear nothing of it.
"Those
islanders are all pirates, many of them desperate characters lost off ships in
storms. Were we to set foot there, they'd murder us and steal our ship. I'd
sooner befriend vultures."
Three
long skin canoes put out from the island. Shokerandit passed his spyglass
round, and they looked at the men, bent of back, who rowed towards them as if
their life depended on it. In the
stern of one of the boats stood a naked woman with long black hair. She
carried a baby which suckled at her breast.
A
snowstorm blew off the mountains at that time, falling like a shawl to the sea.
The flakes settled on the woman's bare breasts and melted.
The
New Season was carrying too
much sail for the canoes to catch up. They fell astern. Still the men rowed
with undiminished zeal. Still they rowed when lost to sight, like madmen.
Once
or twice, cloud and mist parted enough for the passengers to catch a glimpse of
the Shiven heights. Then whoever saw the gap would give a cry,
and other passengers would come running, and gasp to see how far above their
heads stretched those dripping rocks, those vertical jungles, those snows.
Once a landslide started. A part
of the cliff fell away. It dropped and dropped, carrying away more rock with
it. Where it struck the sea, a great wave was raised. A wedge of ice fell,
disappeared under the surface, bobbed up again. Larger wedges tumbled after it having fallen from the edge of some
glacier invisibly housed in the clouds. The falls caused terrifying
reverberations of sound.
A
colony of brown birds sped out from shore in their thousands, whistling their
fright. So great was their wingspan that, when they passed over the ship, the
noise of their movements was like low thunder. The colony took half an hour to
pass overhead, and the captain shot several for the pot.
When
at last the brig rounded the peninsula and began to sail north, within two days
of Rivenjk, another storm struck. It was less severe than the previous one.
They were whirled up in fog and snow, which arrived in great flurries. For a
whole day the light of the suns glittered through thick mists and hail, the
hailstones being as large as a man's fist.
As
the storm abated and the men at the pumps were able to stagger away and sleep,
the coastline slowly revealed itself again.
Here
the cliffs were less vertical, though as awesome as ever, husbanding their own
clouds and rainstorms. From out of one obscuring storm emerged the gigantic
figure of a man, swathed in mist.
The
man appeared to be intending to spring from the shore and land on the deck of
the New Season.
Toress
Lahl cried in alarm.
"That's
the Hero, ma'am," said the second mate reassuringly. "He's a sign
we're nearly at journey's end and a good thing too."
Once
the scale of the coast was grasped, it was plain that the statue was gigantic.
The captain demonstrated with his sextant that it stood over a thousand metres
high.
The
Hero's arms were upraised and carried slightly forward over the head. The knees
were slightly bent. The man's stance suggested that he was either about to jump
into the ocean or take flight. The latter alternative was suggested by what
might have been a pair of wings, or else a cloak, flowing back from the broad
shoulders. For stability, the figure's lower legs had not been separated from
the rock face from which it was sculpted.
The
statue was stylised, cut with curious whorls as if to confer an aerodynamic
shape. The face was sharp and eaglelike, yet not entirely inhuman.
Increasing
the solemnity of the sight, a distant bell tolled. Its brazen voice rolled
across the grey waters to the brig.
"He's
a splendid figure, isn't he?" Luterin Shokerandit said with pride. The
passengers in their metamorphosed state all gathered at the rail to stare
uneasily across at the gigantic statue.
"What
does he represent?" Fashnalgid asked, plunging his hands into his coat
pockets.
"He
represents nothing. He is himself. He's the Hero."
"He
must represent something."
Annoyed,
Shokerandit said, "He stands there, that's all. A man.
To be seen and admired."
They
fell uneasily silent, listening to the melancholy note of the bell.
"Shivenink
is a land of bells," Shokerandit said.
"Has
the Hero got a bell in his belly?" young Kenigg asked.
"Who
would build such a thing in such a place?" Odim enquired, to cover his
son's impertinent question.
"Let
me tell you, my friends, that this mighty figure was created ages ago some say many Great Years past,"
Shokerandit said. "It was built, legend has it,
by a superior race of men, whom we call the Architects of Kharnabhar. The
Architects constructed the Great Wheel. They are the finest builders the world
has ever known. When they finished their labours on the Wheel, they sculpted
this giant figure of the Hero. And the Hero has guarded Rivenjk and the way to
Kharnabhar ever since."
"Beholder,
what are we coming to?" Fashnalgid asked himself aloud. He went below to
smoke a veronikane and read a book.
When
the desolation of a post-apocalyptic Earth yielded to the ice age, signals had
been received from Helliconia for the past three centuries. As the glaciers moved
south, there were few who possessed the ability to watch that newly discovered
planet's history, apart from the androids on Charon.
At
least this could be said for the ice age. It wiped the Earth clear of the
festering shells of defunct cities. It obliterated the cemeteries which all
previous habitation had become. Voles, rats, wolves, ran where highways had
once been. In the southern hemisphere, too, the ice was on the move. Solitary
condors patrolled the empty
A
drop of only a few degrees had been enough to throw the intricate mechanisms of
climatic control out of gear. The nuclear blast had induced in the living
biosphere in Gaia, the
Earth mother a state of
shock. For the first time in epochs, Gaia met a brute force she could not
accommodate. She had been raped and all but murdered by her sons.
For
hundreds of millions of years, Earth's surface had been steadily maintained
within the narrow extremes of temperature most congenial to life maintained by an unwitting conspiracy
between all living things in conjunction with their parent world. This despite
increases in the sun's energy, causing dramatic changes in the constitution of
the atmosphere. The regulation of the amount of salt in the sea had been
maintained at a constant percentage of 3.4. If that had ever risen to a mere 6
percent, all marine life would have ceased. At that percentage of salinity,
cell walls disintegrate.
The
amount of oxygen in the atmosphere had similarly been maintained at a steady 21
percent. The percentage of ammonia in the atmosphere had also been maintained.
The ozone layer in the atmosphere had been maintained.
All
these homeostatic equilibria had been maintained by Gaia, the Earth mother in
whom all living things, from sequoias to algae, whales to viruses, had their
being. Only mankind had grown up and forgotten Gaia. Mankind had invented its
own gods, had possessed those gods, had been possessed by them, had used them as
weapons against enemies, and against their own inner selves. Mankind had
enslaved itself, in hate as much as love. In that madness of isolation, mankind
invented formidable weapons of destruction. In committing genocide, it almost
slew Gaia.
She
was slow to recover. One striking symptom of her illness was the death of
trees. Those abundant organisms, which had spread from the tropical rain
forests to the northern tundras, were killed by the radioactivity and an
inability to photosynthesise. With the disappearance of trees, a vital link in
the homeostatic chain was broken; the homes they provided for a myriad of life
forms were lost.
Conditions
of cold prevailed for almost a thousand years. Earth lay in a chill catalepsy.
But the seas lived.
The
seas had absorbed much of the large clouds of carbon dioxide released by the
nuclear holocaust. The carbon dioxide remained trapped in the water, retained
in deep ocean circulation and not to be released for centuries. The ultimate
release initiated a period of greenhouse warming.
As
had happened before, life came forth from the seas. Many components of the
biosphere insects,
microorganisms, plants, man himself had survived, thanks to isolation, freak winds, or other
providential conditions. They again became active, as white gave place to
green. The ozone layer, shielding living cells from lethal ultraviolet,
reestablished itself. Once more, as the firn melted, the pipe of separate
instruments reached towards orchestral pitch.
By
5900, better conditions were evident. Antelope sprang among low thorn trees.
Men and women muffled themselves in skins and trudged north after the glaciers.
At
night, those humbled revenants huddled together for comfort and gazed upwards
at the stars. The stars had scarcely changed since the time of paleolithic man.
It was the human race which had changed.
Whole
nations had gone forever. Those enterprising people who had developed mighty
technologies and had struck out first for the planets and then for the stars,
who had forged clever weapons and legends those peoples had wiped themselves out. Their sole heirs were the
sterile androids working on the outer planets.
Races
came forth who, under an earlier dispensation, could be regarded as losers.
They lived on islands or in wildernesses, at the tops of mountains or on
untamed rivers, in jungles and swamps. They had once been the poor. Now they
came forth to inherit the Earth.
They
were peoples who took delight in life. In those first generations, as the ice
retreated, they had no need to quarrel. The world awoke again. Gaia forgave
them. They rediscovered ways of living with the natural world of which they
were a part. And they rediscovered Helliconia.
From
6000 and for the next six centuries, Gaia could be said to Convalesce. The tall
glaciers were withdrawing fast to their polar fortresses.
Some
of the old ways of life had survived. As the land returned, old bastions of the
technophile culture were uncovered generally hidden underground in elaborate military complexes. In
the deepest bastions, there were descendants still living whose ancestors had
been part of the ruling elite of the technophile culture; they had ensured
their own survival while those who had been subject to them had perished. But
these living fossils, on reaching the sunshine, died within a few hours-like
fish brought up from the enormous pressures of the ocean deeps.
In
their foul warrens, a hope was found the link with another living planet. Summonses were sent through
space to Charon, and a company of androids fetched back to Earth. These
androids, with untiring skill, set about building auditoria in which the new
population could observe all that happened on the far-distant planet.
The
mentalities of the new populations were shaped to a large extent by the unfolding
story they saw. Survivors on the other planets, cut off from Earth, also had
their links with Helliconia.
In
fresh green lands, auditoria stood like conch shells upended in sand. Each
auditorium was capable of housing ten thousand people. In their sandalled feet,
roughly clothed in skin, and later cloth, they came to look on with wonder.
What they saw was a planet not greatly different from their own, emerging
slowly from the grip of a long winter. It was their story.
Sometimes
an auditorium might remain deserted for years. The new populations also had
then crises, and the natural catastrophes which attended Gaia's recovery. They
had inherited not only the "Earth but its uncertainties.
When
they could, the new generations returned to watch the story of lives running
parallel to their own. They were generations without terrestrial gods; but the
figures on the giant screens appeared like gods. Those gods endured mysterious
dramas of possession and religion which gripped yet puzzled their terrestrial
audiences.
By
the year 6344, living forms were again in moderate abundance. The human
population took a solemn vow that they would hold all possessions in common,
declaring that not only life but its freedom was sacred. They were much influenced
by the deeds of a Helliconian living in an obscure hamlet in the central
continent, a leader called Aoz Roon. They saw how a good man was ruined by a
determination to get his own way. To the new generations, there was no
"own way"; there was only a common way, the journey of life, the uct
of the communal spirit.
As
they viewed the immense figure of Aoz Roon, saw water blow from his lips and
beard as he drank from his hands, they watched drops which had fallen a
thousand years earlier. The human understanding of past generations had made
past and present merge. For many years, the picture of Aoz Roon drinking from
his hands became a popular ikon.
To
the new generations, with their empathic feel for all life, it was natural to
wonder whether they could assist Aoz Roon and those who lived with him. They
had no idea of setting out in starships, as preglacial peoples might have done.
Instead, they decided to focus their empathic sense and broadcast it outwards
through conch shells.
So
it was that signals went from Earth to Helliconia, responding for the first
time to the signals which had long flowed in the opposite direction.
The
characteristics of the human race were now drawn from a slightly different
genetic pool than formerly. Those who had inherited the Earth were strong on
empathy. Empathy had not been dominant in the preglacial world. That gift of
entering into the personality of another, of experiencing sympathetically his
or her state of mind, had never been rare. But the elite had despised it or exploited it. Empathy ran against
their interest as exploiters. Power and empathy were not happy teammates.
Now
empathy was widely dispersed among the race. It became a dominant feature, with
survival characteristics. There was nothing in-human about it.
There
was an inhuman aspect to the Helliconians. The terrestrials puzzled greatly
about it. The Helliconians knew the spirits of their dead and communed
regularly with them.
The
new race on Earth took no particular account of death. They understood that
when they died they were taken back and absorbed into the great Earth mother,
their elementary particles to be reformed into future living things. They were
buried shallowly with flowers in their mouths, symbolising the force that would
spring up from their decay. But it was different on Helliconia. They were
fascinated by the Helliconians' descent into pauk to commune with their
gossies, those sparks of vital energy.
And
it was observed that the ancipital race had a similar relationship with its dead.
Dead phagors sank into a "tether" state and appeared to linger,
dwindling, for several generations. The phagors had no burial customs.
These
macabre extensions to existence were regarded on Earth as a compensation for
the extremities of climate which living things endured in the course of a
Helliconian Great Year. There was, though, a marked difference between the
defunct of the ancipital kind and the defunct of the human kind.
Phagors
in tether supported their living descendants, formed a reservoir of wisdom and
encouragement, comforted them in adversity. The spirits of humans visited in
pauk, on the other hand, were unmitigatedly spiteful. No gossie ever spoke
except to utter reproaches and to complain about a spoilt life.
Why
this difference? asked the new intellects.
They
answered from their own experience. They said: Dreadful though the phagors are,
they are not estranged from the Original Beholder, the Helliconian Gaia figure.
So they are not tormented by the spirits about them. The humans are estranged;
they worship many useless gods who make them ill. So their spirits can never be
at peace.
How
happy for the Helliconian peoples said the empathic ones among themselves
if they could have comfort from their gossies in the
midst of all their other troubles.
So
a determination developed. Those fortunate enough to experience life, to rise
up from the molecular and surface into the great light of consciousness, like a
salmon leaping from a stream to take a winged life, should radiate their
happiness towards Helliconia.
The
living of Earth, in other words, should beam empathy like a signal to
Helliconia. Not to the living of Helliconia. The living, estranged from their
Original Beholder, busy with their affairs, their lusts and hatreds, could not
be expected to receive such a signal. But the gossies
for ever hungry for contact might respond! The gossies in their
event-free existence, suspended in obsidian as they sank towards the Original
Beholder, the gossies might be capable of receiving a beam of empathy.
A
whole generation discussed the daringly visionary proposal.
Was
the attempt worth making? went the question.
It
would be a great unifying experience even if it failed, came the answer.
Could
we possibly hope to affect alien beings the very dead so far away?
Through
us, Gaia could address the Original Beholder. They are kin, not alien. Perhaps
this amazing idea is not ours but hers. We must try.
But
when we are so far distant in space and time . . . ?
Empathy
is a matter of intensity. It defies space and time. Do we not still feel for
the exile of Iphigenia in that ancient story? Let's try.
Shall
we?
On
all counts, it is worth it. The spirit of Gaia commands.
And
so they tried.
The
attempt was long-sustained. Wherever they sat and watched,
wherever they came or went in their rough sandals, the living generations put
away worldly things and radiated empathy towards the dead of Helliconia. And
even when they could not resist including the living, such as Shay Tal or
Laintal Ay, or whomever they might personally favour, they were still
empathising with those long dead.
And
over the years the warmth of their empathy took effect. The fessups ceased to
grieve, the gossies ceased to chide. Those of the living who communed through
pauk were not reproved but comforted. An unpossessive love had triumphed.
A
biogas fire burned in the grate. Before it sat two brothers
talking. Every now and again, the thin brother would reach out to pat
the sturdy one, as the latter told his tale. Odirin Nan Odim, referred to by
all his kin as Odo, was a year and six tenners older than Eedap Mun Odim. He
much resembled his brother, except in the crucial matter of girth, for the Fat
Death had yet to make its dread appearance in Rivenjk.
The
two brothers had much to tell each other, and much planning to do. A ship
bearing the Oligarch's soldiery had recently arrived in the port, and the set
of regulations against which Odim had fought was beginning to trouble Odo too.
However, the Shiveninki were less ready than the Uskuti to take orders. Rivenjk
was still a comfortable place in which to live.
The
remaining precious porcelain which Odim had brought to his elder brother had
been well received.
"Soon
such porcelain will become even more precious," said Odo. "Such fine
quality may never be achieved again."
"Because the weather deteriorates towards winter."
"What
follows from that, brother, is that fuel for firing the kilns will become
short, and so increase in price. Also, as people's lives grow harsher, they
will be content with tin plates."
"What
do you plan to do then, brother?" asked Odim.
"My
trade links with Bribahr, the neighbouring country, are excellent. I even
despatch my goods to Kharnabhar, far north of here. Porcelain and china are not
the only goods that need to travel such routes. We must adapt, deal in other
goods. I have ideas for "
But
Odirin Nan Odim was never allowed peace for long. He, like his brother, housed
a number of relations. Some of them, voluble and voluminous,
rushed to the fireside now, heads full of a quarrel that only Odo could settle.
Some of Eedap Mun's relations, surviving plague and voyage, had been billeted
with their Rivenjk relations, and the old question had arisen of floor space
being encroached upon.
"Perhaps
you would not mind coming with me to see what is happening," said Odo.
"I
would be pleased. From now on, I shall be your shadow, brother."
Homesteads
in Rivenjk were arranged round a courtyard and protected from the elements by a
high wall. The more prosperous the family, the higher the
wall. Round this courtyard lived the various branches of the Odim family very little more enterprising here
than the relatives in Koriantura had been.
With
the families lived their domestic animals, housed in stalls adjoining the human
habitations. Some of the animals had been crowded together to permit the newly
arrived relatives shelter. This arrangement was the cause of the present
quarrel: the resident relations prized their animals above the newly arrived
relations and with some
justice.
The
sanitary arrangements of most Shiveninki courtyard homesteads depended on a
commensalism between animals and humans. All excretions from both house and
stall were washed down into a bottle-shaped pit carved in the rock under the
courtyard. The pit could be maintained from an inspection flap in the
courtyard, through which all vegetable refuse was also thrown. As the refuse
rotted underground, it gave off biogas, chiefly methane.
The
biogas rising from the pit was trapped and piped into the houses, to be used
for cooking and lighting.
This
civilised system had been developed throughout Shivenink to cope with the
extremes of the Weyr-Winter.
As
the Odim brothers inspected the complaints of their relatives, they discovered
that two cousins had been housed in a stall where there was a small gas leak.
The smell offended the cousins, who had insisted on bundling into the adjoining
house, which was already packed with people.
The
gas leak was plugged. The cousins, protesting for form's sake, went back to
their appointed stall. Slaves were despatched to see that the biogas tank was
not malfunctioning.
Odo
took his brother's arm. "The church is nearby, as you will observe when we
take you on a tour of the city. I have arranged this evening for a small
service of thanksgiving to be held there. Praise will be offered to God the
Azoiaxic for your preservation."
"You
are most kind. But I warn you, brother, I am free of religious belief."
"This
little service is necessary," said Odo, raising a dismissive finger.
"There you will be able to meet all our relatives formally. There is
something downcast in your spirit, brother, owing to your multiple
bereavements. You must take a good woman, or at least a slave, to make you
happy. What is the status of that foreign woman in your party, Toress
Lahl?"
"She's
a slave, belonging to Luterin Shokerandit. A doctor,
very spirited. He is a fine young man, and from Kharnabhar. About Captain Fashnalgid,
I am less certain. He's a deserter, not that I blame him for that. I started
out the voyage, before the Fat Death overcame us, with a woman who meant much
to my comfort. Alas, she died in the epidemic."
"Was
she from Kuj-Juvec, brother?"
"No,
but she became like a dove to the tree of my self. She was faithful and good.
Her name, for I must speak it, was Besi Besamitikahl. She was more to me even
than my "
Odim
broke off sharply, for up ran Kenigg, with a newfound friend. As Odim smiled
and took his son's hand, his brother said, "Let me help you find another
dove for that good tree of your self. You have only one brother, but the air is
full of doves waiting for a suitable branch on which to alight."
Luterin
Shokerandit and Harbin Fashnalgid had been given a small room under the roof,
thanks to Odo's generosity. It was lit by one little garret window overlooking
the courtyard, from which they could watch the comings and goings of the family
and their slaves. In an alcove stood a stove on which their slave could cook
their meals.
Both
the men had beds of wood, raised above the floor and covered in rugs. Toress
Lahl was supposed to lie on the floor beside Shokerandit's bed.
Shokerandit
took her in with him while Fashnalgid still slept. He lay all night with his
arms round her. Only as he was rising did Fashnalgid stir.
"Luterin,
why so energetic?" he asked, yawning cavernously. "Didn't you drink
enough of the Odim family's wine last night? Rest, man, and for the Azoiaxic's
sake, let's recover from that terrible voyage."
Shokerandit
came and looked down at him, smiling. "I had enough wine. Now I want to be
off to Kharnabhar as soon as possible. My status is uncertain. I must see how
my father is."
"Damn
fathers. May their gossies eat shoe leather."
"I
have another anxiety too one
you had better heed. Although the Oligarch is well occupied with the war
against Bribahr, he has a ship here in port. More may arrive. They may be
watching for us both. The sooner I start for Kharnabhar, the better. Why not
come with me? There'd be safety and work with my father."
"It's
always cold in Kharnabhar. Isn't that what they say? How far north is it from
here?"
"The
Kharnabhar road covers over twenty-two degrees of latitude."
Fashnalgid
laughed. "You go. I'll stay here. I'll find a ship sailing for Campannlat
or Hespagorat. Anything rather than your frozen refuge, thanks for all
that."
"Please
yourself. We don't exactly please each other, do we? Men have to get along
well, to survive the drive to Kharnabhar."
Fashnalgid
brought an arm up from his furs and held out a hand to Shokerandit. "Well,
well, you're a man for the system, and I'm against it, but never mind
that."
"You
like to think I'm a man for the system, but since my metamorphosis I've broken
from it."
"Yes?
Yet you long to get back to Father in Kharnabhar." Fashnalgid laughed.
"True conformists don't know they conform. I like you well enough,
Luterin, though I know you think I wrecked your life by capturing you. On the
contrary, I saved you from the claws of the Oligarch, so be grateful. Be
grateful enough to heave your Toress over to my bed for the morning, will
you?"
A
flush spread over Shokerandit's face. "She'll get you water or food while
I'm out. Otherwise, she is mine. Ask Odim's brother for what you want he has plenty of slaves for whom he
cares nothing."
They
looked each other in the eye. Then Shokerandit turned to leave the room.
"Can
I come with you?" Toress Lahl called.
"I
shall be busy. You can stay here."
As
soon as he was gone, Fashnalgid sat up in bed. The woman was hurriedly
dressing. She cast the odd glance across at the captain, who smoothed his
moustache and gave a smile.
"Don't
be so hasty, woman. Come over to me. Sweet Besi's dead and I want
comforting."
When
she made no answer, he climbed naked out of bed.
Toress
Lahl made a run for the door, but he caught her by the wrist and pulled her
back.
"Don't
be in such a hurry, I said, didn't I? Didn't you hear me?" He gave her
long brown hair a gentle tug. "Women are generally pleased to be attended
by Captain Fashnalgid."
"I
belong to Luterin Shokerandit. You heard what he said."
He
twisted her arm and grinned down at her. "You're a slave, so you're
anyone's. Beside, you hate his guts I've seen the looks you give him. I never forced a woman, Toress,
that's the truth, and you'll find me a good deal more expert than he, from what
I overheard."
"Please
let me go. Or I shall tell him and he'll kill you."
"Come
on, you're too pretty to threaten me. Open up. I saved you from death, didn't
I? You and he were riding into a trap. He's a fatal innocent, your
Luterin."
He
put a hand between her legs. She got her right hand free and slapped him across
the face.
With
a burst of anger, Fashnalgid wrenched her off her feet and threw her down on
his bed. He fell on top of her.
"Now
you listen to me before you provoke me beyond words, Toress Lahl. You and I are
on the same side. Shokerandit is all very well, but he is going home to
security and position all
the things you and I have lost. What is more, he plans to drive you countless
skerming miles northwards. What's up there but snow and holiness and that
gigantic Wheel?"
"It's
where he lives."
"Kharnabhar's
fit only for rulers. The rest die in the cold. Haven't you heard of the Wheel's
reputation? It used to be a prison, the worst on the planet. Do you want to
finish up in the Wheel?
"Throw
your lot in with me. I have seen the sort of woman you are. You've seen the
sort of man I am. I am an outcast, but I can fend for myself. Before you get
taken miles to some fortress in the northern ice from which you will never
escape, achieve wisdom, achieve wisdom, woman, and throw in your lot with me.
We'll sail from here to Campannlat and better climes. Maybe we'll even get back
to your precious Borldoran."
She
had gone very pale. His face, close above hers, was a
blur, nothing more than eyebrows, those piercing eyes, and that great dead
moustache. She was afraid that he would strike her or even kill her and that Shokerandit would not care. Her
will was already ebbing under the burden of captivity.
"He
owns me, Captain. Why discuss it? But you may have your way with me if you
must. Why not? He has."
"That's
better," he said. "I'll not hurt you. Throw your clothes off."
Luterin
Shokerandit knew the
At
least there was pleasure in being ashore again. He could swear he still felt a
slight rolling movement underfoot. Walking down to the harbour, he went into
one of the inns and drank a measure of yadahl while listening to the talk of
the sailors.
"They're
nothing but a nuisance here, these soldiers," a man nearby was saying to a
companion. "You heard, I suppose, that one was knifed last night down
Perspicacity Alley, and I don't wonder at it."
"They'll
set sail tomorrow," his friend said. "They'll be confined aboard ship
tonight, you'll see, and good riddance." He lowered his voice.
"They're off under Oligarch's orders to fight against the good people of
Bribahr. What harm Bribahr have done the rest of us, I don't know."
"They
may have captured Braijth, but Rattagon is impregnable. The Oligarch is wasting
his time."
"Set
in the middle of a lake, I hear."
"That's
Rattagon."
"Well,
I'm glad I'm not a soldier."
"You're
too much of a fool to be anything but a sailor."
As
the two men laughed together, Shokerandit fixed his gaze on a poster on a wall
by the door. It announced that henceforth Anyone
Entering the State of
Although
Shokerandit never practised pauk, he disliked the stream of new orders the
State was issuing.
Shokerandit
thought to himself as he drained his glass that he probably hated the Oligarch.
When the Archpriest-Militant Asperamanka had sent him to report to the
Oligarchy, he had felt honoured. Then Fashnalgid had stopped him almost at the
Sibornalese frontier; and it had taken him some while to believe what the man
claimed, that he would have been cold-bloodedly killed with the rest of the
returning army. It was even more difficult to realise that all of Asperamanka's
force had been wiped out on the Oligarch's orders.
It
made sense to take rational measures to keep the plague from spreading. But to
suppress pauk was a sign that authoritarianism was spreading. He wiped his
mouth with his hand.
As
a result of circumstance, Shokerandit was no hero but a fugitive. He could not
imagine what his fate would be if he was arrested for desertion.
"What
did
It
behoved him to get home to Kharnabhar and remain under his father's powerful
protection. At least in distant Kharnabhar the forces of the Oligarch would not
reach him. Thought of Insil could be left for later.
With
this reflection came another. He owed Fashnalgid something. He must take him on
the arduous journey north if Fashnalgid could be persuaded to come. Fashnalgid
would be useful in Kharnabhar: there he could help bear witness to the massacre
of thousands of young Shiveninki by their own side.
He
said to himself, I had courage in battle. I must have courage to fight against
the Oligarchy if necessary. There will be others at home who feel as I do when
they hear the truth.
He
paid his coin and left the inn.
Along the waterfront stood a grand avenue of rajabarals. As temperatures dropped, the trees prepared for the long winter.
Instead of shedding their leaves, they drew in their branches, pulling them
into the tops of their vast trunks. Shokerandit had seen pictures in natural
history books of how branches and leaves would dissolve to form a solid resin
plug, protecting the featureless and undecaying tree until it released its seed
in the following Great Spring.
Under
the rajabarals, soldiers from a ship which flew the flags of Sibornal and the
Oligarchy were parading. Shokerandit had a momentary fear that someone might
recognize him; but his metamorphosed shape was protection. He turned inland,
towards the marketplace, where there were agents who handled the affairs of
travellers intending to visit Kharnabhar.
The
cold winds from the mountains made him turn up his collar and lower his head.
But at the agent's door, pilgrims eager to visit the shrines of the Great Wheel
were gathered, many poor and scantily clad.
It
took him a while to arrange matters to his liking. He could travel to
Kharnabhar with the pilgrims. Or he could travel independently, hiring a
sledge, a team, a driver, and a jack-of-all-trades. The former way was safer,
slower, and less expensive. Shokerandit decided on the latter as more befitting
the son of the Keeper of the Wheel.
All
he needed was cash or a letter of credit.
There
were friends of his father's at hand, some men of influence in the town's
affairs. He hesitated, and eventually chose a simple man called Hernisarath,
who ran a farm and a hostel for pilgrims on the edge of town. Hernisarath
welcomed Shokerandit in, immediately supplied a letter of credit for the agent,
and insisted that Shokerandit join him and his wife for a midday meal.
He
embraced Shokerandit on the doorstep when it was time to take leave.
"You're
a good and innocent young man, Luterin, and I'm happy to help. Every day as
Weyr-Winter approaches, farming becomes more difficult. But let's hope we shall
meet again."
His
wife said, "It's so nice to meet a young man with good manners. Our respects to your father."
Shokerandit
glowed as he left them, pleased to have made a good impression; whereas
Snow
began to fall from the heights, whirling as it came, like fine white sugar
dissolving in a stirred glass of water. It thickened, muffling the sound of his
boots on the cobbles. The streets cleared of people. Long grey shadows sprouted
penumbras, dark for Freyr, lighter for Batalix, until the cloud extended over
the bay and enveloped all Rivenjk in murk.
Shokerandit
halted suddenly behind a rajabaral.
Another
man came on from behind, clutching his collar to his throat. He walked past the
tree, glanced back, shuffled his feet, and hurried into a side street.
Shokerandit saw with some amusement that it was called Perspicacity Alley.
With
uncharacteristic forethought, he had not told his fellow travellers that on the
head of the Hero guarding entry to Rivenjk harbour was a heliograph signalling
station. Warning of the deserters aboard the New Season could have reached the port long before the brig docked.
. . .
He
returned to Odo's house by as devious a route as he could contrive. By then,
the worst of the snow shower was over.
"How
fortunate that you arrive in time," Odo said, as Shokerandit entered the
door. "My brother and I and the rest of the family are
about to go to church to give thanks for the New Season's survival. You will come along, please?"
"Oh
. . . yes, of course. A private ceremony?"
"Absolutely private. Only the priest and the family."
Shokerandit
looked at Odim, who nodded encouragingly. "You are about to embark on
another journey, Luterin. We who have known each other such a short while must
part. The ceremony seems appropriate, even if you don't believe in
prayer."
"I
will see if Fashnalgid will come too."
He
hastened up the winding wooden stair to the room Odo had lent them. Toress Lahl
was there, lying under her skins on his bed.
"You're
meant to be working, not lying about," he said. "You're not still
mourning your husband? Where's the captain?"
"I
don't know."
"Find
him, will you? He'll be drinking somewhere."
He
ran back downstairs. As soon as he was gone, Fashnalgid climbed out from under
his bed and laughed. Toress Lahl refused to smile.
"I
want food, not prayer," he said, peering cautiously out of the window.
"And that drink your friend mentioned would be welcome. . . ."
The
Odim clan was gathering in the courtyard, where slaves were still meddling
inefficiently with long rods, climbing in and out of the biogas inspection pit,
despite the sleet in the air. The place was filled with excited talk.
Shokerandit
appeared. Some of the ladies who had been on the New Season ran up and embraced him, in a manner more reminiscent of
Kuj-Juvec than of the rest of Sibornal. Shokerandit no longer contrasted such
free behaviour with his own formal upbringing.
"Oh,
this is such a good place, this Rivenjk," said one well-wrapped
grand-aunt, taking his arm. "There are many fine buildings, and much
statuary. 1 shall be happy here, and mean to set up a press to print poetry. Do
you think your countrymen like poetry?"
But
before Shokerandit could reply, the lady had turned in the other direction to
grasp Eedap Mun Odim by the sleeve. "You are our little hero, cousin,
bringing us safe from oppression. Let me be in the church next to you. Walk
there with me and make me proud."
"I
shall be proud to walk with you, auntie," said Odim, smiling kindly at
her. And the whole jostling crowd began to move out of the courtyard gate and
along the street to the church.
"And
we are proud to have you with us, too, Luterin," said Odim, anxious that
Shokerandit should not feel left out of the party. He looked round with
pleasure at so many Odims gathered together. Although their ranks had been
culled by the Fat Death, the bulk of the survivors was
a compensation of sorts.
When
they filed into the high-roofed church, Odim ranged himself against his
brother, elbows touching. He wondered if Odo, like him, had no belief in God
the Azoiaxic. He was far too polite to put such a personal question; secrecy
was for men, as the saying went. If his brother wished to confess one evening,
over a little wine, that was another matter. For now, it was enough that they
were together and that the service allowed them to mourn for those who had
died, including his wife and children and the beloved Besi Besamitikahl, and to
rejoice in the fact that their own lives were spared.
A
treble voice, disembodied, sexless, free of lust, traced a thread of theatrical
penitence which rose from the well of the church to its interlaced roof beams.
Odim
smiled as he sang and felt his soul lifted towards the rafters. Belief would
have been good. But even the wish to believe was consolatory.
As
the voices of the congregation were raised in song inside, ten beefy soldiers
marched down the street outside accompanied by an officer, and halted outside
Odirin Nan Odim's gate. The watchman opened up to them, bowing. The soldiers
brushed him aside and marched into the centre of the courtyard, trampling the
already trodden carpet of snow.
The
officer barked orders to his men. Four men to search the houses set at each
point of the compass, remainder to stand where they were and be alert for
escapees.
"Abro
Hakmo Astab!" Fashnalgid shouted, jumping up from his bed. He had been
sitting half-dressed, watching both the window and Toress Lahl, to whom he
occasionally read lines of poetry from a small book. She was obeying his orders
to prepare a meal, and was carrying a flaming brand obtained from a slave
downstairs to light their stove.
She
flinched at the obscenity of his oath, although she was used to the swearing of
soldiers.
"How
I love the sound of a military voice!
'No song like yours under spring skies . . .' "
Fashnalgid said. "And the clump of army boots.
Yes, there they are. Look at that young fool of a lieutenant, uniform gleaming.
All I once was . . ."
He
glared down at the scene in the courtyard, where, in front of the soldiers,
slaves still worked, rodding out the biogas drains, glancing mistrustingly at
the invaders.
A
pair of boots started to clump up the stairs to the attic room.
Fashnalgid
snarled, showing white teeth under the wave of his moustache. He rushed for his
sword and glared round the room like a cornered beast. Toress Lahl stood
petrified, one hand to her mouth, the other holding the flaming brand at arm's
length.
"Haaa
. . ." He dashed forward and snatched the brand from her, trailing the
smoke across the room as he ran for the window. Pushing it open, he forced his
head and shoulders out and hurled the brand with all his strength.
He
had not lost his military skills. No grenade could have flown truer. The flame
drew a parabola down the darkened air and disappeared into the open trap of the
biogas chamber. For a second, silence. Then the whole
place exploded. Slabs of the courtyard went flying. A great flame rose in the
midst of everything, burning blue at its core.
With
a roar of satisfaction, Fashnalgid crossed to the door and flung it wide. A young
soldier stood there, hesitating, looking back the way he had come. Without
thought, Fashnalgid ran him through. As the man doubled, Fashnalgid kicked out,
sending him head first down the stairs.
"Now
we've got to run for our lives, woman," he said, taking hold of Toress
Lahl's hand.
"Luterin " she said, but she was too
frightened to do anything but follow him. They ran downstairs. The courtyard
was a scene of panic. The gas still burned. Odims too old, too young, or too
voluminous to attend the church service, together with their animals, were
running about among the soldiers. The smart lieutenant aimed a bullet or two at
the clouds. Slaves were screaming. One of the houses had caught fire.
It
was an easy matter to skirt the mκlιe and leave by the gate.
Once
they were in the street, Fashnalgid dropped to an easier pace and sheathed his
sword, so as to be less conspicuous.
They
hurried into the churchyard. He pulled the woman against a buttress, panting.
Inside, hymns rose to God the Azoiaxic. In his excitement,
he gripped her painfully by the upper arm.
"Those
sherbs, they're after us. Even in this piddling dump . . ."
"Oh,
do let me go. You're hurting me."
"I'll
let you go. You're going to go inside this church and get Shokerandit. Tell him
that the military have caught up with us. There'll be no escaping by boat now.
If he has arranged a sledge, then we all start for Kharnabhar as soon as we
can. Go in and tell him." He gave her a push to encourage her. "Tell
him they want to hang him."
By
the time Toress Lahl reappeared with Shokerandit, many people were about in the
street and not only
innocent bystanders. As the Odims ran shouting with distress, Fashnalgid said,
"Luterin, have you got a sledge? Can we get out of here right away?"
"Need
you have wrecked the Odim home after all they have done for us?"
Shokerandit said, regarding the other's disarray.
"Don't
trust Odim. He's a tradesman. We have to leave. The army's woken up. Don't
forget your lovely Toress Lahl is officially a runaway slave. You know the
penalty for that. Where's the sledge?"
"We
can get it when the stables open at Batalix-dawn. You have changed your mind
suddenly, haven't you?"
"Where
do we hide till dawn?"
Shokerandit
thought. "There's a family friend, by name Hernisarath. He and his wife
will give us shelter until the morning. . . . But I must go and say good-bye to
Odim."
Fashnalgid
pointed a thick finger at him. "You'll do no such thing. He'll hand you
over. Soldiers are swarming everywhere. You are an innocent, aren't you?"
"All
right, and you're an eccentric. Insults apart, why the change of plan? Only
this morning you were going to sail for Campannlat."
Fashnalgid
smiled. "Suppose it occurred to me that I ought to be nearer to God? I've
decided to come with you and your lady slave to Holy Kharnabhar."
On
the sixth day of the sixth tenner of every sixth small year, the Synod of the
Church of the Formidable Peace met in Askitosh. The lesser fry met in
conventials behind the Palace of the Supreme Priest. The fifteen dignitaries
who formed the standing synod lived and met in the Palace itself. They
represented both the ecclesiastical and the secular or military arms of the
organisation of the Church. The burdens of office were heavy upon them. They
were not men given to drollery.
Being
human, the fifteen had their faults. One was regularly overcome by alcohol by
sixteen twenty every day. Others kept young female or male slaves in their
chambers. Some enjoyed peculiar defilements. Nevertheless, at least a part of
each of them was dedicated to the good continuance of the Church. Since good
men were hard to find, the fifteen could be accounted good men.
And
the most dedicated man of all was Chubsalid, a man of Bribahr birth, brought up
by holy fathers within the cloisters of their church, now Priest-Supreme of the
Church of the Formidable Peace, the appointed representative on Helliconia of
God the Azoiaxic, who existed before life and round whom all life revolves.
Even
the most watchful ecclesiastical eye had never seen Chubsalid raise a bottle to
his lips. If he had any sexual proclivities whatsoever, they were a secret kept
between him and his maker. If he ever experienced anger, fear, or sorrow, no
shadows of those emotions ever reached his rosy face. And he was no fool.
Unlike
the Oligarchy, whose meeting place on Icen Hill was not a mile away, the Synod had wide popular support. The Church
genuinely ministered to the needs of its people; uplifted their hearts and
supported them in adversity. And preserved tactful silence
about pauk.
Unlike
the Oligarch, who was never seen and whose image in the fearful popular
imagination most resembled a huge crustacean with hyperactive nippers,
Priest-Supreme Chubsalid travelled among the poor and was a popular visitor
with his congregations. He looked every inch a Priest-Supreme, with his large
stature, craggy but kindly countenance, and mane of white hair. When he spoke,
people wished to listen. His addresses were spun from piety and often fringed
by wit: he could make his congregations laugh as well as pray.
The
discussion at the synodical meetings was conducted in the highest Sibish, with
multiple clauses, elaborate parentheses, and spectacular verb formations. But
the matter on this occasion was strictly practical. It concerned the strained
relationship between the two great estates of Sibornal, the State and the
Church.
The
Church watched with alarm as the edicts of the Oligarchy increased in severity.
One of the synodic priesthood was speaking to the assembly on this subject.
"The
new Restrictions of Persons in Abodes Act and similar regulations are/continue
represented by the State as a move to curtail the plague. Already they are
causing as much disruption as the plague does/will/can. The poor are evicted
and arrested for vagrancy, or else perish from the increasing cold."
He
was a silvery man and spoke in a silvery voice, but its conviction carried to
the end of the room. "We can see the political thinking behind this
iniquitous Act. As more northerly farms fail/failing, the peasants and small
farmers who worked those farms drift into town, where they must find shelter
where they can, generally in overcrowded conditions. The Act seeks to confine
them to their failed farms. There they will starve. I hope I am not unduly
uncharitable when I say that their deaths would suit the State well. The dead
never talk politics."
"You
foresee a revolt starting in the towns if the Act were repealed?" asked a
voice from the other end of the table.
"In
my youth, it was said that a Sibornalese worked for life, married for life, and
longed for life," replied the silvery voice. "But we never rebel. We
leave that to the people of the Savage Continent. The Church has so far said
nothing about these restrictive Acts. Now I suggest that we have reached a
sticking point with the Act against pauk."
"We
have no policy on pauk."
"Neither had the State till now. Again, the dead have no politics, and that the State
has/continuous recognises. Nevertheless, the Oligarchy have
now legislated against pauk. This causes/has/will further misery to our
congregations for whom if
you will forgive my saying so pauk is as much a part of life as parturition.
"The
poor are being unfairly punished to fit them for the coming winter. I move that
the Church speaks out publicly against the recent actions of the State."
An
aged and bald man, completely lacking hair or colour, rose with the aid of two
sticks and spoke.
"It
may be as you say, brother. The Oligarchy may be tightening its grip. I suggest
to you that it has to do so. Think of the future. All too soon, our descendants
will be faced/facing three and a half centuries of the bitter Weyr-Winter. The
Oligarchy reasons that the harshness of nature must be matched by the harshness
of mankind.
"Let
me remind you of that terrible Sibish oath which must not be spoken. It is
regarded as a supreme blasphemy, and rightly. Yet it is admirable. Yes,
admirable. I would not/admonitorily have it spoken in my diocese, yet I admire
the defiance of it."
He
steadied himself. There were those who thought the venerable man was about to
defile his lips with the oath. Instead, he took a different tack.
"In
the Savage Continent of Campannlat, chaos descends with the cold. They have no
overriding order as we have. They crawl back to their caves. Sibornal survives
intact. We will/shall/have perpetual survive by organisation. That organisation
has to tighten like an iron fist. Many have to die that the state will survive.
"Some
of you have complained because all phagors are to be shot regardless. I say
they are not human. Get rid of them. They have no souls. Shoot them. And shoot
all that defend them. Shoot the farmers whose farms fail. This is no time for
individual gestures. Individuality itself must soon/will be punished by
death."
In
the silence, his sticks rattled like bones as he seated himself again.
A
murmur of shock went round the room, but Priest-Supreme Chubsalid from his
ermine-lined seat said mildly, "No doubt they make such speeches all the
while on Icen Hill, but we must keep to our chosen profession, which
involves/continuous tempering our dealings even with failed farmers with mercy.
Our Church stands for the individual, for individual conscience, individual salvation,
and our duty is to remind our friends in the Oligarchy of this from time to
time, so that the people are also clear in their minds on that point.
"The
seasons may grow harsh. We do not have to imitate them, so that even in
harshest times the essential teaching of the Church may/will/must live.
Otherwise there is no life in God. The State sees this time of crisis as one in
which it must show its strength. The Church must do at least as much. Who here
of the fifteen agrees that the Church should stand against the State?"
All
of the fourteen he had addressed turned to mutter with their neighbours down
the long table. They could guess the retribution which would follow the move
advocated by their leader.
One
of the number raised a gold-ringed hand and said, in a
quavering voice, "Sire, the time may/potential come when we do indeed have
to take the kind of stance you suggest. But for pauk?
When we have carefully avoided for eons when perhaps some doubt as to the legitimacy of challenging when the myth of the Original
Beholder opposes our . . ."
He
left that theatrical thought unstated.
The
youngest member of the Synod was a Priest-Chaplain named Parlingelteg, a
delicate man, though it was whispered that some of his activities were
indelicate. He was never afraid to speak up, and he addressed his words
directly to Chubsalid.
"That
last miserable speech convinces me at least and I imagine all of you that we must stand against the State. Perhaps
specifically on the issue of pauk. Let's not pretend pauk isn't real, or
that the gossies don't exist, just because they don't fit with the Teaching.
"Why
do you think the State has tried to forbid pauk? For one
reason only. The State is guilty of genocide. It killed off thousands of
men in Asperamanka's army. The mothers of those sons thus slain have communed
with them after death. The gossies have spoken. Who here said the dead have no
politics? That's nonsense. Thousands of dead mouths cry out against the State
and the murderous Oligarch. I support the Priest-Supreme. We must speak against
Torkerkanzlag and have him thrown out of office."
He
blushed red to the roots of his fair hair, as several of his seniors applauded.
The meeting broke up. Still they drew back from taking a decision. Had
An
hour's break followed. It was too chilly to go outdoors. They loitered in the
heated withdrawing rooms while scouts served water or wine in porcelain cups.
They talked among themselves. Perhaps there was a way of avoiding actual
consultation; apart from what the gossies said, there was no real evidence, was
there?
A
bell rang. They reconvened. Chubsalid spoke privily to Parlingelteg and both looked
solemn.
The
debate was continuing when a liveried slave knocked and entered. He bowed low
before the Priest-Supreme and handed him a note on a tray.
Chubsalid
read the note, then sat for a moment with his elbow on
the table before him and his hand touching his tall forehead. The talk died.
All waited for him to speak.
"Brothers,"
he said, looking round at them. "We have a visitor, an important witness.
I propose to summon him before us. His words, I fancy, will carry more weight than
would further discussion." He gestured to the slave, who bowed and hurried
from the room.
Another
man entered the chamber. With deliberation, he turned and closed the doors
behind him, only then advancing towards the table where the fifteen leaders of
the Church sat. He was dressed in deep blue from head to foot; boots, breeches,
shirt, jacket, cloak, all were blue; so was the hat he carried in his hand. Only his hair was white, although black remained over each temple.
When the Synod had last seen him, his hair had been entirely black.
The
white hair emphasised the size of his head. His straight brows, eyes, mouth,
emphasised the anger that lurked like thunder there.
He
bowed deeply to the Priest-Supreme and kissed his hand. He turned to salute the
Synod.
"I
thank you for giving me audience," he said.
"Archpriest-Militant
Asperamanka, we had been informed of your death in battle," said
Chubsalid. "We rejoice in the inaccuracy of our information."
Asperamanka
formed his lips into a chilling smile. "I all but died but not in battle. The story of how I
managed to reach Askitosh, almost alone of all my army, is an extraordinary
one. I was shot in Chalce, on the very frontiers of our continent, I was
captured by phagors, I escaped, I was lost in marshland well, in brief, it is God's miracle
that I stand before you now. God protected me, and sharpened me as an
instrument of justice. For I come as proof of a crime of
perfidy unequalled in the illustrious history of Sibornal."
"Pray
take a seat," said the Priest-Supreme, motioning to a lackey. "We
wait to hear what you have to tell us. You will prove a better informant than
any gossie."
As
Asperamanka told his story of the ambush, of the withering fire directed by the
Oligarch's guard against his returning forces, as the full extent of what had
happened was borne home to everyone, it became clear that Parlingelteg had
spoken truly. The Church would have to confront the State. Otherwise, the
Church became party to the massacre.
It
took Asperamanka over an hour to unfold the whole story of the campaign and its
betrayal. Finally he was silent. Silent only for a minute.
Then he unexpectedly hid his face in his hands and burst into tears.
"The
crime is mine too," he cried. "I worked for the Oligarch. I fear the
Oligarch. To me, Church and State were one and synonymous."
"But
no more," said Chubsalid. He rose and rested his hand on Asperamanka's
shoulder. "Thank you for being God's instrument and making our duty plain
to us.
"The
Oligarchy has had jurisdiction over humanity's bodies, the Church over its
souls. Now we must gird ourselves to assert the supremacy of the soul above the
body. We must oppose the Oligarchy. Is it here so resolved?"
The
fourteen members gave cries of assent. Sticks rattled under the table.
"Then
it is unanimous."
After
more discussion, agreement was reached that the first move should be to send
out a firmly worded Bill to all churches the length and breadth of the land.
The Bill would declare that the Church defended the ancient practice of pauk,
which it regarded as an essential freedom of every man and woman in the realm.
There was no evidence that the so-called gossies spoke other than Truth. The
Church in no way accepted that the practice of pauk spread the Fat Death.
Chubsalid set his name to the Bill.
"This
is probably the most revolutionary Bill the Church has ever put out," said
the silvery voice. "I just want to state that fact. And by acknowledging
pauk, are we not acknowledging also the Original Beholder? And are we not thus
allowing heathen superstition into the Church?"
"The
Bill makes no mention of the Original Beholder, brother," said
Parlingelteg softly.
The
Bill was approved and sent to the ecclesiastical printer. From the printer it
went out to all the churches in the land.
Four
days passed. In the Palace of the Priest-Supreme, churchmen waited for the
storm to break.
A
messenger, clad in oilskins against the weather, came down from Icen Hill and
delivered a sealed document at the Palace.
The
Priest-Supreme broke the seal and read the message.
The
message said that subversive pamphlets put out by the Synod preached treason,
in that they set out deliberately to flout recent Acts promulgated by the
State. Treason was punishable by death.
If
there was an explanation for these vile offences, then the Priest-Supreme of
the Church of the Formidable Peace should present himself before the Oligarch
forthwith, and deliver it in person.
The
letter was signed with the signature of Torkerkanzleg II.
"I
do not believe that man exists," Chubsalid said. "He has reigned for
over thirty years. Nobody has ever seen him. No portrait exists of his face. He
could be a phagor for all we know to the contrary . . ."
He
continued for a while in this vein, tut-tutting absently, and visiting the
Synod library to compare signatures, toying with magnifying glasses and shaking
his head.
This
activity made the Priest-Supreme's advisors nervous; they felt he should be
concentrating on the gravity of a summons which, on the face of it at least,
appeared to be his death warrant. Senior advisors, speaking among themselves,
suggested that the entire centre of the Church should move immediately from
Askitosh to a safer place possibly to Rattagon, although it was under siege, since its
position in the middle of a lake rendered it secure; or even to Kharnabhar,
despite its extreme climate, since it was a religious refuge.
But
Chubsalid had his own ideas. Retreat never entered his mind. After an hour of pottering
about comparing signatures, he announced that he would meet the Oligarch. An
acceptance note was written by his scribe to that effect. It suggested that the
meeting should be in the great entrance hall of Icen Castle, and that anyone
who wished might come there and hear the debate between the two men.
As
Chubsalid appended his name to the document, Priest-Chaplain Parlingelteg, who
was standing nearby, came forward and knelt by the Priest-Supreme's chair.
"Sire,
when you go to that place, permit me to accompany you. Whatever there befalls
you, let it also befall me."
Chubsalid
set his hand on the young man's shoulder.
"It
shall be as you suggest. I shall be grateful for your presence."
He
turned then to Asperamanka, who was also in the company.
"And
you, our Priest-Militant, will you also come to
Asperamanka
looked here and there, as if seeking out an invisible door. "You speak
better than I, Priest-Supreme. I think it unwise to bring up the subject of the
plague. We have no cure for the Fat Death, any more than the State. The
Oligarch may have reasons we know nothing of for wishing to suppress
pauk."
"Then
we will hear them. You will come with Parlingelteg and me?"
"Perhaps
we should take doctors with us."
Chubsalid
smiled. "We shall be able to stand against him, I trust, without the aid
of doctors."
"Surely
we ought to try and compromise," said Asperamanka, looking wretched.
"We
shall see if that is possible," said Chubsalid. "And thank you for saying
you will accompany us."
The
day dawned. Priest-Supreme Chubsalid put on his ecclesiastical robes and bade
good-bye to his colleagues. One or two he embraced.
The
silvery man shed a tear.
Chubsalid
smiled at him. "Whatever happens this day, I will require your courage as
well as mine." His voice was firm and serene.
He
climbed into his carriage, where Asperamanka and Parlingelteg waited. The
carriage moved off.
It
made its way through silent streets. The police, at the Oligarch's command, had
cleared onlookers away, so that there was none of the cheering which usually
greeted the appearance of the Priest-Supreme. Only silence.
As
the carriage ground its way up the treacherous paving stones of Icen Hill, the
presence of soldiery was all too noticeable. At the gates of the castle, armed
men stepped forward and fended off those priests who had followed behind their
leader's carriage. The carriage passed under the ponderous stone arch. The
great iron gates closed behind it.
Many
windows looked down on the front courtyard, enforcing silence with their
oppressive dead shine. They were mean windows, less like eyes than blunt teeth.
The
party of three was led unceremoniously from the carriage into the chill of the
building. Their footsteps echoed as they traversed the great entrance hall.
Soldiers in elaborate national uniform stood on guard. None moved.
The
party was shown to the rear, to a dingy passage where the skirting was scuffed
by innumerable boots, as if a tormented animal had tried to fight its way to
freedom. After a wait, a signal was given their guide and they ascended by a
narrow wooden stair which wound up two flights without a window by way of
punctuation. They emerged into another passage, no more congenial to tormented
animals than the first, and halted at a door. The guide knocked.
A
voice bade them enter.
They
came into a room which displayed all the festive cheer for which the Oligarchy
was noted. It was a reception room of a kind, lined with chairs on which only
the most emaciated anatomies could have found rest. The one window in the room
was draped in heavy leather curtains, evidently designed to be capable of
repelling the onslaughts of daylight.
The
niggardly proportions of the room, in which the height
of the ceiling was matched only by the depth of gloom it engendered, was
reinforced by its lighting. One fat viridian candle burned in a tall stand in
the middle of the otherwise empty floor. A chilling draught caused its shadows
to stir wakefully on the creaking parquet.
"How
long do we wait here?" Chubsalid enquired of the guide.
"A short while, sire."
Short
whiles were of long duration in such a room, but eventually inner doors opened.
Two uniformed men with swords dragged the doors apart, allowing the party to
view a further room.
This
further room was lit by gas flares, which imparted a sickly light over
everything but the face of a man sitting berobed in a large chair at the far
end of the room. Since the gas lights were behind his throne, his face was cast
into shadow. The man made no movement.
Chubsalid
said in a clear voice, "I am Priest-Supreme Chubsalid of the Church of the
Formidable Peace. Who are you?"
And
an equally clear voice came back. "You address me as the Oligarch."
The
visiting party, although they had prepared themselves for the encounter, were
silenced by a momentary awe. They shuffled forward to the door of the inner
chamber, where soldiers barred their way with naked swords.
"Are
you Torkerkanzlag II?" asked Chubsalid.
Again the clear voice.
"Address me as the Oligarch."
Chubsalid
and Asperamanka looked at each other. Then the former spoke out.
"We
have come here, Dread Oligarch, to discuss the curtailment of traditional
liberties in our state, and to speak with you regarding a recent crime
committed "
The
clear voice cut in. "You have come here to discuss nothing, priest. You
have come here to speak of nothing. You have come here because you preached
treason, in deliberate defiance of recent edicts issued by the State. You have
come here because the punishment for treason is death."
"On
the contrary," said Parlingelteg. "We came here anticipating reason,
justice, and an open debate. Not some sort of tawdry melodramatics."
Asperamanka
set his chest against one of the drawn swords and said, "Dread Oligarch, I
have served you faithfully. I am Priest-Militant Asperamanka, who, as no doubt
you know, led your armies to victory in the field against the thousand heathen
cults of Pannoval. Did you not were not those armies destroyed on their return to your
domains?"
The
unmoved voice of the Oligarch said, "In the presence of your ruler, you do
not ask questions."
"Tell
us who you are," said Parlingelteg. "If you are human you give no
evidence of it."
Ignoring
the interruption, Torkerkanzlag II gave the guard an order: "Draw back the
window curtain."
The
guide who had led the three into the stifling chamber creaked his way across
the floor and grasped the leather curtain with both hands. Slowly, he pulled
the curtain back from the long window.
Grey
light filtered into the room. While the other two turned to see out, Chubsalid
looked back towards the Oligarch. Some of the light filtered even to where he
sat motionless on his shadowed throne; something of his features was revealed.
"I
recognise you! Why, you're " But the Priest-Supreme got no further, for one of the
soldiers grasped him unceremoniously by the shoulder and swung him to the long
window, where the guide stood pointing downwards.
A
courtyard lay beneath the window, surrounded entirely by tall grey walls.
Anyone walking down there would have been crushed by the weight of disapproving
windows ranged above him.
In
the middle of the courtyard, a wooden cage had been built. Inside the cage was
a tall, sturdy pole. What made this arrangement remarkable was the fact that
cage and pole stood on a slatted wooden platform, which was built over piles of
logs. Tucked in among the logs were bundles of brushwood. Bunches of twigs and
kindling skirted the brushwood.
The
Oligarch said, "The punishment for treason is death. That you knew before
you entered here. Death by burning. You have preached
against the State. You will be burnt."
Parlingelteg
spoke up boldly as the curtain was pulled back over the window. "If you
dare burn us, you will turn the religion of Sibornal against the State. Every
man's hand will be against you. You will not survive. Sibornal itself may not
survive."
Asperamanka
made a run for the door, shouting, "I'll see to it that the world hears of
this villainy."
But
there were soldiers outside the door who turned him back.
Chubsalid
stood in the middle of the room and said soothingly to him, "Be firm, my
good priest. If this crime is committed here in the centre of Askitosh, there
will be those who will never rest until the Azoiaxic triumphs. This is the
monster who believes that treachery costs less than armies. He will find that
this treachery costs him everything."
The
unmoving man in the chair said, "The greatest good is the survival of civilisation
over the next centuries. To that end all else must be sacrificed. Fine
principles have to go. When plague's rampant, law and order
break down. So it has always been at the onset of previous Great Winters in Campannlat, in Hespagorat, even in
Sibornal. Armies run mad, records burn, the finest emblems of the state are
destroyed. Barbarism reigns.
"This
time, this winter, we shall/will survive that crisis. Sibornal is to become a
fortress. Already none may enter. Soon, none shall leave. For four centuries,
we shall remain a haven of law and order, whilst the cold tears out the
gizzards of wolves. We will live from the sea.
"Values
will be maintained, but those values must be the values of survival. I will not
have Church and State at loggerheads. That is what the Oligarchy has decided.
Ours is the only plan which can/determined save the maximum number of people.
"Next
spring, we shall rise up strong while Campannlat is still given over to
primitivism and its women lug carts like beasts of burden if they haven't forgotten how to make
wheels by then. At that time, we shall resolve the endless hostility with those
savage lands for good and all.
"Do
you call that wicked? Do you call that wicked, Priest-Supreme? To see our beloved continent triumph?"
Garbed
in his canonicals, Chubsalid made a fine figure. He drew himself up. He let
silence cover the Oligarch's rhetoric before he replied.
"Whatever you may arrogantly believe to the contrary, yours
is the argument of a weak man. We have in
Sibornal a harsh religion, forged, like the Great Wheel itself, out of an
adverse climate. But what we preach is stoicism, not cruelty. Yours is the
ancient argument of ends justifying means. You will find that if you pursue
your proposed course the cruel means will subvert the end, and your plan will
fail utterly."
The
man in the chair moved his hand scarcely an inch as a substitute for a gesture.
"We may make mistakes, Priest-Supreme, that I grant. Then we shall simply
bury our dead and remain on course."
Parlingelteg's
clear young voice rang out: "And all the dead will bear witness against
you. Word will go from gossie to gossie. All will hear of your crimes."
The
Oligarch's darker tone replied. "The dead may bear witness. Happily, they
cannot bear arms."
"When
this deed is known, many will bear arms against you!"
"If
you have nothing to say beyond the airing of threats, then the time has come
for you to meet those unarmed millions below ground yourselves. Or do any of
you care to reconsider your loyalty to the State in view of what I have
said?"
He
motioned to the guards. Parlingelteg shouted the forbidden curse. "Abro
Hakmo Astab, damned Oligarch!"
Armed
guards marched across the room with heavy tread, to take up positions behind
the ecclesiastics.
Asperamanka
could say nothing for the trembling of his jaw. He rolled his eyes at
Chubsalid, who patted him on the shoulder. The youngest priest took Chubsalid
by the arm and called out again, "Burn us and you set all Askitosh
afire!"
Chubsalid
said, "I warn you, Oligarch, if you cause a schism between Church and
State, your plans will never succeed. You will divide the people. If you burn
us, your plan will already have failed."
In
a composed voice, the Oligarch said, "I shall find others who will
cooperate, Priest-Supreme. Dozens of the obedient will rush to fill your place and think it honourable. I know men
well."
As
the guards took hold of the captives, Asperamanka broke free. He ran towards
the Oligarch's throne and went down on one knee, bowing his head.
"Dread
Oligarch, spare me. You know that I, Asperamanka, was your faithful servant in
war. You surely never intended that such a valuable instrument should be
killed. Do with these other two as you will, but let me be saved, let me serve
again! I believe that Sibornal must survive as you say. Harsh times call for
harsh measures. Spiritual power must make way for temporal power to secure the
way. Just let me live, and I will serve . . . for the glory of God."
"You
may do it for your own base sake, but never for God's," said Chubsalid.
"Get up! Die with us, Asperamanka 'twill be less pain." "Living
or dying, we accept the role of pain in our existence," said the Oligarch.
"Asperamanka, this comes unexpectedly from you, the victor of Isturiacha.
You entered here with your brothers; why not burn with your brothers?"
Asperamanka
was silent. Then, without rising from his knees, he burst out in a flood of
eloquence.
"What
has been said here belongs not so much to politics or morals as to history. You wish to change history, Oligarch perhaps the obsession of all great
men. Indeed our cyclic history stands in need of reform reform which must be brutal to be
effective. "Yet I speak for our beloved Church, which I have also served served with devotion. Let these burn for it. I'd rather live for it. History shows us
that religions can perish just like nations. I have not forgotten my history
lessons as a child in the monastery of Old Askitosh, where I was taught of the
defeat of the religion of Pannoval at the hand of a wicked King of Borlien and
his ministers. If Church and State here fall apart, then our Supreme God is
similarly threatened. Let me, as a Man of God, serve your ends."
As
the other priests were marched out, Parlingelteg took a flying kick at
Asperamanka, sending him sprawling on the floor. "Hypocrite!" he
called as he was dragged out of range.
"Take
those two down to the courtyard," said the Oligarch. "If a little
fear is struck into the heart of the Church, the Church may not be so vocal in
future."
He
sat motionless as Priest-Supreme Chubsalid and Priest-Chaplain Parlingelteg
were marched away.
The
chamber emptied. Only one guard remained, silent in the shadows, and
Asperamanka, still crouching on the floor, face pale.
The
Oligarch's cold stare turned in Asperamanka's direction.
"I
can always find work for your kind," he said. "Get up on your
feet."
Most
of Sibornal's rivers ran south. Most of them, for most of the year, were fast and
ill-natured, as befitted waters born of glaciers.
The
Venj was no exception. It was wide, full of dangerous currents, and could be
said to hurtle rather than flow on its way to its outlet at Rivenjk.
In
the course of centuries, however, the Venj had scoured itself a valley through
which it might flow or flood as the mood took it, and it was along this valley
that the road led which would eventually bear a north-bound traveller to
Kharnabhar.
The
road wound upward through pleasant country, protected from prevailing winds by
the mass of the Shivenink Chain. Large bushes, indifferent to frost, grew here,
putting out immense blossoms. Small flowers grew by the wayside, picked by
pilgrims because they were never seen elsewhere.
The
pilgrims were carefree on this, the first stage of their land journey to
Kharnabhar. They travelled alone or in groups, dressed in all manner of garb.
Some went barefoot, claiming that they controlled their bodies so as not to
experience cold. There was singing and music among the groups. This was a
serious exercise in piety one that would stand them in good stead at home for the rest of
their lives but
nevertheless it was a holiday, and they rejoiced accordingly. For some miles
out of Rivenjk, stalls stood by the side of the way, where fruit or emblems of
the Wheel could be bought. Or peasants from Bribahr
for the frontier was close here climbed up from the valley to sell
produce to the travellers. This stage of the way was easy.
The
way became steeper. The air grew a little thinner. The blossoms on the
leathery-leaved bushes were brighter but smaller. Fewer peasants climbed up
from the valley. Not so many of the pilgrims had the lung power to blow their
musical instruments. There was nervous talk of robbers.
But
still well, this special
trip must be an adventure, perhaps the great adventure. They would all return
home as heroes. A little difficulty was welcome.
The
hostels where the pilgrims slept for the night, if they could afford it, became
rougher, the dreams of the pilgrims more troubled. The nights were filled with
the sound of water forever falling a reminder of the heights lost in the clouds above them. Next
morning, the travellers would get silently on their way. Mountains are enemies
of talk. Conversation was born a lowland art.
Still
the road wound upward; still it followed the ill-tempered Venj. Still the
travellers followed the road. And at last they were rewarded by fine views.
They
were approaching Sharagatt, five thousand metres above sea level. When the
clouds dispersed, views were to be had northwestward, down the tangled
mountainsides, into terrifying gorges where vultures soared. Even farther, if
the pilgrim was lucky and eagle-eyed, he might see the plains of Bribahr, blue
with distance or possibly frost.
Before
Sharagatt, a few pokey wayside shops began again. Some had nuts and mountain
fruits to sell, some offered paintings of the landscape, as badly drawn as they
were highly idealised. Signs appeared. A bend in the road and yet another bend and how tired the calf muscles
suddenly seemed and a
stall selling waffles and
a glimpse of a wooden spire and then another bend and people crowds and Sharagatt, yes, that haven! Sharagatt and the prospect of a bath and a clean bed.
Sharagatt
was full of churches, some modelled on the ones in Kharnabhar. Paintings and
engravings of Kharnabhar were on sale. Some claimed that, if you knew where to
go, you could purchase genuine certificates to say that you had visited the
Great Wheel.
For
Sharagatt considerable
though the achievement was to reach it was nothing. It was but a halt, a beginning. Sharagatt was where
the real journey to Kharnabhar began. Sharagatt was as far as many travellers
ever got. Promising everything, it was a milestone of lost hopes. Many people
found themselves too old, too tired, too ill, or simply too poor to get
further. They stayed for a day or two. Then they turned round and made their
way back down to Rivenjk, at the mouth of the unforgiving river.
For
Sharagatt was little past the tropical zone. To the north, further up the
mountain, the climate rapidly grew more severe. Many hundreds of miles lay
between Sharagatt and Kharnabhar. More than determination was needed to make
that journey.
Luterin
Shokerandit, Toress Lahl, and Harbin Fashnalgid slept in the Sharagatt Star
Hotel. More precisely, they slept on a verandah under the broad eaves of the
Sharagatt Star Hotel. For even Shokerandit's careful booking of all details in
Rivenjk had not prevented a muddle at the hotel, which was fully occupied. A
creaky three-decker bunk bed had been carried onto the verandah for their
comfort.
Fashnalgid
lay in the top bunk, with Shokerandit next and the woman at the bottom.
Fashnalgid had not been pleased with the arrangement, but Shokerandit had
bought them each a pipe full of occhara, the weed grown from a mountain plant,
and they were full of peace. A light wagon had brought them and other
privileged passengers this far. Tomorrow they would take to a sledge. Tonight
was for rest. When the mists cleared over the mountain, the night sky blazed
with familiar constellations, the Queen's Scar, the Fountain, the Old Pursuer.
"Toress
Lahl, you see the stars? Can you name them?" Shokerandit asked in a dreamy
voice.
"I
name them all stars. . .
." She gave a faint laugh.
"Then
I shall climb down into your bunk and teach you."
"There
are so many."
"It
will take me a long time. . . ."
But
he fell asleep before he could move, and even animal cries from further down
the mountainside did not awaken him.
Shokerandit
was up early next morning, feeling stale and tired. He pulled his chilly top
clothes on before rousing Toress Lahl.
"We
sleep in all our clothes from now until the end of the journey," he said.
Without waiting for her to follow he was off to the stores to see to the
equipment that would be needed for the month ahead. NORTH TRAVEL STORES it announced over the door, with a painting of the Great Wheel.
He
was anxious. Fashnalgid, a true Uskuti, thought of Shivenink as a mountainous
backwater. Luterin Shokerandit knew better. Remote though it was from the
capital, Shivenink was well provided with police and informers. After
Fashnalgid's killing of a soldier, both police and military would be on their
track. He grieved to think of the trouble he had left with Eedap Mun Odim and
Hernisarath.
Using
an assumed name, he bought various necessary items at the store, and then went
to inspect the team, already booked, which would transport them to Kharnabhar
and the safety of his father's estates.
Fashnalgid
took the processes of the morning more slowly. Directly Shokerandit was gone
from the verandah, he ceased to feign sleep and climbed down into the lower
bunk with Toress Lahl. Now that he had broken her spirit, she offered no
resistance. The occhara had left her listless.
"Luterin
will kill you when he discovers what you are doing," she said.
"Shut
up and enjoy it, you hussy. I'll take care of him when the time comes." He
seized her in a bear's embrace, and with his ankles wrapped about hers, parted
her thighs, and thrust into her. His thrusting set the rickety bunk banging
against the rail of the verandah.
Sharagatt
was divided into two parts. There was Sharagatt and
It
took Shokerandit two hours to see that all was arranged for the journey. He
knew the folk he had to deal with. They were mountain people who called
themselves Ondod, which meant according to who was translating from their complex language either "Spirit People" or
"Spirited People."
One
Ondod would be driver. With him would be his phagor slave. He had a good sledge
and an eight-dog asokin team.
While
he was inspecting the harness inch by inch, Toress Lahl appeared,
her face pale and sullen.
"It's
freezing here," she said listlessly.
He
went over to the supplies he had acquired and brought back a woollen one-piece
undergarment. Smiling, he handed it to her. "This is for you. Put it on
now."
"Where?"
"Here."
He caught her meaning, glanced at the Ondod and phagors standing there.
"Oh, these people have no shame. Put your new garment on."
"I'm
the one with shame," she said. But she did as she was told, while the
others watched smiling.
He
went back to checking everything and interrogating their Ondod driver, by name
Uuundaamp, a small person with brilliant black eyes, pockmarked cheeks, and a
narrow moustache that faded out into lashes across his cheekbones. He was
fourteen, and had made the difficult journey many times.
As
Uuundaamp took Shokerandit out to see the team, Toress Lahl joined them in her
new gear, glancing at the Ondod questioningly.
"All
drivers are young," Shokerandit told her. "They live on meat, and
generally die young."
At
the back of the store, a door opened into a yard. Here were the pens, separated
by high wire. Dirty snow lay on the ground. The noise of the dogs was
deafening.
Uuundaamp
walked the narrow path between the pens. On either side, asokins hurled
themselves at the wire, teeth snapping, saliva running
from their jaws. The horned dogs stood as high as a man's hip, and were covered
in thick fur, brown, white, grey, black, or mixed.
"This our team gumtaa team very
good asokin," Uuundaamp said, pointing out the contents of one pen and
glancing slyly up at Shokerandit. "Before we go here, you two give one
meat chunk for lead dog, make friend together him. Then you
always friend together him. Ishto?"
"Which
is the lead dog, the black one?" Shokerandit asked.
Uuundaamp
nodded. "Same black one, he lead dog. He name
Uuundaamp, all same me. People say, he same size me, only not so fierce."
The
black asokin had finely marked and curled horns, pointing outwards at the ends.
Uuundaamp's body was covered with bristling black fur. Only his chest was
white, and the underside of his tail. The Ondod Uuundaamp pointed out this
latter feature; it was distinctive, making Uuundaamp easy for the rest of the
pack to follow.
Uuundaamp
turned to Toress Lahl. "Lady, to you warning. You
give one meat this Uuundaamp, like I say. Then never no
more. You never give no meat other asokin, understand? These asokin, they keep
rules. We obey. Ishto?"
"Ishto,"
she said. That mountain word of acceptance she had picked up on the way from
Rivenjk.
He
stared up at her, black eyes merry. "You big woman.
I no feed you one piece meat. Beside, my woman, she come Kharnabhar together
us. One thing more. Most important.
Never you try pat these asokin, see? He take him hand
like one piece meat."
Toress
Lahl shivered and laughed. "I wouldn't dare try to pat them."
"We'll
collect Fashnalgid and then we'll be away," Shokerandit said when he had
checked everything thoroughly. The stores and provisions were adequate; the
sledge would not be overloaded. He linked his arm in hers. "You are well,
aren't you? It's completely useless to be ill on the trail."
"Can't
we leave Fashnalgid behind?"
"No.
He's okay. He'd be a good man if anything happened. Let me tell you that I am anxious
in case the Oligarch's agents are on our track. Perhaps they think that if we
reach my father and tell him our history, he will turn the army against the
Oligarchy. Many of my father's associates are military. I checked here, and one
of the sledges is booked to leave at fifteen just an hour after us. They said that four men hired it. If we can leave earlier, all the better for us. I have a
gun."
"I'm
frightened. Can you trust these Ondod?"
"They're
not human. They're related to the Nondads of Campannlat. He's got eight fingers
on each hand you'll see
when he takes his gloves off. They tolerate the phagors but they never really
ally themselves with humans. They're tricky. You must pay them and please them,
or they can be difficult."
While
they were talking, they were walking back from
She
clung to his arm and said resentfully, "Why did you make me strip off in
front of them? You don't have to humiliate me just because I'm a slave."
He
laughed. "Oh, that was part of pleasing them. They wanted to see. They'll
think the better of me for it."
"I
don't think the better of you for it."
"Ah,
but I am lead dog."
She
said viciously, "Why didn't you come into my sleeping bag? Are you weird
or something? Aren't I supposed to be yours to biwack whenever you feel the
urge?"
"Oh,
you want me now? That's a change of tune." He gave a short angry laugh.
"Then you'll be pleased about tonight's arrangements."
They
collected Fashnalgid, who was drinking spirits at a wayside stall. Shokerandit
then spent a while in a small shop, haggling over the price of a bright
yellow-and-red striped blanket. The inevitable pattern of the Great Wheel was
woven among its stripes.
"Beholder, how you waste your money!" Fashnalgid said. "I thought you'd been so careful to get all
the necessary supplies already."
"I
like the look of this blanket. Pretty, isn't it?"
He
paid up and draped the colourful blanket over his shoulder before starting back
for
A
man at the North Travel Stores said that Uuundaamp was asleep. Shokerandit went
alone to the makeshift dwelling carved from the rock at the back of the store,
behind the asokin pens. Some Ondod were sitting on the floor eating strips of
raw meat. Others slept with their women on shelves built against the cliff.
Uuundaamp
was wakened, and came forward scratching his armpits and yawning, showing teeth
almost as sharp as those of his animals.
"You
make hard chief, start three hour too much. I no your man till fifteen."
"Sorry.
Look, I want to start soonest. I bring you present, ishto?"
He
threw the smoked baby goat on the floor. Uuundaamp immediately sat down on the
floor and called to his friends. He pulled out a knife and beckoned to
Shokerandit with it. "All come eat, friend. Gumtaa.
Then make quick start."
As
everyone gathered round, Uuundaamp called to his wife as an afterthought. She
rolled off the shelf she had shared and came forward, bundled in bedding. All
that was visible of her was a round face with black eyes much like Uuundaamp's.
She made no attempt to join the greedy circle of men. Instead, she stood meekly
behind Uuundaamp, deftly catching a scraggy slice of meat when he tossed it to
her over his shoulder.
While
Shokerandit chewed his meat, he observed the hands of the men. They were narrow
and sinewy, and bore eight fingers. The blunt clawlike nails were uniformly
black, gleaming with filth and fat lodged under them.
"Gumtaa,"
said Uuundaamp, with his cheeks bulging.
"Gumtaa,"
agreed Shokerandit.
"Gumtaa,"
agreed the other Ondod. The woman, being a woman, was not called upon to say
whether she thought the food was good or not.
Soon,
nothing but bones and horns were left of the kid. Uuundaamp rose immediately,
wiping his hands on his suit of fur. "By way, chief," he said, still
chewing, "this horrid bag behind me with belly full of gas and babies is
my woman. Name Moub. You can forget. She come together
us. You no mind."
"She
is as welcome as she is beautiful, Uuundaamp. I am carrying this blanket for myself,
which I did not intend to give away, but in view of Moub's loveliness, I wish
you to give it to her as a present."
"Loobiss. You give, chief.
Then she not lose it. She kiss
you."
So
Shokerandit presented the yellow-and-red striped blanket to Moub.
"Loobiss,"
she said. "Far too good for any bag belong this vile
Uuundaamp." She hopped nimbly forward and kissed Shokerandit with
her full and greasy lips.
"Gumtaa. Any time you want
biwack, chief, you use Moub. She look horrid but she
got all that stuff there, ishto?"
"Loobiss!" Their
friendship had been properly cemented. Happiness swept
through Shokerandit, as he recalled sleigh rides with his mother when he was a
child, and playing with Ondod children on their estates. His mother had
always found the Ondod coarse and beastly, perhaps because of the peculiar
conventions between the sexes, which relied on insult. Later, he and his
friends had visited a shack on the edge of the caspiarn forests. His first
sexual experiences had been with Ondod females. He remembered a rotund girl
called Ipaak. To Ipaak he had always been "the pink stinker."
Stern discipline for asokins, stern discipline for travellers. That was the rule for journeys between Kharnabhar and the outside
world. Uuundaamp sat at the front of the sledge with the whip, Moub lumpish
just behind him. The phagor, Bhryeer, rode at the back, standing upright to
steer the long vehicle, often jumping off to left or right, sometimes pushing
when the incline was steep enough for the asokins to require help. The three
humans sat astride the tarpaulin-covered supplies, on one side or the other
according to the direction of the wind.
It
was easy to fall off the sledge. An eye had to be kept on the driver, for a
hint of which way they might be turning. Sometimes Uuundaamp could hardly be
seen for the snow that fell in flurries from the heights of the chain above
them. They had crossed the treacherous Venj by wooden bridge, and were now
proceeding on a roughly north-northeasterly course under the high spine of
Shivenink, where ice prevailed above the ten-thousand-metre line for all of the
Great Year.
Even
when the air was clear of snow, the breath of the dogs rose like steam and
concealed them from the passengers. The team included one bitch, to keep the
other seven doing their utmost. The dogs frequently broke wind at the start of
a new lap of the journey. Their panting could be heard above the shrill of the
metal runners. Otherwise, sounds were muffled. There was no visibility, except
for white walls on either side. The smell of the dogs and of stale clothes
became part of the scene. Monotony dulled the sense of danger. Weariness, the
reflections of the snow, reveries that ran half-formed through the mind, these
filled the days.
The
asokins were attached to the sledge by twenty feet of leather harness. They
were allowed to rest for ten minutes every three hours. Then all eight would
lie down except for Uuundaamp the leader. The man Uuundaamp was at least as
close to his asokins as he was to Moub. They were his life.
During
the break, Uuundaamp did not rest. He and Moub would walk restlessly about,
studying natural phenomena the shape of clouds, the flight of birds, any nuance of change in
weather, tracks of animals, sounds and signs of landslides.
Sometimes
they met pilgrims coming or going, making the great journey on foot. There were
other sledges on the route, bells ringing. Once they were caught behind a slow
herring-train and forced to tag along slowly before the vehicle moved into a
passing place. The herring-train was a land version of the herring-coach. It
bore barrels of pickled fish up to the distant rendezvous.
The
asokins barked furiously whenever they met with another vehicle, but the rival
drivers never moved a muscle in greeting.
The
night's break also had its set pattern. Uuundaamp pulled the team off the track
in selected places he knew about. He then immediately went about settling the
dogs, which had to be staked separately and away from the sledge, so that they
did not eat its skins. Each asokin was fed two pounds of raw meat every third
day; they worked best when starved. But each night they got a herring apiece,
which Uuundaamp threw to each asokin in turn, starting with Uuundaamp. They
caught the fish in midair, swallowing it at a gulp. The bitch was last to be
fed. The lead dog slept some way from the rest of the team. If snow fell during
the night, the dogs remained under it, in small caverns carved by their own
heat. Bhryeer the phagor slept with them.
At
a night's stop, everything had to be made ready for the evening meal inside
fifteen minutes.
"It's
not possible. What's the point?" Fashnalgid complained.
"The
point is that it's possible and must be done," Shokerandit said.
"Stretch the tent, hold tight."
They
were stiff with cold. Their noses were peeling, their cheeks blackened by
frost.
The
sledge had to be unloaded. The tent was pitched over it and secured, which
often entailed a battle against wind. Skins were stretched across the sledge.
On this, the five of them slept, to be off the ground. Belongings required
overnight were arranged nearby: food, stove, knives, oil
lamp. Although the temperature in the tent generally remained below zero, they
found themselves sweating in the confined space, after the cold of the journey.
When
Uuundaamp entered on the first night, he found the three humans quarrelling.
"No
more speak. Be good. Anger bring smrtaa."
"I
can't stand four weeks of this," Fashnalgid said.
"If
you disobey him, he will simply leave," Shokerandit said. "All he
asks is that you put your personality away to sleep for the journey. The cold
will not allow quarrels, or death will strike."
"Let
the sherb leave."
"We'd
die here without him can't
you understand that?"
"Occhara
soon, soon," said Uuundaamp, nudging Fashnalgid. He handed Moub a pair of
silver foxes to cook. They came from traps he had set on his previous journey.
A
pleasant fug arose in the tent. The meat smelt good. They ate with filthy
hands, afterwards drinking melted snow water from a communal mug.
"Food
ishto?" asked Moub.
"Gumtaa,"
they said.
"She
bad cook," Uuundaamp said, as he lit up pipes of occhara and handed them
round. The lamp was providently extinguished and they smoked in peace. The howl
of the wind seemed to die away. Good feelings overcame them. The smoke
filtering through their nostrils was the breath of a mysterious better life.
They were the children of the mountain and it had them in its care. No harm
comes to those who have eaten silver fox. For all the differences between men
and women, and between men and men, all have this good thing in common that the divine smoke pours from
their noses, and perhaps from eyes and ears and other orifices. Sleep itself is
but another orifice in the mountain god. Sometimes in sleep men become the
dream of the silver fox.
In
the morning, when they struggled in the dull, bitter air to fold the tent,
Toress Lahl said secretly to Shokerandit, "How degraded you are and how I
hate you! Last night, you biwacked with that bag of lard,
Moub. I heard you. I felt the sledge tremble."
"I
was being courteous to Uuundaamp. Pure courtesy. Not
pleasure."
He
had discovered that the Ondod female was far gone with child.
"No
doubt your courtesy will be rewarded with a disease."
Uuundaamp
came up smiling with the two silver fox tails. "Carry these at teeth. Gumtaa. Keep off cold from face."
"Loobiss. Have you one for
Fashnalgid?"
"That
man, he got tail grow along face," said Uuundaamp, indicating the
captain's moustache, and laughing merrily.
"At
least he means to be kind," Toress Lahl said, hesitatingly placing the
tail between her teeth to protect her chapped nose and cheeks.
"Uuundaamp
is kind. And when we stop tonight you must be kind to him. Return his
favour."
"Oh,
no ... Luterin . . . not that, please. I thought you had some feeling for
me."
He
turned savagely on her. "I have some feeling for getting us safe to
Kharnabhar. I know the conventions of these people and these journeys and you
don't. It's a code, a matter of survival. Stop thinking you are so
special."
Bitterly
hurt, she said, "So you don't care, I suppose, that Fashnalgid rapes me
whenever your back is turned."
He
dropped the tent and grasped her jacket.
"Are
you lying to me? When did he do it? Tell me when. Then and
when else. How many times?"
He
listened bleakly as she told him.
"Very
well, Toress Lahl." He spoke in no more than a whisper, his face hard.
"He has broken the honour that existed between us as officers. We need him
on this journey. But when we get to my father's home, I shall kill him. You
understand? For now, you say nothing."
Without
further words, they loaded up the sledge. Smrtaa retribution. A prominent
feature of life in these parts. Uuundaamp was harnessing up the dogs,
and in a few minutes they were once more on their way through the mist,
Shokerandit and Toress Lahl biting on their fox tails.
The
unsleeping machines of the Avernus still recorded events below and transmitted
them automatically back to Earth. But the few humans surviving on the
Observation Station took little interest in that primary function; their own
primary function was to survive. Their numbers were so far down lowered by disease as well as
fighting that defence
became a less pressing need.
Much
time was spent establishing tribes and tribal territory, to obviate pitched
battles. In neutral territory between tribes, the obscene pudendolls survived,
to become something sacrosanct, something between gods and demons.
Though
a measure of "peace" descended, the earlier destruction of food
synthesising plants meant that cannibalism was still prevalent. There was
almost no meat but human meat. The heavy tabus against this practice fell with
great force upon the delicately trained sensibilities of the Avernians. To
descend to barbarism and worse within a generation was more than their psyches
could easily endure.
The
tribes became matriarchies, while many of the younger men, mainly adolescent, developed multiple personalities. As many as ten different
personalities could house themselves in one body, differing in inclination,
age, and sex, as well as habits. Ascetic vegetarians were common, living an
eye's blink away from stone age savages, tempestuous
dancers from lawgivers.
The
complex separation from nature undergone by the Avernian colonisers had now reached
its limits. Not only did individuals not know each other: they were now
strangers to themselves.
This
adaptation to stress situations was not for everyone. When severe fighting
first broke out, a number of technicians left the Avernus. They stole a craft
from one of the Observation Station's maintenance bays and fled. They landed on
Aganip.
Tempting
though the green, white, and blue planet of Helliconia looked, its danger was
known to all. Aganip occupied a special place in the mythology of Avernus, for
it was here, many centuries ago, that Earth's colonising starship had
established a base while the Avernus was being constructed.
Aganip
was a lifeless planet, with an atmosphere consisting almost entirely of carbon
dioxide, together with a little nitrogen. But the old base still stood, and
offered something of a welcome.
The
escapers built a small dome. There they lived in restricted circumstances. At
first they sent out signals to Earth and then being naturally unwilling to wait two thousand years for an answer to the Avernus. But the Avernus had
its own problems and did not reply.
The
escapers had failed to understand the nature of mankind: that it, like the
elephant and the common daisy, is no more and no less than a part and function
of a living entity. Separated from that entity, humans, being
more complex than elephants and daisies, have little chance of flourishing.
The signals continued automatically for a long while.
No
one heard.
And
when that massed human spirit we have called empathy reached out across space
and communicated with the gossies of Helliconia, what then? Did nothing
important happen or did
something unprecedentedly magnificent, something quantally different, happen?
The
answer to that question will perhaps remain forever clouded in conjecture;
mankind has its umwelt, however bravely it strives to enlarge that confining
universe of its perceptions. To become part of a greater umwelt may prove
biologically impossible. Or perhaps not. It must be
sufficient to admit that if something unprecedentedly magnificent, something
quantally different, happened, it happened in a greater umwelt than mankind's.
If
it happened, then it was a cooperation, and perhaps a
cooperation of various factors not unlike the cooperation forced on differing
individuals on the trail to Kharnabhar.
If
it happened, then it left an effect. That effect can be traced by looking at
the contrasting fates of Earth, where Gaia resided, and New Earth, which was
without a tutelary biospheric spirit. . .
To
start with the case of Earth, after which New Earth was named:
The
intermission between the two post-nuclear ice ages has been understood as the
swing of a pendulum. Gaia was trying to regulate her clock. But it was less
simple than that, just as the biosphere was less simple than the mechanism of a
clock. The truth may be put more accurately. Gaia had been almost terminally
ill. She was now convalescent, and subject to relapses.
Or,
abandoning the dangers of personifying a complex process, it may be said that
the carbon dioxide released by the deep oceans initiated a period during which
the ice retreated. At the end of the period of greenhouse heating, there was an
overshoot of the return to normal, as the whole biosphere and its ruined biosystems
strove for adjustment. The ice returned.
This
time, the cold was less severe, the spread of the ice caps less extensive, and
the duration of the cold briefer. The period was marked by a series of
oscillations, in the way that a clock's pendulum gradually slows to a
stationary median position. It was a time of discomfort for many generations of
the thin-spread human race. In the remission in the 6900s, for instance, there
was a small war in what had once been
Could
that trivial war be likened to a convalescent's tantrum?
The
restlessness of the period awoke a corresponding restlessness in the human
spirit. Fences were no longer going to be possible. The old world of fences had
died, and was never going to be rebuilt.
"We
belong to Gaia." And with the declaration went the understanding that
human beings were not exactly Gaia's best allies. To see those best allies, a
microscope was needed.
Throughout
the ages and long before
the invention and development of nuclear weapons there had been those who prophesied that the world would end
because of man's wickedness. Such prophecies were always believed, no matter
how many times they had been proved wrong in the past. There was a wish for, as
well as a fear of, punishment.
Once
nuclear weapons were invented, the prophecies gained plausibility, although now
they were couched in lay terms rather than religious ones.
Evidence,
the more convincing because governments tried to suppress it, proved that the
world could be ended at the touch of a button.
Eventually,
the button was touched. The bombs came.
But
human wickedness proved too feeble to end the world. Set against that
wickedness were industrious microbes of which wickedness took little
cognisance.
Large
trees and plants disappeared. The carnivores, including man, disappeared from
the scene for a while. They were superfluous to requirements. These large
beings were merely the superstars in Earth's drama. The dramatists themselves
still lived. Under the soil, on the seabeds of the continental shelves, thick
microbial life continued Gaia's story, undisturbed by radioactivity or
increased ultraviolet. The ecosystems of unicellular life were rebuilding
nature. They were Gaia's pulse.
Gaia
regenerated herself. Mankind was a function in that regeneration. The human
spirit was triggered into a quantum leap in consciousness.
As nature had formed a diverse unity, so now did consciousness. It was no longer possible for a man or woman merely to feel or
merely to think; there was only empathic thinkfeel. Head and heart were one.
One
immediate effect was a mistrust of power.
There
were people who understood what the greed for power in all its forms had done
to the world. That chill faded from the mind. Humanity began truly to be adult
and to live and enjoy with adult comprehension. Men and women looked about at
the territory they happened to occupy and no longer asked, "What can we
get out of this land?" Instead, they asked, "What best experience can
we have on this land?"
With
this new consciousness came less exploitive ties and more ties everywhere, an
abundance of new relationships. The ancient structure of family faded into new
superfamilies. All mankind became a loose-knit superorganism. It did not happen
at once, nor did it happen to everyone. There were those who could not undergo
the metamorphosis. But their genes were recessive and their strain would die
away. They were the insensible in a new world of new empathies. They were the
only ones not smiling.
When
more generations passed, the new race could feel itself to be the consciousness
of Gaia. The ecosystems of unicellular life had been given a voice had, in a sense, invented a voice for
themselves.
Even
as this was happening, the convalescence of the biosphere continued. While
humanity evolved, an entirely new type of being was born to the Earth.
Many
phyla had vanished for ever. The cummerbund of tropical forest with its various
myriad lives had withered from the equator under the nuclear onslaught. Its
fragile soils had been lost into the oceans and could not be recovered. Now a
replacement of a startlingly different kind came forth.
The
new thing was not born of the oceans. It came from the snows and frosts of the
arctic. It fed on ultraviolet radiation and it began moving southward as the
glaciers began a fresh retreat northwards.
The
first men to meet the new thing fell back in astonishment.
White
polyhedrons were slowly advancing. Some of the shapes were no larger than giant
tortoises. Others reached as high as a man's head.
Beyond
their various planes, they had no features. No visible means of movement. No
arms or tentacles. No mouths of any kind. No orifices. No eyes or ears. No
appendages whatsoever. Just white polyhedrons. Some
sides were perhaps less white than others.
The
polyhedrons left no track. They sailed where they would. They moved slowly, but
nothing could stop them, although brave men tried to. They were christened
geonauts.
The
geonauts multiplied and sailed the Earth.
The
geonauts provided a new wonder. The old wonder remained. The great conchlike
auditoria were still scattered across Earth, maintained by androids who had
found no other function, having been programmed to none.
On
the holoscreens, the spring of the Great Year turned to summer just as the
snows of Earth were dying. The history of the beautiful MyrdemInggala, known as
the Queen of
They
attended. They gloried in the benevolent effect their empathy had on the
gossies. But their own new world was calling urgently,
with a fresh beauty that could not be resisted. A thousand years of spring was
theirs.
But what of that unprecedentedly magnificent, quantally different
something that empathic
linking of two worlds? Were its traces visible
to those capable of looking for signs?
So
to the case of New Earth:
On
the other planets also, some slight recovery had been made. There were no
Mother Natures on the dead worlds of Mars and Venus. Their surface temperatures
were generally intolerable, their atmospheres coffins full of carbon dioxide.
Yet the unfortunate colonists who had settled there managed to survive, by wits
and by technology.
These
Outlanders had succumbed to a psychosis regarding Earth. Their generations were
smothered by cosmic anomie. To Earth they would never return. They felt
themselves dispossessed.
When
advanced technology was again within their power and they were quicker to solve technical problems than social ones they built a starship and set off for
the nearest planet which mankind had colonised earlier, so-called New Earth.
This
was an all-male expedition. The men left their women at home, preferring to take
with them on their journey svelte robotic partners, styled as abstract ideals
of womanhood. They enjoyed coupling with these perfect metal images.
New
Earth retained breatheable air. Its one small ocean remained surrounded by
desert desert and inhospitable
mountain ranges. There was a spaceport on the equator, with a city nearby. The
spaceport had not been in use for ages. Nor had the city grown; the roads from
it led nowhere. People lived in the city knowing nothing of that great ocean of
space above their roofs.
The
New Earthers were like neutered animals. Something vital and rebellious had
gone from their spirits. They had no aspirations, no feeling for the
immensities of space, no love for the world that was their home, no tremulous
intimations at dawn and sunset. The degenerate language they spoke had no
conditional tense. Music had been entirely lost as an art.
Hardly surprising. Their world
was without spirit.
These
New Earthers occasionally visited the shores of their salt sea. The visits were
not to refresh themselves but to collect cartloads of the kelp which grew in
the sea. The kelp was one of the few living things on the planet. The people of
New Earth spread it on their fields, growing cereals brought from Earth ages
previously.
They
did not dream because they existed on a world which had never nurtured a Gaia
figure. But they had a myth. They believed that they lived in a giant egg, of
which the desert was the yolk and the cloudless sky was the shell. One day,
said the myth, the sky would crack and fall. Then they would be born. They
would acquire yellow wings and white tails, and they would fly to a better
place, where trees like giant seaweeds grew everywhere in pleasant vales and it
always rained.
When
the Outlanders arrived, they did not like New Earth much.
They
flew to examine the neighbouring planet, like New Earth the size of a
terrestrial planet.
Whereas
New Earth was a world of sand, its sister was a world of ice.
An
observation drone was sent out to take computer-corrected photographs of the
surface and of what lay below the ice.
It
was a forbidding world. Glaciers engulfed mountain ranges. Trackless snowfields
filled the lowlands. Helliconia in the grip of apastron winter was never as
dead as this rigid globe.
The
reconnaissance photographs showed frozen oceans beneath the ice. More. They showed the ruins of great cities and the routes
of astonishly wide roads.
The
Outlanders descended to the surface. Below an icefield remains of a vast
building could be glimpsed. Fragments of it lay about the surface; some
fragments had been carried far from source by the glacier. By blasting, the men
got down to a sector of the ruins.
One
of the first artifacts they brought up was a head, carved in a durable
artificial material. The head was of an inhuman creature. In a slender tapering
skull four eyes were set, lidless. Small feathers lay under the eyes. A short
beak counterbalanced the backward thrust of the skull.
One
side of the head was blackened.
"It's
beautiful," a robot partner said.
"Ugly,
you mean."
"It
was once beautiful to someone."
Dating
was not difficult. The city had been destroyed 3.2 thousand years earlier, at a
time when New Earth was being strenuously colonised.
The
whole planet had been destroyed by nuclear bombardment, and the avian race had
perished with it.
The
Outlanders called this planet Armageddon. They remained on the frigid surface
for some while, discussing what should be done, spellbound by melancholy.
One
of the powerful leaders spoke. "I think we might agree that we have found
here on Armageddon an answer to one of the questions which has plagued mankind
for many generations.
"How
was it that when man went into space, he found no other intelligent species? It
was always assumed that the galaxy would be full of life. Not so. How was it
that there were scarcely any other planets like Earth?
"Well,
we do realise that Earth is a pretty unusual place, where a number of fine
specifications are met. Take just one example the amount of oxygen in Earth's atmosphere is close to twenty-one
percent. If it was twenty-five percent or over, forest fires would be started
by lightning even damp
vegetation would burn. On New Earth, the oxygen percentage is eighteen; there
are no plants to lock away the carbon dioxide and release oxygen molecules. No
wonder the poor boobies there live in a dream.
"Nevertheless,
statistics suggest that there must be other planets like Earth. Maybe
Armageddon was one. Suppose a race with a wide-ranging diet reaches supremacy
and dominates the planet, as happened on Earth before the nuclear war. That
race must use technology to do so from the club and bow-and-arrow onwards. It masters the laws of
nature.
"The
time comes when technology is advanced enough for the race to choose
alternatives. It can put out into space, or it can destroy its enemies with
nuclear weapons."
"Suppose
there are no enemies on the planet?" someone called.
"Then
the race invents them. The pressure of competition which technologies generate
makes enemies necessary, as we know. And there's my point. At that stage,
poised for a whole new way of life, no longer to be confined to the planet of
its birth, on the brink of major discoveries right then that race is set the big examination question: Can I
develop the international social skills required to bring my aggression under
control? Can I excel myself and make a lasting truce with my enemies, so that
we throw away these vile weapons for good and all?
"You
see what I mean? If the race fails the exam, it destroys its planet and itself,
and shows that it was unfit to cross that vital quarantine area space provides.
"Armageddon
was unfit. Its people failed the exam. They destroyed themselves."
"But
you're saying everyone everywhere was unfit. We never have found another
space-going race."
The
leader laughed. "We're still only on Earth's doorstep, don't forget.
Nobody is going to come looking for us until they know we're trustworthy."
"And
are we trustworthy?"
Amid
general laughter, the leader said, "Let's tackle Armageddon first. Maybe
we can get the old place going again, if we press the right button."
Further
surveys showed what the world had once been. One notable feature was a
considerable high-latitude sea which before the nuclear disaster had been only partially ice-covered. After the disaster,
atmospheric contamination had cooled the umbrella of air, leaving the water of
the high-latitude sea warmer than its overlying air. The air was in consequence
heated from below, and moisture drawn upwards. Violent high-latitude storms had
resulted, probably enough in themselves to finish off any survivors of the
nuclear strike. Plentiful snow fell on middle-altitude ground, a plateau once
covered by urbanisation. The major glaciation which set in became
self-sustaining.
The
Outlanders decided to drop what the leader had called vile weapons on the
frozen high-altitude sea, in order to "get things started" again. But
the ice wilderness remained an ice wilderness. Here, the local tutelary spirit,
the biospheric gestalt, was dead.
They
were now almost out of fuel. They decided to return to New Earth and conquer
it. Their discoveries on Armageddon had provided them with a strategy. Their
idea was that one just
one thermonuclear device
dropped over New Earth's north pole would cause heavy
rainfall, transforming the planet. The sea could be enlarged; the local zombies
could make themselves useful by cutting canals. More kelp could be encouraged
to grow, and eventually more oxygen released into the air. The calculations
looked good. To the Outlanders, the decision to try just one more nuclear bomb
was a sane one.
So
they climbed into their ship, leaving Armageddon to its eons of frost.
For
the people who lived on New Earth, one part at least of their only myth came
true. The sky cracked and fell.
What
were the vital differences here? Why could New Earth never recover, while Earth
flourished and put forth new forms like the geonauts?
When
the terrestrials developed their empathic link with the gossies of Helliconia,
a new factor entered the universe. The terrestrials, whether or not they knew
it, were acting as a focus of consciousness for the whole biosphere. The
empathic link was not a weak thing. It was a psychic equivalent of magnetism or
gravity; it bound the two planets.
A
more startling way of putting it would be to say that Gaia communicated
directly with her lusty sister, the Original Beholder.
Of
course it is speculation. Mankind cannot see into the greater umwelts about
him. But he can train his ample senses to look for evidence. All the evidence
suggests that Gaia and the Original Beholder made contact through their
progeny's projecting the link. One can only guess at the ripples of shock that
contact caused unless the
second ice age and its ripples of remission provide evidence of that contact.
It
is speculation that Gaia's recovery was prompted by the refreshment of
encountering a sister spirit in the void nearby.
There
were the geonauts: serene, calm, apparently amiable, a new thing. They can be
understood not as an evolutionary freak but as an inspiration born of a fresh
and powerful friendship . . .
While
on Helliconia, the august processes of the seasons were in undeniable stride.
In
the northern hemisphere, small summer was nearly over. Frosty nights foretold
colder nights ahead. In the winding passes of the Shivenink Chain, frost
already ruled, and the living creatures who ventured there were subject to that
rule.
It
was morning. A screaming windstorm, the frigid breath from
the pole. The supplies were being stacked away. The phagor and Uuundaamp
were harnessing up their asokins. Seventeen days had elapsed since leaving
Sharagatt. They had seen no sign that they were being pursued.
Of
the three passengers Shokerandit had fared best. Toress Lahl had lapsed into speechlessness.
She lay in the tent at night as if dead. Fashnalgid seldom spoke, except to
curse. Their eyebrows and lashes were frosty white within a minute of leaving
shelter, their cheekbones black with frostbite.
The
last section of the trail ran above six thousand metres. To their right, in
fuming cloud, was a solid mountain of ice. Visibility was down to a few feet.
Uuundaamp
came to Shokerandit, eyes merry in his frosted face. "Today soft
going," he shouted. "Downhill through tunnel.
You 'member tunnel, chief?"
"Noonat
Tunnel?" It was an effort to talk in the wind.
"Yaya,
Noonat. Tonight we be there. Takit drink, bit meal,
occhara, gumtaa."
"Gumtaa. Toress tired."
The
Ondod shook his head. "She soon make meat
together asokin.
No much biwack gumtaa no more, eh?" He laughed with closed mouth.
Shokerandit
sensed the man had something more to say. Simultaneously they turned their
backs on the others working at lashing up the sledge. Uuundaamp folded his
arms.
"Your
friend got tail grow along face." One quick sly look from his profile.
"Fashnalgid?"
"Your
friend got tail along face. Team no like him. Team
give plenty kakool. Make bad time. We lose that sherb in Noonat Tunnel,
ishto?"
"Has
he been molesting Moub?"
"Mole sting? No, he stick him prodo up Moub las' night again. Biwack
the bag, ishto? She no like. She
full baby Uuundaamps." He laughed. "So we lose in Tunnel, you
see."
"I'm
sorry, Uuundaamp. Loobiss for telling me
but no smrtaa in Tunnel, please. I speak him friend in Noonat. No more biwack your Moub."
"Chief,
you better lose that friend. Else big kakool, I see." He laughed and
scowled, tapping his forehead, then turned abruptly on his heel.
The
Ondod rarely showed anger. But they were treacherous
that Shokerandit knew. Uuundaamp remained friendly;
without at least an appearance of friendship, the journey could never be made;
but he had lost face by telling a human of his wife's disgrace.
Shokerandit
had been invited to copulate with Moub. Such was Ondod courtesy, and
Shokerandit would have offended by declining the invitation. But Fashnalgid had
done it uninvited, and had broken Ondod law. Ondod laws were simple and stark;
transgression meant death, smrtaa. Fashnalgid would be killed without
compunction. If Uuundaamp had decided to lose Fashnalgid in Noonat Tunnel,
Shokerandit's plea would count for nothing.
Both
Toress Lahl and Fashnalgid shot him curious looks from their red-rimmed eyes.
He gave them no word, though deeply troubled. Uuundaamp was always watching,
and would see if Shokerandit passed Fashnalgid a warning. That would count as
kakool.
The
shaggy bulk of Bhryeer emerged from the murk, trudging down the length of the
sledge. His eyes gleamed cerise as he swung his head momentarily to contemplate
them. His morose gaze settled on Shokerandit. There was no interpreting the
phagor's expression.
He
clicked his milt up one ice-encrusted nostril and then shouted above the wind,
"Team ready go. Climb your plaze. Hol' tight."
Harbin
Fashnalgid pulled a flask from inside his skins, thrust the neck between his
flaking lips, and swallowed. As he stowed the flask away, Shokerandit said,
"Be advised, don't drink. Hold tight, as he said."
"Abro
Hakmo Astab!" Fashnalgid growled. He belched and turned away.
Toress
Lahl looked appealingly at Shokerandit. He shook his head severely, mutely
saying, Don't give up, bite tightly on the silver fox
tail.
As
they took their places on the sledge, they could just see the bundles that were
Uuundaamp and Moub, the latter wrapped in her bright blanket. The dogs were
invisible. Uuundaamp brought the long whip forward over his head. Ipsssssisiii. Then the first squeal of the steel runners as
they chastised the snow. The place where they had spent the night, marked by
yellow stains of human and asokin urine, was immediately lost.
Within
an hour, they were moving downhill towards Noonat Tunnel. Shokerandit felt the
sickness of fear in his throat. He would lose face himself by allowing an Ondod
to kill a fellow human, whatever the justification. His anger turned against
both Uuundaamp and Harbin Fashnalgid. The man was next to him, back hunched in
misery. No communication passed between them.
Their
speed increased. They were moving at perhaps five miles an hour. Shokerandit
kept staring ahead, squeezing his eyes between cheeks and brow. Only the eternal grey to be seen, although somewhere above was a
suspicion of light. Spectral white trees flitted by.
Beyond
the customary noises, the sledge creaks, the whistle of whip, the dog farts,
the crack of ice, the wind song, another noise grew, hollow, threatening. It
was the sound of the wind keening in Noonat Tunnel. Moub answered it with
blasts on a curled goat horn.
The
Ondod were giving warning of their presence to other teams which might be conning
in the other direction.
The
suspicion of light overhead was abruptly cut off. They were in the tunnel. The
phagor gave a hoarse cry and applied the rear crossbeam brake to slow their
progress. Uuundaamp's whip made a different note as he flicked it just before
the nose of his lead dog who bore his name, to slow
their pace.
A
freezing wind struck them like a solid object. This tunnel through the
mountainside was a shortcut to the Noonat station. The road, by which heavier
traffic or marching men went, was some miles longer but less dangerous. In the
tunnel, there was always the chance of two sledges meeting head on, the traces
of the teams entangling hopelessly as the rival asokins fought to the death, a
fatal knife fight taking place. Since the tunnel had been cut to show an almost
circular cross-section, it was theoretically possible for teams to pass by
driving partway up opposite walls, but this chance was so remote that most
drivers spurred onwards in terror, screaming warning as they went.
There
were nine miles of tunnel. What with rockfalls and the force of the wind, the
sledge swayed from one side to the other like a rudderless ship.
The
attempt by Uuundaamp to slow down caused greater vibrations. Fashnalgid cursed.
The driver and his woman slid to either side of the sledge's front and stuck
heels into the snow to increase the braking effect.
Bhryeer
leaned forward and shouted to Fashnalgid, "You bottle juzz now drop
out."
"My bottle? Where?"
As
Fashnalgid leant forward over the side of the sledge, looking where the phagor
indicated, the phagor struck him a blow across the small of his back.
Fashnalgid fell with a cry, landing on hands and knees and rolling over in the
snow.
Immediately,
there was a shrill cry from Uuundaamp and he lashed on the asokins. The phagor
pulled off the rear brake. They sizzled forward, aided by the slope.
Fashnalgid
was already on his feet. Already he was fading into the dimness. He began to
run. Shokerandit yelled to him to come on. The wind roared, the Ondod shrieked,
the runners screamed. Fashnalgid was catching up. As he came level with the
rear of the sledge, his face contorted with effort, the phagor lifted an arm to
strike another blow.
To
be alone in the long tunnel was to face certain death. Other sledges, thrusting
through the gloom, would simply run a man over. This was Ondod smrtaa.
Shouting
at the top of his voice, Shokerandit drew his revolver and ran back on his
knees over the loaded sledge. He clamped the muzzle against the phagor's long
skull.
"I'll
blast your sherbing harneys out." The silver fox tail fell from his mouth
and was gone.
The
phagor cowered back.
"Throw
the brake on."
Bhryeer
did so, but the downhill impetus was such that it made little difference,
beyond sending a spume of fine snow over the running
man.
Still
the whip whistled and the driver shrieked at his team. Fashnalgid was falling
back, mouth open, blackened face distorted. His never-too-certain will was
failing him.
"Don't
give up," yelled Shokerandit, stretching out a hand to the captain.
Making
a new effort, Fashnalgid increased speed. His boots drummed on the snow as he
slowly drew level with the rear of the sledge. Bhryeer cowered out of harm's
way. The wind shrilled.
Clutching
a cord securing the tent with one gloved hand, Shokerandit leant forward and
extended his other hand. He shouted encouragement. Fashnalgid was tiring. The
sledge was still gaining speed. The two men stared into each other's wide eyes.
Their gloved hands touched.
"Yes,"
yelled Shokerandit. "Yes, leap aboard, man, fast!"
Their
grips locked. Just as Shokerandit tugged, Uuundaamp gave a swerve to the left,
flicking the runners of the sledge up the sloping side of the tunnel, and
almost overturning his vehicle. Shokerandit was flung free. He clutched at and
missed a runner as it sizzled past his face. Fashnalgid stumbled over him and
they sprawled flat.
When
they picked themselves up, the sledge was disappearing in the dimness.
"Lousy
biwacking drivers," Fashnalgid said, bending forward and trying to get his
breath back. "Animals."
"That
was deliberate. That's Ondod smrtaa vengeance. Because of your ape tricks with the
woman." He had to turn his back to the wind flow to speak.
"That stinking tub of lard?
He said himself that she was not good enough even for an asokin to enjoy."
He bent double, panting.
"That's
how they talk, you fool. Now listen, and take in what I say. This tunnel is
death. Another sledge may come through at any moment, from one end or the other.
There's no way we could stop it, except with our bodies. We have about seven
miles to go, I'd guess, and we'd better do it fast."
"How
about going back and taking the road?"
"That
way's about thirty miles. We've no provisions and we'd still be walking when
dark fell. We would be dead. Now, are you going to run? Because
I am."
Fashnalgid
straightened up, groaning. He said, "Thanks for trying to save me."
"Astab
you, you arrogant fool. Why couldn't you have tried to obey the system?"
Luterin
Shokerandit started to run. At least it was downhill. His knee hurt from his
fall. He listened for the sound of another sledge but heard only the wind
roaring in his ears.
The
footsteps of Fashnalgid echoed behind him. He never looked back. All his
faculties were concentrated on getting through the tunnel to Noonat.
When
he thought he could run no further, he made himself keep on. Once there was a
gleam of light to one side. In relief, he halted and went to look. Part of the
rock of the outer wall had fallen away, revealing daylight. Nothing could be
seen but cloud and, just beyond arm's reach, a stalactite of ice. He threw a
piece of rock into the void, listened, but never heard it fall.
Fashnalgid
caught up with him, blowing hard.
"Let's
get out through this hole."
"It's
a sheer mountainside."
"Never mind. Bribahr somewhere down there. Civilisation.
Not like this place."
"You'll
kill yourself."
As
Fashnalgid was trying to lever his body through the hole in the rock, a distant
horn announced an oncoming sledge this one also arriving from the south. Shokerandit saw a light
looming. He pressed into the natural alcove, forcing himself back against the
jagged rock close to Fashnalgid.
Next moment, a long black sledge shot by, teamed by ten dogs. A bell dangling over the driver jangled madly. Several men sat
aboard, twelve possibly, all crouching masked against the cold. It was by in a
flash.
"Military,"
Fashnalgid said. "Could they be after us?"
"After
you, you mean. What does it matter? With them travelling ahead, clearing the
way, this is our best chance to get out of the tunnel safely. Unless you like
thousand-foot jumps, you'll come too."
He
started off again. After a while, the running became automatic. He could feel
the knock of his lungs against his ribs. Ice formed on his chin. The lids of
his slitted eyes froze. He lost count of time.
When
the brightness came, it assailed him. He could not prise open his eyes. He
jogged on before realising that he had at last left the tunnel. Sobbing, he
staggered to one side and clung to a boulder. There he lay, panting as if he
would never stop. Two sledges passed nearby, horns blowing, but he did not look
up.
A
lump of falling snow forced him into action. He scrubbed his face with the snow
and peered ahead. The light still seemed brilliant. The wind had dropped. There
was a break in the cloud. Only a short distance away, people were strolling,
smoking veronikanes, wearing blankets. A woman was buying something at a stall.
An ancient bowed man was driving horned sheep down the street. A welcoming sign
said pilgrim lodge: No Ondods. He had reached Noonat.
Noonat
was the last stop before Kharnabhar. It was nothing more than a halt in the
wilds, a place where teams could be changed. But it had something else to
offer. The trail between Kharnabhar,
The
state of hostility which existed between Uskutosh and Bribahr might account for
an increased number of military uniforms visible in Noonat,
and for the fact that an imposing new wooden building, which would face
westwards, was being built.
Shokerandit
was almost too exhausted to take much care for himself. But he had the presence
of mind to stagger behind the boulder that had sheltered him and follow a
footpath uphill until he came to a stone-built goat shed. He climbed in with
the goats and fell asleep.
When
he woke, he felt refreshed, and was angry with himself for wasting time. He
could not greatly care what had happened to Fashnalgid, so great was his need
to find Toress Lahl and to get the sledge on to Kharnabhar. Once there, his problems
would be over.
The
straggle of Noonat lay below him. Its poor houses clung to the mountainside
like burrs to an animal's flank. Most of the houses took advantage of eldawon
trees, a species with thin multiple trunks, and cowered against them or were
actually built into them. Since most of the houses were constructed from the
timber of the eldawon, it was difficult to distinguish habitation from
vegetation.
Cottages
crouched here and there, linked by trails followed by humans, animals, and
fowls. They stood higgledy-piggledy, so that one man's doorstep came level with
the next man's chimney. Fields were coterminous with roofs. Every homestead
boasted a pile of chopped logs. Some piles leant against the houses, some
houses against the piles. Woodmen could be heard, busy with axes, adding to
either the number of piles or the number of homesteads.
For
a short while, the air was free of cloud and possessed a
brilliance unique to high mountain places. Batalix shone over a distant crag.
Boys in the stoney fields, supposedly herding sheep and goats, flew kites
instead.
A
crowd of pilgrims had just arrived on foot from Kharnabhar. Their voices
carried in the clear air. Most had shaven heads, some
went barefoot, despite the hard snow on the ground. All ages were represented
among them; there was even an old yellowed woman being carried in a wicker
chair to which shafts had been attached. A few local traders were watching them
attentively, but without great interest. This lot had already been fleeced on
their way northwards.
Having
travelled the trail before, Shokerandit knew that Uuundaamp would have to stop
here. He and Moub would rest. All the asokins would be staked separately and
fed, with extra meat for Uuundaamp, the leader. Sledge and harness would be
thoroughly overhauled for the last lap of the journey if the Ondods intended to
go on to Kharnabhar. And what would they do with Toress Lahl?
Not
murder her. She was too valuable. As a slave, she could be sold; but few humans
would buy a human slave from an Ondod. Ancipitals on the other hand ... He was
frightened for her, and forgot Fashnalgid.
Although
the ancipital kind were rare in Sibornal as a whole,
those who escaped slavery often made their way to Shivenink, finding in the
wilderness of the chain congenial habitation. Having experienced slavery
themselves, they were the more inclined to use human slaves. Once she vanished
into the hills with them, Toress Lahl would be lost to human knowledge.
Negotiating
the paths at the rear of the houses, he covered the whole village. On its
outskirts, he came to a palisade. Furious barking sounded on the other side as
he approached. He peered over and saw trail asokins, staked out separately, or
in cages. They launched themselves as far as chain and mesh would allow as he
appeared.
This
was unmistakably the staging post. He remembered it now. It had been snowing
the last time he was through, when almost nothing could be seen in the
blizzard. Something like fifty half-starved asokins were
waiting in the pound.
Without
provoking them further, he moved cautiously round by the side.
The
staging post was the last building to the north of Noonat. A shout indicated
that he had been sighted, although he saw no one. The Ondod were too cautious
to be caught unawares.
Three
of them appeared immediately, carrying whips. He knew how deadly they were with
whips, halted, made the sign of peace on his forehead.
"I
want my friend Uuundaamp, give him loobiss. Speak him loobiss, ishto?"
They
were surly. They made no move.
"No
see Uuundaamp. Uuundaamp no want loobiss together you. Uuundaamp
fat lady plenty kakool."
He
said. "I know. I bring help. Moub give birth, yaya?"
Sullenly
they let him through. He told himself it was a trap, and that he should be
ready for anything.
At
the entrance to a barnlike building, the Ondods clustered, pausing, giving each
other sullen eye glances. Then they motioned him to go in. The interior was
dark and unwelcoming. He smelt occhara.
They
thrust him in from behind and slammed the door.
He
ran forward and threw himself flat. The sharp tongue of a whip passed lightly
across his shoulder. He rolled over and dived to a side wall.
With
one swift glance he observed Moub naked except for the blanket he had given
her, which was now wrapped round her breasts. She lay on a plank, legs spread
wide. Toress Lahl crouched over her. Toress Lahl was tied by the upper arm, in
such a way that she could use her hands. The other end of the rope was held by
one of three dehorned phagors who stood motionless against the wall opposite
the one against which Shokerandit crouched. Uuundaamp's lead dog, Uuundaamp,
was staked in the middle of the barn, snapping savagely at the end of his leash
in a futile attempt to eat the nearest portion of Shokerandit.
And Uuundaamp. He had heard or
seen for the barn had
slit windows Shokerandit's
approach. With the ability of his kind, he had jumped above
the lintel of the door, and stood poised there, about to lash out with his whip
again. He smiled as he did so, without mirth.
Shokerandit
had his gun in his hand. He knew better than to point it at the Ondod the gesture would have provoked both
Uuundaamp and phagors. Nor would any threat to Moub halt Uuundaamp in his
present state of mind.
Shokerandit
pointed the gun at the dog.
"I
kill you dog dead, finish, gumtaa, ishto? You fall down here smart, drop whip.
You come here, boy, you Uuundaamp. Else your dog plenty
kakool one second quick!"
As
he spoke, Shokerandit rose up, pointing the gun with both hands down the throat
of the raging dog.
The
whip fell to the floor. Uuundaamp jumped down. He smiled. He bowed, touched his
forehead.
"My
friend, you tumble off sledge in tunnel. No gumtaa. I very worry."
"You'll
have a dead lead dog if you give me that sherb. Untie Toress Lahl. Are you all
right, Toress?"
In
a shaky voice, she said, "I have delivered babies before, and here comes
another. But I am greatly relieved to see you, Luterin."
"What
was the plan here?"
"The
phagors were going to do something for Uuundaamp. I was the exchange gift. I've
been terrified but I'm unharmed. And you?" Her voice trembled.
The
phagors never moved. As he worked at the knots in the cord, Uuundaamp said,
"This very nice lady, yaya. Shaggie he much enjoy . . . give him chance,
yaya. No harm." He laughed.
Shokerandit
bit his lip; the creature had to be allowed to save face. Almost penniless,
they were forced to rely on him to get them to Kharnabhar.
When
she was free, Toress Lahl said to Uuundaamp, "You very kind. When your
baby is born, I buy you and Moub pipes of occhara, ishto?"
Shokerandit
marvelled at her coolness.
Uuundaamp
smiled and whistled through his teeth. "You buy extra pipe for baby too? I
smoke three pipe together."
"Yaya,
if you will kick out these shaggy brutes while I perform the delivery."
Her face was white as she confronted him, but her voice no longer shook.
Still
Uuundaamp felt that honours had not yet been made equal.
"You
give money now. Moub go buy three pipe occhara now. Better leave Noonat before
is darkness."
"Moub's
water broken, give birth directly."
"Baby
no come maybe twenty minutes. She go
buy fast. Smoke, give birth." He clapped his
eight-fingered hands and laughed again.
"The
baby is almost hanging out of her."
"That woman lazy bag."
He grasped Moub by the arm. She sat up without protest. Toress Lahl and
Shokerandit exchanged glances. When he nodded, she produced some sibs and gave
them to the woman. Moub wrapped her entire body in the red and yellow blanket and
waddled out of the barn without protest.
"Stay
there," Shokerandit said. Toress Lahl sat on the water-stained bench. The
lead dog settled down on its haunches, its red tongue lolling. At a gesture
from Uuundaamp, the phagors filed out of the far end of the barn, pushing
through a broken door. Outside, by the dog cage, stood Uuundaamp's sledge,
unharmed.
"Where
your friend grow tail on face?" Uuundaamp asked
innocently.
"I
lost him. Your plan did not work well."
"Ha ha. My
plan work fine. You still want go Kharber?"
"Are
you going that way? You've been paid, Uuundaamp."
Uuundaamp
held his hand wide in a gesture of frankness, exposing his sixteen
black-gleaming nails.
"If
your friend tell police, no gumtaa. Hard
for me. That bad man no understand Ondod like
you. He want smrtaa. Better we go fast, ishto, once that bag throw her baby from her bottom-part."
"Agreed." No point in
quarrelling now. He tucked his gun into his pocket. The apparent friendship of
the trail could be resumed.
They
remained watching each other, and the asokin waited at the end of its leash.
Moub padded back, still swathed in the blanket. She gave two pipes to Uuundaamp
and resumed her place on the plank by Toress Lahl, the third pipe in her mouth.
"Baby
now come. Gumtaa," she said. And a small Ondod
male was born into the world without further ado. As Toress Lahl lifted it,
Uuundaamp nodded and then turned away. He spat into a corner of the barn.
"Boy.
Is good. Not like girl. Boy do
much work, soon have biwack, maybe one year."
Moub
sat up and laughed. "You no make good biwack, you fool sherb. This boy
belong Fashnalgid."
They
both burst into laughter. He went across and hugged her. They kissed each other
over and over.
This
scene so much took everyone's attention that they did not heed whistles of
warning from outside. Three police carrying rifles at the ready entered the
barn from the road end.
The
leader said coolly, "We have offence orders against you all. Uuundaamp,
you and that woman have a number of murders to your name. Luterin Shokerandit,
we have followed you from Rivenjk. You are an accomplice in blowing up an army
lieutenant, and killing a soldier in the course of his duties. Also guilty of deserting from the army. In consequence of
which, you, Toress Lahl, slave, are also guilty of escaping. We have a
dispensation to execute you at once here in Noonat."
"Who
these humans people?" asked Uuundaamp, pointing indignantly at Shokerandit
and Toress Lahl. "I no see them. They just come here one minute, cause
plenty kakool."
Ignoring
him, the police leader said to Shokerandit, "I have orders to shoot you if
you try to escape. Throw down any arms you have. Where is your recent
companion? We want him too."
"Who
do you mean?"
"You
know who. Harbin Fashnalgid, another deserter."
"I'm
here," said an unexpected voice. "Drop your rifles. I can shoot you
and you can't hit me, so don't try. I'll count three and then I shall shoot one
of you in the stomach. One. Two."
The
rifles dropped. By then they had seen the revolver poking through one of the
slit windows.
"Grab
the guns, then, Luterin, look alive."
Shokerandit
unfroze and did as he was told. Fashnalgid entered by the rear door, setting
all the asokins barking.
"How
did you come so providentially?" Toress Lahl asked.
He
scowled. "I imagine the same way these dummies did. By following that
unmistakable red-and-yellow striped blanket. Otherwise I had no idea where you
were. As you see, I'm going in for disguise."
They
had noticed. Fashnalgid had had his immense moustache shaved off and his hair
cut short. He kept his revolver levelled at the police in a professional manner
as he spoke.
"Rifle
get much money," Uuundaamp suggested. "Cut these man throat first, ishto?"
"Never mind that, you little scab-devourer. If your shaggie was here, I'd drop him. Luckily he is not,
because this place is swarming with police and soldiers."
"We'd
better leave fast," Shokerandit said. "Excellent
timing,
The
Ondod became very active. He got the two women to drag the sledge into the barn
and grease the runners, which he insisted was necessary. The police were made to
stand with their trousers round their ankles and their hands up the wall.
Everyone stood back as lead dog Uuundaamp was unleashed and he and the other
seven asokins were secured to the traces, each in its appropriate place. As he
worked, Uuundaamp cursed each of them in different tones of affection.
"Please
hurry," said Toress Lahl once, betraying her nervousness.
The
Ondod went and sat down on the plank where his wife had recently given birth.
"Jus' take small rest, ishto?"
They
waited it out, no one moving, until his honour was satisfied. Snow came in
through the rear door as he methodically checked over the harness.
From
the direction of the street they could hear shouts and whistles. The three
police had already been missed.
Uuundaamp
picked up his whip.
"Gumtaa. Get on."
The
rifles were tucked hastily under the sledge straps as they jumped aboard.
Uuundaamp called encouragingly to Uuundaamp, and the sledge started to move.
The police at once began to shout at the top of their voices. Answering shouts came.
The sledge bumped out of the rear door.
Outside,
ravening asokins leaped furiously against the mesh of their cage. Uuundaamp
raised himself, twirled his whip, sent its tip flying towards the cage door.
The hasp of the cage was secured in position by a thick wooden wedge. The whip
end flicked the wedge free as the sledge went by.
Under
the weight of the dogs, the cage door crashed open, and the brutes hurled
themselves to freedom in a torrent of fur and fangs. Into and through the barn
they rushed. Ghastly cries came up from the police.
The
sledge gathered speed, bumping across rough ground, swinging round. Uuundaamp
shouted commands, plying his whip expertly, licking each dog with it in turn, arms tireless. The passengers hung on. The barking and sounds
of pain from behind died as they went over the hillside and jarred down onto
the northward road.
Shokerandit
looked back. No one was following. Faintly through the snow, sounds of growling
still reached his ears. Then the road turned. Toress Lahl clutched him. Under
one arm, wrapped in a bundle of dirty rag, she sheltered the newborn babe. It
looked up at her and grinned, showing sharp baby teeth.
A
mile along the trail, Uuundaamp slowed and turned.
He
pointed the handle of the whip at Fashnalgid.
"You, kakool man. You jump
off. No want."
Fashnalgid
said nothing. He looked at Shokerandit, grimaced. Then he jumped.
Within
a few yards, his figure was concealed in a whirl of snow. His last words
reached them faintly the
terrible oath: "Abro Hakmo Astab!"
Uuundaamp
turned to scan the trail ahead.
"Kharber!"
he cried.
Avoiding
Noonat, Fashnalgid met up with a group of Bribahrese pilgrims, returning from
Kharnabhar and Noonat and making their way home, down the winding trails to the
western valleys. He had shaved off his moustache in order to avoid
identification and had every intention of disappearing from human ken.
Hardly
had he been with the pilgrims for twenty-five hours when the group met another
party climbing up from Bribahr. The latter had such a tale of disaster to tell
that Fashnalgid became convinced that he was heading in the wrong direction.
Perhaps right directions did not exist anymore.
According
to the refugees, the Oligarch's Tenth Guard had descended on the Great Rift
Valley of Bribahr, with orders to take possession of or destroy the two great
cities of Braijth and Rattagon.
Most
of the rift valley was filled by the cobalt blue waters of
Bribahr
was the great grain-producing
The
inhabitants of Bribahr were mainly peasant farmers. But a warrior elite, based
in the two cities of Braijth and Rattagon, had recklessly threatened
Kharnabhar, the
In
return for their threats, Askitosh had sent an army. Braijth had already
fallen.
Now
the Tenth sat on the shores of
The
frosts of the brief autumn had come. The lake also began to freeze.
There
would be a time, and the Rattagonese knew it, when the ice would be firm enough
to permit an enemy force to cross, walking. But that time was not yet. So far,
nothing heavier than a wolf could get across. It might take a tenner before the
ice would bear a platoon of soldiers. By then, the enemy on the banks would
have starved and crawled away home. The Rattagonese
knew the habits of their lake.
They
did not entirely starve behind their battlements. The ancient rift valley had
numerous faults. There was a tunnel below the lake to the northwestern shore.
It was a wet way to travel, the water in it always knee-deep. But food could
pass by that route; the defenders of Rattagon could afford to wait, as they had
done before in times of crisis.
One
night, when Freyr was lost behind dense gales of snow blowing from the north,
the Tenth put a desperate plan into action.
The
ice was strong enough to bear wolves. It would also bear men with kites flying
above them, supporting much of their weight, making them no heavier than
wolves, and as ferocious.
The
officers encouraged their men by telling them tales of the voluptuous women of
Rattagon who stayed by their men in the fortress, keeping their beds warm.
The
wind blew, strong and steady. The kites tugged and lifted the shoulders of the
men. Bravely they ran onto the thin ice. Bravely they permitted themselves to
be carried across the ice, right up to the grey walls of the fortress.
Inside
the fortress walls, even the sentries slept, huddled in any warm nook to
shelter from the storm. They died with hardly a cry.
The
volunteers of the Tenth cut away their kite cords and ran to the central keep.
They slew the commander of the garrison in mid-snore.
Next
day, the flag of the Oligarchy flew over fallen Rattagon.
This
dreadful story, related with great drama over camp fires, persuaded
It's
always painful to become involved in history, he told himself, and accepted a
bottle that was making the rounds of the pilgrims.
The
night was alive. So thickly was the snow falling that, brushing against a human
face in its descent, it resembled the fur of a great beast. The fur was less
cold than suffocating: it occupied space normally taken up by air and sound.
But when the sledge stopped, the staid brazen tongue of a bell could be
distantly heard.
Luterin
Shokerandit helped Toress Lahl down from the sledge. The churn of snow-flakes
had confused her. She stood with bowed shoulder, sheltering her eyes.
"Where
are we?"
"Home."
She
saw nothing, only the animal dark, rolling, rolling towards her. Dimly, she
made out Shokerandit, a bear walking, as he staggered towards the front of the
sledge. There he embraced both Uuundaamp and the Ondod mother, clutching her
infant into the coloured blanket.
Uuundaamp
lifted his whip in farewell and flashed his unreliable smile. Came the jar-jar
of his warning bell, the slice of his whip over the team, and the outfit was
swallowed immediately by the whirling murk.
Bent
almost double, Shokerandit and Toress Lahl made their way to a gate beyond
which a dim light burned. He pulled a metal bell handle. They leaned
exhaustedly against the stone pillar of the gate until a muffled military figure
appeared from a shelter somewhere beyond the bars. The gate swung open.
They
sheltered, panting, saying nothing to each other, until the guard returned
after securing the gate and scrutinised them under his lantern.
The
guard's lineaments were those of an old soldier. His mouth was tight, his gaze
evaded other eyes, his expression gave nothing away.
He stood his ground and asked, "What do you want?"
"You're
speaking to a Shokerandit, man. Where are your wits?"
The
challenging tone made the guard look more closely. With no change of
expression, he said finally, "You wouldn't be Luterin Shokerandit?"
"Have
I been away that long, you fool? Will you stand there and have me freeze?"
The
man allowed his glance to take in Luterin's metamorphosed bulk in one mute,
insulting glare. "A cab to take you up the drive,
sir."
As
he turned away, Luterin, still nettled at not being recognised, said, "Is
my father in residence?"
"At
present not, sir."
The
guard put his free hand to the side of his mouth and bawled to a slave lurking
at the rear of the guardhouse. In a short while, the cabriolet appeared through
the blizzard, drawn by two yelk already encrusted in snow.
It
was a mile from the gate to the ancient house, through land still known as the
Vineyard. Now it was rough pasturage, where a local strain of yelk was bred.
Shokerandit
alighted. The snow whirled round the comer of the house as if personally
interested in turning them to ice. The woman closed her eyes and clutched
Shokerandit's skins. Following ghostly materialisations of the structure, they
climbed steps to the iron-banded front door. Above them sounded the dismal
tolling bell, long drawn out, like a sound heard underwater. Other bells,
drowning farther off, added their tongues.
The
door opened. Dim guardian figures showed, helping the two new arrivals inside.
The snow ceased, the roaring and clanging ceased, as bolts were shot home
behind them.
In
an echoing darkened hall, Shokerandit exchanged words with a servant unseen. A
lamp glittered high on a marble wall, not yielding its illumination beyond the
frosty surface which reflected it. They padded upstairs, each step with its own
protesting noise. A heavy curtain was drawn back as if to abet the powers of
darkness and stealth. They entered. While the woman stood, the servant lit a
light and quit the room, bowing.
The
room smelt dead. Shokerandit turned up the wick of his lamp.
An
impression of space, a low ceiling, shutters ineffectively barring out the night,
a bed. . . . They struggled out of their filthy garments.
They
had been travelling for thirty-one days and, since Sharagatt, had been allowed
only six and a half hours of sleep a day, rarely more, sometimes less,
according to whether Uuundaamp considered the police were closing on them.
Their faces were blackened by frost and lined by exhaustion.
Toress
Lahl took a blanket from a couch and prepared to lie beside the bed. He climbed
into the bed and beckoned her to join him.
"You
sleep with me now," he said.
She
stood before him, her expression still dazed from the journey. "Tell me
what place we are in now."
He
smiled. "You know where we are. This is my father's house in Kharnabhar.
Our troubles are over. We are safe here. Get in."
She
attempted a smile in return. "I am your slave and so I obey, master."
She
got in beside him. Her answer did not satisfy him, but he put his arms about
her and made love to her. After which, he fell asleep immediately.
When
she awoke, Shokerandit had gone. She lay gazing at the ceiling, wondering what
he was trying to demonstrate by leaving her on her own. She felt herself unable
to move from the comfortable bed, to face the challenges that would have to be
met. Luterin was well disposed to her, and more than that; she had no doubts on
that score. For him, she could feel only hatred. His casual handing over of her
to the animal who drove the sledge, a humiliation
still fresh in her mind, was merely the latest of his coarse treatments. Of
course, she reflected, he did not do these things to her personally; he was
merely conforming to fashion and treating her as slaves were treated.
She
had good reason to hope that he might restore her social status. She would be a
slave no more. But if that entailed marrying him, her husband's murderer, she
did not think she could go through with it, even to ensure her own safety.
To
make matters worse, she felt a dread of this place to which she had been
brought. A spirit seemed to brood over it, chill, hostile.
She
rolled over unhappily in the great bed, to discover that a female slave was
waiting silently, kneeling by the door. Toress Lahl sat up, pulling the sheet
over her naked breasts.
"What
are you doing there?"
"Master
Luterin sent me in to attend you and bathe you when you woke, lady." The
girl bowed her head as she spoke.
"Don't
call me lady. I am a slave just as you are."
But
the response merely embarrassed the girl. Resigning herself to the situation
and half-amused, Toress Lahl climbed naked from the bed. She raised an
imperious hand.
"Attend
me!" she said.
Nodding
compliantly, the girl came forward and escorted Toress Lahl to a bathroom,
where warm water ran from a brass tap. The whole mansion was heated by biogas,
the slave explained, and the water too.
As
Toress Lahl reclined in the luxurious water, she surveyed her body. It had
grown less bulky with the rigours of the journey. Down both sides of her
thighs, the scratches inflicted by Uuundaamp's claws were slowly healing.
Rather worse, she suspected that she might be pregnant. By whom she could not
say, but she thanked the Beholder that matings between Ondods and humans were
never fertile.
Borldoran
and her home town of
What
would he say? Would he ask her? Tell her? She would have to go through with it,
whatever he did.
After
the maid had dried her, she put on a satara gown provided for her. She sank
back on the bed and delivered herself into a state of pauk. It was the first
time that she had descended into the world of the gossies since leaving
Rivenjk. There below her, in obsidian where all decisions had finally been
made, waited the spark of her dead husband, calling her to him.
The
estate looked as beautiful as ever. The continuing wind from the north had
blown most of the night's snow into drifts. Exposed areas were clear. To the
south of every tree lay a line of snow, fine honed as a bird's bone. The Chief
Steward, an agreeable man Luterin had known since his childhood accompanied him
on his survey. Ordinary life was beginning again.
Great
caspiarns and brassimips stood in wind-deflecting parade. On
all sides, distant or near, rose snowy peaks, the daughters of the chain,
generally sulking in cloud. To the north, the cloud allowed glimpses of
the
He
wore a warm greatcoat over his clothes, and had attached his hip-bell to his
belt. In the stable yard, slaves naked to the waist had brought a young gunnadu
for him to ride. These two-legged, large-eared creatures balanced themselves by
means of long tails, and ran on clawed birdlike feet. Like the yelk and biyelk
with which they associated in the wild, the gunnadu were necrogenes. Thus they
belonged to a category of animal which could give birth only through its own
death. Luterin's mother had said bitterly to him once, "Not unlike
humanity."
Gunnadu
were without wombs; the sperm developed into grubs inside the stomach, where
they fed, working outwards until reaching an artery.
From there they exploded throughout the maternal body, causing rapid death. The
grubs pupated through several stages, feeding on the carrion, until of a size
to survive in the outside world as small gunnadu.
Fully
grown gunnadu made docile mounts, but tired easily. They were ideal for short
journeys, such as an inspection of the Shokerandit estate.
He
felt himself safe here. The police would never enter one of the great estates.
While his father was away enjoying the hunt, Luterin was in charge. Despite his
long absence, despite his metamorphosis, he fell into the role with ease. From
the Chief Steward down to the lowest slave, everyone knew him. It was absurd to
think of any other life. And he was the perfect only son.
He
had duties. Those he would attend to. He must introduce Toress Lahl to his
mother. And he would have to speak to Insil Esikananzi; that might be a little
awkward. . . . Meanwhile, there were more important duties.
He
had matured. He caught himself reflecting that it was no bad thing that his
father was absent. Always before this, he had missed him. Lobanster
Shokerandit's word hereabouts was law, as it was with his one remaining son.
But the formidable Keeper of the Wheel was frequently absent. He liked to live
rough, he said, and his hunting trips took up two or three tenners at a time.
Off he would go, taking his dogs and his yelk with him. Sometimes he went
accompanied only by his mute hunt captain, Liparotin. A farewell wave and he
would be away, into the trackless wilds.
From
his childhood, Luterin remembered that casual gesture of the hand upraised. Less a sign of love for him and his mother as they watched him
depart, more a sign of acknowledgement to the spirit which presided over the
lonely mountains.
Luterin
had grown up missing his father. His withdrawn mother was hardly compensating
company. Once he had insisted on accompanying his father and his brother,
Favin. He had been proud then, among the proud caspiarns; but Lobanster had
appeared vexed with his sons, and they had returned home after no more than a
week away.
He
sniffed. He told himself that he too was a solitary, like his father. And then
his thoughts swung back to Harbin Fashnalgid, last seen when Uuundaamp had
turned him off the sledge. Only now did he realise he liked Fashnalgid, and
should try to do something for him. His jealous anger at the man for possessing
Toress Lahl was over.
Now
he could recall
He
and the Chief Steward visited the stungebag enclosure. The slow creatures were
much as he remembered them. It was said that the Shokerandits had bred
stungebags through four Great Years. The stungebags looked like badly thatched
caterpillars or, when stretched to their full length, like fallen trees. They
were combined animal and plant, a sport born at the melting time when the
planet was showered by high-energy radiation.
Slaves
were working in the hoxney paddock. Droves of hoxneys had once roved the
uplands. Now they were starting to go into hibernation. In one of the corners
of the estate, slaves were collecting the animals and storing them away in dry
barns, prising them out of the nooks and crannies in which they had hidden. The
animals relapsed swiftly into a shrunken, glassy state, their energies
draining. They would come to resemble small translucent figures. Already, some
were losing their dull brown colour and exhibiting colourful horizontal
stripes, as they had done in the Great Spring.
In
the hibernatory state, the hoxneys were known as glossies, perhaps not only for
their shine, but because, like gossies, they were not entirely dead.
The
estate manager, a freeman, came up and touched his hat.
"Glad to see you back, master. We're packing the glossies with hay between, as you may observe,
to protect the creatures. They should be all right when spring arrives, if so
happen it ever does."
"It'll
come. It's only a matter of centuries."
"So
you scholars say," said the man, with a conspiratorial grin at the
steward.
"The
principle is to organise for spring now. By storing these hoxneys safely,
instead of leaving them to the vagaries of nature, we guarantee a good riding
herd when the time comes."
" 'Twill be long past our
lifetimes."
"Someone
will be here, I don't doubt, to be grateful for our providence."
But
he spoke absentmindedly, with Fashnalgid still on his mind.
When
he got back to the mansion, he summoned his father's secretary, a learned
withdrawn man called Evanporil. He gave Evanporil instructions that four armed
liegemen were to be sent on two giant biyelk as far down the road as Noonat, to
seek out Fashnalgid if he was to be found. Fashnalgid was to be brought back to
the safety of the Shokerandit estate. The secretary left about his task.
Luterin
ate some lunch, and only then thought that he should visit his mother.
The
hall of the great house was gloomy. There were no windows on the lower floor,
so as to render the structure more impervious to ice, snow, and flood. A great
heavy chair stood empty on the marble tiling; as far as Luterin knew, no one
had ever sat in it.
Between
the dim wall lamps, fed from the biogas chambers, skulls of phagors projected
from the walls. These were specimens that Lobanster and other Shokerandits
before him had killed. They remained now with their horns held high, their
shadowed eye sockets observing with melancholy the far recesses of the hall.
He
paused on the way to his mother's quarters, aware of an uproar outside. Someone
was shouting in a thick drunken voice. Shokerandit ran for a side door,
hip-bell clattering. A slave hastily flung back the bolts to allow him passage.
In
a court overlooked by the upper windows of the mansion, a liegeman and two
freemen were brandishing swords. They had cornered six dehorned phagors. One of
the phagors, a gillot with thin withered dugs which spoke of years in
captivity, was calling out in a hoarse voice, in Sibish, "You not to kill,
you vile Sons of Freyr! This Hrl-Ichor Yhar come back
belong to us, the ancipitals! Stop! Stop!"
"Stop!" Shokerandit
said.
The
men had already killed one of the ahumans. A swordsman had disembowelled a
stallun with a downward slash of his sword. Ancipital eddre lodged in their
carcasses above their lungs. As Shokerandit bent over the corpse, which was
still in spasm, the intestines slithered forth on a tide of yellow blood.
The
mass loosened itself and began slowly to evacuate the cavern of the ribs like a
concoction of soft-boiled eggs in jelly. Beige shadows ran between little
glistening mounds which came creeping out of the wound like a living mass,
flowing thickly over the flags and into the cracks between the flags, flowing
until all poured forth, separate organs no longer distinguishable in the
general exodus, leaving a hollow behind them.
Shokerandit
tugged back the dead creature's ear to expose its blaze mark.
He
glared at the men.
"These
are our slave ancipitals. What are you doing?"
The
liegeman was scowling. "Best mind out the way, master. Orders are to kill
off all phagors, whether ours or otherwise."
The
five phagors began shouting hoarsely and scrambling to get past the men, who
immediately brought their swords to the ready.
"Stop. Drikstalgil,
who gave you these orders?" He remembered the liegeman's name.
Keeping
one eye on the ancipitals and his sword ready, the liegeman dipped into his
left pocket and brought out a folded paper.
"Secretary
Evanporil issued me this this morning. Now, stand back, if you would not mind,
master, or you'll get crushed."
He
handed Shokerandit a poster, which Shokerandit flapped open with an angry
gesture. It was printed in heavy black letters.
The
poster announced that a New Act had been passed, in a further attempt to keep
down the Plague known as the Fat Death. The Ancipital Race had been identified
as the main Carrier of the Plague. All Phagors must therefore be killed. Phagor
slaves must be put down. Wild Phagors should be shot on sight. A bounty would
be paid of One Sib per ancipital head by the appropriate authority in each
District. Henceforth, the possession of Phagors was illegal, under Penalty of
Death. By Order of the Oligarch.
"Put
up your swords until I give you further orders," Shokerandit said.
"No more killing till I say so. And get this corpse away from here."
When
the men reluctantly did as he instructed, Shokerandit went back into the house,
marching angrily upstairs to see the secretary.
The
mansion was full of ancient prints, many of them engraved by a steel process in
Rivenjk, when that city had boasted an artistic colony. Most of the prints
depicted scenes suitable to wild mountainous areas: hunters coming unexpectedly
upon bears in clearings, bears coming unexpectedly upon hunters, stags at bay,
men mounted on yelk leaping into chasms, women being stabbed in gloomy forests,
lost children dying in pairs upon exposed crags.
Beside
the secretary's door was a print of a soldier-priest on guard before the very
portals of the Great Wheel. He stood stiffly upright while spearing to death an
immense phagor which had leaped from a hole to attack him. The engraving was
entitled the Sibish
lettering executed with many a curlicue "An Old Antagonism."
"Very
appropriate," Shokerandit said aloud, thumped on Evanporil's door, and
entered.
The
secretary was standing by his window, looking out, and enjoying a cup of
pellamountain tea. He inclined his head and looked slyly at Shokerandit without
speaking.
Shokerandit
spread the poster out on his desk.
"You
did not tell me about this when I was here earlier. How's
that?"
"You
did not ask me, Master Luterin."
"How
many ancipitals do we employ on the estate?"
The
secretary answered without hesitation. "Six hundred and
fifteen."
"It
would be a tremendous loss to slaughter them. The new Act is not to be complied
with. First, I am going into town to see what the other landlords make of
it."
Secretary
Evanporil coughed behind his fingers. "I wouldn't advise a visit to town
just now. We have reports of some disturbance there."
"What
kind of disturbance?"
"The clergy, Master Luterin.
The live cremation of Priest-Supreme Chubsalid has caused a great deal of
disaffection. A tenner has passed since his death, and I'm given to understand
that the occasion was marked this morning by the burning of an effigy of the
Oligarch. Member Ebstok Esikananzi led some men to quell the display, but there
has been trouble since."
Shokerandit
sat himself on the edge of the desk.
"Evanporil,
tell me, do you consider that we can afford to kill over six hundred phagors
out of hand?"
"That's
not for me to say, Master Luterin. I am only an administrator."
"But
the Act it's so
arbitrary. Don't you think so?"
"I
would say, since you ask me, Master Luterin, that, if scrupulously carried out,
the Act will rid Sibornal of the ancipital kind for ever. An advantage,
wouldn't you say?"
"But
the immediate loss of cheap labour to us ... I don't imagine my father will be
best pleased."
"That
may be, sir, but for the general good . . ." The secretary let the
sentence hang.
"Then
we will not implement the Act until my father returns. I shall write to
Esikananzi and the other landlords to that effect. See that the managers are
clear on that score immediately."
Shokerandit
spent the afternoon happily riding about the estate, ensuring that no more
phagors were harmed. He rode out some miles to call on his father's cousins,
who had another estate in a mountainous region. With his mind full of plans, he
forgot entirely about his mother.
That
night he made love to Toress Lahl as usual. Something in the words he uttered,
or in the way he touched her, woke a response in her. She became a different
person, yielding, imaginative, fully alive. An
exhilaration beyond mere happiness filled Luterin. He thought he had won a
great gift. All the pains of life were worth such delight.
They
spent the whole night in the closest embraces, moving slowly, moving wildly, moving scarcely at all. Their spirits and bodies were one.
Towards
morning, Luterin fell asleep. He was immediately in the dreamworld.
He
was walking through a sparse landscape almost bereft of trees. It was marshy
underfoot. Ahead lay a frozen lake whose immensity could not be judged. It was
the future: all-powerful night prevailed in a small winter during the
Weyr-Winter. Neither sun was in the sky. A lumbering animal with rasping breath
followed him.
It
was also the past. On the shores of the lake were camped all the men who had
died violently in the Battle of Isturiacha. Their wounds still remained,
disfiguring them. Luterin saw Bandal Eith Lahl there, standing apart with his
hands in his pockets, gazing down at the ground.
Under
the ice of the lake, something gigantic was penned. He recognised that this was
where the breathing came from.
The being surged forth from the ice. The ice did not break. The being was a huge woman with a lustrous
black skin. She rose and rose into the sky. No one saw her but Luterin.
She
cast a benevolent gaze on Luterin and said, "You will never have a woman
to make you entirely happy. But there will be much happiness in the pursuit."
Much
more she said, but this was all Luterin could remember when he woke up.
Toress
Lahl lay beside him. Not only were her eyes shut: her whole countenance
presented a closed appearance. A lock of hair lay across her face; she bit it, as
recently she had bitten the fox tail to preserve her from the cold of the
trail. She scarcely breathed. He recognised that she was in pauk.
Finally
she returned. She stared and looked at him almost without recognition.
"You
never visit those below?" she said in a small voice.
"Never. We Shokerandits
regard it as gross superstition."
"Do
you not wish to speak with your dead brother?"
"No."
After
a silence, he clutched her hand and asked, "You have been communing with
your husband again?"
She
nodded without speaking, knowing it was bitter to him. After a moment, she
said, "Isn't this world we live in like an evil dream?"
"Not
if we live by our beliefs."
She
clung to him then and said, "But isn't it true that one day we shall grow
old, and our bodies decay, and our wits fail? Isn't that true? What could be
worse than that?"
They
made love again, this time more from fear than affection.
After
he had done the rounds of the estate the next day, and found everything quiet,
he went to visit his mother.
His
mother's rooms were at the rear of the mansion. A young servant girl opened the
door to him, and showed him into his mother's anteroom. There stood his mother,
in characteristic pose, hands clasped tightly before her, head slightly on one
side as she smiled quizzingly at him.
He
kissed her. As he did so, the familiar atmosphere that she carried round with
her enveloped him. Something in her attitude and her gestures suggested an
inward sorrow, even he
had often thought it an
illness of some kind: and yet an illness, a sorrow, so familiar that Lourna
Shokerandit drew on them almost as a substitute for other marked
characteristics.
As
she spoke gently to her son, not reproaching him for failing to come earlier,
compassion rose in his heart. He saw how age had increased its tyranny upon her
since their last meeting. Her cheeks and temples were more hollow, her skin
more papery. He asked her what she had been doing with herself.
She
put out a hand and touched him with a small pressure, as if uncertain whether to
draw him nearer or push him away.
"We
won't talk here. Your aunt would like to see you too."
Lourna
Shokerandit turned and led him into the small wood-panelled room within which
much of her life was spent. Luterin remembered it from childhood. Lacking windows,
its walls were covered with paintings of sunlit glades in sombre caspiarn
forests. Here and there, lost among representations of foliage, women's faces
gazed into the room from oval frames. Aunt Yaringa, the plump and emotional
Yaringa, was sitting in a corner, embroidering, in a chair upholstered somewhat
along her own lines.
Yaringa
jumped up and uttered loud soblike noises of welcome.
"Home at last, you poor poor thing! What you must have been through . . ."
Lourna
Shokerandit lowered herself stiffly into a velvet-covered chair. She took her
son's hand as he sat beside her. Yaringa perforce retreated to her padded
corner.
"It's
happiness to see you back, Luterin. We had such fears for you, particularly
when we heard what happened to Asperamanka's army."
"My
life was spared through a piece of good fortune. All our fellow countrymen were
slain as they returned to Sibornal. It was an act of deep treachery."
She
looked down at her thin lap, where silences had a habit of nestling. Finally
she said, without glancing up, "It is a shock to see you as you are. You
have become so ... fat." She hesitated on the last word, in view of her
sister's presence.
"I
survived the Fat Death and am in my winter suit, Mother. I like it and feel
perfectly well."
"It
makes you look funny," said Yaringa, and was ignored.
He
told the ladies something of his adventures, concluding by saying, "And I
owe my survival in great part to a woman called Toress Lahl, widow of a
Borldoranian I killed in battle. She nursed me devotedly through the Fat
Death."
"From
slaves, devotion is to be expected," said Lourna Shokerandit. "Have
you been to see the Esikananzis yet? Insil will be eager to see you again, as
you know."
"I
have not yet spoken to her. No."
"I
shall arrange a feast for tomorrow night, and Insil and her family shall come.
We will all celebrate your return." She clapped her hands once, without
sound.
"I
shall sing for you, Luterin," said Yaringa. It was her speciality.
Lourna's
expression changed. She sat more upright in her chair.
"And
Evanporil tells me that you are countermanding the new Act to destroy all
phagors."
"We
could cull them gradually, Mother. But to lose all six hundred at once would be
to disrupt the working of the estate. We are hardly likely to get six hundred
human slaves to replace them apart from the greater expense of human slaves."
"We
must obey the State."
"I
thought we would wait for Father's return."
"Very well. Otherwise, you
will comply with the law? It is important for us Shokerandits to set an example."
"Of course."
"I
should tell you that a foreign female slave was arrested in your rooms this
morning. We have her in a cell, and she will go before the local Board when
they meet next."
Shokerandit
stood up. "Why was this done? Who dared intrude into my rooms?"
With
composure, his mother answered, "The servant you had ordered to attend the
slave woman reported that she went into a state of pauk. Pauk is proscribed by
law. No less a personage than Priest-Supreme Chubsalid has gone to the stake
for refusing to comply with the law. Exception can hardly be made for a foreign
slave woman."
"In
this case, an exception will be made," Shokerandit said, pale of face.
"Excuse me." He bowed to his mother and aunt and left their rooms.
In
a fury, he stamped through the passages to the Estates Office. He relieved his
anger by bellowing at the staff.
As
he summoned the estate guard captain, Shokerandit said to himself, Very well, I
shall marry Toress Lahl. I must protect her from injustice. She'll be safe,
married to a future Keeper of the Wheel . . . and perhaps this scare will
persuade her not to visit the gossie of her husband so often.
Toress
Lahl was released from the cell without trouble and restored to Shokerandit's
rooms. They embraced.
"I
bitterly regret this indignity imposed on you."
"I
have become used to indignity."
"Then
you shall become used to something better. When the right opportunity arises, I
will take you to meet my mother. She will see the kind of person you are."
Toress
Lahl laughed. "I am sure that I shall not greatly impress the Shokerandits
of Kharnabhar."
The
feast to mark Luterin's return was well attended. His mother had shaken off her
lethargy to invite all local dignitaries as well as such Shokerandit relations
as were in favour.
The
Esikananzi family arrived in force. With Member Ebstok Esikananzi came his
sickly-looking wife, two sons, his daughter Insil Esikananzi, and a train of
subsidiary relations.
Since
Luterin and Insil had last met, she had developed into an attractive woman,
though a heaviness in her brow prevented true beauty as well as suggesting that tendency
to meet fate head-on which had long been a quality of the Esikananzis. She was
elegantly dressed in a grey velvet gown reaching to the floor, adorned by the
sort of wide lace collar she favoured. Luterin noted how the formal politeness
with which she covered her disgust at his metamorphosis studiedly emphasised
that disgust.
All
the Esikananzis tinkled to a great extent; their hip-bells were very similar in
tone. Ebstok's was the loudest. In a loud whisper, he spoke of his bottomless
sorrow at the death of his son Umat at Isturiacha. Luterin's protest that Umat
was killed in the great massacre outside Koriantura was swept aside as lies and
Campannlatian propaganda.
Member
Ebstok Esikananzi was a thickset man of dark and intricate countenance. The
cold endured on his frequent hunts had brought a maze of red veins creeping
like a species of plant life over his cheeks. He watched the mouths, not the eyes,
of those who addressed him.
Member
Ebstok Esikananzi was a man who believed in being unafraid to speak his mind,
despite the fact that this organ, when spoken, had only one theme to sound: the
importance of his opinion.
As
they demolished the maggoty fists of venison on their plates, Esikananzi said,
addressing both Luterin and the rest of the table, "You'll have heard the
news about our friend Priest-Supreme Chubsalid. Some of his followers are
kicking up a bit of trouble here. Wretched man preached treason against the
State. Your father and I used to go hunting with Chubsalid in better days. Did
you know that, Luterin? Well, we did on one occasion.
"The
traitor was born in Bribahr, so you don't wonder. . . . He paid a visit to the
monasteries of the Wheel. Now he takes it into his head to speak against the
State, the friend and protector of the Church."
"They
have burnt him for it, Father, if that's any consolation," said one of the
Esikananzi sons, with a laugh.
"Of course. And his estates
in Bribahr will be confiscated. I wonder who will get them?
The Oligarchy will decide on what is best. The great thing is, as winter
descends, to guard against anarchy. For Sibornal, the four main tasks are
clear. To unify the continent, to strike rapidly against all subversive
activity, whether in economic, religious, or academic life . . ."
As
the voice droned on, Luterin Shokerandit stared down at his plate. He was
without appetite. His eventful time away from Shivenink had so widened his outlook
on life that he was oppressed by the sight and sound of the Esikananzis, of
whom he had once been in awe. The pattern of the plate before him penetrated
his consciousness; with a wave of nostalgia, he realised that it was an Odim
export, despatched from the warehouse in Koriantura in better times. He thought
with affection of Eedap Mun Odim and his pleasant brother and then, with guilt, of Toress Lahl,
at present locked in his suite for safety. Looking up he caught Insil's cool
gaze.
"The
Oligarchy will have to pay for the death of the Priest-Supreme," he said,
"no less than for the slaughter of Asperamanka's army. Why should winter
be an excuse for overturning all our human values? Excuse me."
He
rose and left the room.
After
the meal, his mother employed many reproaches in order to induce him to return
to the company. Sheepishly, he went and sat with Insil and her family. They
made stiff conversation until slaves brought in a phagor who had been taught to
juggle. Under guidance from her master's whip, the gillot jiggled a little from
one foot to another while balancing a plate on her horns.
An
ensemble of slaves appeared next, dancing while Yaringa Shokerandit did her
party piece and sang love songs from the Autumn Palaces.
If my heart were free, if my
heart were free,
And wild as the dashing Venj
is
"Are
you being uncivil or merely soldierly?" Insil asked, under cover of the
music. "Do you anticipate our marrying in a kind of dumb show?"
He
gazed at her familiar face, smiled at her familiar teasing tone. He admired the
froth of lace and linen at shoulders and breasts, and observed how those
breasts had developed since their last meeting.
"What
are your expectations, Insil?"
"I
expect we shall do what is expected of us, like creatures in a play. Isn't that necessary in times like these when,
as you tactfully reminded Pa, ordinary values are cast off like garments, in
order to meet winter naked."
"It's
more a question of what we expect from ourselves. Barbarism may come,
certainly, but we can defy it."
"Word
has it that in Campannlat, following the defeat you administered to their
various savage nations, civil wars have broken out and civilisation is already
crumbling. Such disturbances must be avoided here at all costs . . . Notice
that I have taken to talking politics since we parted! Isn't that
barbarism?"
"No
doubt you have had to listen to your father preaching about the perils of
anarchy many times. It's only your neckline I find barbaric."
When
Insil laughed, her hair fell over her brow. "Luterin, I am not sorry to
see you again, even in your present odd shape, disguised as a barrel. Let's
talk somewhere privately while your relation sings her heart out about that
horrible river."
They
excused themselves and went together to a chill rear chamber, where biogas
flames hissed a continual cautionary note.
"Now
we can trade words, and let them be warmer than this room," she said.
"Ugh, how I hate Kharnabhar. Why were you fool enough to come back here?
Not for my sake, was it?" She gave him a look askance.
He
walked up and down in front of her. "You still have your old ways, Sil.
You were my first torturer. Now I've found others. I am tormented tormented by the evil of the
Oligarchy. Tormented by the thought that the Weyr-Winter
might be survived by a compassionate society, if men thought that way, not by a
cruel and oppressive one like ours. Real evil
the Oligarch ordered the destruction of his own
army. Yet I can also see that Sibornal must become a fortress, submitting to
harsh rules, if it is not to be destroyed as Campannlat will be by the oncoming
cold. Believe me, I am not my old childish self."
Insil
appeared to receive the speech without enthusiasm. She perched herself on a
chair.
"Well,
you certainly don't look yourself, Luterin. I was disgusted at the sight of
you. Only when you condescend to smile, when you are not sulking over your
plate, does your old self reappear. But the size of you ... I hope my
deformities remain inside me. Any measures, however harsh, against the plague,
are justified if they spare us that." Her personal bell tinkled in
emphasis, its sound calling up a fragment of the past for him.
"The
metamorphosis is not a deformity, Insil; it's a biological fact. Natural."
"You
know how I hate nature."
"You're
so squeamish."
"Why
are you so squeamish about the Oligarch's actions? They're all part of the same
thing. Your morality is as boring as Pa's politics. Who cares if a few people
and phagors are shot. Isn't life one big hunt
anyway?"
He
stared at her, at her figure, slender and tense, as she clutched her arms
against the chill of the room. Some of the affection he had once felt broke
through. "Beholder, you still argue and riddle as before. I admire it, but
could I bear it over a lifetime?"
She
laughed back. "Who knows what we shall be called upon to endure? A woman
needs fatalism more than a man. A woman's role in life is to listen, and when I
listen I never hear anything but the howl of the wind. I prefer the sound of my
own voice."
He
touched her for the first time as he asked, "Then what do you want from
life, if you can't even bear the sight of me?"
She
stood up, looking away from him. "I wish I were beautiful. I know I
haven't got a face just
two profiles tacked together. Then I might escape fate, or at least find an
interesting one."
"You're
interesting enough."
Insil
shook her head. "Sometimes I think I am dead." Her tone was
unemphatic; she might have been describing a landscape. "I want nothing
that I know of and many things I know nothing of. I hate my family, my house,
this place. I'm cold, I'm hard, and I have no soul.
"My
soul flew out of the window one day, maybe when you were spending your year
pretending to be dead . . . I'm boring and I'm bored. I believe in nothing. No
one gives me anything because I can give nothing, receive nothing."
Luterin
was pained by her pain, but only that. As of old, he found himself at a loss
with her. "You have given me much, Sil, ever since childhood."
"I
am frigid, too, I suspect. I cannot bear even to be kissed. Your pity I find
contemptible." She turned away to say, as if the admission cost her dear,
"As for the thought of making love with you as you are now . . . well, it
repels me ... at least, it does not attract me at all."
Although
he had no great depth of human understanding, Luterin saw how her coldness to
others was part of her habit of maligning herself. The habit was more ingrained
than formerly. Perhaps she spoke truth: Insil was always one for truth.
"I'm
not requiring you to make love with me, dear Insil. There is someone else whom
I love, and whom I intend to marry."
She
remained half turned from him, her narrow left cheek against the lace of her
collar. She seemed to shrink. The wan gaslight made the skin at the nape of her
neck glisten. A low groan came from her. When she could not suppress it by
putting hands to mouth, she began to beat her fists against her thighs.
"Insil!" He clutched
her, alarmed.
When
she turned back to him, the protective mask of laughter was back on her face. "So, a surprise! I find that there was after all
something I wanted, which I never expected to want. . . . But I'm too much of a
handful for you, isn't that true?"
"No, not that, not a negative."
"Oh,
yes . . . I've heard. The slave woman in your quarters . . . You want to marry
a slave rather than a free woman, because you've grown like all the men here,
you want someone you can possess without contradiction."
"No,
Insil, you're wrong. You're no free woman. You are the slave. I feel tenderly
for you and always will, but you are imprisoned in your self."
She
laughed almost without scorn. "You now know what I am, do you? Always
before you were so puzzled by me, so you said. Well, you are callous. You have
to tell me this news without warning? Why did you not tell my father, as
convention demands? You're a great respecter of convention."
"I
had to speak to you first."
"Yes?
And have you broken this exciting news to your mother? What of the liaison
between the Shokerandits and the Esikananzis now? Have you forgotten that we
shall probably be forced to marry when your father returns? You have your duty
as I have mine, from which neither of us has so far flinched. But perhaps you
have less courage than I. If that day comes when we are forced into the same bed,
I will repay you for the injury you do me today."
"What
have I done, for the Beholder's sake? Are you mad because I share with you your
lack of enthusiasm for our marriage? Speak sense, Insil!"
But
she gave him a cold look, her eyes dark under her disordered hair. Collecting
up her heavy skirt with one hand, she set the other hand pale against her cheek
and hastened from the chamber.
Next
morning, after Toress Lahl had bathed and a slave woman had dressed her,
Luterin took her before his mother and announced formally that he intended to
mam' her and not Insil Esikananzi. His mother wept and threatened and in particular threatened the
wrath of Luterin's father and finally retreated to her inner room.
"We
shall go for a ride," Luterin said coolly, strapping on his revolver and
clipping a sling onto a short rifle. "I'll show you the Great Wheel."
"Am
I to ride behind you?"
He
regarded her judiciously. "You heard what I said to my mother."
"I
heard what you said to your mother. Nevertheless, at present I am not a free
woman, and this is not Chalce."
"When
we return, I will have the secretary issue you a declaration of your freedom.
There are such things. Just now, I wish to be outside." He moved
impatiently to the door, where two stablemen stood holding the reins of two
yelk.
"I'll
teach you the points of a yelk one day," he said, as they moved into the
grounds. "These are a domestic breed bred by my father, and his father before him."
Once
outside the grounds of the estate, they moved into the teeth of the wind. There
was no more than a foot of snow underfoot. On either side of the track, striped
markers stood, awaiting the time when the snow was
deep.
To
get to Kharnabhar, the peak, they had to pass the Esikananzi estates. The track
then wound through a tall stand of caspiarns, the branches of which were fuzzy
with frost. As they advanced, bells of differing voice told of Kharnabhar, as
it emerged gradually from the cloud.
Everything
here was bells, indoors and out. What had once had a function to guard against the possibility of
being lost in snow or fog was now a fashion.
Toress
Lahl reined her yelk and stared ahead, holding a cloaked arm up to her face to
protect her mouth. Ahead lay the
The
track itself led uphill to the entrance to the Great Wheel. That entrance,
almost legendary, had been adorned by the Architects with gigantic bird-faced
oarsmen. It led into the depths of
Up
the face of the mountain the buildings climbed, many of them chapels or
mausoleums erected by pilgrims on this holiest of sites. Some of them stood
boldly above the snow, perched on rock outcrops. Some were in ruins.
Shokerandit
gestured largely ahead. "Of all this my father is in charge."
He
turned back to her. "Do you want to look more closely at the Wheel? They
don't take you in there by force. These days, you have to volunteer to get a
place in the Wheel."
As
they moved forward, Toress Lahl said, "I somehow imagined that we should
see a part of the Wheel from outside."
"It's
all inside the mountain. That's the main idea. Darkness.
Darkness bringing wisdom."
"I
thought it was light brought wisdom."
Jostling
locals stared at their metamorphosed shapes. Some locals bore prominent
goitres, a common malady in such mountainous inland regions. They
superstitiously made the symbol of the circle as they moved towards the
entrance of the Wheel with Shokerandit and Toress Lahl.
Nearer,
they could see a little more: the great ramplike walls leading in from either
side, as if to pour humanity down the gullet of the mountain. Above the
entrance, protected from landslides by an apron, was a starkly carved scene
embodying the symbolism of the Wheel. Oarsmen clad in
ample garments rowed the Wheel across the sky, where could be recognised some
of the zodiacal signs: the
Pilgrims,
dwarfed by the statuary, knelt at the gateway, calling aloud the name of the
Azoiaxic One.
She
sighed. "It's splendid, certainly."
"To
you, it may be no more than splendid. To those of us who have grown up in the
religion, it is our life, the mainspring that gives us confidence to face the
vicissitudes of this life."
Jumping
lightly from his yelk's back, he took hold of her saddle and said, looking up
at her, "One day, if my father finds me fit enough, I may in my turn
become Keeper of the Wheel. My brother was to have been heir to the role, but
he died. I hope my chance will come."
She
looked down at him and smiled in a friendly way, without understanding.
"The wind's dropped."
"It's
generally calm here.
He
fell silent, sensing that he had been too enthusiastic. He wished to be happy,
to be confident, as he had been. But the encounter with Insil the previous
evening had upset him. Abruptly he jumped back on his yelk and led away from
the entrance to the Wheel.
Without
speaking, he wended a way through the village street, where pilgrims were
crowding among the clothing shops and bell stalls. Some munched waffles stamped
with the sign of the Great Wheel.
Beyond
the village was a steep ravine, with a path winding down into a distant valley.
The trees grew close, with massive boulders between them. Drifts of snow lay
here and there, making the route treacherous. The yelk picked their way with
care, the bells on their harness jingling. Birds called in the branches high
above them and they heard the sound of water falling onto rock. Shokerandit
sang to himself. Batalix weakly lit their way. In the chasmlike valley below
them, shadow ruled.
He
halted where the track divided. One fork ran upwards along the slopes, one
down. When she caught up with him, he said, "They say this valley will
fill with snow when the Weyr Winter really comes say in my grandchildren's time, if I have any. We should take the
upper track. It's the easiest way home."
"Where
does the lower track lead?"
"There's
an old church down there, founded by a king from your part of the world, so you
might be interested. And next to it is a shrine my father built in memory to my
brother."
"I'd
like to see."
The
way became steeper. Fallen trees obstructed their way. Shokerandit pursed his
lips to see how the estate was being neglected. They passed under a waterfall,
and picked their way through a bed of snow.
Cloud
clung to the hillside. Every leaf about them shone. The light was bad.
They
circled past the cupola of the chapel. Its bell hung silent. When they reached
level ground, they saw that a great drift of snow had sealed the door of the
building.
As
a native of Borldoran, Toress Lahl recognised immediately that the church was
built in what was known as the Embruddockan style. Most of it lay below ground
level. The steps which wound down its curving outer dome were intended to give
worshippers a chance to clear their minds of worldly things before entering.
She
scooped away snow so that she could peer through a narrow rectangular window
set in the door. Darkness had been created inside, such light as there was
penetrating from above. An old god's portrait gazed down from behind a circular
altar. She felt her breath come faster.
The
name of the deity eluded her memory, but she knew well the name of the king
whose bust and titles stood, sheltered from the elements, under the porch above
the outer door. He was JandolAnganol, King of Borlien and Oldorando, the
countries which later became Borldoran.
Her
voice shook when she spoke. "Is this why I am brought here? This king is a
distant ancestor of mine. His name is proverbial where I come from, though he
died almost five centuries ago."
Luterin's
only response was to say, "I know the building is old. My brother lies
nearby. Come and see."
In
a moment, she collected herself and followed him, saying, "JandolAnganol .
. ."
He
stood contemplating a cairn. Stone was piled on stone, and capped with a
circular block of granite. His brother's name FAVIN was
engraved on the granite, together with the sacred symbol of circle within
circle.
To
show reverence, Toress Lahl dismounted and stood with Luterin. The cairn was a
brutal object in comparison with the delicately worked chapel.
Finally,
Luterin turned away and pointed to the rocks above them.
"You
see where the waterfall begins?"
High
overhead, a spur of rock protruded. Water spouted over its lip, falling clear
for seventy feet before striking stone. They could hear the sound of its
descent into the valley.
"He
rode out here one day on a hoxney, when the weather was better. Jumped man and mount. The Azoiaxic knows
what made him do it. My father was at home. He it was who found my brother,
dead on this spot. He erected this cairn to his memory. Since then, we have not
been allowed to speak his name. I believe that Father was as heartbroken as
I."
"And
your mother?" she asked, after a pause.
"Oh,
she was upset too, of course." He looked up again at the waterfall, biting
his lip.
"You
think greatly of your father, don't you?"
"Everyone
does." He cleared his throat and added, "His influence on me is
immense. Perhaps if he were away less, he would not be so close to me. Everyone
knows him hereabouts for a holy man much like your ancestor, the king."
Toress
Lahl laughed. "JandolAnganol is no holy man. He is known as one of the
blackest villains in history, who destroyed the old religion and burnt the
leader of it, with all his followers."
"Well,
we know him here as a holy man. His name is revered locally."
"Why
did he come here?"
He
shook his head impatiently. "Because this is Kharnabhar.
Everyone wants to be here. Perhaps he was doing penance for his sins . .
."
To
that she would say nothing.
He
stood staring down into the valley, into the confused hillsides.
"There
is no finer love than that between son and father, don't you agree? Now I have grown
up, I know other kinds of love all with their lure. None has the purity
the clarity of the love I bear for my father. All others are full of
questions, of conflicts. The love for a father is unquestioning. I wish I were one
of his hounds, that I could show him unquestioning obedience. He's away in the
caspiarn forests for months at a time. If I were a hound, I could be forever at
his heel, following wherever he led."
"Eating
the scraps he threw you."
"Whatever he wished."
"It's
not healthy to feel like that."
He
turned towards her, looking haughty. "I am not a lad anymore. I can please
myself or I can subdue my will. So it must be with everyone. Compassion and
firmness are needed. We must fight unjust laws. As long as anarchy does not
take over, Weyr-Winter will be endurable. When spring comes, Sibornal will
emerge stronger than ever. We are committed to four tasks. To
unify our continent. To rectify work, and consolidate it
organisationally with regard to depleted resources . . . Well, all that's no
concern of yours. . . ."
She
stood apart from him. The clouds of their breath formed and dispersed without
meeting. "What role do I play in your plans?"
He
was uneasy with the question, but liked its bluntness. Being in Toress Lahl's
company was like occupying a different world from Insil's. With a sudden
impulse, he turned and grasped her, staring into her eyes before kissing her
briefly. He stepped back, drawing deep breath, drinking in her expression. Then
he moved forward again and this time kissed her with greater concentration.
Even
when she made some response, he could not banish the thought of Insil
Esikananzi. For her part, Toress Lahl too struggled against her late husband's
phantom lips.
They
broke apart.
"Be
patient," he said, as if to himself. She gave no answer.
Luterin
climbed back on his mount, and led the way up the track which wound through the
dark trees. The bells on the animals' harness jingled. The little snowbound
chapel sank behind them, soon becoming lost in the obscurity.
When
he returned, a sealed note from Insil awaited him. He opened it with
reluctance, but it contained only an oblique reference to their quarrel of the
previous evening. It read:
Luterin:
You will think me hard, but
there are those who are harder. They offer you greater danger than ever I
could.
Do you recall a conversation
we once had about the possible cause of your brother's death? It took place,
unless I dreamed it, after you had recovered from that strange horizontal
interlude which followed the death. Your innocence is heroic. Let me say more
soon.
I beg you use guile now.
Hold "our" new secret for a while, for your own sake.
Insil
"Too
late," he said impatiently, screwing the note up into a ball.
But
how could anyone be sure that those tutelary biospheric spirits, the Original
Beholder and Gaia, had a real existence?
There was no
objective proof, just as empathy cannot be measured. Microbacterial life has no
knowledge of mankind: their umwelts are too disparate. Only intuition can permit mankind to see and
hear the footsteps of those geochemical spirits who have managed the life of a
functioning whole world as a single organism.
It is intuition,
again, which tells humanity that to live according to the spirit it must not
possess, must refrain from dominating. It was precisely those men who met so
secretively on Icen Hill, shut away from human contact, secure from contact
with the outside world, who most feverishly tried to possess the world.
And
if they succeeded?
The biospheric
spirits are forgiving and adaptable. Intuition tells us that there are always
alternatives. Homeostasis is not fossilisation but the balance of vitality.
The early tribal
hunters who burned the forests to secure their prey gave birth to the
ecosystems of the great savannahs. Mutability informs Gaia's cybernetic
controls.
The Original
Beholder's grey cloak was sweeping across Helliconia. Human beings defied it or
accepted it, according to their individual natures.
Beyond the pale of
human possession, the creatures of the wild made their own dispositions. The
brassimip trees greedily stored food resources far below ground, in order that
they might continue to grow. The little land crustaceans, the rickybacks,
congregated in their thousands on the underside of stones of alabaster, working
lodgements for themselves in the stone with secretions of acid; they would
derive such light as they needed to sustain them through the stone itself. The
horned sheep of the mountains, the wild asokin, the badgered timoroon, the
flambreg on their scoured plains, indulged in fierce courtship battles. There
was time for one more mating and perhaps one more: the number of living
offspring born would be decided by temperature, by the food supply, by courage,
by skill.
All those beings
which could not be described as part of the human race, but remained suspended
by a quirk of evolution just outside the hearths of humanity wistfully looking towards the camp
fires those beings
too made their dispositions.
The Driat tribes,
given the gift of language and well able to curse in it, cursed and moved down
from the hills to rocky shores of their continent, where they would find food
in abundance. The migratory Madis were driven from their dying ucts to seek shelter
in the West and to haunt the ruined cities mankind had deserted. The Nondads
burrowed down between the roots of great trees, living their elusive lives
little differently from in the scorching days of summer.
As for the
ancipital race, each generation saw global conditions reverting to what they
had been before the invasion of Freyr into their skies. To their eotemporal
minds, the stereotype of the future was coming more nearly to resemble the
stereotype of the past. On the broad plains of Campannlat, phagors became
increasingly dominant, relying for meat on the herds of yelk and biyelk, which
appeared in growing numbers, and becoming bolder in their attacks on the Sons
of Freyr. Only in Sibornal, where their presence had never been strong, were
they subject to organised counterattacks from humanity.
All these creatures
could be seen as vying with one another. In a sense it was true. But in a wider
sense, all were a unity. The steady disappearance of green things destroyed
their numbers, but they remained intact. For all of them depended on the
anaerobic muds on the Helliconian seabeds, working to bury carbon and maintain
the oxygen of the atmosphere, so that the great processes of respiration and
photosynthesis were maintained over land and ocean.
All these
creatures, again, could be seen as the vital life of the planet. In a sense it
was true. But fully half of the mass of Helliconian life lived in the
three-dimensional pasturages of the seas. That mass was composed for the most
part of single-celled microflora. They were the true monitors of life, and for
them little changed, whether Freyr was close or distant.
The Original
Beholder held all living forces in balance. How was life possible on the
planet? Because there was life on the planet. What would
happen without life? There could be no life. The Original Beholder was a spirit
who dwelt over the waters: not a separate spirit endowed with mind, but a vast
cooperative entity, creating well-being from the centre of a furious chemical
storm. And the Original Beholder was forced to be even more ingenious than her
sister goddess, Gaia, on nearby Earth.
Somewhat apart from
all other living things, from algae and rutting sheep and rickybacks, were the
humans of Helliconia. These creatures, although fully as dependent on the
homeostatic biosphere as other units of life, had nevertheless elevated
themselves to a special category. They had developed language. Within the
wordless universe, they had assembled their own umwelt of words.
They had songs and
poems, dramas and histories, debate, lament and proclamation, with which to
give tongue to the planet. With words came the power to invent. As soon as
words came, there was story. Story was to words as Gaia was to Earth and the
Original Beholder to Helliconia. Neither planet had a story until mankind came
chattering onto the scene and invented it to fit what each generation saw as the facts.
There were
visionaries on Helliconia who, at this time of crisis in human affairs, divined
the existence of the Original Beholder. But visionaries had always been there,
often inarticulate because they worked close to the thresholds of inarticulacy.
They perceived something azoiaxic in the universe, something beyond life round
which all life revolves, which was itself at once
unliving and the Life.
The vision did not
fit easily into words. But because there were words, their listeners could not
tell whether the vision was true or false. Words have no atomic weight. The
universe of words has no ultimate criteria corresponding to life and death in
the tongueless universe. This is why it can invent imaginary worlds which have
neither life nor death.
One such imaginary
world was the perfectly functioning Sibornalese state as visualised by the
Oligarchy. Another was the perfectly functioning universe of God the Azoiaxic
as visualised by the elders of the Church of the Formidable Peace. With the
defiance of the Oligarch's edicts and the subsequent burning of Priest-Supreme
Chubsalid and his fellow ecclesiastics, the two imaginary perfections ceased to
coincide. After long periods of near identity, Church and State discovered to
their mutual horror that they were in opposition.
Many of the leading
clergy, like Asperamanka, were too much in the pocket of the State to protest.
It was the rank and file of the Church, the lowly friars, the unlovely monks,
those closest to the people, who raised the alarm.
One Member of the
Oligarchy cried out against "those preachers in their cowls running to and
fro, spreading false rumours among the common folk" thus unconsciously echoing Erasmus on
Earth many centuries earlier. But the Oligarchy was no defender of humanism. It
could respond to the oppressed only with more oppression.
Enantiodromia
once more. Just when the ranks were closing, a
gulf opened; when unity was within reach, the divisions became widest.
The Oligarchy
turned everything to its advantage. It could use the new unrest in its
countries as an excuse for yet firmer measures. The army returning from its
success in Bribahr was redeployed in the towns and villages of Uskutoshk. A
sullen and cowed population stood by while its village priests were shot.
The dissention
reached even Kharnabhar.
Ebstok Esikananzi called
upon Luterin to discuss the trouble, and watched his mouth rather than his eyes
when Luterin counselled caution. Other worthy officials representing one side
or other also called. Luterin found himself closeted with Secretary Evanporil
and staff for many hours. With his own fate hanging over him, he was unable to
decide the fate of his province.
The Great Wheel was
involved in the dispute. While it was itself run by the Church, its territory
was under the control of a lay governor appointed by the Keeper. The gulf
between lay and ecclesiastic widened. Chubsalid was not forgotten.
After two days of
argumentation, Luterin did what he had done before when feeling oppressed. He
escaped.
Taking with him a
good hound and a huntsman, he rode off into the wilds, the almost limitless
wilderness of mountain round Kharnabhar. A blizzard was blowing, but he
disregarded it. Lost here and there among the valleys, or punctuating breaks in
the caspiarn forests, were hunting lodges and shrines where a man could stable his
mount, shelter, and sleep. Like his father, he simply disappeared from human
ken.
Often he hoped that
he might encounter his father. He saw the meeting in his mind's eye. Saw his
father the centre of a group of heavily garbed hunters, the snow swirling about
them. Masked hawks sat on leather shoulders. A biyelk dragged a sled carrying
dead game. The breath of the hounds rose up. His father descended stiffly from
his saddle and came towards him, arms outstretched.
Always his father
had learnt of his heroism at Isturiacha, and congratulated him on his escape
from death at Koriantura. They embraced . . .
He and his
companion met no one, heard nothing but the clash of glaciers. They slept in
remote lodges, where the aurora flickered high above the forests.
However tired he
was, however many animals they had slain, the nights brought bad dreams to
Luterin. The obsession overwhelmed him that he was climbing, not amid forests,
but through rooms stuffed with meaningless furniture and ancient possessions.
In those rooms, a sense of horror gathered. He could neither find nor evade the
thing that hunted him.
Often he awoke and
imagined that he was again laid flat by paralysis. Knowledge of his real
surroundings returned only slowly. Then he would try to calm his mind with
thoughts of Toress Lahl; but ever and again Insil stood beside her.
At least his mother
had taken to her bed after the feast she had given in his honour, so news that
he would not marry Insil had not spread.
He saw in how many
ways Insil was fitted to be his wife in the years to come; in her was the true
unyielding Kharnabhar spirit.
Toress Lahl, by
contrast, was an exile, a foreigner. Had he said he would marry her merely to
prove his independence?
He hated the fact
that he was still undecided. Yet he could not decide finally until his own
uncertain situation was made clear. That entailed a confrontation with his
father.
Night after night,
lying with beating heart inside his sleeping bag, he came to see that
confrontation there must be. He could marry Insil only if his father did not
force him to it. His father must accept his viewpoint.
He must be hero or
outcast. There were no other alternatives. He had to face rejection. Sex, when
all was said, was a question of power.
Sometimes, as the
aurora cast its glow inside the dark lodges, he saw his brother Favin's face.
Had he also challenged his father in some way and lost?
Luterin and the
huntsman rose early every dawn, when night birds were still in flight. They
shared their food together as equals, but never a private thought did they let
pass from one to the other.
However badly the
nights passed, the days were all happiness. Every hour brought a changing light and changing conditions. The habits of the
animals they stalked differed from hour to hour. With the decline of the small
year, the days grew shorter, and Freyr remained always close to the horizon.
But sometimes they would climb a ridge and see through foliage the old ruler
himself, still blazing, throwing his light into another valley brimming in its
depths with shadow like a sea, as a king might carelessly fill a glass with
wine.
The stoic silence
of nature was all about them, increasing their sense of infinity. Infinity came
through all their senses. The rocks down which they scrambled to drink at some
snow-bearded mountain stream seemed new, untouched by time. Through the silence
ran a great music, translated in Luterin's blood as freedom.
On their sixth day
in the wilderness, they spied a party of six horned phagors crossing a glacier
on kaidaw-back. The cowbirds sailing above their shoulders gave them away. They
stalked the phagors for a day and a half, until they could get ahead of them
and ambush them in a ravine.
They killed all six
ancipitals. The cowbirds fled, screeching. The kaidaw were good specimens.
Luterin and the huntsman managed to round up five of them and decided to drive
them back to the family estate. It was possible that the Shokerandit stables
could breed a domesticated strain of kaidaw.
The expedition had
ended in modest triumph.
The tongues of the
sullen bells of the mansion could be heard to toll long before the building
loomed out of the blue mists.
So Luterin returned
home, to find uproar, and his father's yelk being combed down in the stables,
dead game lying everywhere, and his father's bodyguard
throwing back fresh-brewed yadahl in the gunroom.
Unlike Luterin's
imagined meeting with Lobanster Shokerandit, the real reunion between father
and son contained no embraces.
Luterin hurried into
the reception hall, throwing off only his outer garments, retaining his boots,
his revolver, his bell. His hair was long and unkempt.
It fluttered about his ears as he ran towards his father.
Skewbald hounds
skulked about the chamber and pissed against the wall hangings. A group of
armed men stood by the door, backs to the main party, looking round
suspiciously as if plotting.
About Lobanster
Shokerandit were gathered his wife, Lourna, and her sister, and friends such as
the Esikananzis Ebstok,
his wife, Insil, and her two brothers. They were talking together. Lobanster's
back was turned to Luterin, and his mother saw him first. She called his name.
The talk ceased.
They all turned to look at him.
Something in their
faces an unpleasant
complicity told him they
had been discussing him. He faltered in mid-stride. They continued to regard
him and yet, curiously, their true attention still remained with the black-clad
man in their midst.
Lobanster
Shokerandit could command the attention of any group. This was less by his
stature, which was no more than average, than by a sort of stillness which
emanated from him. It was a quality all noticed, yet no one had word for it.
Those who hated him, his slaves and servants, said that he froze you with a
glance; his friends and allies said that he had an amazing power of command or
that he was a man apart. His hounds said nothing, but slunk about his legs with
their tails tucked down.
His hands were neat
and precise, his nails pointed. Lobanster Shokerandit's hands were noticeable.
They were active while the rest of him remained rigid. They frequently
travelled up to visit his throat, which was always swathed in black silk,
moving with a startled action not unlike that of crabs or hawks searching for
concealed prey. Lobanster had a goitre, which his cravat concealed and his
hands betrayed. The goitre lent a pillarlike solidity to the neck, sufficient
to support a large head.
The white hair of
this remarkable head was brushed straight back as if raked, receding from a
broad forehead. There were no eyebrows, but the pallid eyes were surrounded by
thick dark lashes so
thick that some people suspected Madi blood somewhere. The eyes were further
bolstered by grey pillows or bags below them; these pillows, having a certain
goitrous quality, acted as embankments behind which the eyes watched the world.
The lips, though ample, were almost as pale as the eyes, and the flesh of the
face almost as pale as the lips. A sebacious sheen covered forehead and cheeks sometimes the busy hands went up to
wipe at the film so that
the face gleamed as if it had recently been recovered from the sea.
"Come near,
Luterin," said the face now. The voice was deep and somewhat slow, as if
the chin was reluctant to disturb the mound of goitre lying below it.
"I am glad you
are back, Father," said Luterin, advancing. "Had you good
hunting?"
"Well enough.
You are so metamorphosed that I scarcely recognised you."
"Those
fortunate enough to survive the plague take on compact shape for the Weyr-Winter,
Father. I assure you I feel excellently fit."
He took his
father's neat hand.
Ebstok Esikananzi
said, "We may assume that phagors feel themselves to be fit, yet they are
proven carriers of the plague."
"I have
recovered from the plague. I cannot carry it."
"We certainly
hope you can't, dear," said his mother.
As he turned to
her, his father said sternly, "Luterin, I wish you to retire to the hall
and await me. I shall be there presently. We have some legal matters to
discuss."
"Is there
something the matter?"
Luterin took the
full force of his father's stare. He bowed his head and retired.
Once in the hall,
he paced about, heedless of the tongue of his bell. What had made his father so
cold he could not guess. True, that august figure had
always been distant even when present, but that had been merely one of his
qualities, as much taken for granted as the hidden goitre.
He summoned a slave
and sent him to fetch Toress Lahl from her quarters.
She came
questioningly. As she approached, he thought how appealing her metamorphosed
shape was. And the frost prints on her face had healed.
"Why have you
been so long away? Where have you been?"
There was a hint of
reproach, although she smiled and took his hand.
As he kissed her,
he said, "I'm entitled to vanish on the hunt. It's in the family blood.
Now listen, I am anxious for you. My father's back and evidently displeased.
This may be something that concerns you, since my mother and Insil have been
talking to him."
"What a pity
you were not here to welcome him, Luterin."
"That can't be
helped," he said dismissively. "Listen, I want to give you
something."
He
led into an alcove off the hall, where a wooden cupboard stood. With a key
taken from his pocket, he unlocked the cupboard. Within hung dozens of heavy
iron keys, each labelled. He ran a finger along the rows, frowning.
"Your father
has a mania for locking things," she said, half laughing.
"Don't be
silly. He is the Keeper. This place has to be fortress as well as home."
He found what he wanted
and picked out a rusted key almost a hand's span long.
"Nobody will
miss this," he said, locking up the cupboard. "Take it. Hide it. It
is the key to that chapel built by your countryman, the king-saint. You
remember, in the woods? There may be a little trouble
I can't tell what. Perhaps about
pauk. I don't want you harmed. If anything happens to me, you will be in
danger of arrest at the least. Go and hide in the chapel. Take a slave with you they're all longing to escape. Choose
a woman who knows Kharnabhar, preferably a peasant."
She slipped the key
into the pocket of her new clothes.
"What can
happen to you?" She clutched his hand.
"Nothing,
probably, but I just feel
an apprehension. . . ."
He heard a door
opening. Hounds came scurrying, nails clicking on the
tiles. He pushed Toress Lahl into the shadows behind the cupboard, and stepped
forth into the hall. His father was emerging. Behind him came half a dozen of
the conspiratorial men, bells clanking.
"We'll speak
together," said Lobanster, lifting one finger. He led into a small wooden
room on the ground floor. Luterin followed, and the conspiratorial men moved in
behind them. The last one in locked the door on the inside. The biogas hissed
when turned up.
This room had a
wooden bench and table and little else in the way of furniture. People had been
interrogated here. There was also a wooden door fortified with iron straps,
which was kept locked. It was a private way down into the vaults, where the
well was whose waters never froze. Legend had it that precious brood animals
had been preserved down there in the coldest centuries.
"Whatever we
discuss should be said privately, Father," Luterin said.
"I don't even
know who these other gentlemen are, though they make free in our house. They
are not your huntsmen."
"They are
returned from Bribahr," said Lobanster, speaking the words as if they gave
him a cold pleasure. "Eminent men need bodyguards in these times. You are
too young to understand how plague can cause the dissolution of the state. It breaks
up first small communities and then large. The fear of it disintegrates
nations."
The conspiratorial
men all looked very serious. In the limited space, it was impossible to stand
away from them. Only Lobanster was separate, poised without movement behind the
table, on the surface of which he played his fingers.
"Father, it is
an insult that we should have to converse before strangers. I resent it. But I
say to you and to them,
if they are capable of hearing that although there may be truth in what you say, there is a
greater truth you neglect. There are other ways of disintegrating nations than
by plague. The harsh measures being brought against pauk the common people, the Church the cruelty behind those measures will eventually bring greater
destruction than the Fat Death "
"Cease,
boy!" His father's hands went to the region of his throat. "Cruelty
is also part of nature. Where is mercy, except with men? Men invented mercy,
but cruelty was here before them, in nature. Nature is a press. Year by year,
it squeezes us tighter. We cannot fight it but by bringing to bear cruelty of
our own. The plague is nature's latest cruelty, and must be fought with its own
weapons."
Luterin could not
speak. He could not find, under that chill, pale gaze, words to explain that
while there might be a casual cruelty in circumstances, to formulate cruelty
into a moral principle was a perversion of nature. To hear such pronouncements
from his father turned him sick. He could only say, "You have swallowed
utterly the words of the Oligarch."
One of the
conspiratorial men spoke in a loud, rough voice. "That is everyone's
duty."
The sound of this
stranger's voice, the claustrophobia of the room, the tension, his father's
coldness, all mounted to Luterin's brain. As if from afar, he heard himself
shouting, "I hate the Oligarch! The Oligarch is a monster. He murdered
Asperamanka's army. I'm here as a fugitive instead of a hero. Now he will
murder the Church. Father, fight this evil before you are yourself devoured by
it."
This
he said and more, in a kind of seizure. He was
scarcely aware of their bringing him from the room and helping him outside. He
felt the bite of the chill wind. There was snow in his face. He was pushed
through a courtyard where the biogas inspection pit was, and into a harness
room.
The stablemen were
sent away, the conspiratorial men were sent away. Luterin was alone with his
father. Still he could not bear to look at him, but sat clutching his head,
groaning. After a while he listened to what his father was saying.
". . . only son left to me. You I must groom to take over the role
of Keeper. For you there are particular challenges, and you must meet them. You
must be strong "
"I am strong!
I defy the system."
"If the order
is to wipe out pauk, then we must wipe it out. If to destroy all phagors, then
we must destroy all phagors. Not to do so is weakness. We cannot live without a
system all else is
anarchy.
"I hear from
your mother that you have a female slave who has influence over you. Luterin,
you are a Shokerandit and you must be strong. That slave must be destroyed, and
you will marry Insil Esikananzi, as we have planned since your childhood. There
is no question but that you must obey. You obey not for my sake, but for the
sake of freedom and Sibornal."
Luterin gave a
laugh. "What freedom would there be in such circumstances? Insil hates me,
I believe, but for you that's neither here nor there. There's no freedom under
the laws now being imposed."
Lobanster moved as
if for the first time. It was a simple gesture, a mere removal of one hand from
the throat, to extend it in appeal towards Luterin.
"The laws are
harsh. That's understood. But there is no freedom, nor any life, without them.
Without laws firmly applied, we shall die. Just as Campannlat dies without law,
though the climate favours it above Sibornal. Campannlat already disintegrates
under the coming of the Great Winter. Sibornal can survive.
"Let me remind
you, my son, that there are one thousand eight hundred and twenty-five small
years in a Great Year. This Great Year has but five hundred and sixteen more
years to run before its death, before the time of greatest cold, the winter
solstice, when Freyr is farthest from us.
"We have to
live like iron men until that time. Then the plague will be gone, and
conditions will improve once more. We have known these facts since birth, for
we hold Kharnabhar. The life of the Great Wheel is dedicated to getting us
through that black time, to bringing us again to the light and warmth "
Now Luterin
confronted his father and spoke composedly.
"Agreed, the
Wheel does as you say, Father. Why, then, do you approve as I gather you must these wicked deeds whereby Chubsalid,
Priest-Supreme of our Church, is burnt and the Church in general
attacked?"
"Because
the Wheel is an anachronism." Lobanster
made a throaty noise resembling a laugh, so that his goitre trembled under its
black covering. "It is an anachronism, without meaning. It cannot save
Helliconia. It cannot save Sibornal. It is a sentimental concept. It functioned
properly only when it imprisoned murders and debtors. It conflicts with the
scientific laws of the Oligarchy. Those laws, and
those alone, can bring us through the Weyr-Winter which will be upon our
children. We cannot have two sets of laws in conflict. Therefore the Church
must be demolished. It was as a first step towards that demolition that the Act
against pauk was passed."
Again Luterin found
no words.
"Is that what
you brought me here to tell me?" he asked at last.
"I was not
going to have others hear our discussion. I'm chiefly concerned with your
contempt for the laws concerning pauk and the extermination of phagors, as
reported by Evanporil. If you weren't my son, I would have killed you. Do you
understand?"
Luterin shook his
head once. He cast his gaze to the floor of the tack room. As in childhood, he
was unable to face his father's eyes.
"Do
you understand?"
Still Luterin could
not speak. He was utterly dismayed by his father's imperviousness to his
feelings.
Lobanster wiped his
shining brow and crossed to the table, on which lay a
saddle bag among other pieces of harness. He flicked open the buckle on the
saddle bag so that a wad of posters came spilling out. He handed one to his
son.
"Since you are
so fond of Acts, have a look at the latest one."
Sighing, Luterin
took it. He barely glanced at it before letting it drop. The sheet sailed into
a corner of the room. It stated in black letters that, as a further measure to
prevent plague, persons found in a metamorphosed state would be put to death. By Order of the Oligarch. Luterin said nothing.
His father spoke.
"You see that if you do not obey my wishes I cannot protect you. Can
I?"
At last Luterin stared
at his father in misery. "I have served you, Father. I have done as you
wished all my life. I went into the army without protest and acquitted myself well. I have
been and desired nothing
better than to be your possession. No doubt something of the
same was in Favin's mind when he leaped to his death. But now I have to oppose
you. Not for my sake. Not even for religion's sake, or for the State. After
all, what are they but abstractions? I must oppose you for your own sake.
Either the season or the Oligarch himself has driven you mad."
A terrible fire
shone on his father's face, while the eyes remained as stoney as ever.
He snatched a long
black shoeing knife from the table and held it out to his son. "Take this,
you fool, and come outside with me. You must be made to see who is mad."
The snow was coming
down fast, whirling round a grey angle of the mansion as if bent on filling up
the courtyard to the very top of its walls as soon as possible. The conspiratorial
men stood in a group, hands tucked under their belts, waiting under a porch,
heels knocking together for warmth. To one side stood yelk, still saddled, with
an anxious stableman still standing among them. Near at hand was a pile of
phagor corpses; they had been dead for some while: the snow settled on them
without steaming.
To
one side, close to an outer gate, a row of rusty iron hooks stuck out from the
wall above head level. The naked bodies of four men and a
woman dangled by ropes from the hooks.
Lobanster pushed
his son in the back, urging him forward. The touch was like fire.
"Cut these
dead things down and look at them. Have a good look at their monstrousness and
then ask if the Oligarch is not just. Go on."
Luterin drew near.
The killing appeared recent. Moisture stood on the distorted faces of the dead.
All five corpses were of people who had survived the Fat Death and
metamorphosed.
"Laws have to
be obeyed, Luterin, obeyed. Laws are what make society, and without society men
are only animals. We caught these people on the way to Kharnabhar today, and we
hanged them here because of the law. They died so that society can survive. Do
you now think the Oligarch mad?"
As Luterin
hesitated, his father said harshly, "Go on, cut them down, look at the
agony in their faces, and then ask yourself if you prefer that state to life.
When you reach an answer, you can get down on your knees to me."
The lad looked in
appeal at his father. "I loved you as a dog its master. Why do you make me
do this?"
"Cut them
down!" One hand flew convulsively to the throat.
Choking, Luterin
came level with the first corpse. He raised the knife and looked up into its
distorted face.
It was someone he
knew.
For a moment, he hesitated.
But there was no mistaking that face, even without its moustache. Luterin
recalled vividly seeing it in the Noonat Tunnel, livid with exertion. Swinging
the knife, he cut down the remains of Captain Harbin Fashnalgid. At the same
time, his mind opened. Just for a second, he was the boy about to prefer a
year's paralysis to the truth.
He turned to his
father.
"Good. That's
one. Now the next. To rule you must obey. Your brother
was weak. You can be strong. I heard of your victory at Isturiacha when I was
in Askitosh. You can be Keeper, Luterin, and your children. You can be more
than Keeper."
Flecks of spittle
flew from his mouth, to be carried along in a vortex of snow. The expression on
his son's face made him pause. In an instant, his demeanour altered. His bell
rattled at his hip almost for the first time as he turned to look for his
conspiratorial men.
The words burst
from Luterin. "Father, you are the Oligarch! You! That's what Favin
discovered, wasn't it?"
"No!"
Lobanster suddenly changed. All command was gone. As he raised his crablike
hands, every line of his body expressed fear. He clutched his son's forearm as
Luterin drove the knife up under his rib cage, straight into his heart. Blood
burst from the torn clothing and covered both their hands.
The courtyard
became a scene of confusion. First to move was the saddler, who cried in terror
and rushed out of the gate. He knew what befell menials who witnessed murder.
The conspiratorial men were less quick to respond. Their leader was falling to his
knees in the snow and then collapsing slowly, one reddened hand tugging weakly
at his goitre, over the body of Fashnalgid. They stared at the sight as if
paralysed.
Luterin did not
wait. Horrified though he was, he ran over to the yelk and flung himself on one
of them. As he galloped from the yard, a shot came, and he heard the men behind
him rushing to follow.
Slitting his eyes
against the snow, he spurred on the yelk. Across the rear
square. Men shouted. His father's recently returned cavalcade was still
being unloaded. A woman ran, shrieking, slipped, fell. The yelk leaped over
her. At the gate there was a move to stop him. It was ill-coordinated. He
struck out with his revolver, trying to smash the face of a guard who made to
grab his rein. Then he was in the grounds.
As he rode, heading
for a belt of trees and the side road, he was saying something over and over
again. His mind had lost its rationality. Only a while later could he grasp and
understand what he said.
What he constantly
repeated to himself was, "Patricide is the greatest crime."
The words formed a
rhythm to his escape.
Nor did he make any
conscious decision as to where he was going. There was but one place in
Kharnabhar where he might be safe from pursuit. The trees flashed by on either side,
smeared across his slitting vision. He rode with his head low on the yelk's
neck, breathing its misty breath, shouting at the creature to tell it what the
greatest crime was.
The gates of the
Esikananzi estate loomed out of the flying twilight. There was a flicker of
lamplight at the lodge, and a man ran out. Then he was torn from view. Beyond
the drum of the yelk's hoofs, above the whistle of the wind, came sounds of
pursuit.
He was into the
village before he knew it. Bells clashed about his ears as he passed the first
monastery. There were people about, muffled to the eyes. Pilgrims screamed and
scattered. He glimpsed a waffle stall overturned. Then it too was gone and
there were only guardhouses before him until out of the murk loomed the ramparts of
Without waiting to
do more than check the yelk's pace, Luterin flung himself off the animal and
ran forward. Above, a great bell tolled. It spoke in solemn tones of his guilt.
But the instinct for self-preservation drove him onwards. He ran down the ramp.
Priestly figures came forward.
"The
soldiers!" he gasped.
They understood.
The soldiers were no longer their allies. They hurried him into the gloom,
while the great metal doors clanged fast together behind him.
The Great Wheel had
claimed him.
The
geonauts were the first life systems on Earth not to consist of living cells,
and therefore not to depend on bacteria. They formed a complete break from all
life that had gone before, including those amazing gene cities, humanity.
Perhaps
Gaia had turned her metaphorical thumbs down on humanity. They had proved
themselves more of a curse than an adjunct to the biosphere. Possibly they were
now being phased out, or merged with a greater thing.
At
all events, the white polyhedrons were now everywhere, covering every
continent. They appeared to do no harm. Their ways were as inscrutable as the
ways of kings to cats, or of cats to kings. But they emitted energy.
The
energy was not the old energy which mankind had used for centuries and termed
electricity. The humans called the new energy egonicity, perhaps in memory of
the old.
Egonicity
could not be generated. It was a force which flowed only from large white polyhedrons
when they were about to replicate, or were meditating on the subject. It could,
however, be felt. It was felt as a mild singing noise in the lower stomach or hora region. It did not register on any
instrument the post-ice age humans could devise.
The
post-ice age humans were itinerant. They no longer wished to possess land but
rather to be possessed by it. The old world of fences was dead for ever.
Wherever
they went, they walked. And it so turned out that it was the easiest thing to
follow a suitable geonaut. Humanity had not lost its old ingenuity, or its
skill with its hands. As generations passed, a group of men on one of the new
continents discovered a way of harnessing enough egonicity to move a small
carriage. Soon, small carriages were to be seen everywhere, moving at a slow
rate over the land, trundling in front of a geonaut.
When
the geonaut replicated, letting slip a stream of tiny polyhedrons like sheets
of paper in the wind, the egonicity ceased, and those who sat in the carriage
had to push it to another source.
However,
that was just a beginning. Later developments would bring different
arrangements.
The
human race, greatly reduced from its former numbers, roamed the new Earth, and developed
a dependence on the geonauts which increased generation by generation.
Nobody
worked as once people had worked, bent double planting rice or sowing potatoes
in the dirt. They did plant vegetables occasionally, but that was for pleasure;
and others inherited the fruits of their labours, since they had by that time
moved on though rarely by
more than a. mile a day. Egonicity was not a violent power source.
Nobody
worked at desks. Desks were extinct.
It
might have been supposed that these people were always on holiday, or perhaps
that they inhabited some rather Spartan version of the Garden of Eden. Such was
not the case. They were intensely involved with work of their own specific
kind. They were doing what they termed rethinking.
The
storms of radioactivity which had followed the nuclear war had left their brand
upon the genetic pool. The survival of mankind increasingly favoured those with
new connections among the neural pathways of their brains. The neocortex had
been, in geological terms, a hasty development. It had functioned well on
ordinary occasions but, in times of stress, it had been bypassed by emotion. In
prenuclear times, this deficiency had been regarded as a norm, sometimes as a
desirable norm. Violence was regarded as an acceptable solution to many
problems which would never have originated had violence not been in the air in
the first place.
In
these more pacific times, violence was unwelcome. It was seen as a failing,
never as a solution. Generation by generation, the neocortex
developed better connections with other parts of the brain. Mankind
began to know itself for the first time.
These
itinerant people did see themselves as on holiday. Such are the ways that Gaia
works through evolution. They found pleasure in doing exactly those things
which improved their stock, and those couples excelled whose children in the
next generation would do best at the new sport of rethinking.
Mainly
they searched for deep structures in the human consciousness. While seeking out
those guiding determinants which had shaped the history of the human race so
far, they were guided by what happened on Helliconia. The records of
terrestrial history before the nuclear destruction were almost entirely
destroyed; only one or two caches of knowledge had been disinterred from the
ruins. But Helliconia was reckoned to present in its people a fair parallel of
the deep structures which had once prevailed on Earth.
Those
terrestrials who had so feared their own violent nature, who had walled
themselves about with fences, armaments, and harsh laws so it was reckoned were not greatly different from the
troubled young man who killed his father. Aggression and killing had been an
escape from pain: in the end, the planet itself had been murdered by its own
sons.
Although
there was scarcely a person on the whole planet who had not heard of the Great
Wheel of Kharnabhar, few had visited it. None had seen it in its entirety.
The
Great Wheel lay underground, buried in the heart of
Nothing
was known of the Architects of Kharnabhar, but one thing was certain. They were
devout men. They had believed that faith could move worlds. They had set about
building a machine of stone which could haul Helliconia across the darkness and
cold until it docked again to bask in the warmth of God the Azoiaxic's favour.
So far, the machine had always worked.
The
machine was powered by faith, and the faith was in the hearts of men.
The
way by which men entered the Wheel had been unchanged throughout the ages.
After a preliminary ceremony at the gates of the tunnel, the newcomer was led
down a wide flight of stairs which curved into the mountain. Biogas jets lit
the way. At the bottom of the steps was a funnel-shaped chamber, the far wall
of which was a section of the Wheel itself. The newcomer was then helped or
propelled, depending on his state of mind, into the cell of the Wheel there
visible. After a while, after a jerk, the Wheel began to rotate. Slowly, the
view of the outer world was cut off from the cell's new occupant by the rock
face. The outer world disappeared from view. Now the newcomer was alone except for all the occupants of all
the other cells nearby, who would remain unseen throughout his tenure of the
Wheel.
Luterin
Shokerandit was not untypical of those who entered the Wheel. Others had sought
refuge there. Some had been saints, some sinners.
Originally,
the plan of the Architects had been followed by the Church. There had been no
shortage of volunteers to take their places in the Great Wheel and row it
across the firmament to its rightful port beside Freyr. But when the long
centuries of light returned at last, when Sibornal was again bathed in
daylight, then the faith declined. It became more difficult to attract the
faithful, to persuade them into the darkness.
The
Wheel would have come to a standstill had not the State stepped in to aid the
Church. It had sent its criminals to Kharnabhar, in order that they might serve
their sentences in the Wheel and, crouched deep in rock, haul their world and
themselves to remission. Thus had come about the close
collaboration of Church and State which had sustained the strength of Sibornal
for more Great Years than could be remembered.
Throughout
the summer and the long lazy autumn, the Wheel was hauled as often by
malefactors as by priests. Only when life became more difficult, when snows
began to fall and crops to fail, did the old faith
grow strong again. Then the religious returned, begging for a guaranteed place
among the righteous. The criminals were sent off to become sailors or soldiers,
or were dumped unceremoniously in
Father father what headwaters are these
The rock so red hot like a forehead
And me so fevered in the rude red darkness
Are you there above below me
Waiting not to die O death
Its energies You scream in the walls
Of my existence by my side
The lights go by
Go by and are gone and I in the snoring
Rock I revile myself That thing
I never did in mind but of a sudden
With your knife cutting our mutual
It was I swear our mutual artery
This place of terror screaming
Where I'll forever bleed like lava
Clogging the rude red rock darkness
His
thoughts ran in curious patterns, seemed to him to flow through him forever.
Time was marked in the entombed soul by protracted squeals of rock against rock
and by hideous groans. Gradually, the groans caught his attention. His mind
became quieter listening to them.
He
was uncertain of his whereabouts. He imagined himself lying in the subterranean
stall of some great wounded beast. Though close to death, the beast was still
searching for him, looking here, looking there. When it found him, it would
fall upon him and crush him to death in its own final agonies.
At
last he roused himself. It was the wind he heard. The wind blew down the
orifices of the Wheel, creating a harmony of groans. The squealing was the
movement of the Wheel.
Luterin
sat up. The priests of the Wheel had not only let him in, thus saving him from
his father's avengers, they had absolved him from all his sins before guiding
him into his cell. Such was their standard practice. Men who were imprisoned
with their sins upon them were more likely to go mad.
He
stood up. The terrible thing he had done filled all his
mind. He looked with horror at his right hand, and at
the bloodstain on his right sleeve.
Food
arrived. It could be heard rumbling down a chute in the rock overhead. It
consisted of a round loaf of bread, a cheese, and a chunk of something which
was probably roast stungebag, tied up in a cloth. So it was Batalix-dawn
overhead. Soon the small winter would prevail, and then Batalix would not be
seen again for several tenners. But little difference that made in the entrails
of
The
Architects of Kharnabhar had arranged every measurement to correspond in some
way with the astronomical facts which governed life on Helliconia. The height
of the cell was 240 centimetres, corresponding to the six weeks of a tenner
times the forty minutes of the hour, or to five times the six weeks times the eight
days in a week.
The
width of the cell at its outer end was 2.5 metres 250 centimetres, corresponding to the ten tenners of a small year
times the number of hours in a day.
The
depth of the cell was 480 centimetres, corresponding to the number of days in a
small year.
Against
one wall was a bunk, the cell's sole furniture. Above the bunk was the chute
down which provisions came. On the far side of the cell was the opening which
served as a latrine. The wastes fell down a pipe to biogas chambers below the
Wheel, which, supplemented by vegetable and animal wastes from the monastery
overhead, supplied the Wheel with its methane lighting.
Luterin's
cell was separated from those on either side by walls .64159 metres in
thickness a figure which,
added to the cell width, gave the value of pi. As he sat on his bunk with his
back against this partition, he regarded the wall on his left. It was solid
unmoving rock, and formed the fourth wall of the cell with scarcely a crack
between it and its neighbours in the Wheel. Carved in this rock were two sets
of alcoves: a high series containing the biogas burners, which provided the
cells with what light and warmth they enjoyed, and, set twice as frequent, a
lower series containing lengths of chain, firmly stapled into place.
Still
munching his bread, Luterin crossed to the outer wall and lifted the heavy
links of chain. They seemed to sweat in his hands. He dropped them. The chain
fell back into its narrow alcove. It consisted of ten links, each link representing
a small year.
He
stood there without movement, his gaze locked on the length of chain. Beside
the horror of his deed, another horror was growing, the horror of imprisonment.
By these ten-link chains, the Great Wheel was to be moved through space.
He
had not yet taken his turn with the chains. He had no notion how long he had
lain in a delirium, while words winged like birds through his head. He recalled
only the shrill noise of trumpets from the monks somewhere above the Wheel, and
then the lurching horizontal movements of the Wheel itself, which continued for
half a day.
Contemplating
the outer wall frightened Luterin. The time would come when he would feel differently. That wall was the
only changing element of his environment. Its markings formed a map of the
journey; by those excoriations, a practised prisoner could chart his way
through time and granite.
The
inner walls, the permanent walls of the cell, had been elaborately incised by previous
occupants. Portraits of saints and drawings of genital organs testified to the
mixed occupancy of the cell. Poems were engraved here, calendars, confessions,
calculations, diagrams. Not an inch had been spared. The walls preserved
fossils of spirits long dead. They were palimpsests of suffering and hope.
Revolutionary
slogans could be read. One was cut on top of an earnest prayer to a god called
Akha. Many of the earliest markings were obliterated by later ones, as one
generation obliterates another. Some of the early inscriptions, though faint,
were legible and delicately formed. Some were in ornate scripts which had
disappeared from the world.
In
one of the faintest, most elaborate scripts, Luterin read the basic details of
the Wheel itself. These were figures which had a power over all who were
incarcerated here.
The
Wheel might more properly be described as a ring, revolving about a great
central finger of granite.
The
height of the Wheel was a uniform 6.6 metres, or twelve times 55, the northern
latitude of the Wheel itself. Counting its base, its thickness was 13.19
metres, 1319 being the year of Freyr-set, or Myrkwyr, at latitude 55°N, dating
the years from the nadir year of apastron. The diameter of the Wheel was 1825
metres, the number of small years in one Great Year. And 1825 was the number of
cells set in the outer circumference of the Wheel.
Close
to this numeration, and allowed to remain intact, was an intricately engraved
figure. It represented the Wheel in its correct dimensions, set in the rock.
Above it was the cavern, large enough to permit the monks from the monastery to
walk on top of the Wheel and drop supplies to the prisoners below. Entry to the
cavern could be gained only through Bambekk Monastery, which perched on the
hillsides of
Whoever
had incised the figure on the granite had evidently been well informed. The
river that ran below the Wheel, assisting its revolutions, was also depicted.
Other schematic lines carried a connection from the heart of the Wheel out to
Freyr and Batalix and to the constellations of the ten houses of the zodiac the Bat, Wutra's Ox, the
"Abro
Hakmo Astab!" Luterin exclaimed, uttering the forbidden oath for the first
time. He hated these supposed connections. They lied. There were no
connections. There was only himself, embedded in rock, no better than a gossie.
He flung himself down on the bunk.
He
used the oath again. As one of the damned, he was permitted it.
The dimmer the vision, the louder the noises. Luterin presumed that the other occupants of the Wheel slept when
it was not moving. He lay awake, gazing vacantly about the dull box he
inhabited.
His
water supply ran down into a trough near the foot of his bunk. Its drips and
splashes were close, and as regular as the tick of clocks.
Deeper
in tone were the flows of water beneath the mobile floor. These were lazy
noises, like a continuous drunken monologue. Luterin found them soothing.
Other
watery noises, drips and plops, coming more distantly, reminded him of the
outside world of nature, of freedom, of the hunt. He could imagine himself
wandering free in the caspiarn forests. But that illusion could not be
sustained. Ever and again he saw his father's face in its final agony. The
brooks, waterfalls, torrents, disappeared from his mind's eye, to be replaced
by blood.
His
lethargy was pierced only when he opened his daily woven bundle of food, and
found a message in it.
He
carried the scrap of paper over to the blue flame in the outer wall and peered
at it. Someone had written in small script, "All is well here. Love."
There
was no signature, not even an initial. His mother? Toress Lahl? Insil? One of his friends?
The
very anonymity of the message was an encouragement. There was someone outside
who thought well of him and who could at least on one occasion communicate with him.
That
day, when the priests' trumpets sounded, he leaped up and seized hold of the
chain hanging in its alcove in the outer wall. Bracing his feet against the
partition wall, he heaved on the chain. His cell moved the Wheel moved.
Another
heave, and the movement was less reluctant this time.
A few centimetres were gained.
"Pull,
you biwackers!" he shouted.
The
encouraging bugles sounded at intervals for twelve and a half hours, then fell silent as long. By the end of a day's work,
Luterin had advanced himself by some 119 centimetres, almost half the width of
his cell. The flame which lit his cell was close to the dividing wall. By the
end of another day's work, it would be eclipsed would be in the following cell and a new one would be revealed.
A
mass of 1284551.137 tons had to be shifted: that was the burden which holiness
had placed on the incumbents of the Wheel. It appeared to be merely a physical
labour. But, as the days were to pass, Luterin would find himself
regarding it more and more as a spiritual task; while more and more it became
apparent to him that there were indeed connections out from his heart, and from
the Wheel, to Freyr and Batalix and to the far constellations. The perception
would come that the Wheel contained not merely hardship but as legend claimed the beginnings of wisdom.
"Pull!"
he shouted again. "Pull, you saints and sinners."
From
then on, he became fanatical, leaping up eagerly from his bunk as soon as the
awaited bugle blew. He cursed those who, in his imagination, did not rise as
swiftly to the task as he did. He cursed those who would not labour at their
chains at all, as he had once done. It was beyond his understanding why the
work periods were not longer.
At
night but here only night
existed Luterin lay down
to sleep with a head full of the image of that great slow-grinding Wheel,
crushing men's lives away like a grindstone. The Wheel moved every day, as it
had done since the great Architects had established it.
It
revolved about a harsh irony. The captives, nested like maggots each in
separate cells on the perimeter of the Wheel, were forced to propel themselves
into the heart of the granite mountain. Only by submitting to that cruel
journey, by actively collaborating in it, was it possible to emerge. Only by
that collaboration was it possible to effect the
revolution of the Wheel which meant freedom. Only by plunging deep into the
entrails of the mountain was it possible to issue forth a free man.
"Pull,
pull!" shouted Luterin, straining every muscle. He thought of the 1824
others, captive each in his separate cell, each bound to pull if ever they were
to escape.
He
knew not what crises prevailed in the outside world. He knew not what sequence
of events he had precipitated. He knew not who lived or died. Increasingly, as
the tenners went by, his mind was filled with loathing for those other
prisoners some perhaps
sick or even dead who did
not pull with a whole heart. He felt that he alone was bearing the weight of
rock on his sinews, he alone heaving the Wheel through its firmament of granite
towards the light.
The
tenners passed, and the small years. Only the scratchings on the outer rock
wall changed. Otherwise, all remained always the same.
The
sameness overpowered his youthful mind. He became dull, resigned. He did not
always move now when the priests' trumpets blew overhead, their noise made
reedy by the thickness of roof.
His
thoughts of his father receded. He had come to terms with his guilt by
believing that his father had himself been overwhelmed by guilt, and had handed
his son the knife before taunting him in order that he might meet death. That
face, always shining with sebum, had been a face of misery.
It
took him a long while to contemplate the possibility of visiting his father in
pauk. But the idea preyed on his mind. In the second year of his incarceration,
Luterin climbed onto his bunk and lay flat. He scarcely knew what to do.
Gradually, the pauk state overcame him, and he drifted down into a darkness greater than any in the heart of the mountain.
Never
before had he entered into that melancholy world of the gossies, where all who
had once lived and lived no more sank slowly through the terrible silences into
nonbeing. Disorientation overwhelmed him. At first he could not sink; then he
could not stop himself sinking. He drifted down towards the sparks dim below
him like guttering stars, all arranged in a static uniformity possible only
within the regions of death.
The
barque of Luterin's soul moved steadily, peering without sight into the fessup
ranks which filtered down all the way to the heart of the Original Beholder.
Viewed closely, every gossie resembled something like singed poultry, hanging
to dry. Through their rib cages, their transparent stomachs, particles could be
seen, circulating slowly like flies in a bottle. In their sketchy heads, little
lights flickered through hollow eye sockets. Obeying a direction no compass
could detect, the soul of Luterin fluttered before the gossie of Lobanster
Shokerandit.
"My
father, you need say one word only and I shall be gone, I who loved you best
and harmed you most."
"Luterin,
Luterin, I wait here, sinking towards extinction, only in the hope of seeing
you. What sight could be more welcome to my eyes than you? How fare you, child,
in the ranks of those who must still undergo the hour of their mortality?"
On the last word, puffs of sparks were transpired.
"Father,
ask not of me. Speak of yourself. My thoughts are never free of that crime I
committed. Those terrible moments in that fatal courtyard always haunt
me."
"You
must forgive yourself, as I forgave you when I reached this place. We were of
different generations, your mind had not yet composed itself, you were unable
to take the long view of human affairs that I could. You obeyed a principle,
just as I did. There's honour in that."
"I
did not intend to kill you, my beloved father only the Oligarch."
"The
Oligarch never dies. There is always another." As the gossie spoke, a
cloud of dull particles issued from the cavity where once a mouth had been.
They hung and dispersed but slowly, like snow sinking into coal dust.
The
cinder of Lobanster described how he had taken on the duties of the Oligarch
because he believed that there were values in Sibornal worth preserving. He
spoke long about these virtues, and many times his discourse wandered.
He
spoke of the way he had hidden the truth of his august position from his
family. His long hunting trips were no such thing. Somewhere in the wilderness
of the mountains, he had a secret retreat. There his hunting dogs were kept,
while he went on with a small guard to Askitosh. He collected the hounds on the
way home. Once his older son had discovered the hounds and pieced the truth
together. Rather than speak of what he found, Favin had leaped to his death.
"You
may easily imagine the grief that overwhelmed me, son. Better to be here, to be
safe in obsidian, knowing that no more bitter shocks can assail flesh and
spirit."
The
soul of the son was overcome but not convinced by this eloquence.
"Why
could you not confide in me, Father?"
"I
let you guess when I believed the time to be right. The plague must be stopped,
the people must learn obedience. Otherwise, civilisation will sink and die
under the impact of centuries of cold. Only with that thought in mind could I
persevere as I did."
"Respected
Father, you could not represent civilisation when the blood of thousands was on
your hands."
"They
are here with me now, son, those men of Asperamanka's army. Do you imagine they
have a single complaint against me? Or your brother, also
here?"
The
soul uttered the equivalent of a cry. "Matters are different after death.
There is no real feeling, only benevolence. What about that unnecessary war you
caused to be waged against our neighbors in Bribahr, when the ancient city of
"Only if necessity is cruelty. My speediest way from Kharnabhar to distant Askitosh was to turn
westwards from Noonat and speed down the Bribahrese river,
the Jerddal a much more
easily navigable river than our ill-tempered Venj. So I came to the coast where
ships awaited me, and was not recognised, as in Rivenjk I would have been
recognised. Do you comprehend me, my son? I speak only to set your mind at
rest.
"It
is important that the Oligarch remain anonymous. It lessens danger of
assassination and jealousy between nations. But a party of nobles from Rattagon
sailing on the Jerddal did recognise me. In view of the hostility between our
countries, they planned to dispose of me. I disposed of them instead, in
self-defence. You must do likewise, my dear son, when your turn comes. Protect
and cherish yourself."
"Never, Father."
"Well,
you have plenty of time to mature," said the glimmering shade indulgently.
"Father,
you have also struck out against the Church." The soul paused. It was unable
to master its feelings, at once of respect and hatred, towards this smokey
fragment. "I must ask you do you think that God ever listens or speaks?"
The
hollow which had once been mouth made no movement when it replied. "It is
given to us gossies here below to perceive wherefrom our visitors come. I know
well, my son, that you come from the heart of our
nation's holiness. Therefore I ask you: in this purgatory, do you hear God
speak? Do you feel him listen?"
In
the questions moved a kind of leaden evil, as if misery could be happy only in
propagating itself.
"If
it were not for my sins, he might listen, he might speak. That I believe."
"If
there were a God, boy, do you not reckon that we here below in all our legions
would know of him? Look around you. There's nothing here but obsidian. God is
mankind's greatest lie a
buffer against the bleak truths of the world."
For
the soul, it was as if a strong current was drawing it towards an unknown
place, and it felt close to suffocation.
"Father,
I must leave."
"Come
nearer to me that I may embrace you."
Accustomed
to obey, Luterin drifted nearer to the battered cage. He was about to hold out
a hand in a gesture of affection when a strong rain of particles shot up from
the gossie, enveloping it as if with fire. He scudded away. The glow died. Just
in time, he recalled the stories which claimed that the gossies, for all their
resignation to death, would seize a living soul and change places with it if
they could.
Once
more, he uttered his protestations of affection and rose up slowly through the
obsidian, until the whole congregation of gossies and fessups was not more than
a dwindling star field. He returned to his own prostrate form in its cell.
Sluggishly, he became aware of the warmth of the living body.
There
were still eight years to go before his cell was hauled round to the exit,
still three before his cell had reached even halfway, in the heart of the
dolorous mountain.
The
environment never changed. But Luterin's revulsion for himself began to stale, and
change came to colour his thought. He began to brood on the division which had
been growing between the Church and the State. Supposing that division became
still wider and, for whatever reason, recruitment to the Wheel ceased. Supposing that ten-yearers continued to be released and were not
replaced. Gradually the Wheel would slow. There would be too few men to
budge its mass. Then, despite all the world's bugles, the Wheel would stop. He
would be entombed deep within the mountain. There would be no escape.
The
thought pursued him like a yellow-striped fly, even in his slumbers. He did not
doubt that it pursued many another prisoner. Certainly
the Wheel had never failed since the Architects finished their work long ago;
but the past was no guarantee for the future. He lived in a suspense that was
scarcely life, thinking with resignation of the old saying, "A Sibornalese
works for life, marries for life, and longs for life." Apart from the
clause regarding marriage, he would have sworn that the proverb originated in
the Wheel.
He
was tormented by the thought of women, and by the lack of male companionship.
He tried to signal through the rock to his nearest fellow sufferers, but no
response came. Nor did he receive any more messages from outside. Hope of them
died. He had been forgotten.
Through
the spells of work and silence, a riddle rose to haunt him. Of the 1825 cells
of the Wheel, only two had access to the outer world at one time, the cell by
which one entered and the adjacent cell by which one left. How, then, had the
Wheel been loaded with its pilgrims in the first instance? How had the giants
who had erected this machine started it into motion?
He
burdened his mind with visions of ropes and hawsers and pulleys, and of gushing
underground rivers which turned the Wheel into a waterwheel. But he could never
resolve the riddle to his satisfaction.
Even
the processes of his mind remained incarcerated within the holy mountain.
Occasionally
a rickyback would make a journey across his cell floor. With joy, he seized it
up, holding it gently, watching its fragile legs wave as it struggled to be
free. The rickyback understood freedom and was undividedly interested in the
subject. Infinitely more complex humans were more divided.
What
transcendental pain caused men to imprison themselves for a large portion of
their lives within the Great Wheel? Was this indeed the path towards
self-understanding?
He
wondered if the rickyback understood itself. His efforts to identify with the
tiny creatures, so as to enjoy a fraction of their freedom, left him feeling
ill. He lay for hours at a time on the floor of the cell, staring at minute
moving things, small white ants, microscopic worms.
Sometimes he caught pink-eyed rats and mice observing him. If I died, he
thought, these would be my only witnesses. The unconsidered.
Many
men must have died during their confinement in the intestines of the Wheel.
Some had confined themselves from choice, as some were celibate from choice.
Perhaps they had been goaded by a wish to escape into changelessness, away from
the bustle of the world that
bustle framed, if he understood the astronomers, within the greater commotion
of the universe.
But
for him, the changelessness of the cell was a kind of death. There had been no
yesterday. There would be no tomorrow. His spirit fought against a withering
process.
Then
the day's trumpets echoed, and he scrambled up, ran to the outer wall of his
cell, and grasped the nearest chain. Heaving the Wheel through the rock had
become the only meaningful activity left. By 119 centimetres a day, the machine
progressed each of its occupants through the darkness.
He
never sank into pauk again. But the visit to his father's ember had removed the
burden of his guilt. He found after a while that he had ceased to think of his
father; or, if he thought at all, he thought only of the spark spluttering in
the world beyond mortality.
The
father who had been real to him, the brave hunter, forever stalking with his gallant
friends through the wilds of the caspiarn forest, was lost, had never existed.
Instead there was a man who in place of that free life had chosen to incarcerate himself in Icen Hill, in the slatey
castle in Askitosh.
There
were curious parallels between the dead man's life and Luterin's own. Luterin
was also self-imprisoned.
For
the third time, his life had come to a standstill. After the
year's paralysis, on the threshold of adulthood, the hiatus of the Fat Death, with
its subsequent metamorphosis; now this. Was he at last to cease to be
what Harbin Fashnalgid had called a creature of the system? Was there a last
metamorphosis awaiting him?
It
remained to be seen if he could throw off his father's influence. His father,
though head of the system, had also been its victim, as had his family through
him. Luterin thought of his mother, for ever incarcerated in the family
mansion: she might as well be where he was.
As
the years passed, he saw Toress Lahl more dimly. The glow of her presence went
out. By becoming a slave, she had become no more than a slave; as his mother
had pointed out, her devotion was merely the devotion of a slave, self-seeking,
self-preserving, not from the heart. Without social status dead to society, as people said of
slaves the heart did not
move. There could be only tactical moves. He thought he understood that a slave
must always hate its captor.
Insil
Esikananzi glowed more brightly as the tenners and centimetres passed.
Incarcerated in her own home, entombed within her own family, she carried the
spark of rebellion; her heart beat strongly under her velvets. He spoke to her
in the dark. She answered always mockingly, teasing him for his conformity; yet
he was comforted by her concern, and by her perception of the world.
And
he hauled on his chain whenever the trumpets blew.
High
above the Great Wheel rode a structure to some extent resembling it. The Earth
Observation Station Avernus also relied on faith for its working.
That
faith had failed. Matriarchal societies ruled over small groups of people now
entirely devoted to the spiritual playacting of multiple personalities. The
giant aberrant sexual organs, the pudendolls, had all been ceremonially put to
death often by aberrant
means. But a revulsion from all things mechanical or
technological had left the tribes prey to a spiritless eudaemonism in which the
sexual motif predominated.
The
genders became hopelessly confused. From childhood, individuals adopted female
and male personalities, sometimes as many as five of each. These multiple
personalities might remain forever strangers to each other, speaking different
dialects, pursuing different ways of life. Or they might fall into violent
quarrels with each other, or become hopelessly enamoured of another.
Some
of these personalities died, while their originator lived on.
Gradually,
a general disintegration took place, as if the genetic coding on which
inheritance depended had itself become confused.
A
diminishing population continued to play its intricate games. But the sense of
an ending was in the air. The automatic systems were also breaking down. The
drones programmed to service faulty circuits were becoming themselves fit only
for regeneration. Regeneration required human supervision, which was not
forthcoming.
The
signals passing back to Earth became more partial, less coordinated. Soon they
would cease entirely. It needed only a few more generations.
It
was summer in the northern hemisphere of Earth in a year that would once have
been called 7583. A group of lovers was travelling in a slowly moving room.
Other rooms were moving nearby, also at a leisurely pace. They perambulated
before a mountainous geonaut. The geonaut perambulated in the tropics.
Sometimes,
one of the lovers would climb down from the room and cross to another room.
Seventy rooms clustered round the geonaut. Soon it would replicate.
A
man called Trockern was talking, as he liked to do in the afternoons, when the
morning's rethinking session was over. Like the others present, male and
female, Trockern wore nothing but a light gauze veil over his head.
He
was a lightly built olive-skinned man, with good features and an irrepressible
smile which broke forth even when he was speaking seriously.
"If
I've got the fruits of this morning's rethink right, then the bizarre peoples
who lived in the ages before the nuclear war failed to realise one fact which
now seems obvious to us. They had not developed sufficiently to escape from the
same sort of territorial possessiveness which still governs birds and
animals."
He
was addressing two sisters, Shoyshal and Ermine, who were currently sharing his
room with him. The sisters looked much alike; but there was a greater clarity
about Shoyshal, and she was the leader of the pair.
"At
least part of the old race denounced the evils of landownership," Ermine
said.
"They
were regarded as cranks," Trockern said. "Listen, my theory, which I
hope we can explore, is that possession was everything for the old race. Love for them, even love was a political
act."
"That's
far too sweeping," Shoyshal said. "Admittedly, over most of the globe
in those times one sex dominated the other "
"Possessed them as slaves."
"Well,
dominated them, you argumentative hunk. But there were also societies where sex
became just good clean fun, without any spiritual or possessive connotations,
where 'liberation was the watchword, and "
Trockern
shook his head. "Darling, you prove my point. That minority was rebelling
against the predominant ethos, so they too treated were forced to treat love as a political act. 'Liberation or 'free love' was a
statement, therefore political."
"I
don't suppose they thought like that."
"They
didn't see clearly enough to think like that. Hence their
perpetual unease. My belief is that even their wars were welcome as an
escape from their personal predicaments. . . ."
Seeing
that Shoyshal was about to argue, he went on hastily, "Yes, I know war was
also linked to territory. That sense of territorially extended from the land to
the individual. You were supposed to be proud of your native land and to fight
for it, and equally you were supposed to be proud of and fight for your lover.
Or wife, as they then called it. Do you imagine I am proud of you or would
fight for you?"
"Is
that a rhetorical question?" Ermine asked, smiling.
"Look,
take an example. This obsession the old race had with ownership. Slavery was a
common condition on Earth up to and including the Industrial Revolution. Long after that, in many places. It was just as bad as we
witness it on Helliconia. It gave you power to possess another person an idea now almost past belief to us.
It would bring us only misery. But we can see how the slave owner also becomes
enslaved."
As
Trockern raised both his left hand and his voice for
emphasis, the old man sleeping away the afternoon on a nearby bunk muttered
irritably, snorted, and rolled over onto his other side.
"Again,
darling, there were plenty of societies without slaves," Shoyshal said.
"And plenty of societies which abhorred the idea."
"They
said they abhorred it, but they kept servants when they could possessed them as far as possible.
Later they employed androids. Officially nonslave societies went in for
multiple possessions instead. Possessions, possessions it was a form of madness."
"They
were not mad," Shoyshal said. Just different from us.
They'd probably find us pretty strange. Besides, it was the adolescence of
mankind. I've listened to your preaching often enough, Trockern, and can't deny
I've enjoyed it more or
less. Now listen to what I am going to say.
"We're
here because of astonishing luck. Forget about the Hand of God, about which the
Helliconians are always agonising. There's just luck. I don't mean only luck
that a few humans survived the nuclear winter though that's a part of it. I mean by luck the series of Earth's
cosmic accidents. Think of the way plantlike bacteria released oxygen into an
otherwise unbreathable atmosphere. Think of the accident of fish developing
backbones. Think of the accident of mammals developing placenta so much cleverer than eggs though eggs, too, were winners in
their day. Think of the accident of the bombardment which altered conditions so
sharply that the dinosaurs failed, to give mammals
their chance. I could go on."
"You
always could," said her sister half-admiringly.
"Our
old adolescent ancestors feared accident. They feared luck. Hence
gods and fences and marriage and nuclear arms and all the rest. Not your
possessiveness, but the fear of accident, which eventually befell them. Perhaps
such prophecies are self-fulfilling."
"Plausible.
Yes. I'll agree, if you will allow that possessiveness itself might have been a
symptom of that fear of accidents."
"Oh,
well, Trockern, if you're going to agree, let's get back to the subject of
sex." They all laughed. Outside their windows, the mobile city could be
seen trundling on its inelegant way, drinking egonicity from the white
polyhedrons.
Ermine
put an arm about her sister's shoulder and stroked her hair.
"You
talk about one person possessing another; I suppose you would say that the old
institution of marriage was like that. Yet marriage still sounds rather
romantic to me."
"Most
squalid things are romantic if you get far enough away from them,"
Shoyshal said. "Anything seen through a haze . . . But marriage is the
supreme example of love as a political act. The love was just a pretence, or at best an illusion."
"I
don't see what you mean. Men and women did not have to marry, did they?"
"It
was voluntary in a way, yes, but there was the pressure of society to marry. Sometimes moral pressure, sometimes economic pressure. The
man got someone to work for him and have sex with. The woman got someone to
earn money for her. They pooled their cupidities."
"How awful!"
"All
those romantic postures," continued Shoyshal, enjoying herself.
"Those raptures, those love songs, that sticky music, that literature they
so prized, the suicide pacts, the tears, the vows all just social mating displays, the baiting of the trap they
couldn't see they were setting or falling into."
"You
make it sound awful."
"Oh,
it was worse than that, Ermine, I assure you. No wonder so many women chose
prostitution. I mean, marriage was another version of the power struggle, with
both husband and wife battling for supremacy over the other. The man had the
bludgeon of the purse strings, the woman the secret weapon between her
legs."
They
all burst out in laughter. The old man on the other bunk, SartoriIrvrash by
name, began to snore in self-defence.
"It's
a long while since yours was secret," Trockern said.
When
a city became too crowded for someones liking, it was
not difficult to change to another geonaut and head off in a new direction.
There were many other cities, other alternatives. Some people liked to follow
the long light days; others travelled to enjoy spectacular scenery; others
developed longings to view the sea or the desert. Every environment offered a
different kind of experience.
And
those kinds of experience were of a different order from the kinds that once
had been. No longer did the people cry out. Their agile brains had at last led
their emotions to accept a role of modesty, subordinate but never acquiescent
to Gaia, spirit of Earth. Gaia did not seek to possess them, as their imagined
gods had once done. They were themselves part of that spirit. They had a
vision.
In
consequence, death ceased to play the leading role of Inquisitor in human
affairs, as once it had done. Now it was no more than an item in the homely
accounting which included mankind: Gaia was a common grave from which fresh
increment continually blossomed.
There
was also the dimension of a real involvement with Helliconia. From watchers,
men and women had graduated to participators. As the images failed to arrive
from the Avernus, as the mere pictures died in the shell-like auditoria, so the
empathic link was forged ever more strongly. In a sense, humankind humanmind
leaped across space to become the eye of the Original
Beholder, to lend strength to their distant fellows on the other planet.
What
the future might bring to that spiritual extension of being was a matter for
expectation.
By
accepting a role proper and comfortable to them, the terrestrials had again
entered the magic circle of being. They had forsworn their old greeds. Theirs
was the world, as they were the world's.
When
it was growing dark, Ermine said, "Talking about love as a political act.
It takes a little getting used to. But what was that legalistic arrangement the
old race suffered when a marriage broke up? JandolAnganol had one? Oh, a
divorce. That was a quarrel over possessions, wasn't it?"
"And
over who possessed the children," Shoyshal said.
"That's
an example of love all entangled in economics and politics. They didn't
understand that the random cannot be escaped. It's one of the caprices by which
Gaia keeps herself up to date."
Trockern
glanced out the window and gestured at the geonaut. "I wouldn't be
surprised if Gaia hasn't sent that object to supersede us," he said, with
an air of mock gloom. "After all, geonauts are more beautiful and more
functional than we are present
company excepted."
As
the stars came out, the three climbed down onto the earth and walked by the
side of their slow-trundling room. Ermine linked arms with the other two.
"We
can judge from the example of Helliconia how many lives of the old race were
ruined by territoriality and the lust to possess those who were loved. No
matter that it killed love. At least the nuclear winter freed our race from
that sort of territoriality. We have risen to a better kind of life."
"I
wonder what else is wrong with us that we don't know about?"
Trockern said, and laughed.
"In
your case we know," said Ermine, teasingly. He bit her ear. Inside the
room, SartoriIrvrash stirred on his bunk and grunted, as if in approval, as if
he would have relished biting that pink lobe himself. It was about the hour
when he generally decided to wake and enjoy the hours of tropical darkness.
"That
reminds me," Shoyshal said, looking up at the stars. "If my
randomness theory is in any way correct, it might account for why the old race
never found any other life forms out there, except on Helliconia. Helliconia
and Earth were lucky. We were accident-prone. On the other planets, everything
went according to some geophysical plan. As a result, nothing ever happened.
There was no story to tell."
They
stood looking up into the infinite distances of the sky.
A
sigh escaped Trockern. "I always experience intense happiness when I look
up at the galaxy. Always. On the one hand, the stars
remind me that the whole marvellous complexity of the organic and inorganic
universe resolves itself down to a few physical laws awesome in their
simplicity "
"And
of course you are happy that the stars provide a text for a speech. . . ."
She imitated his posturing.
"And
on the other hand, darling, and on the other hand . . . Oh, you know, I'm happy that I'm more
complex than a worm or bluebottle, and thus able to read beauty into those few
awesome physical laws."
"All
those age-old rumours about God," Shoyshal said. "You can't help
wondering if there isn't something in them. Perhaps the truth is that God's a
real old bore you wouldn't want to be seen dead with. . . ."
".
. .Sitting brooding for ever over planets piled with nothing but sand ..."
".
. .And counting every grain," finished Ermine. Laughing, they had
to run to catch up with their room.
The
years went by. It was simple. All one had to do was haul on the chains, and the
years passed. And the Wheel moved through the starry firmament.
Despair
gave way to resignation. Long after resignation came hope, flooding in without
fanfares, like dawn.
The
nature of the graffiti on the encompassing outer wall changed. There were
representations of nude women, hopes and boasts about grandchildren, fears
about wives. There were calendars counting down the final years, the figures growing
larger as the tenners shrank.
Yet
still there were religious sayings, sometimes repeated obsessively on every few
metres of wall until, after many tenners, the writer grew tired. One such which
Luterin read musingly was: ALL THE WORLDS
WISDOM HAS ALWAYS EXISTED: DRINK DEEP OF IT THAT IT MAY INCREASE.
Once,
as he hauled on his chains with the rest of the unseen host, as trumpets blew
and the whole structure shrieked on its pinions, Luterin Shokerandit was aware
of a faint luminosity in his cell. He worked. Every hour hauled the mass of the
Wheel under 10 centimetres forward, but every hour
increased the luminosity. An halosis of yellow
twilight crept in.
He
thought himself in paradise. Throwing off his furs, he tugged at the ten-link
chain with extra vigour, shouting for his unhearing fellows to do the same.
Near the end of the twelve-and-a-half-hour work period, the cell's leading wall
slipped forward to reveal the merest slit of light. The cell became filled with
a holy substance which flickered and flowed into the least corner of the cell.
Luterin fell down on his knees and covered his eyes, crying and laughing.
Before
the work period ceased, all of the slit was contained
within his outer wall space. It was 240 millimetres wide and there was now half a small year
to go before Luterin had hauled his cell once more to the exit under Bambekk
Monastery. Concisely engraved lettering in the granite read: YE HAVE BUT HALF A YEAR LEFT AWAY
FROM THE WORLD:
SEE YE BENEFIT FROM IT.
The
window was cut deep into the rock. It was difficult to see how far it extended
before it became a window to the outside. Bars were secured over it at the far
end. Through the bars a distant tree could be seen, a caspiarn blowing before a
storm wind.
Luterin
stared out for a long while before going to sit on his bunk to contemplate the
beauty about him. The cleft by which the daylight entered was silted with
rubble. Through it filtered a precious quality which brimmed
the entire volume of the cell with transforming fluids of beauty. All the light
in the world seemed to him to be pouring blessing on his head. Before him lay
both the brightest of illuminations, as well as exquisite shadows which painted
the corners of the modest room with such gradations of tone as he had never observed
in the world of freedom. He drank the ecstasy of being a living biological
creature again.
"Insil!"
he cried into the twilight. "I shall be back!"
He
did not work the next day, but watched the life-giving window being moved by
others across the outer wall. On the following day, when again he refused to
work, the window moved again and all but disappeared. Even the crack remaining
was sufficient to spill an exquisite pearly luminosity into his confinement.
When, on the fourth workday, even that vanished presumably to charm the inmate of the following cell he was disconsolate.
Now
began a period of self-doubt. His longing to be free changed to a fear of what
he would find. What would Insil have done with herself? Would she have left the
place she hated?
And his mother. Perhaps she was
dead by now. He resisted the impulse to sink into pauk and find out.
And Toress Lahl. Well, he had set
her free. Perhaps she had made her way back to Borldoran.
And what of the political situation? Was the new Oligarch carrying out the old Oligarch's edicts? Were
phagors still being slain? What of the quarrel between Church and State?
He
wondered how he would himself be treated when he emerged into the world.
Perhaps a party of execution would await him. It was the old question, still
unanswered over almost ten small years: was he saint or sinner? A hero or a criminal? Certainly he had forfeited any claim
to the position of Keeper of the Wheel.
He
began talking to an imagined woman, achieving an eloquence that was never his when
he was face to face with anyone else.
"What
a maze life is to humans! It must be so much simpler to be a phagor. They
aren't tormented by doubt or hope. When you are young, you enjoy a sustained
illusion that sooner or later something marvellous is going to happen, that you
are going to transcend your parents' limitations, meet a wonderful woman, and
be capable of being wonderful to her.
"At
the same time, you feel sure that in all the wilderness of possibility, in all the
forests of conflicting opinion, there is a vital something that can be known known and grasped. That
we will eventually know it, and convert the whole mystery into a coherent
narrative. So that then one's true life the point of everything will emerge from the mist into a pure light, into total
comprehension.
"But
it isn't like that at all. But if it isn't, where did the idea come from, to
torture and unsettle us? All the years I've spent here all the thought that's gone by . .
."
He
tugged mightily at each heavy chain that presented itself in that endless
succession of chains. The days on the stone calendar dwindled. That impossible
day would be upon him when he would be free again to move among other human
beings. Whatever happened, he prayed to the Azoiaxic that he might make love to
a woman again. In his imagination, Insil was no longer remote.
The
wind blew from the north, carrying with it the taint of the permanent ice cap.
Very few things could live within its breath. Even the tough leaves of the
caspiarns furled themselves like sails against the trunks of the trees when the
wind blew.
The
valleys were filling with snow. The snow was packing down. Year by small year,
the light grew less.
There
was now a covered way to the small chapel of King JandolAnganol. It was roughly
built of fallen branches, but it served to keep a path clear to the sunken
door.
For
the first time in many centuries, someone lived in the chapel. A woman and a
small boy crouched over a stove in one corner. The woman kept the door locked,
and screened the stove so that its light could not be seen from outside. She
had no right to be here.
All
round the chapel she had set traps which she found rusting in the vestry of the
chapel. Small animals were caught in her traps, providing food enough. Only
rarely did she dare show herself in the
She
taught her son to read. She drew the letters of the alphabet in the dust, or
carried him to see the letters painted on the walls in various texts. She told
him that the letters and words were pictures of ideal things, some of which
existed or could exist, some of which should not exist. She tried to instil
morality with his reading, but she also invented silly stories for him which
made them both laugh.
When
the child was asleep, she read to herself.
It
was a perpetual source of wonder to her that the presiding presence in this
building was a man from her own city of
As
the years passed, she told the story to her growing son.
"This
naughty King JandolAnganol did a great wrong in the country where your mother
was born. He was a religious man, yet he killed his religion. It was a terrible
paradox under which he found it hard to live. So he came to Kharnabhar and
served in the Wheel for the full ten small years, as now does the one who is
your father.
"JandolAnganol
left two queens behind him to come here. He must have been very wicked, though
the Sibornalese think him holy.
"After
he emerged from the Wheel, he was joined by the Dimariam woman I told you
about. Like me, she was a doctor. Well, she seems to have been other things
besides, including a trader of some sort. Her name was Immya Muntras, and she,
feeling the call of religion, sought out the king. Perhaps she comforted his
old age. She stood by him. That's no ill thing.
"Muntras
possessed learning which she thought precious. See, here is where she wrote it
all down, long ago, during the Great Summer, when people thought the world was
going to end, just as they do now.
"This
lady Muntras had some information from a man who arrived in Oldorando from
another world. It sounds strange, but I have seen so many amazing things in my
life that I believe anything. Lady Muntras's bones now lie in the antechapel,
beside those of the king. Here are her papers.
"What
she learned from the man from another world concerned the nature of the plague.
She was told by the strange man that the Fat Death was necessary, that it brought
to those who survived a metamorphosis, a change in bodily metabolism which
would enable them best to survive the winter. Without that metamorphosis,
humans cannot hope to live through the heart of the Weyr-Winter.
"The
plague is carried by ticks which live on phagors and transfer to men and women.
The bite of the tick gives you plague. The plague brings metamorphosis. So you
see that man cannot survive the Weyr-Winter without phagors.
"This
knowledge the lady Muntras tried to teach in Kharnabhar, centuries past. Yet
still they are killing phagors, and the State does everything in its power to
keep the plague at bay. It would be better to improve medicine, so that more
people who caught the plague could survive."
So
she used to talk, scanning her boy's face in the semidarkness.
The
boy listened. Then he went to play among the treasures left in the chests which
had once belonged to the wicked king.
One
evening, as he was playing and his mother reading by the firelight, there came
a knocking at the door of the chapel.
Like
the slow seasons, the Great Wheel of Kharnabhar always completed its
revolutions.
For
Luterin Shokerandit, the Wheel at last came full circle. The cell that had been
his habitation returned to the opening. Only a wall 0.64 metres thick separated
it from the cell ahead, into which a volunteer was even then stepping, to
commence ten years in the darkness, rowing Helliconia towards the light.
There
were guards waiting in the gloom. They helped him from his place of
confinement. Instead of releasing him, they took him slowly up a winding side
stair. The light grew steadily brighter; he closed his eyes and gasped.
They
took him into a small room in the monastery of Bambekk. For a while he was left
alone.
Two
female slaves came, regarding him out of the corner of their eyes. They were
followed by male slaves, bearing a bath and hot water, a silver looking glass,
towels and shaving equipment, fresh clothes.
"These
are by courtesy of the Keeper of the Wheel," said one of the women."
'Tisn't every wheeler gets this treatment, be sure of that."
As
the scent of hot water and herbs reached him, Luterin realised how he stank,
how the methaney odours of the Wheel clung to him. He allowed the women to
strip off his ragged furs. They led him to the bath. He lay glorying in the
sensation as they washed his limbs. Every smallest event threatened to
overwhelm him. He had been as if dead.
He
was powdered and dried and dressed in the thick new clothes.
They
led him to the window to peer out, although the light at first almost blinded
him.
He
was looking down on the
Visibility
was good. A snowstorm was dying, and clouds blew away to the south, leaving
pockets of undiluted blue sky. It was all too brilliant. He had to turn away,
covering his eyes.
"What's
the date?" he asked one of the women.
"Why,
'tis 1319, and tomorrow's Myrkwyr. Now, how about
having that beard cut off and looking a few thousand years younger?"
His
beard had grown like a fungus in the dark. It was streaked with grey and hung
to his navel.
"Cut
it off," he said. "I'm not yet twenty-four. I'm still young, aren't
I?"
"I've
certainly heard of people being older," said the woman, advancing with the
scissors.
He
was then to be taken before the Keeper of the Wheel.
"This
will be merely a formal audience," said the usher who escorted him through
the labyrinth of the monastery. Luterin had little to say. The new impressions
crowding in were almost more than he could receive; he could not help thinking
how he had once regarded himself as destined to be Keeper.
He
made no response when eventually he was left at one end of what seemed to him
an immense chamber. The Keeper sat at the far end on a wooden throne, flanked by
two boys in ecclesiastical garb. The dignitary beckoned Luterin to approach.
He
stepped gingerly through the lighted space, awed by the number of paces it
required to reach the dais.
The
Keeper was an enormous man who had draped himself in a purple gown. His face
seemed about to burst. Like his gown, it was purple,
and mottled with veins climbing the cheeks and nose like vines. His eyes were
watery, his mouth moist. Luterin had forgotten there were such faces, and
studied it as an object of curiosity while it studied him.
"Bow,"
hissed one of the attendant children, so he bowed.
The
Keeper spoke in a throttled kind of voice. "You are back among us, Luterin
Shokerandit. Throughout the last ten years, you have been under the Church's
care otherwise you would
probably have been poisoned by your enemies, in revenge for your act of
patricide."
"Who
are my enemies?"
The
watery eyes were squeezed between folds of lid. "Oh, the slayer of the
Oligarch has enemies everywhere, official and unofficial. But they were mainly
the Church's enemies too. We shall continue to do what we can for you. There is
a private feeling that ... we owe you something." He laughed. "We
could help you to leave Kharnabhar."
"I
have no wish to leave Kharnabhar. It's my home." The watery eyes watched
his mouth rather than his eyes when he spoke.
"You
may change your mind. Now, you must report to the Master of Kharnabhar. Once,
if you remember, the offices of Master and Keeper of the Wheel were combined.
With the schism between Church and State, the two offices are separate."
"Sir,
may I ask a question?"
"Ask
it."
"There's
much to understand . . . Does the Church hold me to be saint or sinner?"
The
Keeper endeavoured to clear his throat. "The Church cannot condone
patricide, so I suppose that officially you are a sinner. How could it be
otherwise? You might have worked that out, I would have thought, during your
ten years below. . . . However, personally, speaking ex officio ... I'd say you
rid the world of a villain, and I regard you as a saint." He laughed.
So
this must be an unofficial enemy, thought Luterin. He bowed and turned to walk
away when the Keeper called him back.
The
Keeper heaved himself to his feet. "You don't recognise me? I'm
Wheel-Keeper Ebstok Esikananzi. Ebstok an
old friend. You once had hopes of marrying my daughter, Insil. As you
see, I have risen to a post of distinction."
"If
my father had lived, you would never have become Keeper."
"Who's
to blame for that? You be grateful that I'm grateful."
"Thank
you, sir," said Luterin, and left the august presence, preoccupied by the
remark regarding Insil.
He
had no idea where he was supposed to go to report to the Master of Kharnabhar.
But Keeper Esikananzi had arranged everything. A liveried slave awaited Luterin
with a sledge, with furs to protect him from the cold.
The
speed of the sledge overwhelmed him, and the jingle of the animals' harness
bells. As soon as the vehicle started to move, he closed his eyes and held
tight. There were voices like birds crying, and the song of the runners on the
ice, reminding him of something he knew not what.
The
air smelt brittle. From what little he glimpsed of Kharnabhar the pilgrims had
all gone. The houses were shuttered. Everything looked drabber and smaller than
he remembered it. Lights gleamed here and there in upper windows or in trading
stores which remained open. The light was still painful to his eyes. He slumped
back, marshalling his memories of Ebstok Esikananzi. He had known this crony of
his father's since childhood, and had never taken to the man; it was Ebstok who
should be called to account for his daughter Insil's bitterness.
The
sledge rattled and jolted, its bells merrily jingling. Above their tinny sound
came the tongue of a heavier bell.
He
forced himself to look about.
They
were sweeping through massive gates. He recognised the gates and the gatehouse
beside them. He had been born here. Cliffs of snow three metres high towered on
either side of the drive. They were driving through
yes the Vineyard. Ahead, roofs of a familiar house showed. The bell of
unforgettable voice sounded even louder.
Shokerandit
was visited by a warming memory of himself as a small boy, pulling a little
toboggan, running towards the front steps. His father was standing there, at home
for once, smiling, arms extended to him.
There
was an armed sentry on the door now. The door was three parts enclosed in a
small hut for the sentry's protection. The sentry kicked on the panels of the
front door until a slave opened up and took charge of Luterin.
In
the windowless hall, gas jets burned against the wall, their nimbuses reflected
in the polished marble. He saw immediately that the great vacant chair had
gone.
"Is
my mother here?" he asked the slave. The man merely gaped at him and led
him up the stairs. Without emotional tone, he told himself that he should be
the Master of Kharnabhar, as well as Keeper.
At
the slave's knock, a voice bade him enter. He stepped into his father's old
study, the room that had so often been locked against him during earlier years.
An
old grey hound lay sprawled by the fire, woofing pettishly at Luterin's
arrival. Green logs hissed and smouldered in the grate. The room smelt of
smoke, dog's piss, and something resembling face powder. Beyond the thick-paned
window lay snow and the infinite wordless universe.
A
white-haired secretary, the hinges of whose lumbar region had rusted to force
on him a resemblance to a crooked walking stick, approached. He munched his
lips by way of greeting and offered Luterin a chair without any needless
display of cordiality.
Luterin
sat down. His gaze travelled round the room, which was still crammed with his
father's belongings. He took in the flintlocks and matchlocks of earlier days,
the pictures and plate, the mullions and soffits, the orreries and oudenardes.
Silverfish and woodworm went about their tasks in the room. The sliver of
crumbling cake on the secretary's desk was presumably of recent date.
The
secretary had seated himself with an elbow by the cake.
"The
master is busy at present, with the Myrkwyr ceremony to come. He should not be
long," said the secretary. After a pause, he added, regarding Luterin
slyly, "I suppose you don't recognise me?"
"It's
rather bright in here."
"But
I'm your father's old secretary, Secretary Evanporil. I serve the new Master
now."
"Do
you miss my father?"
"That's
hardly for me to say. I simply carry out the administration." He became
busy with the papers on his desk.
"Is
my mother still here?"
The
secretary looked up quickly. "She's still here, yes."
"And Toress Lahl?"
"I
don't know that name, sir."
The
silence of the rooms was filled with the dry rustle of paper. Luterin contained
himself, rousing when the door opened. A tall thin man with a
narrow face and peppery whiskers came in, bell clanking at waist. He
stood there, wrapped in a black-and-brown heedrant, looking down at Luterin.
Luterin stared back, trying to assess whether this was an official or an
unofficial enemy.
"Well
. . . you are back at last in the world in which you
have caused a great deal of havoc. Welcome. The Oligarchy has appointed me
Master here as distinct
from any ecclesiastical duties. I'm the voice of the State in Kharnabhar. With
the worsening weather, communications with Askitosh are more difficult than
they were. We see to it that we get good food supplies from Rivenjk, otherwise
military links are . . . rather weaker. . . ."
This
was drawn out sentence by sentence, as Luterin made no response.
"Well,
we will try to look after you, though I hardly think you can live in this
house."
"This
is my house."
"No.
You have no house. This is the house of the Master and always has been."
"Then
you have greatly profited by my act."
"There
is profit in the world, yes. That's true."
Silence
fell. The secretary came and proffered two glasses of yadahl. Luterin accepted
one, blinded by the beauty of its ruby gleam, but could not drink it.
The
Master remained standing rather stiffly, betraying some nervousness as he
gulped his yadahl. He said, "Of course, you have been away from the world
for a long time. Do I take it that you don't recognise me?"
Luterin
said nothing.
With
a small burst of irritation, the Master said, "Beholder, you are silent, aren't
you? I was once your army commander, Archpriest-Militant Asperamanka. I thought
soldiers never forgot their commanders in battle!"
Then
Luterin spoke. "Ah, Asperamanka . . . 'Let them bleed a little' . . . Yes,
now I remember you."
"It's
hard to forget how the Oligarchy, when your father controlled it, destroyed my
army in order to keep the plague from Sibornal. You and I were among the few to
escape death."
He
took a considered sip at his yadahl and paced about the room. Now Luterin
recognised him by the anger lines incised into his brow.
Luterin
rose. "I'd like to ask you a question. How does the State regard me as a saint or a sinner?"
The
Master's fingernails tapped against his glass. "After your father . . .died, there followed a period of unrest in the various nations of
Sibornal. They're used to harsh laws by now the laws that will see us safe through the Weyr-Winter but then it was otherwise. There was,
frankly, some bad feeling about Oligarch Torkerkanzlag II. His edicts weren't
popular. . . .
"So
the Oligarchy circulated the rumor and this was my idea that they had trained you to assassinate your father, whom they
could no longer control. They put out the idea that you had been spared at the
massacre at Koriantura only because you were the Oligarchy's man. The rumour
increased our popularity and brought us through a difficult time."
"You
wrapped up my crime in a lie."
"We
just made use of your useless act. One outcome of it was that the State
recognised you officially as a why do you say 'saint'? as a hero.
Youve become part of legend. Though I have to say that
personally I regard you as a sinner of the first water. I still keep my
religious convictions in such matters."
"And
is it religious conviction that has installed you in Kharnabhar?"
Asperamanka
smiled and tugged at his beard. "I greatly miss Askitosh. But there was an
opportunity open to govern this province, so I took it. ... As a legend, a
figure in the history books, you must accept my hospitality for the night. A guest, not a captive."
"My mother?"
"We
have her here. She's ill. She's no more likely to recognise you than you were
to recognise me. Since you are something of a hero in Kharnabhar, I want you to
accompany me to the public Myrkwyr ceremony tomorrow, with the Keeper. Then
people can see we haven't harmed you. It will be the day of your
rehabilitation. There'll be a feast."
"You'll
let me feed a little . . ."
"I
don't understand you. After the ceremony, we will make what arrangements you
wish. You might consider it best to leave Kharnabhar and live somewhere less
remote."
"That's
what the Keeper also hoped I might consider."
He
went to see his mother. Lourna Shokerandit lay in bed, frail and unmoving. As
Asperamanka had anticipated, she did not recognise him. That night, he dreamed
he was back in the Wheel.
The
following day began with a great bustle and ringing of bells. Strange smells of
food drifted up to where Luterin lay. He recognised the savoury odours as rising
from dishes he would once have desired. Now he longed for the simple fare he
had reviled, the rations that came rolling down the chutes of the Wheel.
Slaves
came to wash and dress him. He did as was required of him, passively.
Many
people he did not know assembled in the great hall. He looked down over the
bannisters and could not bring himself to join them. The excitement was
overpowering. Master Asperamanka came up the stairs to him and said, taking his
arm, "You are unhappy. What can I do for you? It is important that I am
seen to please you today."
The
personages in the hall were flocking outside, where sleighbells rattled.
Luterin did not speak. He could hear the wind roar as it had done in the Wheel.
"Very
well, then at least we will ride together and people will see us and think us
friends. We are going to the monastery, where we shall meet the Keeper, and my
wife, and many of Kharnabhar's dignitaries." He talked animatedly and
Luterin did not listen, concentrating on the exacting performance of descending
a flight of stairs. Only as they went through the front door and a sleigh drew
up for them, did the Master say sharply, "You've no weapon on you?"
When
Luterin shook his head, they climbed into the sleigh, and slaves bundled furs round
them. They set off into the gale among cliffs of snow.
When they turned north, the wind bit into their faces. To the twenty degrees of frost, a considerable chill factor had
to be added.
But
the sky was clear and, as they drove through the shuttered village, a great
irregular mass appeared through its veils to loom over
"Shivenink,
the third highest peak on the planet," said Asperamanka, pointing it out.
"What a place!" He made a moue of distaste.
Just
for a minute the mountain's naked ribbed walls were visible; then it was gone
again, the ghost that dominated the village.
The
passengers were driven up a winding track to the gates of Bambekk Monastery.
They entered and dismounted. Slaves assisted them into the vaulted halls, where
a number of official-looking people had already gathered.
At
a sign, they proceeded up several staircases. Luterin took no interest in their
progress. He was listening to a rumble far below, which carried through the
monastery. Obsessively, he tried to imagine every corner of his cell, every
scratch on its enclosing walls.
The
party came at last to a hall high in the monastery. It was circular in shape.
Two carpets covered the floor, one white, one black. They were separated by an
iron band which ran across the floor, dividing the chamber in half. Biogas shed
a dim light. There was one window, facing south, but it was covered by a heavy
curtain.
Embroidered
on the curtain was a representation of the Great Wheel being rowed across the
heavens, each oarsman sitting in a small cell in its perimeter, wearing
cerulean garments, each smiling blissfully.
Now
at last I understand those blissful smiles, thought Luterin.
A
group of musicians was playing solemn and harmonious music at the far side of
the room. Lackeys with trays were dispensing drinks to all and sundry.
Keeper
of the Wheel Esikananzi appeared, raising his hand graciously in greeting.
Smiling, half-bowing to all, he made his portly way towards where the Master of
Kharnabhar and Luterin stood.
When
they had greeted each other, Esikananzi asked Asperamanka,
"Is our friend any more sociable this morning?" On receiving a
negative, he said to Luterin, with an attempt at geniality, "Well, the
sight you are about to witness may loosen your tongue."
The
two men became surrounded by hangers-on, and Luterin gradually edged his way
out of the centre of the group. A hand touched his sleeve. He turned to meet
the scrutiny of a pair of wide eyes. A thin woman of guarded mien had
approached, to observe him with a look of real or feigned astonishment. She was
dressed in a sober russet gown, the hem of which touched the floor, the collar
of which rioted in lace. Although she was near middle age and her face was
gaunter than in bygone times, Luterin recognised her immediately.
He
uttered her name.
Insil
nodded as if her suspicions were confirmed and said, "They claimed that
you were being difficult and refusing to recognise people. What a habit this
lying is! And you, Luterin, how unpleasant to be recalled from the dead to
mingle with the same mendacious crowd older, greedier . . . more frightened. How do I appear to you,
Luterin?"
In
truth, he found her voice harsh and her mouth grim. He was surprised by the
amount of jewellery she wore, in her ears, on her arms, on her fingers.
What
most impressed him were her eyes. They had changed. The pupils seemed enormous a sign of her attention, he believed.
He could not see the whites in her eyes and thought, admiringly,
Those irises show the depth of Insil's soul.
But
he said tenderly, "Two profiles in search of a face?"
"I'd
forgotten that. Existence in Kharnabhar has grown narrower over the years dirtier, grimmer, more
artificial. As might be expected. Everything narrows.
Souls included." She rubbed her hands together in a gesture he did not
recall.
"You
still survive, Insil. You are more beautiful than I remembered." He forced
the insincerity from him, conscious of pressures on him to be a social being
again. While it remained difficult to enter into a conversation, he was aware of
old reflexes awakening including
his habit of being polite to women.
"Don't
lie to me, Luterin. The Wheel is supposed to turn men into saints, isn't it?
Notice I refrain from asking you about that experience."
"And
you never married, Sil?"
Her
glare intensified. She lowered her voice to say with venom, "Of course I
am married, you fool! The Esikananzis treat their slaves better than their
spinsters. What woman could survive in this heap without selling herself off to
the highest bidder?"
She
stamped her foot. "We had our discussion of that glorious topic when you
were one of the candidates."
The
dialogue was running too fast for him. "Selling yourself
off, Sil! What do you intend to mean?"
"You
put yourself completely out of the running when you stuck your knife into that
pa you so revered. . . . Not that I blame you, seeing that he killed the man
who took away my cherished virginity your brother Favin."
Her
words, delivered with a false brightness as she smiled at those around them,
opened up an ancient wound in Luterin. As so often during his incarceration in
the Wheel, he thought of the waterfall and his brother's death. Always there
remained the question of why Favin, a promising young army officer, should have
made the fatal jump; the words of his father's gossie on that subject had never
satisfied him. Always he had shied away from a possible answer.
Not
caring who was looking on among the pale-lipped crowd, he grasped Insil's arm.
"What are you saying about Favin? It's known that he committed
suicide."
She
pulled away angrily, saying, "For Azoiaxic's sake, do not touch me. My
husband is here, and watching. There can be nothing between us now, Luterin. Go
away! It hurts to look at you."
He
stared about, his gaze darting over the crowd. Halfway across the chamber, a
pair of eyes set in a long face regarded him in open hostility.
He
dropped his glass. "Oh, Beholder . . . not Asperamanka,
that opportunist!" The red liquid soaked into the white carpet.
As
she waved to Asperamanka, she said, "We're a good match, the Master and I.
He wanted to marry into a proud family. I wanted to survive. We make each other
equally happy." When Asperamanka turned with a sign back to his
colleagues, she said in venomous tones, "All these leather-clad men going
off with their animals into the forests . . . why do they so love each other's
stink? Close under the trees, doing secret things, blood brothers. Your father,
my father, Asperamanka . . . Favin was not like that."
"I'm
glad if you loved him. Can't we escape from these others and talk?"
She
deflected his offer of consolation. "What misery that brief happiness
inherited . . . Favin was not one to ride into the caspiarns with his heavy males. He rode there with me."
"You
say my father killed him. Are you drunk?" There was something like madness
in her manner. To be with her, to enter into these ancient agonies it was as if time stopped. It was as
if a fusty old drawer was being unlocked; its banal contents had become
hallowed by their secret nature.
Insil
scarcely bothered to shake her head. "Favin had everything to live for ...
me, for instance."
"Not
so loud!"
"Favin!"
she shouted, so that heads turned in her direction. She began to pace through
the crowd, and Luterin followed. "Favin discovered that your father's
'hunts' were really journeys to Askitosh and that he was the Oligarch. Favin
was all integrity. He challenged your father. Your father shot him down and
threw him over the cliff by the waterfall."
They
were interrupted by officious women acting hostess, and separated. Luterin
accepted another glass of yadahl, but had to set it down, so violently was his
hand shaking. In a moment, he found his chance to speak to Insil again,
breaking in on an ecclesiastic who was addressing her.
"Insil this
terrible knowledge! How did you discover about
my father and Favin? Were you there? Are you lying?"
"Of course not. I found out
later when you were in
your fit of prostration by
my customary method, eavesdropping. My father knew everything. He was glad because
Favin's death punished me. I could not believe I had heard aright. When he
was telling my mother she was laughing. I doubted my senses. Unlike you, however, I did not fall into a
year-long swoon."
"And
I suspected nothing ... I was fatally innocent."
She
gave him one of her supercilious looks. Her irises appeared larger than ever.
"And
you still are fatally innocent. Oh, I can tell . . ."
"Insil,
resist the temptation to make everyone your enemy!"
But
her look hardened and she burst out again. "You were never any help to me.
My belief is that children always know intuitively the real natures of their
parents, rather than the dissembled ones which they show the world. You knew
your father's nature intuitively, and feigned dead to avoid his vengeance. But
I am the truly dead."
Asperamanka
was approaching. "Meet me in the corridor in five minutes," she said
hastily, as she turned, smiling and gaily raising a hand.
Luterin
moved away. He leaned against a wall, struggling with his feelings. "Oh,
Beholder . . ." he groaned.
"I
expect you find the crowds overpowering after your solitude," someone who
passed by said pleasantly.
His
whole inner life was undergoing revolution. Things had not been, he had not
been, as he had pretended to himself. Even his gallantry on
the field of battle had that not been powered by
ancient angers released, rather than by courage? Were all battles
releases from frustration, rather than deeds of deliberate violence? He saw he
knew nothing. Nothing. He had clung to innocence, fearing
knowledge.
Now
he remembered that he had experienced the actual moment when his brother died.
He and Favin had been close. He had felt the psychic shock of Favin's death one
evening: yet his father had announced the death as occurring on the following
day. That tiny discrepancy had lodged in his young consciousness, poisoning it.
Eventually he could
foresee joy could come
that he was delivered from that poison. But delivery was not yet.
His
limbs trembled.
In
the turmoil of his thoughts, he had almost forgotten Insil. He feared for her
in her strange mood. Now he hurried towards the corridor she had indicated reluctant though he was to hear more
from her.
His
way was barred by bedizened dignitaries, who spoke to him and to each other
roundly of the solemnity of this occasion, and of how much more appalling
conditions would be henceforth. As they talked, they devoured little
meat-filled pastries in the shape of birds. It occurred to Luterin that he
neither knew nor cared about the ceremony in which he had become involved.
Their
conversation paused as all eyes focussed on the other side of the chamber.
Ebstok
Esikananzi and Asperamanka were leaving by a spiral stair which wound to an
upper gallery.
Luterin
took the opportunity to slip into the corridor. Insil joined him in a minute,
her narrow body leaning forward in the haste of her walk. She held her skirt up
from the floor in one pale hand, her jewellery glittering like frost.
"I
must be brief," she said, without introduction. "They watch me
continually, except when they are in drink, or holding their ridiculous
ceremonies as now. Who
cares if the world is plunged into darkness? Listen, when we are free to leave
here, you must proceed to the fish seller in the village. It stands at the far
end of
"What
then, Insil?" Again he was asking her questions.
"My
dear father and my dear husband plan to kick you out. They will not kill you,
as I understand that
might look bad for them, and that much they owe you for your timely disposal of
the Oligarch. Simply evade them after the ceremony and go down
He
stared impatiently into her hypnotic eyes.
"And
this secret meeting what
is it about?"
"I
am playing the role of messenger, Luterin. You still remember the name of
Toress Lahl, I suppose?"
Trockern
and Ermine were asleep. Shoyshal had gone somewhere. The geonaut they preceded
had come to a halt, and stood gently breathing out its little white hexagonal
offspring.
SartoriIrvrash
woke and stretched, yawning as he did so. He sat up on his bunk and scratched
his white head. It was his habit to sleep for the second half of the day,
waking at midnight, thinking through the dark hours, when his spirit could
commune with the travelling Earth, and teaching from dawn onwards. He was
Trockern's teacher. He had named himself after a dangerous old sage who once
lived on Helliconia, whose gossie he had met empathically.
After
a while, he heaved himself up and went outside. He stood for a long while
looking at the stars, enjoying the feel of the night. Then he padded back into
the room and roused Trockern.
"I'm
asleep," Trockern said.
"I
could hardly waken you if you weren't."
"Zzzz."
"You stole
something of mine, Trockern. You stole my explanation of why things went awry
on Earth, in order to impress your ladies."
"As
you see, I impressed fifty percent of them." Trockern indicated the
peacefully sleeping Ermine, whose lips were pursed as if she was awaiting the
chance to kiss someone in her midsummer dream.
"Unfortunately
you got my argument wrong. That possessiveness which was once such a feature of
mankind was not a product of fear, as you claimed although I believe you called it 'perpetual unease.' It was a
product of innate aggressiveness. The old races did not fear enough: otherwise
they would never have built the weapons they knew would destroy them. Aggression
was at the root of it all."
"Isn't
aggression born of fear?"
"Don't
get sophisticated before you can walk. If you take Helliconia as an example,
you can see how every generation ritualises its aggression and its killing. The
earlier terrestrial generations you were talking about did not seek to possess
only territory and one another, as you were claiming."
"In
truth, SartoriIrvrash, you cannot have slept well this afternoon."
"In
truth I sleep, as I wake in truth." He put an arm about the younger man's
shoulders. "The argument can be taken to greater heights. Those ancient
people sought to possess the Earth also, to enslave it under concrete. Nor did
their ambitions die there. Their politicians strove to make space their
dominion; while the ordinary people created fantasies wherein they invaded the
galaxy and ruled the universe. That was aggression, not fear."
"You
could be right."
"Don't
abandon your point of view so easily. If I could be right I could be wrong. We
ought to know the truth about our forebears who, wicked though they were, have
given us our chance on the scene."
Trockern
climbed from his bunk. Ermine sighed and turned over, still sleeping.
"It's
warm let's take a stroll
outside," said SartoriIrvrash.
As
they went out into the night, with the star field above them, Trockern said,
"Do you think we improve ourselves, master, by rethinking?"
"We shall
always be as we are, biologically speaking, but we can improve our social
infrastructures, with any luck. I mean by that the sort of work our extitutions
are working on now a revolutionary new integration of the major theorems of
physical science with the sciences of mankind, society, and existence. Of
course, our main function as biological beings is as part of the biosphere, and
we are most useful in that role if we remain unaltered; only if the biosphere
in some way altered again could our role change."
"But
the biosphere is altering all the time. Summer is different from winter, even
here so close to the tropics."
SartoriIrvrash
was looking towards the horizon, and said, rather absently, "Summer and winter are functions of a stable biosphere, of
Gaia breathing in and out in her stride. Humanity has to operate within the
limits of her function. To the aggressive, that always seemed a pessimistic
point of view; yet it is not even visionary, merely commonsensical. It fails to
be common sense only if you have been indoctrinated all your life to believe,
first, that mankind is the centre of things, the Lords of Creation, and,
second, that we can improve our lot at the expense of something else.
"Such
an outlook brings misery, as we see on our poor sister planet out there. We
have only to step down from the arrogance of believing that the world or the
future is somehow 'ours' and immediately life for everyone is enhanced."
Trockern
said, "I suppose each of us has to find that out for ourself." He
found it delightful to be humble after sunset.
With
sudden exasperation, SartoriIrvrash said, "Yes, unfortunately that's so.
We have to learn by bitter experience, not blithe example. And that's
ridiculous. Don't imagine that I think the state of affairs is perfect. Gaia is
an absolute ninny to let us loose in the first place. At least on Helliconia
the Original Beholder planted phagors to keep mankind in check!" He
laughed and Trockern joined in.
"I
know you think me wanton," the latter said, "but isn't Gaia herself a
wanton, spawning so riotously in all directions?"
His
senior shot him a foxy look. "Everything else must bring forth in
abundance, so that everything else can eat it. It's not the best of
arrangements, perhaps cooked
up and cobbled together on the spur of the moment from a chemical broth. That
doesn't mean to say we can't imitate Gaia and adopt, like her, our own
homeostasis."
The
moon in its last quarter shone overhead. SartoriIrvrash pointed to the red star
burning low by the horizon.
"See
Antares? Just north of it is the constellation Ophiuchus, the Serpent
The
two men contemplated the distance without speaking. Then Trockern said,
"Have you ever thought, master, how phagors vaguely resemble the demons
and devils which used to haunt the imagination of Christians?"
"That
had not occurred to me. I have always thought of an even older allusion, the
minotaur of ancient Greek myth, a creature stuck between human and animal, lost
in the labyrinths of its own lusts."
"Presumably
you think that the Helliconian humans should allow the phagors to coexist, to
maintain the biospheric balance?"
"
'Presumably. . .' We presume so much." A long silence followed. Then
SartoriIrvrash said, reluctantly, "With the deepest respect to Gaia and
her Serpent-
Trumpets
sounded above the heads of the gathering. Their voices were muted and sweet,
and in no way reminiscent of those work trumpets buried far below their feet except to Luterin Shokerandit.
The
dignitaries in the great chamber swallowed their last bird-shaped pastries and
put on reverential faces. Luterin moved among them feeling cumbersome among so
many ectomorphic shapes. He lost sight of Insil.
The
Keeper and the Master, Insil's father and husband, were returning down the
spiral stair. They had assumed silken robes of carmine and blue over their
ordinary clothes, and put on odd-shaped hats. Their faces were as if cast from
an alloy of lead and flesh.
Side
by side, they paraded to the curtained windows. There they turned and bowed to
the assembly. The assembly fell silent, the musicians tiptoed away over
creaking boards.
Keeper
Esikananzi spoke first.
"You
all know of the reasons why Bambekk Monastery was built, many centuries ago. It
was built to service the Wheel and of course you know why the Architects built the Wheel. We
stand on the site of the greatest act of faith ever achieved/to be by mankind.
But perhaps you will/permissive allow me to remind you why this particular
position was chosen by our illustrious ancestors, in what some people regard as
a remote part of the Sibornalese continent.
"Let
me draw your attention to the iron band running under your feet which divides
this dome in half. That band marks the line of latitude on which this edifice
is built. We are here fifty-five degrees north of the equator, and standing
upon that actual line. As you scarcely need reminding, fifty-five degrees north
is the line of the Polar Circle."
At
this point, he gestured to a servant. The curtains concealing the windows were
drawn apart.
A
view over the town was revealed, looking south. The visibility was good enough
for everything to be seen clearly, including the far horizon, bare except for a
thin line of denniss trees.
"We
are fortunate on this occasion. The cloud has cleared. We are privileged to
witness a solemn event which the rest of Sibornal will be commemorating."
At
this point, Master Asperamanka stood forward and spoke, stiffening his speech
with High Dialect. "Let me echo my good friend and colleague's word,
'fortunate.' Fortunate we are/tend indeed. Church and State have
kept/keeping/will the people of Sibornal united. The plague has
been/aspirational eradicated, and we have slain most of the phagors on our
continent.
"You
know that our ships have mastery of the seas. In addition, we are now/will
building a Great Wall to serve as an act of faith comparable with our formidable
Great Wheel.
"This
is/proclamatory a New Great Age. The Great Wall will run right across the north
of Chalce. There will be watchtowers on it every two kilometres, and the walls
will be seven metres high. That Wall, together with our ships, will
keep/keeping out all enemies from our territory. The Day of Myrkwyr is the
harbinger of Weyr-Winter ahead, but we shall live through it, our grandchildren
will live through it, and their grandchildren. And we shall emerge in the
spring, the next Great Spring, ready to conquer all of Helliconia."
Cheers
and handclaps had sounded throughout this speech. Now the applause was
clamorous. Asperamanka stared down to hide the gleam of satisfaction on his
face.
Ebstok
Esikananzi raised a hand.
"Friends,
it is five to noon on this solemn day. Watch the southern horizon. Since it is
small winter, Batalix is below that horizon. She will rise again with her puny
light in another four tenners, but "
His
words were lost, as everyone pressed to the windows.
Down
in the village below, a bonfire had just been lit. The villagers were seen as
ants, running about it, arms upraised, swaddled in woollens or furs.
Fresh
drink was brought to the watchers in the dome. Mostly, it was drunk as soon as
received, and the empty glasses thrust out for more. An unease had settled on
the privileged crowd, whose faces made a gloomy contrast to the merry gestures
of the ants far below.
A
bell began to sound noon. As if in response to its brazen tongue, a change took
place on the southern horizon.
On
that horizon, the road could be seen as it wound from the village. Elsewhere
was unbroken white, trees and buildings standing in frosty outline. Wisps of
snow perpetually blew from lodgements, streaming out on the wind like smoke
from candles newly extinguished. The horizon itself was clear, and bright with
dawn with sunrise.
Above
its crusty line rose a rim of red, a red of heaviness, of congealing blood, the
upper part of Freyr's orb.
"Freyr!"
came the exclamation from the throats of all who watched, as if by naming the
star they could have power over it.
A
shaft of light spread upon the world, casting shadows, flooding a range of far
hills with pink light till they gleamed against the slatey sky behind them. The
faces of the privileged in the dome were made red. Only the village below,
where the ants were circling, remained in shadow.
The
privileged glared upon that sliver of disc. It remained as it was, growing no
greater. The most intense scrutiny could not determine the instant at which,
instead of increasing, it began to shrink.
Light
was withdrawn from the world. The range of far hills faded, was absorbed into
the increasing murk.
The
precious slice of Freyr shrivelled still further. By now, the giant sun had in
actuality set: what remained behind was an image of it, a refraction through
the thickness of atmosphere of the real thing below the horizon. None could
tell the image from the real. Myrkwyr had already begun, without their knowing
it.
The
red image shrivelled.
It
divided itself into bars of light. Shattered.
Then
it was gone.
In
the centuries ahead, Freyr would hide like a mole beneath the mountain, never
to be seen again. In the small summers, Batalix would shine as previously; the
small winters would remain unlit, under the shadow of the greater winter.
For
all who experienced it, Myrkwyr was a day of doom. The faceless deity who
presided over the biosphere was powerless to intervene, relying perhaps on the
shortsightedness of the humans, on their involvement in their own affairs, to
damp down its psychic shock. She was carried along with her world. Seen in
wider perspective, Freyr continued to shine, and ever would do until its
comparatively brief lifespan was finished: its darkness was merely a local
condition, of small duration.
For
most of nature, there could be only submission to fate. On land, the sap, the seed,
the semen, would wait, dormant for the most part. In the sea, the complex
mechanisms of the food chain would continue unabated. Only mankind could lift
itself above direct necessity. In mankind lay reserves of strength unknowable
to those who held them, reserves which could be drawn upon in situations where
survival demanded.
Such
reflections were far from the minds of those in the assembly who watched Freyr
shatter into fragments of light. They were touched by fear. They wondered for
their family's survival and their own. The most basic question of existence
faced them: How am I to keep fed and warm?
Fear
is a powerful emotion. Yet it is easily overcome by anger, hope, desperation,
and defiance. Fear would not last. The great processes of the Helliconian year
would grind on towards apastron and the winter solstice. That turning point of
the year was many generations away. By then, the twilights of Weyr-Winter would
have long since become all that northern Sibornal knew. The rise of Freyr once
more, majestic in the Great Spring, would be greeted with the same awe as its
departure. But fear would have died long before hope.
How
mankind would survive the centuries of Weyr-Winter would depend upon its mental
and emotional resources. The cycle of human history was not immutable. Given
determination, better could succeed worse; it was possible to row into the
light, to navigate in the tide of Myrkwyr.
Keeper
Esikananzi said solemnly, "The long night holds no fear for those who
trust in the Lord God the Azoiaxic, who existed before life, and round whom all
life revolves. With his aid, we shall bring this precious world of ours through
the long night, to bask again in his glory." And Master Asperamanka
shouted spiritedly, "To Sibornal united throughout the long Weyr-Winter to come!"
Their
audience responded bravely. But in every heart lay the knowledge that they
would never see Freyr again; nor would their children, nor their children's
children. On the latitude of Kharnabhar the brighter sun of Freyr would never
shine in the sky until another forty-two generations had been born and died.
Nobody present could ever hope to see that brilliant luminary again.
A
choir sang distantly the anthem, "Oh, May We All Find Light at Last."
Gloom settled in every heart. The loss was as sharp as the loss of a child.
The
lackey solemnly drew the curtains again, hiding the landscape from view.
Many
in the assembly stayed to drink more yadahl. They had little to say to each
other. The musicians played, but a mood of sullen resignation had settled which
would not be dispelled. Singly or in groups, the guests were leaving. They
evaded each other's gaze.
Stone
steps wound down through the monastery to the entrance. A carpet had been laid
on the stairs in honour of the occasion. Cold drafts, blowing upwards, lifted
the edges of the carpet. As Luterin was descending, two men emerged from an
archway on a landing and seized him.
He
fought and shouted, but they locked his arms behind him and carried him into a
stone washroom. Asperamanka was waiting there. He had divested himself of his
ceremonial robes, and was putting on a coat and leather gauntlets. His two men
wore leather and carried guns at their belts. Luterin thought of what Insil had
said: "All those leather-clad men . . . doing secret things."
Asperamanka
put on a genial tone. "It isn't going to work, is it, Luterin? We can't
have you going free in a tight-knit community like Kharnabhar. You'll be too
disruptive an influence."
"What
are you trying to preserve here apart from yourself?"
"I
wish to preserve my wife's honour for one thing. You seem to think there is
evil here. The fact is, we have to fight to survive. The good and the bad
will naturally survive in us. Most people
understand that. You don't.
"You
are inclined to play the part of a holy innocent, and they always make trouble.
So we are going to give you a chance to help the whole community. Helliconia
needs to be hauled back into the light. You are going to go into the Wheel for
another ten-year spell."
He
fought free and ran for the door. One of the huntsmen reached it in time to
slam it in his face. He struck the man on the jaw, but was made captive again.
"Tie
him," Asperamanka ordered. "Don't let him go again."
The
men had no cord. One reluctantly yielded up the broad belt of his jacket, and
with that they lashed Luterin's hands behind his back.
When
Asperamanka opened the door, they marched down the rest of the stairs, the men
flanking Luterin closely. Asperamanka seemed greatly pleased with himself.
"We
said farewell to Freyr with courage and ceremony. Admire power, Luterin. I
admired your father for his ruthlessness as Oligarch. What a fateful generation
ours is. Either we'll be wiped out or we'll decide the course of the world. . .
."
"Or
you'll choke on a fish bone," Luterin said.
They
descended to the entrance hall. Through the broad archway, the outer world
could be seen. The chill came in, and also the noise of the crowd and the
bonfire. The simple people were dancing round the fires they had lit, faces
gleaming in the light of the flames. Traders scurried about, selling waffles
and spitted fish.
"For
all their religion, they believe that lighting fires may bring Freyr
back," Asperamanka said. He lingered at the entrance. "What they are
really doing is ensuring that wood becomes short before it need be. . . . Well,
let them get on with it. Let them go into pauk or do whatever they please. The
elite is going to have to survive on the backs of just such peasants as these
for the next few centuries or more."
There
was shouting and a stir from the back of the crowd. Soldiers came into view as
the crowd parted to make way for them. They carried something struggling
between them.
"Ah,
they've caught another phagor. Good. We'll see this," Asperamanka said,
with a hint of ancient angers under his brows.
The
phagor was lashed upside down to a pole. It struggled violently as its captors
brought it to one of the fires.
Behind
came a figure of a man, lifting his arms and shouting. Luterin could not hear
what he said for the general hubbub, but he recognised him by his long beard.
The man was his old schoolmaster, who had taught him
long ago in another existence when he was lying paralysed in bed.
The old man had kept a phagor as servant, being too poor to afford a slave. It
was clearly his phagor which the soldiers had captured.
The
soldiers dragged the creature nearer to the fire. The crowd ceased its dancing
and shouted with excitement, the women egging the soldiers on along with the
men.
"Burn
it!" shouted Asperamanka, but he merely echoed the voice of the mob.
"It's
just a domestic," Luterin said. Harmless as a dog."
"It's
still capable of spreading the Fat Death."
Fight
though it would, the ancipital was pulled and pushed to the largest of the fires.
Its coat began to burn. Another inch a yell from the crowd a heave and
then a mournful call sounded from beyond the gathering. Distant human screams.
Into the marketplace poured armed ancipitals on kaidaws.
Each
ancipital wore body armour. Some wore primitive skull shields. They rode their
red kaidaws from a position behind the animals' low humps, at the crouch. In
this position they could strike out with spears as they went.
"Freyr
die! Sons of Freyr die!" they cried from their harsh throats.
The
crowd began to move, less as separate individuals than as a wave. Only the
soldiers made a stand. The captive phagor was left with its pale harneys
boiling in its skull, but it rose up and made off, coat still smouldering.
Asperamanka
ran forward, shouting to the soldiers to fire. Luterin, as an observer, could
see that there were no more than eight of the invaders. Some of them sprouted
black hairs, a mark of ancipital old age. All but one had been dehorned a sure sign that these were no kind
of threat from the mountains, such as tremulous imaginations in Kharnabhar fed
on, but a few refugee phagors who had banded together on this special day, when
conditions in Sibornal reverted to virtually what they had been before Freyr
entered Helliconia's sky, many epochs ago.
He
saw how members of the crowd who were impeded in some way fell first to the
stabbing spears: pedlars with trays, women with babies or small children, the
lame, the sick. Some were trampled underfoot. A baby was scooped up and flung
into the heart of a fire.
As
Asperamanka and his two bullies drew guns and started firing, the horned
ancipital wheeled its russet-haired mount and charged at the Master. It came
straight, its skull low over the massive skull of the kaidaw. In its eye was no
light of battle, simply a dull cerise stare: it was doing what it did according
to some ancient template set in its eotemporal brain.
Asperamanka
fired. The bullets lost themselves in the thick pelage of animal. It faltered
in mid-stride. The two bullies turned and ran. Asperamanka stood his ground,
firing, shouting . The kaidaw fell suddenly on one knee. Up came the spear. It
caught Asperamanka as he turned. The tip entered his skull through the eye
socket and he fell back into the monastery entrance.
Luterin
ran for his life. He had wrenched his arms free of the belt. He jumped down
into the street, into the trampled snow, and ran. There were other running
figures nearby, too concerned with saving their own lives to bother with his.
He hid behind a house, panting, and surveyed the scene.
Blue
shadows and bodies lay on the marketplace. The sky overhead was a deep blue, in
which a bright star gleamed Aganip. Hues of sunset lay to the south. It was bitterly cold.
The
mob had surrounded one kaidaw and was pulling its rider to the ground. The
others were galloping off to safety another sign that this was not an arm of a regular ancipital
component, which would not have abandoned a fight so easily.
He
made his way without trouble towards
Sanctity
Street was narrow. Its buildings were tall. Most had been constructed in a
better age to house the pilgrims who came to visit the Wheel. Now the shutters
were up; many doors were barricaded. Slogans had been painted on the walls: God
Keep the Keeper, We Follow the Oligarch presumably as a form of life insurance. At the rear of the houses
and hostels, the snow was piled up to the eaves.
Luterin
started cautiously down the street. His mood was one of elation at his escape.
He could see beyond the end of the street, where it seemed eternity began.
There was an unlimited expanse of snow, its dimensions emphasised by occasional
trees. In the distance stretched a band of pink of the most delicate kind,
where the sun Freyr still lit on a far cliff, the southern face of the northern
ice cap. This vista lifted his spirits further, suggesting as it did the
endless possibilities of the planet, beyond the reach of human pettiness.
Despite all oppression, the great world remained, inexhaustible in its forms
and lights. He might be gazing upon the face of the Beholder herself.
He
passed an entranceway where a figure lurked. It called his name. He turned.
Through the dusk, he saw a woman wrapped in furs.
"You
are almost there. Aren't you excited?" she said.
He
went to her, clutched her, felt her narrow body under the furs.
"Insil!
You waited."
"Only
partly for you. The fish seller has something I need. I am sick after that
performance in there, with the silly drama and speeches. They think they have
conquered nature when they wrap a few words round it. And of course my sherb of
a husband mouthing the word Sibornal as if it were a mouthwash . . . I'm sick,
I need to drug myself against them. What is that filthy curse which the
commoners use, meaning to commit irrumation on both suns? The forbidden oath?
Tell me."
"You
mean, 'Abro Hakmo Astab'?"
She
repeated it with relish. Then she screamed it.
Hearing
her say it excited him. He held her tight and forced his mouth against hers.
They struggled. He heard his own voice saying, "Let me biwack you here,
Insil, as I've always longed to do. You're not really frigid. I know it. You're
really a whore, just a whore, and I want you."
"You're
drunk, get away, get away. Toress Lahl is awaiting you."
"I
care nothing for her. You and I are meant for each other. That's been the case
ever since we were children. Let's fulfill ourselves. You once promised me.
Now's the time, Insil, now!"
Her
great eyes were close to his.
"You
frighten me. What's come over you? Let me be."
"No,
no, I don't have to let you be now. Insil Asperamanka is dead. The phagors killed him. We can be married
now, anything, only let me have you, please, please!"
She
wrenched herself away from him.
"He's
dead? Dead? No. It can't be. Oh, the cur!" She started screaming and ran
down the street, holding up her trailing skirt above the trodden snow.
Luterin
followed in horror at her distress.
He
tried to detain her but she said something which he at first could not
understand. She was crying for a pipe of occhara.
The
fish seller was, as she had said, at the end of the street. A short passage had
been constructed beyond the original shop front, allowing passengers to enter
without bringing the cold in with them. Above the door was a sign saying ODIMS FINEST FISH.
They
entered a dim parlour where several men stood, warmly wrapped, all of them
metamorphosed winter shapes. Seals and large fish hung on hooks. Smaller fish,
crabs, and eels were bedded in ice on a counter. Luterin took little notice of
his surroundings, so concerned was he for Insil, who was now almost hysterical.
But
the men recognized her. "We know what she wants," one said, grinning.
He led her into a rear room.
One
of the other men came forward and said, "I remember you, sir."
He
was youthful and had a vaguely foreign look about him.
"My
name is Kenigg Odim," he said. "I sailed with you on that journey
from Koriantura to Rivenjk. I was just a lad then, but you may recollect my
father, Eedap Odim."
"Of
course, of course," said Luterin distractedly. ″A dealer in
something. Ivory, was it?"
"Porcelain,
sir. My father still lives in Rivenjk, and organises supplies of good fish to
come up here every week. It's a paying business, and there's no demand for porcelain
these days. Life's better down in Rivenjk, sir, I must say. Fine feelings are
about as much good as fine porcelain up here."
"Yes,
yes, I'm sure that's so."
"We
also do a trade in occhara, sir, if you would care for a free pipe. Your lady
friend is a regular customer."
"Yes,
bring me a pipe, man, thank you, and what of a lady called Toress Lahl? Is she
here?"
"She's
expected."
"All
right." He went through into the rear room. Insil Esikananzi was resting
on a couch, smoking a long-stemmed pipe. She looked perfectly calm, and
regarded Luterin without speaking.
He
sat by her without a word, and presently the young Odim brought him a lighted
pipe. He inhaled with pleasure and immediately felt a mood strangely compounded
of resignation and determination steal over him. He felt he was equal to
anything. He understood now Insil's expanded irises, and held her hand.
"My
husband is dead," she announced. "Did you know that? Did I tell you
what he did to me on our wedding night?"
"Insil,
I've had enough confidences from you for one day. That episode in your life is
over. We are still young. We can marry, can make one another happy or
miserable, as the case may be."
Wreathing
herself in smoke, she said from the centre of it, "You are a fugitive. I
need a home. I need care. I no longer need love. What I need is occhara. I want
someone who can protect me. I want you to get Asperamanka back."
"That's
impossible. He's dead."
"If
you find it impossible, Luterin, then please be quiet and leave me to my
thoughts. I am a widow. Widows never last long in winter. . . ."
He
sat by her, sucking on the occhara, letting his thoughts die.
"If
you could also kill my father, the Keeper, this remote community could revert
to nature. The Wheel would stop. The plague could come and go. The survivors
would see the Weyr-Winter through."
"There
will always be survivors. It's a law of nature."
"My
husband showed me the laws of nature, thank you. I do not wish for another
husband."
They
fell silent. Young Odim entered and announced to Luterin that Toress Lahl
awaited him in an upper room. He cursed and stumbled after the man up a rickety
stair without a backward look at Insil, certain that she would remain where she
was for some while.
Luterin
was shown into a small cabin, before which a curtain did duty for a door.
Inside, a bed served as the only furniture. Beside the bed stood Toress Lahl.
He was astonished at her girth until he remembered that he was much the same
size.
She
had certainly grown older. There was grey in her hair, although she still
dressed it as she had done ten years ago. Her cheeks were rough and florid with
the abrasion of frost. Her eyes were heavier, although they lit as she smiled
with recognition. In every way, she seemed unlike Insil, not least in the kind
of calm stoicism with which she presented herself for his inspection.
She
wore boots. Her dress was poor and patched. Unexpectedly, she removed her fur
hat whether in welcome or
respect he could not tell.
He
took a step towards her. She immediately came forward and embraced him, kissing
him on both cheeks.
"Are
you well?" he asked.
"I
saw you yesterday. I was waiting outside the Wheel when they let you free. I
called to you but you did not look my way."
"It
was so bright." Still confused by the occhara, he could think of nothing
to say. He wanted her to make jokes like Insil. When she did not, he asked,
"Do you know Insil Esikananzi?"
"She
has become a good friend of mine. We've supported each other in many ways. The
years have been long, Luterin . . . What plans do you have?"
"Plans?
The sun's gone down."
"For
the future."
"This
innocent is again a fugitive. . . . They may even try to blame me for
Asperamanka's death." He sat down heavily on the bed.
"That
man is dead? It's a mercy. . . ." She thought and then said, "If you
can trust me, Luterin, I could take you to my little hideout."
"I
would only be a source of danger."
"That's
not what our relationship is based on. I'm still yours, Luterin, if you will have
me." When he hesitated, she said pleadingly, "I need you, Luterin.
You loved me once, I believe. What choices do you have here, surrounded by
enemies?"
"There's
always defiance," he said. He laughed.
They
went down the narrow stairs together, taking care in the dark. At the bottom,
Luterin looked into the rear room. To his surprise, the couch was empty and
Insil had gone.
They
bid good-bye to young Odim and made their way into the night.
In the
gathering darkness, the Avernus passed overhead, making its swift transit of
the sky. It was now a dead eye.
At
last the splendid machine had run down. Its surveillance system was only partly
functional. Many other systems but not the vital ones were still operational. Air still circulated. Cleaning machines
still crawled through walkways. Here and there, computers still exchanged
information. Coffee machines still regularly brought coffee to the boil.
Stabilisers
kept the Earth Observation Station automatically on course. In the port
departure lounge, a toilet regularly flushed itself, like a creature unable to
suppress weeping fits.
But
no signals were returning to Earth.
And
Earth no longer had need of them, although there were many who regretted the
termination of that unfolding story from another world. For Earth was moving
beyond its compulsive stage, where civilisation was measured by the quantity of
possessions, into a new phase of being where the magic of individual experience
was to be shared, not stored; awarded, not hoarded. The human character became
involuntarily more like that of Gaia herself: diffuse, ever changing, ever open
to the adventures of the day.
As
they went through the dusk, leaving the village behind them, Toress Lahl tried to
talk of superficial things. Snow fell, blowing in from the north.
Luterin
did not reply. After a silence, she told him how she had borne him a son, now
almost ten years old, and offered Luterin anecdotes about him.
"I
wonder if he will grow up to kill his father," was all Luterin said.
"He
is metamorphosed, as we are. A true son, Luterin. So he will survive and breed
survivors, we hope."
He
trudged behind her, still with nothing to say. They passed a deserted hut and
were heading for a belt of trees. He glanced back now and again.
She
was following her own train of thought. "Still your hated Oligarchy is
killing off all the phagors. If only they understood the real workings of the
Fat Death, they would know that they are killing off their own kind too."
"They
know well enough what they're doing."
"No,
Luterin. You generously gave me the key to JandolAnganol's chapel, and I've
lived there ever since. One evening, a knock came at the door and there was
Insil Esikananzi."
He
looked interested. "How did Insil know you were there?"
"It
was an accident. She had run away from Asperamanka. They were then newly
married. He had brutally sodomised her, and she was in pain and despair. She
remembered the chapel as a refuge your brother Favin had taken her there once, in happier days. I
looked after her and we became close friends."
"Well
. . . I'm glad she had a friend."
"I
showed her the records left by JandolAnganol and the woman Muntras, with the
explanations of how there was a tick which travelled from phagors to mankind
carrying the plagues necessary to mankind's survival in the extreme seasons.
That knowledge Insil took back with her, to explain to the Keeper and the
Master, but they would take no notice."
He
gave a curt laugh. "They took no notice because they already knew. They
would not want Insil's interference. They run the system, don't they? They knew. My father knew. Do you imagine
those old church papers were secret? Their knowledge became common
knowledge."
The
ground sloped. They picked their way more carefully toward where the caspiarn
forest began.
Toress
Lahl said, "The Oligarch knew that killing off all phagors meant ultimately killing the humans yet still he passed his orders?
That's incredible."
"I
can't defend what my father did or Asperamanka. But the knowledge did not suit them. Simply that.
They felt they had to act, despite their knowledge."
He
caught the scent of the caspiarns, inhaled the slight vinegary tang of their
foliage. It came like the memory of another world. He drew it gratefully into
his lungs. Toress Lahl had two yelk tethered in the shelter of the trees. She
went forward and fondled their muzzles as he spoke.
"My
father did not know what would happen if Sibornal was rid of phagors for ever.
He just believed that it was something necessary to do, whatever the
consequences. We don't know what will happen either, despite what it may say in
some fusty old documents. . . ." More to himself , he said, "I think
he felt some drastic break with the past was needed, no matter what the cost.
An act of defiance, if you like. Perhaps he will one day be proved right.
Nature will take care of us. Then they'll make a saint of him, like your wicked
saint JandolAnganol.
"An
act of defiance . . . that's mankind's nature. It's no good just sitting back
and smoking occhara. Otherwise we should never progress. The key to the future
must lie with the future, not the past."
The
wind was getting up again; the snow came faster.
"Beholder!"
she said. She put a hand up to her rough face. "You've grown hard. Are you
going to come with me?" she asked.
"I
need you," she said, when he did not answer.
He
swung himself up into the saddle, relishing the familiarity of the act, and the
response of the animal beneath him. He patted the yelk's warm flank.
He
was an exile in his own land. That would have to change. Asperamanka was done
for. The obscene Ebstok Esikananzi would have to be brought to an accounting.
He did not wish for what Esikananzi had; he wanted justice. His face was grim
as he gazed down at the yelk's mane.
"Luterin,
are you ready? Our son is waiting for us in the chapel."
He
stared across at the blur of her face and nodded. Snowflakes settled on his
eyelids. As they nudged their mounts down among the trees, a wind cut through the
forest, slicing down from the slopes of
At
the last moment, Luterin turned in the saddle to catch a last glimpse of the
village. The light of its fires was reflected on the low cloud cover blowing
in.
Holding
the reins more firmly, he urged the yelk faster down the slope and into the
thickening murk. The woman called to him with anxiety in her voice, but Luterin
felt exhilaration rising in his arteries.
He
raised a fist above his head.
"Abro
Hakmo Astab!" he shouted, hurling his voice into the distances of the
forest.
The
wind took the sound and smothered it in the weight of falling snow.
For the nature of the world as a whole is altered by age.
Everything must pass through successive phases. Nothing remains for ever what
it was. Everything is on the move. Everything is transformed by nature and
forced into new paths. One thing, withered by time, decays and dwindles.
Another emerges from ignominy, and waxes strong. So the nature of the world as
a whole is altered by age. The Earth passes through successive phases, so that
it can no longer bear what it could, and it can now what it could not before.
Lucretius: De
Rerum Natura 55 BC
My dear Clive,
There
you have it. Seven years have passed since I began to consider these matters.
This volume will achieve first publication in a year when we both reach a new
decade, and when my age will be exactly double yours.
As
I walk in Hilary's garden wondering what form of words to use, it occurs to me
that the question to ask is, Why do individuals of the human race long for close
community with each other, and yet remain so often apart? Could it be that the
isolating factor is similar to that which makes us feel, as a species, apart
from the rest of nature? Perhaps the Earth mother you meet in these pages has
proved less than perfect. Like a real mother, she has had her troubles on a cosmic scale.
So
the fault is not all ours, or hers. We must accept a lack of perfection in the
scheme of things, accept the yellow-striped fly. Time, in which the whole drama
is staged, is, as J. T. Fraser puts it. "a hierarchy of unresolved
conflicts." We must accept that limitation with the equanimity of
Lucretius, and be angry only at those things against which one can be
effectively angry, like the madness of making and deploying nuclear weapons.
Such
matters are not generally the subject of literature. But I felt the necessity,
as you see, to have a shot at incorporating them.
Now
at last I have done. The rambling edifice of Helliconia is before you, with my hopes
that you will enjoy the results.
Your
affectionate Father
Boars
Hill