by Bruce Sterling
From Crystal Express
Then one arrives at Audoghast, a
large and very populous city built in a sandy plain … The
inhabitants live in ease and possess great riches. The market is always
crowded; the mob is so huge and the chattering so loud that you can
scarcely hear your own words … The city contains beautiful
buildings and very elegant homes.
—Description of Northern Africa
Abu Ubayd Al-Bakri (A.D. 1040-94)
Delightful Audoghast! Renowned through the
civilized world, from Cordova to Baghdad, the city spread in splendor
beneath a twilit Saharan sky. The setting sun threw pink and amber
across adobe domes, masonry mansions, tall, mud-brick mosques, and open
plazas thick with bristling date-palms. The melodious calls of market
vendors mixed with the remote and amiable chuckling of Saharan hyenas.
Four gentlemen sat on carpets in a tiled and
whitewashed portico, sipping coffee in the evening breeze. The host was
the genial and accomplished slave-dealer, Manimenesh. His three guests
were Ibn Watunan, the caravan-master; Khayali, the poet and musician;
and Bagayoko, a physician and court assassin.
The home of Manimenesh stood upon the hillside
in the aristocratic quarter, where it gazed down on an open marketplace
and the mud-brick homes of the lowly. The prevailing breeze swept away
the city reek, and brought from within the mansion the
palate-sharpening aromas of lamb in tarragon and roast partridge in
lemons and eggplant. The four men lounged comfortably around a low
inlaid table, sipping spiced coffee from Chinese cups and watching the
ebb and flow of market life.
The scene below them encouraged a lofty
philosophical detachment. Manimenesh, who owned no less than fifteen
books, was a well-known patron of learning. Jewels gleamed on his dark,
plump hands, which lay cozily folded over his paunch. He wore a long
tunic of crushed red velvet, and a gold-threaded skullcap.
Khayali, the young poet, had studied
architecture and verse in the schools of Timbuktu. He lived in the
household of Manimenesh as his poet and praisemaker, and his sonnets,
ghazals, and odes were recited throughout the city. He propped one
elbow against the full belly of his two-string guimbri guitar,
of inlaid ebony, strung with leopard gut.
Ibn Watunan had an eagle's hooded gaze and hands
callused by camel-reins. He wore an indigo turban and a long striped
djellaba. In thirty years as a sailor and caravaneer, he had bought and
sold Zanzibar ivory, Sumatran pepper, Ferghana silk, and Cordovan
leather. Now a taste for refined gold had brought him to Audoghast, for
Audoghast's African bullion was known throughout Islam as the standard
of quality.
Doctor Bagayoko's ebony skin was ridged with an
initiate's scars, and his long clay-smeared hair was festooned with
knobs of chiseled bone. He wore a tunic of white Egyptian cotton, hung
with gris-gris necklaces, and his baggy sleeves bulged with herbs and
charms. He was a native Audoghastian of the animist persuasion, the
personal physician of the city's Prince.
Bagayoko's skill with powders, potions, and
unguents made him an intimate of Death. He often undertook diplomatic
missions to the neighboring Empire of Ghana. During his last visit
there, the anti-Audoghast faction had mysteriously suffered a lethal
outbreak of pox.
Between the four men was the air of camaraderie
common to gentlemen and scholars.
They finished the coffee, and a slave took the
empty pot away. A second slave, a girl from the kitchen staff, arrived
with a wicker tray loaded with olives, goat-cheese, and hard-boiled
eggs sprinkled with vermilion. At that moment, a muezzin yodeled the
evening call to prayer.
"Ah," said Ibn Watunan, hesitating. "Just as we
were getting started."
"Never mind," said Manimenesh, helping himself
to a handful of olives. "We'll pray twice next time."
"Why was there no noon prayer today?" said
Watunan.
"Our muezzin forgot," the poet said.
Watunan lifted his shaggy brows. "That seems
rather lax."
Doctor Bagayoko said, "This is a new muezzin.
The last was more punctual, but, well, he fell ill." Bagayoko smiled
urbanely and nibbled his cheese.
"We Audoghastians like our new muezzin better,"
said the poet, Khayali. "He's one of our own, not like that other
fellow, who was from Fez. Our muezzin is sleeping with a
Christian's wife. It's very entertaining."
"You have Christians here?" Watunan said.
"A clan of Ethiopian Copts," said Manimenesh.
"And a couple of Nestorians."
"Oh," said Watunan, relaxing. "For a moment I
thought you meant real feringhee Christians, from Europe."
"From where?" Manimenesh was puzzled.
"Very far away," said Ibn Watunan, smiling.
"Ugly little countries, with no profit."
"There were empires in Europe once," said
Khayali knowledge-ably. "The Empire of Rome was almost as big as the
modern civilized world."
Watunan nodded."I have seen the New Rome, called
Byzantium. They have armored horsemen, like your neighbors in Ghana.
Savage fighters."
Bagayoko nodded, salting an egg. "Christians eat
children."
Watunan smiled. "I can assure you that the
Byzantines do no such thing."
"Really?" said Bagayoko. "Well, our Christians
do."
"That's just the doctor's little joke," said
Manimenesh. "Sometimes strange rumors spread about us, because we raid
our slaves from the Nyam-Nyam cannibal tribes on the coast. But we
watch their diet closely, I assure you."
Watunan smiled uncomfortably. "There is always
something new out of Africa. One hears the oddest stories. Hairy men,
for instance."
"Ah," said Manimenesh. "You mean gorillas, from
the jungles to the south. I'm sorry to spoil the story for you, but
they are nothing better than beasts."
"I see," said Watunan. "That's a pity."
"My grandfather owned a gorilla once,"
Manimenesh said. "Even after ten years, it could barely speak Arabic."
They finished the appetizers. Slaves cleared the
table and brought in a platter of fattened partridges, stuffed with
lemons and eggplants, on a bed of mint and lettuce. The four diners
leaned in closer and dexterously ripped off legs and wings.
Watunan sucked meat from a drumstick and belched
politely. "Audoghast is famous for its cooks," he said. "I'm pleased to
see that this legend, at least, is confirmed."
"We Audoghastians pride ourselves on the
pleasures of table and bed," said Manimenesh, pleased. "I have asked
Elfelilet, one of our premiere courtesans, to honor us with a visit
tonight. She will bring her troupe of dancers."
Watunan smiled. "That would be splendid. One
tires of boys on the trail. Your women are remarkable. I've noticed
that they go without the veil."
Khayali lifted his voice in song.
"When a woman of Audoghast appears
The girls of Fez bite their lips,
The dames of Tripoli hide in closets,
And Ghana's women hang themselves."
"We take pride in the exalted status of our
women," said Manimenesh. "It's not for nothing that they command a
premium market price!"
In the marketplace, downhill, vendors lit tiny
oil lamps, which cast a flickering glow across the walls of tents and
the watering troughs. A troop of the Prince's men, with iron spears,
shields, and chain mail, marched across the plaza to take the night
watch at the Eastern Gate. Slaves with heavy water-jars gossiped beside
the well.
"There's quite a crowd around one of the
stalls," said Bagayoko.
"So I see," said Watunan. "What is it? Some news
that might affect the market?"
Bagayoko sopped up gravy with a wad of mint and
lettuce. "Rumor says there's a new fortune-teller in town. New prophets
always go through a vogue."
"Ah yes," said Khayali, sitting up. "They call
him 'the Sufferer.' He is said to tell the most outlandish and
entertaining fortunes."
"I wouldn't trust any fortune-teller's market
tips," said Manimenesh. "If you want to know the market, you have to
know the hearts of the people, and for that you need a good poet."
Khayali bowed his head. "Sir," he said, "live
forever."
It was growing dark. Household slaves arrived
with pottery lamps of sesame oil, which they hung from the rafters of
the portico. Others took the bones of the partridges and brought in a
haunch and head of lamb with a side dish of cinnamon tripes.
As a gesture of esteem, the host offered Watunan
the eyeballs, and after three ritual refusals the caravan-master dug in
with relish. "I put great stock in fortune-tellers, myself," he said,
munching. "They are often privy to strange secrets. Not the occult
kind, but the blabbing of the superstitious. Slave-girls anxious about
some household scandal, or minor officials worried over
promotions-inside news from those who consult them. It can be useful."
"If that's the case," said Manimenesh, "perhaps
we should call him up here."
"They say he is grotesquely ugly," said Khayali.
"He is called 'the Sufferer' because he is outlandishly afflicted by
disease."
Bagayoko wiped his chin elegantly on his sleeve.
"Now you begin to interest me!"
"It's settled, then." Manimenesh clapped his
hands. "Bring young Sidi, my errand-runner!"
Sidi arrived at once, dusting flour from his
hands. He was the cook's teenage son, a tall young black in a dyed
woolen djellaba. His cheeks were stylishly scarred, and he had bits of
brass wire interwoven with his dense black locks. Manimenesh gave him
his orders; Sidi leapt from the portico, ran downhill through the
garden, and vanished through the gates.
The slave-dealer sighed. "This is one of the
problems of my business. When I bought my cook she was a slim and
lithesome wench, and I enjoyed her freely. Now years of dedication to
her craft have increased her market value by twenty times, and also
made her as fat as a hippopotamus, though that is beside the point. She
has always claimed that Sidi is my child, and since I don't wish to
sell her, I must make allowance. I have made him a freeman; I have
spoiled him, I'm afraid. On my death, my legitimate sons will deal with
him cruelly."
The caravan-master, having caught the
implications of this speech, smiled politely. "Can he ride? Can he
bargain? Can he do sums?"
"Oh," said Manimenesh with false nonchalance,
"he can manage that newfangled stuff with the zeroes well enough."
"You know I am bound for China," said Watunan.
"It is a hard road that brings either riches or death."
"He runs the risk in any case," the slave-dealer
said philosophically. "The riches are Allah's decision."
"This is truth," said the caravan-master. He
made a secret gesture, beneath the table, where the others could not
see. His host returned it, and Sidi was proposed, and accepted, for the
Brotherhood.
With the night's business over, Manimenesh
relaxed, and broke open the lamb's steamed skull with a silver mallet.
They spooned out the brains, then attacked the tripes, which were
stuffed with onion, cabbage, cinnamon, rue, coriander, cloves, ginger,
pepper, and lightly dusted with ambergris. They ran out of mustard dip
and called for more, eating a bit more slowly now, for they were
approaching the limit of human capacity.
They then sat back, pushing away platters of
congealing grease, and enjoying a profound satisfaction with the state
of the world. Down in the marketplace, bats from an abandoned mosque
chased moths around the vendors' lanterns.
The poet belched suavely and picked up his
two-stringed guitar. "Dear God," he said, "this is a splendid place.
See, caravan-master, how the stars smile down on our beloved
Southwest." He drew a singing note from the leopard-gut strings. "I
feel at one with Eternity."
Watunan smiled. "When I find a man like that, I
have to bury him."
"There speaks the man of business," the doctor
said. He unobtrusively dusted a tiny pinch of venom on the last chunk
of tripe, and ate it. He accustomed himself to poison. It was a
professional precaution.
From the street beyond the wall, they heard the
approaching jingle of brass rings. The guard at the gate called out.
"The Lady Elfelilet and her escorts, lord!"
"Make them welcome," said Manimenesh. Slaves
took the platters away, and brought a velvet couch onto the spacious
portico. The diners extended their hands; slaves scrubbed and toweled
them clean.
Elfelilet's party came forward through the
fig-clustered garden: two escorts with gold-topped staffs heavy with
jingling brass rings; three dancing-girls, apprentice courtesans in
blue woolen cloaks over gauzy cotton trousers and embroidered blouses;
and four palanquin bearers, beefy male slaves with oiled torsos and
callused shoulders. The bearers set the palanquin down with stifled
grunts of relief and opened the cloth-of-gold hangings.
Elfelilet emerged, a tawny-skinned woman, her
eyes dusted in kohl and collyrium, her hennaed hair threaded with gold
wire. Her palms and nails were stained pink; she wore an embroidered
blue cloak over an intricate sleeveless vest and ankle-tied silk
trousers starched and polished with myrobalan lacquer. A light
freckling of smallpox scars along one cheek delightfully accented her
broad, moonlike face.
"Elfelilet, my dear," said Manimenesh, "you are
just in time for dessert."
Elfelilet stepped gracefully across the tiled
floor and reclined face-first along the velvet couch, where the
well-known loveliness of her posterior could be displayed to its best
advantage. "I thank my friend and patron, the noble Manimenesh. Live
forever! Learned Doctor Bagayoko, I am your servant. Hello, poet."
"Hello, darling," said Khayali, smiling with the
natural camaraderie of poets and courtesans. "You are the moon, and
your troupe of lovelies are comets across our vision."
The host said, "This is our esteemed guest, the
caravan-master, Abu Bekr Ahmed Ibn Watunan."
Watunan, who had been gaping in enraptured
amazement, came to himself with a start. "I am a simple desert man," he
said. "I haven't a poet's gift of words. But I am your ladyship's
servant."
Elfelilet smiled and tossed her head; her
distended earlobes clattered with heavy chunks of gold filigree.
"Welcome to Audoghast."
Dessert arrived. "Well," said Manimenesh. "Our
earlier dishes were rough and simple fare, but this is where we shine.
Let me tempt you with these djouzinkat nutcakes. And do sample
our honey macaroons—I believe there's enough for everyone."
Everyone, except of course for the slaves,
enjoyed the light and flaky cataif macaroons, liberally dusted
with Kairwan sugar. The nut-cakes were simply beyond compare:
painstakingly milled from hand-watered wheat, lovingly buttered and
sugared, and artistically studded with raisins, dates, and almonds.
"We eat djouzinkat nutcakes during
droughts," the poet said, "because the angels weep with envy when we
taste them."
Manimenesh belched heroically and readjusted his
skullcap. "Now," he said, "we will enjoy a little bit of grape wine.
Just a small tot, mind you, so that the sin of drinking is a minor one,
and we can do penance with the minimum of alms. After that, our friend
the poet will recite an ode he has composed for the occasion."
Khayali began to tune his two-string guitar. "I
will also, on demand, extemporize twelve-line ghazals in the
lyric mode, upon suggested topics."
"And after our digestion has been soothed with
epigrams," said their host, "we will enjoy the justly famed dancing of
her ladyship's troupe. After that we will retire within the mansion and
enjoy their other, equally lauded, skills."
The gate-guard shouted, "Your errand-runner,
Lord! He awaits your pleasure, with the fortune-teller!"
"Ah," said Manimenesh. "I had forgotten."
"No matter, sir," said Watunan, whose
imagination had been fired by the night's agenda.
Bagayoko spoke up. "Let's have a look at him.
His ugliness, by contrast, will heighten the beauty of these women."
"Which would otherwise be impossible," said the
poet.
"Very well," said Manimenesh. "Bring him
forward."
Sidi, the errand boy, came through the garden,
followed with ghastly slowness by the crutch-wielding fortune-teller.
The man inched into the lamplight like a
crippled insect. His voluminous dust-gray cloak was stained with sweat,
and nameless exudations. He was an albino. His pink eyes were shrouded
with cataracts, and he had lost a foot, and several fingers, to
leprosy. One shoulder was much lower than the other, suggesting a
hunchback, and the stub of his shin was scarred by the gnawing of
canal-worms.
"Prophet's beard!" said the poet. "He is truly
of surpassing ghastliness."
Elfelilet wrinkled her nose. "He reeks of
pestilence!"
Sidi spoke up. "We came as fast as we could,
Lord!"
"Go inside, boy," said Manimenesh; "soak ten
sticks of cinnamon in a bucket of water, then come back and throw it
over him."
Sidi left at once.
Watunan stared at the hideous man, who stood,
quivering on one leg, at the edge of the light. "How is it, man, that
you still live?"
"I have turned my sight from this world," said
the Sufferer. "I turned my sight to God, and He poured knowledge
copiously upon me. I have inherited a knowledge which no mortal body
can support."
"But God is merciful," said Watunan. "How can
you claim this to be His doing?"
"If you do not fear God," said the
fortune-teller, "fear Him after seeing me." The hideous albino lowered
himself, with arthritic, aching slowness, to the dirt outside the
portico. He spoke again. "You are right, caravan-master, to think that
death would be a mercy to me. But death comes in its own time, as it
will to all of you."
Manimenesh cleared his throat. "Can you see our
destinies, then?"
"I see the world," said the Sufferer. "To see
the fate of one man is to follow a single ant in a hill."
Sidi reemerged and poured the scented water over
the cripple. The fortune-teller cupped his maimed hands and drank.
"Thank you, boy," he said. He turned his clouded eyes on the youth.
"Your children will be yellow."
Sidi laughed, startled. "Yellow? Why?"
"Your wives will be yellow."
The dancing-girls, who had moved to the far side
of the table, giggled in unison. Bagayoko pulled a gold coin from
within his sleeve. "I will give you this gold dirham if you will show
me your body."
Elfelilet frowned prettily and blinked her
kohl-smeared lashes. "Oh, learned Doctor, please spare us."
"You will see my body, sir, if you have
patience," said the Sufferer. "As yet, the people of Audoghast laugh at
my prophecies. I am doomed to tell the truth, which is harsh and cruel,
and therefore absurd. As my fame grows, however, it will reach the ears
of your Prince, who will then order you to remove me as a threat to
public order. You will then sprinkle your favorite poison, powdered asp
venom, into a bowl of chickpea soup I will receive from a customer. I
bear you no grudge for this, as it will be your civic duty, and will
relieve me of pain."
"What an odd notion," said Bagayoko, frowning.
"I see no need for the Prince to call on my services. One of his
spearmen could puncture you like a waterskin."
"By then," the prophet said, "my occult powers
will have roused so much uneasiness that it will seem best to take
extreme measures."
"Well," said Bagayoko, "that's convenient, if
exceedingly grotesque."
"Unlike other prophets," said the Sufferer, "I
see the future not as one might wish it to be, but in all its
cataclysmic and blind futility. That is why I have come here, to your
delightful city. My numerous and totally accurate prophecies will
vanish when this city does. This will spare the world any troublesome
conflicts of predestination and free will."
"He is a theologian!" the poet said. "A leper
theologian—it's a shame my professors in Timbuktu aren't here to debate
him!"
"You prophesy doom for our city?" said
Manimenesh.
"Yes. I will be specific. This is the year 406
of the Prophet's Hejira, and one thousand and fourteen years since the
birth of Christ. In forty years, a puritan and fanatical cult of
Moslems will arise, known as the Almoravids. At that time, Audoghast
will be an ally of the Ghana Empire, who are idol-worshipers. Ibn
Yasin, the warrior saint of the Almoravids, will condemn Audoghast as a
nest of pagans. He will set his horde of desert marauders against the
city; they will be enflamed by righteousness and greed. They will
slaughter the men, and rape and enslave the women. Audoghast will be
sacked, the wells will be poisoned, and the cropland will wither and
blow away. In a hundred years, sand dunes will bury the ruins. In five
hundred years, Audoghast will survive only as a few dozen lines of
narrative in the travel books of Arab scholars."
Khayali shifted his guitar. "But the libraries
of Timbuktu are full of books on Audoghast, including, if I may say so,
our immortal tradition of poetry."
"I have not yet mentioned Timbuktu," said the
prophet, "which will be sacked by Moorish invaders led by a blond
Spanish eunuch. They will feed the books to goats."
The company burst into incredulous laughter.
Unperturbed, the prophet said, "The ruin will be so general, so
thorough, and so all-encompassing, that in future centuries it will be
stated, and believed, that West Africa was always a land of savages."
"Who in the world could make such a slander?"
said the poet.
"They will be Europeans, who will emerge from
their current squalid decline, and arm themselves with mighty sciences."
"What happens then?" said Bagayoko, smiling.
"I can look at those future ages," said the
prophet, "but I prefer not to do so, as it makes my head hurt."
"You prophesy, then," said Manimenesh, "that our
far-famed metropolis, with its towering mosques and armed militia, will
be reduced to utter desolation."
"Such is the truth, regrettable as it may be.
You, and all you love, will leave no trace in this world, except a few
lines in the writing of strangers."
"And our city will fall to savage tribesmen?"
The Sufferer said, "No one here will witness the
disaster to come. You will live out your lives, year after year,
enjoying ease and luxury, not because you deserve it, but simply
because of blind fate. In time you will forget this night; you will
forget all I have said, just as the world will forget you and your
city. When Audoghast falls, this boy Sidi, this son of a slave, will be
the only survivor of this night's gathering. By then he too will have
forgotten Audoghast, which he has no cause to love. He will be a rich
old merchant in Ch'ang-an, which is a Chinese city of such fantastic
wealth that it could buy ten Audoghasts, and which will not be sacked
and annihilated until a considerably later date."
"This is madness," said Watunan.
Bagayoko twirled a crusted lock of mud-smeared
hair in his supple fingers. "Your gate-guard is a husky lad, friend
Manimenesh. What say we have him bash this storm-crow's head in, and
haul him out to be hyena food?"
"For that, Doctor," said the Sufferer, "I will
tell you the manner of your death. You will be killed by the Ghanaian
royal guard, while attempting to kill the crown prince by blowing a
subtle poison into his anus with a hollow reed."
Bagayoko started. "You idiot, there is no crown
prince."
"He was conceived yesterday."
Bagayoko turned impatiently to the host. "Let us
rid ourselves of this prodigy!"
Manimenesh nodded sternly. "Sufferer, you have
insulted my guests and my city. You are lucky to leave my home alive."
The Sufferer hauled himself with agonizing
slowness to his single foot. "Your boy spoke to me of your generosity."
"What! Not one copper for your driveling."
"Give me one of the gold dirhams from your
purse. Otherwise I shall be forced to continue prophesying, and in a
more intimate vein."
Manimenesh considered this. "Perhaps it's best."
He threw Sidi a coin. "Give this to the madman and escort him back to
his raving-booth."
They waited in tormented patience as the
fortune-teller creaked and crutched, with painful slowness, into the
darkness.
Manimenesh, brusquely, threw out his red velvet
sleeves and clapped for wine. "Give us a song, Khayali."
The poet pulled the cowl of his cloak over his
head. "My head rings with an awful silence," he said. "I see all
waymarks effaced, the joyous pleasances converted into barren
wilderness. Jackals resort here, ghosts frolic, and demons sport; the
gracious halls, and rich boudoirs, that once shone like the sun, now,
overwhelmed by desolation, seem like the gaping mouths of savage
beasts!" He looked at the dancing-girls, his eyes brimming with tears.
"I picture these maidens, lying beneath the dust, or dispersed to
distant parts and far regions, scattered by the hand of exile, torn to
pieces by the fingers of expatriation."
Manimenesh smiled on him kindly. "My boy," he
said, "if others cannot hear your songs, or embrace these women, or
drink this wine, the loss is not ours, but theirs. Let us, then, enjoy
all three, and let those unborn do the regretting."
"Your patron is wise," said Ibn Watunan, patting
the poet on the shoulder. "You see him here, favored by Allah with
every luxury; and you saw that filthy madman, bedeviled by plague. That
lunatic, who pretends to great wisdom, only croaks of ruin; while our
industrious friend makes the world a better place, by fostering
nobility and learning. Could God forsake a city like this, with all its
charms, to bring about that fool's disgusting prophesies?" He lifted
his cup to Elfelilet, and drank deeply.
"But delightful Audoghast," said the poet,
weeping. "All our loveliness, lost to the sands."
"The world is wide," said Bagayoko, "and the
years are long. It is not for us to claim immortality, not even if we
are poets. But take comfort, my friend. Even if these walls and
buildings crumble, there will always be a place like Audoghast, as long
as men love profit! The mines are inexhaustible, and elephants are
thick as fleas. Mother Africa will always give us gold and ivory."
"Always?" said the poet hopefully, dabbing at
his eyes.
"Well, surely there are always slaves," said
Manimenesh, and smiled, and winked. The others laughed with him, and
there was joy again.