Serpent's Blood The First Book of Genesys [070-4.5] By: BRIAN STABLEFORD Synopsis: At first glance Serpent's Blood looks like another fantasy epic. After all, it's billed as the First Book of Genesys (to be followed by Salamander's Fire and Chimera's Cradle ), and the action consists largely of ill-assorted groups travelling through realms of mystery and danger like the Forest of Absolute Night and Dragomite Hills, seeking the enigmatic Navel of the World.... But Brian Stableford is science fiction's number one expert in designing exotic biosystems, and this is a carefully imagined alien world where the omnipresent Enemy is far more insidious than any Dark Lord. It is, simply, decay. The biosphere is riddled with multiple varieties of rot: wood, stone, metal and even glass are all short-lived. Cities are forever under construction, forever falling apart. The human colonists aren't quite human; we learn that they've been gene-engineered to live in this ecosystem, with teeth that regrow when destroyed by blight. Books and records don't last, either: human knowledge itself is decaying as it's passed from memory to memory. Which sounds glum; but the story is exciting, colourful and witty, if a little leisurely in pace. We meet two fascinating alien races, with a third to come -- not to mention grisly `chimeras' which mingle human and unearthly flesh. A new sort of change is in the air, a long-planned genetic time-bomb which may finally end this constant losing battle against decay. After book one the lead characters still face a long, long journey ahead -- and I'm looking forward to it. Serpent's Blood The First Book of Genesys <^. i FORTHCOMING TITLES FROM BRIAN STABLEFORD IN THIS SERIES Salamander's Fire Chimera's Cradle SERPENT'S BLOOD The First Book of Genesys Brian Stableford BCA1 LONDON NEW YORK SYDNEY TORONTO A. This edition published 1995 byBCA by arrangement with Random House Ltd. Copyright Brian Stableford 1995 Brian Stableford has asserted his right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988 to be identified as the author of this work. This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, resold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the publisher's prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser CN 1477 Printed and bound in Germany by Graphischer Grofibetrieb PoBneck GmbH A member of the Mohndruck printing group Part One In Xandria, linked together by chains of coincidence A. Humans were made by a world other than the one they know, close kin to it but not the same. No man of the world will ever see the world which made him, and yet it can be glimpsed in dreams. No memory of the world which made the human race survives in this world, nor is there any account of it in the sacred lore, but what is written in the blood can never be wholly erased, and the flickering flame which lights the most intimate dreams can never be utterly extinguished. No man born of this world can know what a moon or a mountain is, but there are men nevertheless who see the moon while their eyes are firmly shut, and drink of precious folly, and there are men who climb mountains while they lie abed, dizzied by sublime heights. This world has no changing seasons, but there are seasons in the rhythm of our being. The tides which surge in our blood are greater by far than the petty tides which stir our shallow seas. The world's seas are briny, but not as briny as the blood of men. Our blood marks us children of other and unimaginably distant seas, and this is true even of those who have Serpent's blood in them. The world's seas are shallow but the water of our being is deeper by far; it marks us children of a great and unfathomable abyss, and this is true even of those whose hearts are warmed by Salamander's fire. There are seasons in the affairs of men, and always will be, despite that the men who live in the world we know were born and will be born again from Chimera's Cradle. The Apocrypha of Genesys a ndris myra sol had been a prince in Ferentina until he was six years old, but now had been six years a vagabond. Exactly half a lifetime had passed since he quit his own land, and the anniversary was not a happy one. He had told himself a thousand times that it was neither fear nor the fear of brotherly love turning to hatred which had driven him away from his home. He had told himself a thousand times what a fine thing it was to be a citizen of the world rather than the scion of a single tiny nation, but he was past believing it now. Six years had taught him what it meant to be without home, without property and without a goal in life. In six years he had suffered every penalty of aimlessness, but he wasn't so foolish as to imagine that things couldn't get worse. Andris sat on a crooked chair beside a rickety table beneath the internal staircase in a harbour side inn called the Wayfaring Tree in the city of Xandria and cursed his miserable luck. He was alone and friendless. The ale he was drinking was uncommonly dark and suspiciously salty, matching his mood with uncanny precision. The legs of the chair had become so soft and spongy by courtesy of the corrosions of five different kinds of wood rot that it threatened to cave in beneath his bulk- which was, admittedly, unusually large by Xandrian standards. The surface of the table was peppered and blotched by no less than eight kinds of rot, three of which were unfamiliar to him, being quite unknown in milder climes. One of these appeared to be feeding on the stain which had been used to colour the wood, mottling the tabletop with a strangely discomfiting pallor. Andris had no idea what kind of wood it was, and couldn't put a name to any of the eight kinds of rot, familiar or unfamiliar. His travels hadn't taught him a great deal, but they had amply demonstrated the truth of the old adage that it did no good to learn the names and habits of different kinds of rot because there would always be a new kind eating away at your possessions whenever you turned around. That, in a nutshell, is the story of my life, he reflected. In fact, that, in a nutshell, is the story of everybody's life, even though the vast majority of men fail to notice the fact- especially those who are privileged to live in a vast and vainglorious city like Xandria. Andris didn't like Xandria. He liked it even less than all the other ports which he had visited as he had made his slow way southwards across the Slithery Sea, and he was already regretting his decision to come here chasing a rumour which could hardly be expected to live up to his hopes even if it were true. Xandria was huge, and it had a city wall in frank defiance of what common men held to be the limits of practicability even in more temperate lands where stone had the grace to crumble at a relatively slow pace. Xandria's inhabitants thought they were the most civilised people in the world. Few of them had ever heard of Ferentina, but even those who had would undoubtedly consider it to be a stagnant backwater in the flowing stream of human history. In Ferentina, though, even tiny inns had solid chairs, tables whose four legs were all precisely the same length, and' serving girls. In Andris's view, there could be no firmer proof of the^ un civilised nature of a city and its people than the fact that the city contained, and its people gladly patronised, inns which did not employ serving girls. In the Wayfaring Tree a man had to carry his own ale, which was dispensed through a hatchway of such parsimonious dimensions that merely waiting to be served could easily take ten minutes. Andris didn't know why this was, but he was prepared to assume that it had something to do with the innkeeper's fear of being mobbed, choked and beaten black and blue when his patrons tasted the ale he served. In spite of the poor quality of the ale, the inn was crowded. Most of its patrons were sailor men from the various ships which were moored in the harbour, but there was a party of local bravos huddled about a table set in a covert on the other side of the staircase which led up to the rooms in the upper part of the house. Occasionally one or other of these bully-boys would dart a glance through one of the gaps between the slats of the stairway, as if to see whether Andris was trying to listen to their whispered conversation. The implied suspicion made Andris feel direly uncomfortable, even though he had not the least interest in whatever villainy they might be plotting. He wished that he had someone to talk to, so that he could immerse himself in a conversation of his own, but none of the sailor men were from the ship that had brought him to Xandria, and his tentative enquiries regarding the possible whereabouts of one Theo Zabio had so far met with no response. The table in the covert was not the only one from which glances were occasionally directed at Andris. At the other side of the room, close to the door which gave access to the waterfront, sat a group of ambers, whose skins were almost as pale as his own. He knew that this was mere coincidence, and that these other men were so- called dark landers from the great forest in the far south of what the Xandrians were pleased to think of as their empire. In all probability, he supposed, most of the other people in the room who were gold ens all, though some were so dark as almost to be reckoned bronze- took him for a dark lander in spite of the cut of his clothes. They had been very good clothes once, but six years of mending and patching had turned them into ragged travesties. In order to avoid the possibility of making accidental eye-contact with curious and suspicious gazes Andris studied the ceiling beams with a critical eye. In a place like this, every guest had good cause to wonder whether the ceiling of his bedroom might collapse while he was peacefully sleeping in his bunk. The beams looked solid enough, but it was easy to see where fresh paint had been applied to conceal the tell-tale blotches of softening decay. The stone pillars which supported the ends of the beams looked sturdier, with relatively few cracks and crevices, but there was clear enough evidence of patching for the informed eye to notice. The whole lot could go at any time, Andris thought, with a silent sigh. And there's a cellar too, subject to steady seepage if the taste of the ale's anything to go by. The whole edifice might crumble into its own soggy bowels, taking every one of us with it. Paradoxically, the uncheerful thought made him feel slightly better. The idea that all Xandria would one day crumble into dust and slide into the every-hungry sea made his personal plight seem less remarkable. His contemplation of the ceiling ended abruptly as his attention was caught by the unmistakable sound of trouble, borne kind of argument had started between the dark landers and the sailor men at the neighbouring table. Insults were being hurled back and forth in several different accents. Mercifully, no one was getting up to wave fists, let alone draw blades. Andris judged that it would probably die down soon enough. In any case, he was close to the bottom rung of the staircase; he could dash up to his room at a moment's notice should there be any need so to do. He stared into the murky depths of his ale. The tankard- which was glass, albeit of a crude kind- was showing the effects of some mysterious species of blight. The vessel didn't seem likely to break, but he didn't suppose that the bloom made the ale taste any better. His contemplation of the tankard's interior was interrupted by a sudden awareness that he was no longer alone. He jerked his head up to confront the man who was now standing beside the empty chair opposite his own. Andris would doubtless have offended the other with the fierceness of his stare had the man not been blind, but his eyes had been wrecked by some kind of disease which had turned the pupils milk-white and the whites blood-red. He was thin, and his clothes were in rags but he carried himself with a certain dignity and his ancient face was not unhandsome, apart from the terrible eyes. j "May I tell you a story," the ancient whispered, 'for the smallest and oldest coin you have. " ', Is this what I will be when I grow old? Andris thought, with a twinge of panic. The few coins which he had left were all small, and none had been minted within the last two years. "It'd be a bad bargain," he confessed. "You'll find richer men elsewhere in the room." "I hear them," the old man said. "But here there is silence, and sickness of heart. Here there is a need which I might meet." His accent was one which Andris did not know; he too must be a stranger in Xandria. Could he really judge the sickness of a heart from the quality of a pool of silence? "Perhaps there is," said Andris, not ungrudgingly. "Tell me a story, then- but tell me no tales of Xandria's noble kings and valiant heroes. I'd far rather hear a tale which might remind me of my childhood in a distant land." "I can't promise to awaken old memories," the ancient said, 'but I'll tell you the oldest tale I know. You might have heard it in the cradle even though you come from the far side of the world. " " I'll settle for that," Andris agreed. The old man sat down. He held himself very straight although the years must have weighed heavily upon him. He was at least thirty but it was evident that he still had pride in his work. He seemed to have been thoroughly versed in his dubious Art. When I'm old as well as destitute, Andris thought, J won't even have stories to trade for the coins I beg. "There is no destiny," said the old man softly, in the sonorous tone of one reciting words learned in the distant past and recited many times before. "The future cannot be foretold, but the world is pregnant with many possibilities. Some will be given birth and suckled with nourishing milk, and the strongest of these will grow to be things which are new not merely in the world but in the universe. "What will be new cannot be foreseen, but its shadow might be glimpsed in the fertile imagination. "There once came a Serpent into Idun, which brought the gift of a tree whose fruit had knowledge of good and evil, and the forefathers bought the tree with promises they could not fulfill. / will make you a gift of my blood, the Serpent said, and hope that you will use it wisely. The forefathers accepted the gift, and made a further promise they could not fulfill. We shall return this gift a thousand fold they said, if only we can use it wisely. "There also came a Salamander into Idun, which brought the gift of a tree whose fruit had knowledge of another kind, and the forefathers bought the tree with coin the Salamander could not spend. I will make you a gift of the fire in my heart, the Salamander said, and hope that it might warm you. The forefathers accepted this gift, and gave the Salamander another unspendable coin. We shall return this gift a thousand fold they said, if we can only feel its warmth. " Serpents die, and Salamanders too, and the people of the world brought death with them when they first descended from the sky, but if ever the world is devoid of Serpents or Salamanders men will have cause to mourn. Better by far that the promises their forefathers made might one day be fulfilled, and the coin they paid might one day be spent. Milk that is given to the nourishment of Serpents and Salamanders is already owed, and does not go to waste. "There is no destiny. The future cannot be foreknown, but the human mind is pregnant with many designs, some of which may be realised if only the necessary instruments can be devised and forged. " We cannot know today what we might discover tomorrow, but the scheming mind should make what provision it can. Remember this, for it is a truth as vital as any in the lore. " For a second or two, Andris didn't realise that the recitation was over. Was that the whole of the story f he thought. Was it a story at all? The blind man clearly believed that it was; he now had the manner of one who had just imparted a valuable secret. Andris reached into the money-pouch attached to his belt, and took a coin at random. He held it out to the old man for several seconds before it dawned on him that the gesture was futile. He reached across the table to pick up the man's left hand with his own, and solemnly placed the coin in the palm. "It's neither Xandrian nor fresh," he admitted apologetically. "Thank you," said the old man. "Was the story to your satisfaction? Had you heard it before, long ago? " "Only the beginning and the end," Andris told him, 'and not all parts of a story. We cannot know today what we might discover tomorrow, but the scheming mind should make what provision it can is a popular saying in my homeland, but the passages concerning the Serpent and the Salamander are new to me. In Ferentina, no man has ever seen a Serpent or a Salamander. I hear that Serpents, at least, can sometimes be seen in Xandria. " "They never come to the city," the old man said, 'but I have heard that they can sometimes be seen in the western regions of the empire. " He stressed the words heard and seen very faintly. " If your story is from the Lore of Genesys," Andris said thoughtfully, 'it's strange that I've never heard it in full. I thought the storytellers of Ferentina were thoroughly versed in that particular set of legends." "It's from the Apocrypha of Genesys," the blind man informed him. "We had many forefathers, and they gave us more gifts than most of us know. Goran made the lore for everyone, but his brothers took care to communicate their own wisdom to a select few." "Oh," Andris said un enthusiastically "You mean the secret commandments and all that occult rubbish." He regretted it immediately, realising that if the blind man could recite mock mythology with evident respectfulness he might be a firm believer in all that occult rubbish. He would have apologised, but at that moment the argument between the dark landers and their neighbours erupted again, and this time there was little time wasted in mere insult. Within a few seconds- far more quickly than Andris would have thought possible- the dark landers were on their feet, lashing out this way and that with hands and feet alike. Three tables and a dozen chairs went tumbling over, followed by a cacophony of shattering glass. Through the open doorway of the inn rushed a member of the king's guard, red-skirted and brightly helmed. He hadn't drawn his sword; his empty hands were raised in a placatory fashion, and his clear intention was to nip the trouble in the bud. Alas, he was already too late. He was immediately swallowed up by the violence. Andris stood up, the first thought in his mind being that he ought to protect the blind man. "Quickly," he said. "Up the staircase!" But the blind man didn't move- because, of course, he didn't know where the staircase was. Andris stood up and reached out his hand, intending to take the blind man by the arm and lead him away to safety, but he was rudely interrupted. Other men had their eyes on the steps and their thoughts on escape, including the bravos who had huddled about the table in the alcove beneath the slanting staircase. All of a sudden those men were jostling Andris and his companion, trying to shove them both out of the way. The blind man's chair was overturned and the table too. The table knocked the blind man over as it fell, spilling Andris's sour ale all over his grey rags. The insult and injury done to the meek story-teller inflamed Andris's anger rather more than the loss of the unappetising beer, but he still had sufficient presence of mind to curb his temper. When he turned to grapple with the men who were ambitious to swarm up the stairway he had no intention of hitting or hurting anyone; like the guardsman he merely wished to restore a semblance of order to the incipient chaos. He never got the chance to speak or to take constructive action. The biggest of the conspirators- who was a little wider than Andris, though not as tall- was already intent on thrusting him out of the way. He barged forward and sent Andris ^spinning sideways, away from the bottom stair. Andris would probably have tripped over one of the lesser men and fallen down had it not been for the fact that he met another man coming the other way, who had apparently been hurled with even greater force. This proved to be the guardsman who had tried unsuccessfully to break up the fight as it started. Andris grabbed hold of the guardsman and the guardsman grabbed hold of him, as both of them struggled to stay upright. Their eyes met for a moment and Andris saw- or thought he saw- a glimmer of understanding. At any rate, the guardsman made no attempt to strike Andris, and they released one another at exactly the same time. They wanted to turn in opposite directions- Andris towards the stairway and the soldier towards the area where half a dozen amber dark landers were lashing out among a crowd of thirty or forty gold ens now including at least one more guardsman- but neither of them was able to follow his intention through. The big man who had shoved Andris had picked up the table at which Andris had been seated, and he brought its heavy top across in a vicious arc aimed at the heads of the amber and the guardsman. ; Andris, who had the advantage of being able to see it coming, ducked. The guardsman, who was looking the other way, took the edge of the table square on the back of his head. The guardsman went down as if he had been pole-axed. Andris would have escaped unhurt if only the table had not had its legs still firmly attached, but one of them caught him in the ribs as he tried to shrink into an impossibly small space, and jarred him horribly. While he gasped in pain the big man turned the table sideways, lifted it up- rather inelegantly, but with considerable dexterity- and brought it crashing down on the fallen guardsman. Had the table's edge struck the man's head again it would have killed him, but it struck his leg instead. Again, one of the table-legs- of which only two now remained attached- hit Andris, this time just beneath the hip. The impact redoubled Andris's agony and spun him around, 10 with his limbs in a terrible tangle. When he fell, trying unsuccessfully to embrace his ribs with one hand and his thigh with the other, he somehow contrived to fall upon the upended tabletop, which was now sandwiched between his own body and that of the soldier. The wind had been knocked out of him, and he had to fight desperately hard to draw air into his reluctant lungs. He was still there several minutes later, cursing his luck and nursing his injuries, when two other guardsmen seized him, and told him that he was under arrest. By this time, the men who had been fighting for access to the stairway had disappeared, having presumably made their escape. The stricken guardsman and the blind story-teller were both stretched out on the flagstoned floor, unconscious and barely breathing. It occured to Andris, somewhat belatedly, that he might be in deep trouble. A. Z the dark lander suffered his fifth and final seizure shortly after the nineteenth hour. That, at least, was the time according to Ereleth's red-striped candle; a glance out of the window at the brightly shining stars suggested to her that the candle might be as much as half an hour slow, but she certainly wasn't about to summon an astronomer to make an accurate time-check. Witchery was work that required to be done in secret- preferably in a high attic with a single narrow window and a low dark-beamed ceiling, just like the room they were in. The last seizure was by no means as spectacular as the earlier ones. The dark lander had nothing left in his stomach to bring up but clotted blood, and insufficient strength in his aged muscles to sustain violent convulsions. His colour was quite ghastly. Being a dark lander he had started out pale, but now his flesh was almost ds white as his hair, the colour of new sailcloth. His open eyes were bulging out of their sockets, like two great glass beads with a bad case of vitric rot. Ereleth didn't waste much time watching the dying man's convulsions. She was far more interested in watching the Princess Lucrezia's reaction to his unlovely death. So far, Lucrezia's response had been all that could be expected, and Ereleth was not disappointed now. The expression in the young woman's eye was one of fascinated but dispassionate interest; her gaze was intense but clinical, and her lovely features were flushed with a purely intellectual excitement. By contrast, the features of the giant who stood on the far side of the couch looked as if they had been carved out of stone; her eyes too might have been made out of glass. The giant was no longer a stranger to this room, although she had to duck under the beams every time she took a step, but she had not become used to such 12 sights; her awe and her anxiety remained as powerful as ever. But she was only a guard, not an apprentice witch. Lucrezia is the one, Ereleth told herself, feeling that the statement was the final confirmation of something she had known for a long time, something which had long been determined. This is the best and truest instrument that I have forged. This is my appointed heir. She's no child of Belin's, despite that he's her father, but something wholly and exclusively mine. The last thought brought a slight frown to her face, because Belin naturally saw things differently. According to Ereleth's spies, he had recently taken advice from his pettifogging ministers which bade him arrange a marriage for his twenty-second daughter even though she was still forty days short of her seventh birthday: a marriage to the prince of Shaminzara. Ereleth had not the slightest idea why Sharminzara should suddenly have entered so forcefully into the ministers' calculation of the delicate balance of political power within Xandria's sphere of influence, but she had made it her business to find out what kind of place it was. According to the patient tally men who kept count of the empire's possessions, Shaminzara was an isle fully five hundred kirns distant, which measured barely sixty kirns by fifty- five, so desolate as to be well-nigh treeless. It had only a single harbour and was reputed to be a favourite haunt of pirates. It wasn't the kind of place in which a young queen might be able to develop her own ambitions; nor was it the kind of place in which a young witch might find adequate scope for the exercise of her Art. "Did I not tell you?" said Ereleth softly, lacing her fingers together and cracking her ancient knuckles. "Dead in five hours. A small enough dosage to be easily disguised, and no known antidote. It never fails." The princess made a slight sound of disgust. "It took him five hours," she said warily. "He must have been at least twenty-five, and he spent the last fifteen of them working on the wall. The only reason the seneschal released him to us was that he was no longer capable of lifting a fair-sized pebble or mixing smooth cement. He wanted to die. We need far better subjects if these experiments are to be reliable. If I'm ever to use the Art in earnest I need to know how to measure the effect of the poisons on men who are strong and desperate to live." "Your father has better uses for men like that," Ereleth said wryly. "We all have- or would have, given half thecnance." She laughed lewdly. "In this case, believe me, the condition of the subject makes no difference." Privately, however, she thought: The child has a good mind. She is determined to take nothing on trust which can be tested. Not one of her sisters showed such promise- but those who have Serpent's blood have a natural aptitude for witchery. Ereleth, who had never borne a child herself, had been mentor lo half a dozen of Lucrezia's half-sisters before her; the tricks of poisoning and the corollary tricks of healing the poisoned- had long been considered valuable in the Xandrian royal family. Custom dictated that every king of Xandria should have at least one witch-wife, and should always let it be known- discreetly, of course- that any one of his daughters might have been trained in such skills. The alliances sealed and cemented by their marriages were just that bit stronger when tinged with a little anxiety. Many teachers, Ereleth knew, would have construed the princess's scepticism as an insult to their teaching, and to the lore itself, but Ereleth too had never been prepared to take entirely on trust that which had been handed down to her by her own mentor. The experiments which she had undertaken in the course of a long lifetime had disclosed several significant inaccuracies in the traditional lore, which she had been careful to take aboard. She was too clever and too proud to be one of those over-devout lore keepers who assumed that if reality would not conform with what she had been taught then reality must be at fault; she was, after all, a keeper of the secret commandments, loyal to a higher authority than the king of Xandria. Ereleth's own mentor, in the course of her diplomatic career, had never had cause to use more than half a dozen of the several hundred poisons whose properties she 'knew'. She had lived in quiet times, and had not been blessed with the gift of curiosity. Ereleth had lived in quiet times too, but she had always taken care to make more liberal and varied use of what she knew, partly for art's sake but mainly to make sure that what she had been taught was actually true. It was all very well to have a profound respect for the first commandment of Goran the Forefather "The only sin is forgetfulness' but the lore was no more immune to disease 14 and decay than anything else in the world. The most insidious form of forgetfulness was surely the slow poison of cumulative error which was gradually corrupting every one of the Four Hundred Arts. The stink of the dead dark lander was becoming overpowering, but Lucrezia's fascination kept her by his side. Ereleth noted that the princess was still prepared to lean over the corpse in order to make minute inspection of the effects of the poison she had fed him. Her curiosity was indefatigable. The giant maintained her position too, but in her case it was duty and determination that would not let her turn away. Ereleth approved of duty and determination in servants; they were qualities as valuable in their way as intelligence and curiosity in lore keepers This particular guard- her name was Dhalla -- was the one Ereleth co-opted to help in all her quiet work. Lucrezia liked her, and the fondness seemed to be reciprocated. "It is as well to be comfortable in the presence of death, my child," Ereleth said approvingly. "Ours is classified as an Art Political rather than an Art Chemical, and its exercise has as much to do with reputation and mystique as it has with healing or execution, but a poisoner must not be over wary of the fruits of her endeavours. Learn to love the stink of putrefaction, provided that you are the cause of it." Lucrezia straightened herself, and smiled. She had a deceptively sweet smile. Like her mother- who had died in childbed trying to bear Belin a second son, when Lucrezia was less than a year old- she was slender, with finely drawn features, but she was wiry and had a good measure of strength to support her perennial stubbornness. Her eyes were dark, almost black in the lamplight whose yellow radiance supplemented the white light of the blazing stars, but they gleamed with a moistness which a mere man might mistake for tenderness. "Get rid of that," Ereleth said to Dhalla, pointing to the dead man. "He has told us all he can." Dhalla promptly knelt down to fold the corpse into the white shroud on which it lay. She picked it up without any evident effort. She had to set it down in order to unlock the door, and then again to close the door behind her, but she did her work with consummate efficiency. "I need a stronger man than that for the other test, Lucrezia said pensively, as the sound of Dhalla's footsteps on the stair died away. "Only one of the Hyry Keshvara's seeds remains, and while the one to which I gave the dog refuses to bear flower or fruit I dare not waste the third on another diseased and enfeebled wreck of a human being. I must persuade my father to release a suitable host." Ereleth approved of the direction her pupil's train of thought had taken, and of the spirit that inspired her, but she could not help but feel a slight pang of anxiety about this particular experiment. Because Keshvara traded with the Apu she had long been a useful supplier of the materials Ereleth required to maintain her stock of potions, many of which originated in the dark lands Ereleth had encouraged Lucrezia's acquaintance with the woman, and had been pleased by the way in which the princess's admiration for the adventuress had nourished the discontent which inevitably afflicted the daughters of a Xandrian king as they grew to adolescence within the constricting security of the citadel's Inner Sanctum. But she had not expected Keshvara to bring gifts of an unprecedented and highly unusual kind, and strange stories with them. It was not that she could not see the possible significance of such an event, nor that she had no confidence in her own competence to respond to such a challenge, but Lucrezia's education was far from complete. One more year might make all the difference. On the other hand, if the king really were planning to send her to Shaminzara . . . "The bush might take a year to put forth flowers," Ereleth pointed out. "I fear that you might not have the time to see it bloom. Rumour has it that your father has plans for you." "My father's plans be damned," Lucrezia retorted carelessly. "I've not the least intention of being shipped off to some petty island kingdom in order to be locked away in a prison narrower by far than this one, to serve as child bearer to some brutal protector of pirates. I'm worth infinitely more than that." Ereleth was slightly taken aback by this- not because she disapproved of the sentiment but because Lucrezia hadn't had to ask what she was talking about. The princess must have begun to cultivate her own network of spies- presumably working through her maidservent, Monalen, and Dhalla. Ereleth wondered whether she ought to caution her pupil against indiscretion. The 16 room was secure against eavesdroppers, but such sentiments should not have been spoken aloud within the Sanctum. She decided that there were more important things which needed to be said. "I will do what I can to persuade the king's ministers that you are too young to go to Shaminzara and might do far more for the empire in days to come if you were allowed to complete your education. All that is true- but there are other reasons why it is necessary that you and I should not be separated now. There is work for us to do." Lucrezia could not, of course, know what she meant but Ereleth was nevertheless surprised by her reaction. "I'm heartily sick of that work too," the princess said, with defiant frankness. "I've a burning desire to do something new, something of my own. You can have no idea of the fervour which thrills me when I listen to Hyry Keshvara telling me of her adventures in the Spangled Desert and the Forest of Absolute Night. How I envy that woman!" "You shouldn't," said Ereleth mildly. "It's one thing to travel the world as a princess, with men-at-arms beside you and the implicit might of Xandria behind you, and quite another to travel as a petty trader, ever vulnerable to robbery and rape." "Keshvara seems to evade such fates readily enough." "Keshvara is by no means handsome and by no means rich," Ereleth pointed out. "I disagree." Lucrezia's voice had all the stubborn authority of a princess born and bred. "She may not dress in silks and she wears her hair uncommonly short, but she has fine, strong features- hers is not a conventional womanly beauty, I'll grant, but her face is finer by far than the one worn by that supposedly handsome popinjay of a guard-captain who persists in staring at me from his lofty coign of vantage while I work in the garden. As for riches, she has the wealth of knowledge and experience, and a desperately keen eye for precious things. Did you see the way her eyes lit up when she described how she came across the seeds from the far side of the Dragomite Hills? Did you see what a fever burned her while she spoke of gathering an expedition to find the road into the unknown? " Ereleth had indeed seen those signs, but it was the content of Keshvara's account which had disturbed her, not the manner of its delivery. "I believe that she was intending to serve as a recruit.in someone else's expedition," Ereleth said, thinking that it migntbe wise to dampen the princess's inflamed romanticism, 'and the overwhelming likelihood is that the road she intends to follow will lead nowhere but oblivion. Even if the seeds were really brought across the Dragomite Hills, that doesn't mean that any man might now cross them with impunity. " "If anyone can do it," Lucrezia said firmly, "Hyry Keshvara can." "I wish her the very best of luck," Ereleth said, with only the faintest hint of sarcasm, 'but you and I have a kind of wisdom which urges us to make more careful plans- and to make more extensive enquiries first. Even when time presses, the wise are patient. " " You've led a very patient life, I know," Lucrezia replied, obviously conscious other rudeness in saying so but determined to say it nevertheless. "But I hope you'll forgive me if I say that I would not like to live as you have lived. I don't want to be married off to some princeling, whether I remain my father's instrument or become a true witch-wife. I don't want to be a prisoner, condemned to rot quietly while I pass on the lore to my own daughters and stepdaughters. " Is that really how she sees me? Ereleth thought. But then, how could she possibly see me otherwise, when she is not yet party 1,0 the deeper secrets of the lore? "I have not always been a prisoner," she said aloud, rather stiffly, remembering the time when she had been free, before Belin had married her- not to bed, but to fill a space which tradition required to be filled. "I have lived in those dark lands which Keshvara merely visits. I know the Apu better than she does, although twenty years have passed since I learned their lore. I have ambition yet, for myself as well as my most precious pupil." "I know you have," Lucrezia said, not ungently. "But how will you ever escape these high walls which surround us both? I doubt that my father would ever let you go, although he might easily set one of my sisters in your place, now that you have trained so many. I wonder that you'd want to go, given that you've been here so long." Does she think I'm too old to cope with the world beyond the walls? Ereleth said to herself sourly. Do / seem so feeble in body 18 and mind? Has she no imagination, to see beyond appearances to what I really am? But how can she read signs of which she knows nothing? How can she know secrets which I have been careful to keep, even from her? "You do not know me," she said brusquely. "Nor do you know yourself, as yet. I have a clearer idea of what you are and what you might be than you have yourself. You must trust my judgment in such matters." In the past, her authority had always sufficed to subdue her pupil's awkward moods, but it did not seem sufficient now. "Must I?" she retorted. "My whole life, it seems, is governed by musts. I must do as my father wills; I must do what my teacher advises; I must do what tradition demands. I must do all these things, even when they conflict. I'd gladly trade every privilege I'm heir to for the one which Keshvara has: the privilege of being free." "You don't understand," Ereleth said, knowing how unsatisfactory a statement it was, and how hollow it would sound in Lucrezia's ear, even though it had the advantage of truth. "I understand far more than you think," the girl replied forlornly. "I know what I am, and what I want to be." If only you did, Ereleth thought. If only you could. Lucrezia had turned away after finishing her statement, unable to sustain her defiance as resolutely as she might have wished. She crossed the room to the window, and opened the casement so that she could suck in the warm air of the summer night. Ereleth joined her gratefully. The unpleasant odour of the corpse still lingered in the air of the claustrophobic chamber, and had long since ceased to serve as a useful challenge. The sky was very clear, and the calm back cloth against which the vivid flame stars were set scintillated with the silver dust of fainter lights. On nights such as this it was possible to see as well as one could in the dingy light of a cloudy winter day. Starlight had always seemed to Ereleth to be infinitely preferable- on the grounds of being far more intricate and far more beautiful- to the blue curtain of daylight which danced attendance on the imperious sun. The chamber was set so high that they could see over the crenellated rim of the lowest section of the citadel wall. The waters of the great harbour were visible beyond the green-fronded rooftops, sparkling with reflected starlight. "On calm days and nights," Lucrezia said, 'the opense^ must be like a vast sheet of shimmering glass: a mirror to catch me image of infinity. " It was hardly an original thought, Ereleth knew. The sea was described in similar terms in a hundred romantic tales which the young princess must have heard over and over again from her nurses, her elder sisters and her maidservants. But such ways of seeing, and the ways of thinking they reflected, were precious things which needed to be protected, and cherished, for the sake of maintaining a sense of wonder. "It is, daughter," she said, as softly and lovingly as she could. "That's exactly what it is." 20 a ndris studied the examining magistrate carefully while the clerk read out the charges against him. He was dark for a golden, as many Xandrians were almost sailor man dark- although his hair and beard were going grey. He was tall, too- perhaps tall enough to resent the fact that Andris was a good three sims taller. At least he's old, Andris thought. My best hope is that he's experienced enough in the ways of the world to know the difference between a cultivated man from the far north and a forest savage. If only I can reason with him . . . He stirred restlessly. The heavy steel shackles which were clasped about his ankles always settled at an awkward angle when he stood still, and they had chafed the flesh so that any sustained pressure quickly became painful. The shackles were purely symbolic- lust rust had weakened the links of the chain strung between them to the point where at least half of them would shatter if he kicked out forcefully but he knew better than to oppose their grip. The last thing he needed was to have attempting to escape and damaging crown property added to the list of his supposed crimes. Apart from the magistrate, the clerk and Andris, the only other people present in the examination room were three soldiers. One had been set to guard him, and had been with him ever since he had been brought out of the cells beneath the harbour master office. The other two a sergeant and a captain were presumably here as witnesses. The sergeant was lean and grizzled; he looked as if he had been a soldier all his life. The captain was very young and very neat; he looked as if he had been recruited within the ten day Andris remembered seeing both of them when he had been arrested. He was mildly disturbed, but not unduly surprised, to find that the guardsman who had been knocked unconscious was not present. All the other prisoners had been brought in before him; evidently they had told their stories and received their sentences. There had been eight in all eight, at least, who had shared the harbour master cells with him. Four were dark landers and four were sailors from various far-flung shores of the Slithery Sea. The room seemed much too large for such a small gathering. There were rows of wooden benches on either side of the dock, presumably placed there for the use of onlookers as well as witnesses, but they were deserted now. The detritus of waterfront brawls were presumably of little enough public interest even at the best of times, and the hour was now uncomfortably close to the midday doldrums. The magistrate would doubtless be enthusiastic to get things over and done with, so that he might go to his bed. Andris noticed, however, that the proceedings were not entirely unobserved. A series of observation-slits had been cut into the wall behind the magistrate, so that watchers in some covert or corridor beyond could peer in without exposing more of themselves than their curious eyes. Someone was lurking behind one of the slits, quietly looking on. Andris wished that there were more people present. He was extremely conscious of being alone and friendless, and h(s apprehension was heightened by the fact that he had no idea how the law-courts of Xandria functioned. According to the oft-quoted wisdom of Goran the Forefather the law was the law throughout the world, but Andris -- who had reason enough to believe that he had seen but a tiny fraction of the world- had not found it so. If there ever had been a man named Goran, who really had said all the things he was supposed to have said, he must have lived a very long time ago, when the affairs of men ran far more smoothly than they did nowadays. "What have you to say to these charges, dark lander said the magistrate, when the clerk had finished. "I beg your pardon, sir, but I'm not a dark lander Andris said. His scrupulous politeness was wasted; the magistrate frowned resentfully. "You are the Andris Myrasol to whom the charges refer, are you not?" he said. "That's my name," Andris confirmed patiently. "And to those 22 who know names it reveals clearly enough that I'm not a dark lander My skin is pale because I come from Ferentina in the far north, nearly two thousand kirns beyond the opposite shore of the Slithery Sea. I'm a civilised man, as you are. " He added the last comment by way of diplomatic flattery, but it seemed to go to waste. "You were arrested in the company of dark landers the magistrate pointed out. "There were dark landers in the room," Andris admitted, 'but I wasn't with them. I was sitting at a different table, and I wasn't involved in any way with the fight which broke out. I'm innocent of all the charges. " The clerk whispered something in the magistrate's ear. "All the men I have so far questioned say that you were involved in the fight," the magistrate said. "All of them have said that they saw you grappling with Guardsman Herriman, and that it was you who struck him with the table at which you had been sitting." With a sinking heart, Andris remembered the long hours spent in the harbour master cells and all the whispered conversations that had gone on around him. The dark landers and sailors seemed to have settled their own differences by agreeing that he was the most suitable candidate to take all of the blame. He looked around at the two guardsmen, neither of whom was making any protest. "Have you asked the guardsman who was hurt?" he said. "Did he say I hit him?" The magistrate looked at the officer, who stiffened slightly. "Herriman's in the hospital, sir," he said. "He's unfit to attend these proceedings, having sustained a broken leg and severe concussion. He did come round for a few minutes, but he was only able to say that he was hit from behind and couldn't see who did it." The magistrate's dark eyes settled on Andris again. "What about the story-teller?" Andris asked desperately. "He was at my table." This time it was the sergeant who answered. "There was another man injured, sir," he said. "A pauper. He was able to walk once he came round, and wasn't taken to hospital. I have no idea what happened to him, but he wouldn't be much use as a witness- he was blind." The magistrate turned to Andris again. "Are you saying that all the other witnesses are lying?" he asked silkily. "Yes," Andris said firmly. ^; "I saw him grappling with Herriman myself, sir, said the sergeant quickly. "Just out the corner of my eye, like, while I was trying to sort things out but I did see it." "Is Sergeant Purkin lying?" the magistrate asked Andris. "No, sir," said Andris swiftly. "He's mistaken. The guardsman and I did collide for a moment. He was pushed towards me just as I was pushed towards him. We had to hold on to one another to keep our balance." It sounded feeble even to him, although it was the truth, and he was quick to add: "I'm sure that the man who was injured will confirm this, if you'll only wait until he's able to give his evidence." The magistrate didn't seem disposed to listen to any plea for more time. It was perfectly plain he wanted to get this over with as soon as possible. "There was a big man," Andris said desperately. "Heavyset. Almost as big as me, but not quite as tall. He and several others were desperate to get away up the staircase to the bedrooms. I just happened to be in their way that's why they shoved me. It was the big man who picked up the table and hit us with it. He hit me as well as the guardsman- I can show you the bruises." "Make a note of the fact that the man has bruises," the magistrate said to the clerk, without showing the slightest interest it^ inspecting them, 'even though he denies being involved in the^ brawl. " , "They're just trying to put the blame on me because I'm a foreigner," Andris complained. "They decided to say I hit the guardsman just in case someone tried to put the blame on them." "All of the arrested men are foreigners," the magistrate pointed out. "But not from as far away as me- and they all knew each other ... at least, the dark landers knew one another and so did the men they were fighting." "And yet both sets of former disputants now agree that you caused Trooper Herriman's injuries," the magistrate observed, as though it were a point of immense significance. "You are, I suppose, a prince of your own land?" Andris was so startled by the change of tack that he failed to notice the sarcasm in the remark. 24 "As a matter of fact," he said, 'yes. " The magi state let out a short, barking laugh. The clerk tittered. Sergeant Purkin smiled in a way that was both ironic and predatory. "It's strange," said the magistrate, 'that the further away visitors to Xandria hail from, the higher their rank seems to be. No matter how shabby their clothing might appear, nor how ill-supplied their purses, they always turn out to be princes. " Or to put it another way, Andris thought dismally, we think we just caught you out in a whopping lie, and we're not going to believe a single word you say. "It doesn't matter what I once was," he said desperately. "I arrived in Xandria a poor man, hoping to find a kinsman of mine who left my homeland many years ago. A merchant in one of the northern ports told me that he'd come here. I took a room in the Wayfaring Tree while I made my enquiries. I was just sitting by the staircase, with the story-teller, when a riot broke out. I had no quarrel with anyone. . except, perhaps, with the man who did hit the guardsman, who'd already caused some injury and distress to my companion, the blind man. " "What's the name of this kinsman for whom you're supposedly searching?" the magistrate asked. "Theo Zabio. I understand he came south across the Slithery Sea some twelve or fifteen years ago." "Have you ever heard of a man named Theo Zabio, Captain Cerri?" the magistrate asked. "Never," said the officer, slightly unhappily. No reason why you should, Andris thought. You can't have been born twelve years ago. "I think this is all nonsense," the magistrate said sternly. "Whether you're a dark lander or not, it seems that you behave like a dark lander I see no reason whatsoever to doubt the word of all these witnesses. I find you guilty as charged, on all counts." The sanctimonious bastard, Andris thought. It's the same wherever you go. Always put the blame on the foreigner, and if you have a choice go for the big one. I should never have crossed the Slithery Sea. I should never have come south at all. What was wrong with west or east? Why should I expect Theo Zabio to be interested in me, just because he's my uncle? All my other uncles would have stabbed me in the back as soon as look at me. "I'm sorry, sir," he said, keeping his voice very levelmspite of the ashen taste in his mouth, 'but the witnesses are mistaken. That's understandable- it was a very confused situation. But the fact is that I didn't hit anybody, least of all the guardsman. This isn't fair. In my own land, I'd be allowed to see and hear my accusers give evidence, and I'd be allowed an advocate too. " "This is Xandria," the magistrate told him coldly. "Advocates cost money, and you hadn't enough in your pouches to hire a donkey-driver. How, exactly, did you intend to make a living here? What training do you have? " Andris wondered briefly whether he could possibly get away with a flat lie, but decided that it was best not to weave too tangled a web of deceits, even though he knew that even a half-honest answer would probably bring forth more laughter. "My primary training is in the Arts Geographical," he said uncomfortably. He had, indeed, been intensively educated in that subject, although his primary training- and almost all his actual experience- had been in the Arts Martial, which he thought it best not to admit in the present circumstances. Unfortunately, the Arts Geographical were held in very low esteem in these parts, because the maps which had been drummed into his memory with such great care were held by every man who sailed the Slithery Sea or knew its shores to be utterly unreliable. "You must understand, sir," he was quick to add, 'that insofar as they relate to the nations of the far north, the Arts Geographical are far more congruent with reality than they seem to be in these parts. " "If that's the case," the magistrate said, reverting to his silkily menacing tone, 'it's surprising that you've strayed so far from the lands where your education is of use to you. I ask again- how did you intend to make your living here? And how do you propose to pay the debt that you now owe His Royal Highness King Belin of Xandria? " "It's not so very surprising, sir," Andris said, fighting to keep calm even though he knew this was a losing battle. He tried desperately to think of a story which might be believable. "When the maps which trading nations know are inadequate to their purposes, their noblemen become interested in making new and better maps- and who else but a mapmaker could they send forth to do such work? In Ferentina there's considerable curiosity about 26 the Slithery Sea, the Thousand Islands and legendary Xandria. I've known the name of Xandria since infancy, sir, and have known too that the lore I learned had misplaced it. I came here in the hope that my kinsman Theo Zabio might help me to amend my faulty lore, so that I could return to Ferentina with news which might be to the benefit of our merchants- and of yours. I beg you to let me do that work." The magistrate's face had become stony. He was not in the least interested in the follies of foreign map makers "Have you any money, other than that which was found on your person?" he asked- displaying, Andris bitterly observed, the skill which men of justice the world over had for getting to the true heart of a matter. "None," he admitted, while his sinking heart attained the utmost depths of its private abyss. "My coin amounts to three crowns, I believe- but I have my colours and brushes in my pack at the inn, and some other goods . . ." "He had but two crowns and a quarter," the clerk interrupted dutifully. Andris shook his head angrily, bur knew that it was useless to protest. Corrosion allowances were generous around the shores of Slithery Sea, where even gold could not be expected to last more than a few years unless a man had a very cunning purse. "The fine for incapacitating a guardsman," the magistrate said, 'is eight hundred crowns. The lesser charges bring the sum to nine hundred and ninety. The interest for delayed payment is one per cent per ten day "But I didn't do it," Andris said doggedly. "Your guilt has already been determined," the magistrate told him unceremoniously. "Given that your education is worthless, I think it best if you pay off the debt under the supervision of the king's stone masons "I'm trained in the Arts Martial too!" Andris said swiftly- but the magistrate only favoured him with a grim smile, as if he had contradicted yet again his earlier claims to have been uninvolved in the brawl. Anxious to find a more profitable course of action, Andris said: "Don't I have any right of appeal? Is there no way I can delay matters until you can hear the guardsman's testimony?" ^7 The magistrate sighed. "If you decide to go to prison^' he said, 'one crown will be added to your debt for every day you spend there." "You mean it costs money to go to jail in Xandria?" said Andris, in genuine astonishment. The magi state smile broadened, albeit in a somewhat lack lustre fashion. "Xandria," he said unctuously, 'has been a civilised nation for a hundred thousand years. That is why its name is known even to the superstitious geographers of Ferentina. Its jails are comfortable, its prisoners well-fed- for which reason we must discourage our prisoners from staying there too long when they could be much more usefully employed in repairing the walls which secure Xandria's place as the greatest nation in the world. The rate of pay for indentured stone workers is three crowns a day, but the interest payable on your fine will initially take up a third of that, once you actually start. Would you like me to summon a mathematician to work out the exact time of your service? " Andris thought of himself as a fair arithmetician, by laymen's standards, and felt in no need of a number-wise magician to tell him that the magistrate was talking in terms of four hundred days and more. "You call this civilised?" he said, allowing his anger to show because he could no longer hold it in check. "No wonder no one from Ferentina ever came here before- or ever went back to tell their story, if they did. Do I have the right of appeal or do I not?" "Your only right of appeal is the right to a petition for a royal pardon," the magistrate said, in an ominously self-satisfied fashion, 'and the administrative charge levied on a failed royal petition is a hundred crowns. I must warn you, too, that the likelihood of your petition being heard within the next few ten days is slight. The king is a very busy man. " "Any man who keeps more than thirty wives would be!" Andris snapped unwisely he judged when he saw the reaction of the clerk. The magistrate, no longer smiling in any fashion at all, said: "I'm bound to point out that you have just committed a further offence, for which I ought to fine you another ten crowns. Given that you're a foreigner and clearly, a barbarian- I shall overlook the 28 matter this time, but I urge you to show proper respect in future. Now, do you wish to go to jail in order to wait until a petition can be heard, or will you start your term of indentured labour immediately? It would be much better for you, in the long run, were you to take the latter option. " Andris had not the slightest desire to rush into a career as a stone worker labourer, and he was in no mood to make complicated calculations as to the extra time he would have to spend on the wall in exchange for a few ten days in prison. "I'll go to jail," he said obstinately. "I want to petition for that royal pardon- and I want the captain here to ask his man what he thinks about the question of who hit him." "We already know the answer to that," the magistrate said icily. "He couldn't see, because he was struck from behind, in a cowardly fashion. There's no possibility whatsoever of my verdict being overturned- and I must point out that the king has the right to increase your fine as well as imposing further administrative charges. At this rate, you'll be working on the wall for life." "I only want justice," said Andris sourly, knowing even as he said it that his chances of ever receiving it or anything like it- were vanishingly small. I'm as good as dead, he thought. Dead and buried before turning thirteen-and for what? A moment's pity for a blind story-teller who hadn't anything more interesting to relate than fake sequels to the oldest and rottenest myths in the world. This is what seeing the world amounts to: a slow descent into misery and degradation, to end as a virtual slave two thousand kirns from home. What a rotting city! What a rotting life! "Take him away," said the magistrate. The silent guardsman took him by the arm. Andris had no alternative but to shuffle off, dragging his absurdly corroded chains behind him. As he paused by the door he looked back at the novice captain, who had the grace to blush slightly. Whether the blush was in sympathy for the injustice of the court's treatment of an innocent man or resentment of the angry stare with which the condemned man sought to wither him Andris didn't care to speculate. f\70V don't suppose," Jacom Cerri said to Sergeant Purkin, I as they threaded their way through the crowded street beneath the fiery afternoon sun, 'that the amber might have been telling the truth?" "Naw," said Purkin, in that infuriatingly worldly wise way he had. "All dark landers are liars. Don't even know the meaning of the word truth. Can't believe a word they say, sir take my word for it." Jacom hated the way that the old soldier had of patron ising him, always contriving to imply that he was a country-born babe in arms who desperately needed to be educated in the ways of the city and of the world. It wouldn't have been so bad had Jacom been sufficiently confident that it wasn't so, but the few short ten days he had been in the city had made him keenly aware of the sheltered nature of his upbringing. (' When his father had bought him a commission in the king's guard he had fondly imagined that he would spend most of his time about the court, looking handsome' and being gallant. Nobody had told him that the harbour patrol fell into the guard's jurisdiction rather than that of the constabulary or the militia, or that he would have to exert himself in such undesirable occupations as breaking up tavern brawls. The huge amber had been his very first arrest, and the mere fact of it made him feel uncomfortable and somehow dirty. The possibility that he had got it wrong and might be found out was too horrible to bear. He desperately wanted to prove himself to his father, to his commanding officer, to the king. . . but most of all, at least for the moment, to Sergeant Purkin and the men in his command. "But he isn't a dark lander is he?" Jacom persisted. "He really is from the far north, and he really wasn't with the dark landers who actually started the fight." Purkin spat in the gutter, narrowly missing a pair of urchins who were intent on some game involving a reel of cotton, a handful of matches and a giant shield bug They didn't bother to look up. "Came in on a ship all right," he admitted. "Darklanders aren't worth a bucket o' shit aboard ship, so he probably does come from tother side o' the Slithery Sea. So what? Still a barbarian, and a fool. Should've shut up and gone to the wall right away. Might have been free again in a year or so. Damned now. Probably never get off. His own stupid fault. " "But there were other men on that stairway, weren't there?" Jacom said. "I saw them." He had, in fact, arrived just in time to see a pair of heels disappearing, but he felt that it was necessary to remind Purkin that he had been in the inn while the affray was still in full flow. He didn't want anyone thinking that he had hung back while his men did all the work, because he hadn't. "Yeah," Purkin agreed. "Locals knew what a good idea it'd be to be out o' the way before we started kicking arses. Checuti's men, I think. Thieves and tricksters. I know that big bastard the amber tried to fix the blame on- Burdam Thrid, his name is. End up on the wall himself one day, that's for sure. Only hope it's some other poor sucker has to arrest him." "Could it have been him who hit Hernman, I mean?" "Aw, I don't know," the sergeant complained. "Who cares?" It seemed to Jacom that, in the sergeant's eyes, the sin of caring was at least as bad as any others he might have committed. He wasn't sure that the sergeant was right to think so, but he didn't want to to be out of step with the whole citadel guard. It was important to fit in if he were going to build a proper career. While they walked the last hundred mets to the hospital he directed his attention to other matters, scanning the street for signs of evil doing He was off duty, but his commanding officer had gone to great pains to explain to him that while he was in the king's uniform he was the king's representative, bound to look after the king's interests. The street was filled with hawkers selling a bewildering variety of fruits, vegetables and loaves of bread from carts and baskets. Competition seemed to be fierce it appeared to be a buyers' market, in which it was impossible for anyone to make a sale without an exhaustive session of haggling. Jacom had never been able to see the point of the kind of long drawn-out haggling which wasted ten or fifteen minutes in making the most trivial purchases, but it seemed to be an immensely important point of pride among Xandrians never to pay a quarter-crown too much for a day's bread. He supposed that this must be what his father had been talking about in all those long lectures about efficient trade being the true basis of imperial grandeur. Personally, he had always thought of imperial grandeur in terms of armies or, to be strictly honest, in terms of flags, military uniforms, arms and armour- but his own brand-new uniform and badges of rank seemed to carry little enough weight when it came to pushing through a crowd of serious shoppers. He was glad when they finally arrived at their destination. The hospital was oppressively clean. The walls were whitewashed every week and the floors were scrubbed every day. The constant battle that was waged about Xandria's mighty walls, in the interest of keeping them strong and impenetrable, seemed to be a cursory affair compared with the constant battle that was waged within the city's hospitals. To Jacom Cerri, who was new to the rituals of military discipline and the ways in whicH they were employed to mech anise men's reflexes, the manner in which the orderlies worked seemed remarkable in its efficiency-anjd also in its pointlessness. He was a sceptical man, utterly uninterested in and unimpressed by all talk of the occult and the invisible. He had not an atom of faith in the 'bacteria' which were said to infest all walls arid all floors not to mention the very air itself- and which must be kept at bay at all costs in places where wounded; men were laid to rest. He thought of hygiene as a matter of politeness, and felt that it was quite unnecessary to pretend that mere cleanliness was a matter of life and death. The true purpose of all this scrubbing down with unpleasantly sharp-smelling substances, he thought, as he glanced into the wards past which he and Purkin tramped, must he symbolic. The real idea must surely be to provide a kind of allegorical example to the patients, urging them to marshal all their inner resources to the fight against debilitation. The real medicine is in the mind, isn't that what they say? The psychological effect in question seemed to be working well enough on Herriman, who was looking surprisingly cheerful considering that the last time Jacom had seen him he had been unable to stay conscious for more than a few minutes at a time, and had spent most of those lost in delirium. The guardsman seemed genuinely pleased to see his sergeant and his commanding officer, and he saluted them both with some verve, although the plaster cast on his leg inhibited the initial movement of his hand and the eventual impact of his rigid fingers on his bandaged head brought a pained expression to his face. Purkin's response was automatic but deliberately slovenly. Jacom's was much neater. An officer had to be able to salute properly, or what would people think? "I'll be back on my feet in two ten days they say," Herriman told them, in response to Jacom's polite enquiry. "I just wish the plaster cast didn't itch so much. They'll have to change it tomorrow- I just can't help trying to bend my knee, and the plaster's crumbling. They keep sluicing it with that disinfectant stuff, but it doesn't help. I keep telling them, everything crumbles, it's just the nature of things but they don't listen. Medics, hey?" "Medics," Jacom echoed obligingly. "The inquiry's concluded, by the way. We got nine of them. They all got away with trivial fines except for the big amber. He was identified as the one who hit you he's in jail for the moment, looking for a pardon, but he'll be on the wall for a long time." Herriman looked puzzled for a moment or two. "It wasn't the dark lander who hit me, sir," he said hesitantly. Jacom's heart skipped a beat. He didn't dare look at Purkin for fear that the man might take the glance as a tacit 'f told you so', although the only thought in his mind was: I've made a mess of this, haven't I? Aloud, he said: "No, it wasn't a dark lander It was the big amber by the stairway looked almost as if he might have giant's blood in him, if that were possible. He was the one who did it. They all said so." TMo sir," said Herriman stubbornly. "It definitely wasn't him." "You had your back to him," said Purkin, speaking with exaggerated carefulness in order to signal to his man that this was treacherous ground. "You couldn't see who hit you, could you? Anyway, I saw you grappling with him myself. You probably can't remember, because you got hit on the head." 33 "He wasn't in thejight at all," Herriman said, blithely refusing to take the hint. "I grabbed hold of him to stop myself falling over. He helped me. He was just having a drink with some beggar. Some big bastard in a hurry to get up the stairs knocked his table over- the amber was only trying to stay out of trouble." "You didn't see it," Purkin insisted steadfastly. ToJacom he said: "His memory's not clear, sir. Must've been the blow on the head. He doesn't know what he's talking about." "It might have been the other big man, but it wasn't the amber," the supine man insisted. "The amber was in front of me when I was hit from behind. Whoever it was, it couldn't possibly have been him." "You only told me that you didn't see who hit you," Jacom complained anxiously. "That's what I told the magistrate. Eight witnesses all agreed that it was the big man." "All protecting one another, like as not," opined the soldier- but then he caught the full glare of Purkin's disapproving eye, and a sudden expression of enlightenment dawned. "Oh well," he went on. "Don't suppose it matters. The score's even. They send one of us to hospital, we send one of them to the wall. They don't care which of us they hurt, so why should we care which of them we punish? Ought to send two to^ the wall really I mean, we are the law. We're supposed to comejout ahead." Jacom pursed his lips. He had a strong suspicion that he ought to let the matter rest, but somehow he couldn't quite bring himself to do it. Perhaps this was an opportunity for' him to demonstrate that he could be firm in a just cause. ' "Are you sure it wasn't the amber?" he asked, with more unease in his tone than he would have liked. "It was a brawl, when all's said and done. Maybe he just lost his temper and lashed out. Maybe he caught you by accident." "Don't worry about it, sir," Herriman advised, with one eye still on his sergeant. "Like I said before, I couldn't actually see who it was. Anyway, he'll be a lot more use on the wall than the other skinny bastards that were swarming around. Probably a pirate- pirates are always big. Must be all the fish they eat." He was babbling now, trying to cover up his earlier mistake. "That's all very well," Jacom said slowly, although he was coming round to the opinion that his one and only priority ought to be covering up his own mistake, if indeed he had made one. "But if you're right, it would mean that the man who did hit you has got away with it. What did you say the other man's name was, sergeant?" "Burdam Thrid," said Purkin, raising his eyes to the discoloured ceiling as if to say that this was all a terrible waste of time. "Checuti's man?" the recumbent guardsman said. "So it was! I bet it was him. If he ever tries it again I'll skewer the ugly bastard." "Who's Checuti?" Jacom asked. It was Purkin who answered. "Dealer in stolen goods," he said contemptuously. "Oily bastard. Getting too big for his boots. People've started calling him the prince o' thieves. He's long overdue for a fall. Needs chasing out of the city back to wherever he came from. " "Khalorn," said Hcrriman helpfully. "Somewhere around there, anyhow. He's not exactly a foreigner, but not a real Xandrian. " Jacom wondered whether his father's estates were far enough away from the city for its masters and labourers not to be real Xandrians, in the eyes of men like Herriman. "Perhaps we ought to investigate this further," he said un enthusiastically "We're the king's guard, sir, not the constabulary," Purkin said pointedly. "Keeping order is our business, not thief-taking. Checuti's nothing to do with us. No point in our pursuing this matter any further, sir. It's settled we should let it alone. " Jacom was uncomfortably aware of the fact that he was being lectured, in a rough and ready way. The.sergeant was twice his own age, but that didn't justify his taking a pseudo-parental tone with his officer. On the other hand, Jacom had every reason to suppose that the advice was sound. If he had made a mistake, the best thing for all concerned except, admittedly, the amber was to keep quiet about it and hope nobody ever found out. He didn't like to think that the man who had really flattened one of his soldiers might have got away with it, and he felt decidedly uncomfortable about the whole affair, but he supposed that it would all blow over quickly enough. The amber had been destitute, after all if he hadn't been picked up for this crime he'd soon have committed another. "People shouldn't tell lies in the king's court," he said helplessly. "The witnesses, I mean-I don't like the idea of them ganging up to 35 protect one of their. own by accusing an innocent man. If that's really what happened ... I mean, shouldn't we do something about it not officially, of course, but for our own satisfaction?" The look which Purkin gave him was withering, and even Herriman looked mildly astonished. Evidently no matter what stories one heard about the honour of the guard and the extraordinary lengths to which good men were prepared to go in defence of that honour- that simply wasn't the way things were done around here. "All right," Jacom said awkwardly, after half a minute's embarrassed silence had leaked away. "The matter's closed. Get back on your feet as fast as you can, Herriman -- we need you. Mercifully, we're on citadel duty for the next three ten days Very peaceful, I dare say, after the harbour patrol." "Yes sir," said Purkin. Jacom had a paranoid suspicion that the man might be radiating contempt even though he was duty bound to provide the looked-for agreement. "Guarding the gates and patrolling the walls is about as easy as it ever gets, in peacetime." "Just make sure the big amber doesn't get away while you're keeping watch on the prison, sar'nt" said Herriman, with a chuckle which sounded wholly sincere. "Wouldn't do to lose him now we've got him, would it?" "No," said Purkin dully, withja sly sideways glance at Jacom. "It wouldn't." n the enclosed roof-garden which was the crowning glory of the Inner Sanctum of the great citadel of Xandria Princess Lucrezia watched two servants digging up a corpse. The progress was slow; the women were used to labouring in the garden, but this was heavier work than they were usually required to do. The task was made more difficult by the fact that the upper part of the corpse was spiked with dozens of sharp and sturdy thorns, each one three or four sims long. It was obvious that the labourers did not like their work. They were mortally afraid of the dead woman, and of the thorns which stood out from her head, arms and breasts, even though Lucrezia had assured them that they were not poisonous. Servants were prone to far too many superstitions and commonplace fears. / should hare waited for Dhalla, Lucrezia thought. She doesn't seem to mind doing this kind of thing, even though it' snot her job. Having given her orders, however, Lucrezia was determined to see that they were obeyed. If servants began to think they'd be let off if they made a task seem like hard work nothing would ever get done. Not until the two women had lifted the cadaver into the cart did she turn away. She was near to tears, but it wasn't pity which made her feel that way. She felt that she had lost a precious opportunity. The dog was still alive, and the thorny shoots projecting from the upper part of its body were vividly green, but there was not the slightest sign of a bud anywhere. Lucrezia no longer had the slightest doubt that what Hyry Keshvara had told her would turn out to be true: the third and last remaining seed would reproduce if and only if she followed the instructions given by the people who had sold the seeds to the trader. She had to feed it to a human being- a strong, healthy human being- so that it might take a full 37 measure of the nourishment it needed from the human body and spirit; only then would the plant which grew inside its host put forth flowers. In any case, she thought, a human would be able to satisfy a deeper curiosity by telling her what it felt like to undergo the fabulous process of metamorphosis, at least until the throat filled up with thorns. The dog could only whimper, in a manner which suggested puzzlement rather than pain. If only the woman had been stronger! Dhalla arrived while Lucrezia was still dripping water into the eager throat of the whimpering dog. The giant had to duck down very low to pass beneath the stone lintel of the gateway, moving the lust rust-stained gate very carefully lest she tear it from its hinges by accident. "There's news that might interest you, highness," said Dhalla, as soon as Lucrezia glanced up at her. The princess stood up, and met the guard's eyes frankly. Dhalla immediately dropped her gaze, as she had been trained to do. Lucrezia would rather she had not done so, but understood the difficulty well enough. She liked Dhalla better than any of her personal servants and far better than any of her multitudinous sisters. The giant wasn't handsome and her conversation was limited, but she had a sense of humour, which was a rare thing in the Inner Sanctum. Her most endearing feature was that she always obeyed Lucrezia's orders with a conspicuous alacrity that she never displayed for anyone else's benefit! "What is it?" the princess asked. "There was a young darklandcr in the court today, highness. Actually, he said he wasn't a dark lander but he's an amber. He crippled a guardsman during a brawl in some harbour side drinking-den." "What concern is that of mine?" Lucrezia asked. "Only that he applied for a royal pardon instead of starting work on the wall immediately. He doesn't understand the law, you see. Either that or he's too pig-headed to be sensible. If you were to offer him a conditional pardon . . . well, I don't think he knows enough to ask the right questions. He's very big and strong might almost have giant's blood in him." Dhalla smiled as she made the last remark. She knew well enough that all the dirty jokes and folktales about ordinary men and giants were pure fantasy. There were no male giants and no men with giant's blood in them. "They say that I have a splash of Serpent's blood in me," Lucrezia said. So far as she knew, that was nonsense too, but she didn't smile as she said it. There was mention of "Serpent's blood' in ancient myths, which conferred a certain glamour on the notion even though no one Lucrezia had ever asked about it including her mother, from whom she was supposed to have inherited the trait- had had the slightest idea what it might mean. As far as Lucrezia could tell, a mating of human and Serpent was far less likely than a mating of man and giant. Serpents were not merely un human but unearthly, like most of the things which grew in the Grey Waste, the Forest of Absolute Night, the fabled heartland of the Spangled Desert and the Dragomite Hills. According to rumour, the reproductive organs of Serpents were in their mouths rather than their underbellies and they were hermaphrodites; if so, it was hardly likely that sexual intercourse between their kind and human beings was possible. "This amber sounds exactly the kind of man you'd need to grow a healthy thorn-bush, highness," Dhalla said, although Lucrezia had already taken that inference. "Unfortunately," Lucrezia said pensively, "I'd need my beloved father's permission to take him into my service, for whatever use. He won't like it it's one thing to bring some decrepit old wall slave into the Sanctum, but quite another to import a virile tavern-brawler." "I could make certain that he was no trouble," Dhalla said. "I could break his legs before taking him from the prison. I'll watch him night and noon if necessary." "It's not a question of there being any real danger," Lucrezia said, with a sigh. "It's simply a matter of available excuses. If my father can think of any reason for refusing me, he'll probably do it. In this case, he'd have no trouble at all." "Sorry, highness," Dhalla said. "I thought. . ." "Don't be sorry," Lucrezia was quick to say. "You were right. It's worth a try, given that I'm legally entitled to make the offer. If I keep on asking for favours, my father might say yes one day just to keep me quiet. I could send Monalen to see the amber right away 39 - then, if he's fooL enough to accept the conditional pardon, I could go to father myself. If I explain it cleverly enough father might just think of it as poetic justice- too good a joke to pass up. But will the amber agree? What was his sentence?" "He'll have to work off a fine of about a thousand crowns, plus interest accrued while he's in jail, plus whatever else they can pile on for future mis behaviour You know how these things work- it could easily turn into a life sentence if no one offers to buy him out within the next few days. I doubt that anyone will do that; he only arrived a couple of days ago so he's unlikely to have any friends in Xandria." "What if someone tells him what I want him for? He's bound to be suspicious, isn't he?" "No one would dare to interfere- and the man seems to be a complete idiot. He's an amber, after all." "In that case," Lucrezia said, 'you'd better fetch Monalen. " Dhalla bowed, and turned on her heel. Lucrezia turned back to her garden. It was really Ereleth's garden, but Lucrezia had begun to think of it as her own, just as she had begun to think of Ereleth's wisdom as her own. She knew that she was merely the latent of a string of royal apprentices whom Ereleth had trained in the secret Arts of witchery, but she also knew that she had been tjrained more assiduously and more intensively than any of her sisters. She knew that Ereleth regarded her as her true heir, and she,in her turn had begun to think of Ereleth as hers: a unique combination of substitute mother and instrument of ambition. The garden contained more than a hundred exotic species of plants, every one of which produced or was reputed to produce some kind of toxic substance. Some of them had been grown here since time immemorial- Ereleth was by no means the first witch- wife to lend her knowledge to the throne of Xandria -- but others were recent arrivals. Ereleth's experimental frame of mind had led her carefully to cultivate the acquaintance of certain merchants and adventurers, in the interest of increasing as well as maintaining her repertoire. Many of the 'gifts' they brought for which the king's treasury paid high prices did not live up to their reputations, but some did. The most reliable of these suppliers was Hyry Keshvara, whose usefulness to the king's witches was greatly enhanced by the fact that she did not need to use middlemen in her dealings with Ereleth; being female, she could pass more or less freely in and out of the Inner Sanctum. Lucrezia had a clear memory of the day when Hyry Keshvara had brought the three seeds which grew in the flesh of living men, partly because it was the first time she had been alone with the trader for any length of time- Ereleth had been bedridden with some kind of fever -- and partly because Hyry had been so obviously excited by the news she had brought along with the seeds. "Nothing like these seeds has ever been seen in the lands with which Xandria trades, highness," Hyry had said. "I don't know whether the claims made on their behalf are true, but I bought other items along with these which were obviously exotic. They were offered to me not as objects of great value but as tokens of proof that the people who supplied them had achieved the impossible- that they had crossed the Dragomite Hills in safety. These seeds, they said, came from the fabled Navel of the World, which lies far beyond the Soursweet Marshes. If that is true, something of profound importance must have occurred in the lands beyond the Forest of Absolute Night, for no one who tried to cross the Dragomite Hills within the last few centuries has ever returned to tell the tale." Lucrezia's first instinct had been to wish as fervently as Hyry Keshvara evidently wished that this might be true- but she was Ereleth's apprentice and had been schooled in scepticism. "Is there no other way such things could have come into Xandria?" Lucrezia had asked. "According to Ereleth, the captain of every ship that docks in the shadow of the Great Wall swears that he brings goods never before seen within the empire, from lands so distant that no Xandrian has ever heard of them. It is all lies, she says, pandering to the thirst for travellers' tales that all sedentary city folk have." "I can't tell for certain," Hyry had answered. "Although I saved these seeds for you, highness, knowing how enthusiastic you would be to test the claims which were made on their behalf, I took the other items to a very cunning man and an uncommonly bold adventurer. They both agreed with me that the plants in question were extremely odd, and that if they did indeed originate from the 41 lands south of theDragomite Hills their arrival here must be reckoned a marvel. The hills stretch so far to the west and the east, and are so inconveniently bounded by the Grey Waste and the Spangled Desert, that even seeds would have difficulty surviving the journey. There were mature plants too, highness, all astonishingly free from the ravages of decay. Either they were conveyed across the hills as swiftly as a man can ride, or the people who brought them possess a powerful means of protecting their produce from corruption. In either case, highness . . ." "Perhaps they have the secret of incorruptible stone," Lucrezia had said, intending it as a joke- but there had been a hollow ring in Hyry Keshvara's polite laugh which suggested that the merchant did not consider it a jesting matter. If anyone other than Hyry Keshvara had told Lucrezia that the seeds had come from the lands south of the Forest of Absolute Night, let alone that they had come from the legendary Navel of the World of which something was said in the Lore ofGenesys, where incorruptible stone was mentioned too Lucrezia would not have believed it. Ereleth, when the story was repeated to her, would not believe it even from Keshvara. "If the most honest merchant of the city swears off his firstborn's life that something is true," Ereleth was frequently wont to say, 'you may be perfectly certain that it is a lie. If it is tjhe richest who swears, you may be certain that it is one of the damnedest lies ever pronounced. " Hyry Keshvara was neither the mos^t honest merchant in the city nor the richest, hut there was something in her particular excitement that Lucrezia was inclined to trust . . . something which spoke not of thirst for profit but of thirst for adventure, and perhaps for glory. Lucrezia had fallen in love with that particular excitement, there seemed to her to be little enough in life that was worth desiring, and she had lately developed a powerful thirsr for the new and the strange. When Hyry had repeated what she had been told about the manner in which the seeds might be cultivated, Lucrezia had listened with the utmost care. "I cannot vouch for any of this," Hyry had said, 'and cannot easily put my trust in such a wild tale, but what I was told is that one must persuade a man or a woman to swallow the nut whole. Both his legsI'll assume that it's a man must then be broken in half a dozen places, but carefully, so that he doesn't bleed to death. He must be buried waist deep in rich soil, left loose around his loins but packed tight about his midriff. His arms ought to be broken as well, if he's strong, to make absolutely sure that he can't uproot himself, but he mustn't be killed, for the seed will only grow in living flesh. He must be well fed while the nut germinates in his belly and begins to grow. Once the shoots are established in his flesh he'll cease to feel pain; if he hasn't gone mad before then he'll remain lucid, perhaps even cheerful, until the flowers bloom. For a hundred days and more there'll be no sign of anything amiss with him, and he may become prodigiously enamoured of his keepers and feeders, especially any comely women among them- if a woman is used, of course, the reverse would be the case. "The first thing to emerge from his flesh will be the thorns. His legs, face and torso will sprout quills like a porcupine, but he should still be fit and well, for the plant is very ingenious in the matter of insinuating its own tissues within its host's without any considerable disruption of function. He must be very well fed during this phase, for the plant will be hungry and all its nourishment must be derived from its host's gut. A hundred and thirty days after the thorns, the flowers will begin to emerge. I'm assured that although they aren't exactly beautiful, they are fascinating in their peculiarity, resembling snakes with gaping jaws. It's the fang-like elements protecting the flower which produce the poison- it's said to be the deadliest in existence, but there are far too many substances of which that's said-for the claim to be taken seriously. The flowers aren't self-fertilizing, but will exchange pollen with one another in a way which is said to be interesting to watch. Then the nuts will form anew. "After that, the process can be repeated but I was solemnly warned that it might not be easy to bring the plants to the point of self-reproduction, and that they cannot be grown except from seed. Some of their near cousins are adapted to grow perfectly well in animal flesh, but my informants said that these seeds cannot be relied upon to put forth flowers- or might produce sickly and sterile flowers- in any but human flesh. They said, too, that if the man in whose flesh they are growing should die, from hunger or disease or some inherent weakness, the plant will die too. There are three nuts, princess, so you have some scope for testing the truth of these statements. " 43 "Who sold you these seeds and told you this tale?" Lucrezia had demanded to knoW*Darklanders? " "Certainly not, highness. Darklanders live in daily contact with much that is unearthly, but they have a powerful dislike of the unusual. The two men who brought me these things had kept them secret while they came through the forest. They were bronzes, who said they had long been homeless wanderers, and they boasted that they had drunk the water of the Lake of Colourless Blood and had seen the Silver Thorns. I think they were making a game of the whole matter, highness -- but what they sold me was certainly strange, and if they were telling the truth about these . . . " Lucrezia gathered from this that Hyry was very interested to know how much truth there was in what she had been told by these enigmatic merchants, and had brought the seeds to the Inner Sanctum because she fervently hoped that Ereleth -- or Lucrezia -- would subject them to a test which she herself dared not try. Although the first two seeds had failed, Lucrezia, Ereleth and Hyry had all been fascinated by the manner of their failure, which bore out much of what the bronze men had said. The first had got as far as producing thorns, but the redundant slave Lucrezia had been given to use had simply; not been up to the task. She had seemed sturdy enough, and was certainly not undernourished, having spent a lifetime in one of the Citadel's best kitchens, but she had shrivelled and died by slow degrees, in spite of every remedy Ereleth could prescribe. Lucrezia had no reason to think that another doctor would have fared any better. I Ereleth had been impressed by this experiment too. Initially, she had refused to believe that the plant could possibly live according to the pattern Hyry Keshvara had described, because it made no sense in terms of the theory of evolution by natural selection. The witch-queen's curiosity had been further stimulated by the second experiment with the dog, and she had then taken it upon herself to question Keshvara more carefully about the origin of the seeds. "There's not much more I can add," Hyry had said. "As I told the princess, they made a game of secrecy. At the time, I thought they were merely trying to talk up the goods, but. . . Carus Fraxinus and Aulakh Phar have already chided me for missing a valuable opportunity, and they were right. There was one thing, though . . ." She hesitated, until she was commanded to go on. "The bronzes said that if there were women in Xandria with Serpent's blood --they did say women, not men they ought to be told of this, lest they mistake the restlessness within their veins. Their words, majesty which they refused to explain." Lucrezia knew that Hyry must know what was whispered about her own Serpent's blood, and was annoyed that the trader had not seen fit to mention this when they had spoken before, but she understood her hesitation. Mention of such matters could be considered indelicate. Ereleth had made no criticism, though; it seemed that she simply filed the new detail away with the rest. When Lucrezia had questioned her as to what it all meant, she had confessed her ignorance with unusual frankness. Now, as Lucrezia reached out to pet the half-buried dog, which responded to her touch with a plaintive whimper, she wondered whether there really was a special restlessness within her veins- and, if so, what it might signify. What these people gave to Hyry was intended to serve as evidence of their power to work miracles, she thought. She understands that, and so do those friends who are determined to investigate the possibility of crossing the Dragomite Hills. I have a part to play too, and I won't let her down. If I can only persuade my father to let me have the amber, I'll prove to her--and to him! -- that the bronzes spoke the truth, and that the world is a richer and stranger place than either of them dares to imagine . . . and then, by whatever means I can devise, I'll do everything in my power to find out exactly how rich and strange it is. There has to be more to life than politics and poison. 45 a ndris's cell was about as long as he was tall and so narrow that he could easily touch both walls while standing in the middle. The pallet which served as a mattress wasn't long enough to allow him to stretch out full length, and the hole provided for the expulsion of wastes was the top of a pipe which led straight down to the sewer, with nothing but a wooden cover to keep the stink at bay. Fortunately, it was a very long drop. On a brighter note, some of Andris's few possessions had been fetched from the inn where he had been lodging, so he had a change of clothes. There was a tap over the waste-hole which produced water with which to wash. The mattress was surprisingly free of vermin; and the cell did have a small glazed window. He was told that food would be served twice a day, and if his first experience of it could be trusted it was perfectly edible, though somewhat elementary. All in all, it wasn't as bad as some prisons he had been in. ' The jailer who installed him in the cell was a small rotund man of perennially mournful aspect. He looked like the kind of man who might be easily overpowered, but the doors of all the cells were constructed in such a way as to minimise the chance of any prisoner ever having the opportunity to overpower him. They were made of very stout wood and had no less than three huge bolt-beams to secure them. The top beam fitted over a spy-hole, the bottom one over a slit some three sims deep and twenty wide, through which food could be passed. It was never necessary to remove more than one beam at a time- and, of course, strictly against the rules to do so. Andris didn't doubt that the doors and the beams were regularly checked and replaced before they showed significant signs of weakening. He worked out that it might be possible for a man with very strong fingers to dislodge the top and bottom beams from inside, but there was no way he could get to the middle one even if he failed to attract attention when the top one crashed to the floor. The ceiling seemed to be by far the weakest element in the forces of his confinement. There was a patch in the middle which was sulphurously yellow by virtue of the attentions of some ferocious local species of rot--but even Andris, who was probably the tallest man ever to have been locked up there, wasn't quite tall enough to touch it with his outstretched fingertips. In any case, it was impossible to figure out what, if anything, was beyond the stonework. The cell was set very high in one of the citadel's seven towers, and it seemed entirely possible that there might be nothing above it but empty space without any convenient egress. Andris found the height rather dizzying the first time he looked down from the window; he had never been in a building with more than three storeys before, and this particular tower had six. Andris was no more than averagely acrophobic, but the thought of a possible collapse sent shivers down his spine as he realised how many floors he might crash through on the way down. Nor was the tower in which he was confined exceptional; he knew that the others were just as huge, and the interior of the citadel--into which his window faced- contained several erections of hardly less magnitude, including one which stood alone, unsupported by any accessory walls. The jailer informed him that this was the Inner Sanctum, in which the king kept his thirty-one wives and their households, and confirmed that there really was a walled garden set upon its roof. "On a good day you can see the witch-wife Ereleth tending her poison apples," the jailer said- in jest, Andris assumed. "You also have a wonderful view of the treasury's mint, where all the coin in the realm gets freshened up ar regular intervals, and you can watch the horses going back and forth from the biggest livery stable in the world, which happens to be directly below us. That's so our fall will be cushioned by straw and horse shit if ever there's a collapse. You can also see the whipping-post and the scaffold, although we don't have any whippings or hangings scheduled this ten day - not yet, at any rate." It was not at all difficult to obtain such information from the jailer, who was perfectly willing to stand in the corridor and chat 47 through the spy-hole. He evidently found his job rather tedious. For the moment, the had less than thirty men in his charge, distributed about this floor and the one below. As the magistrate had observed, few men could afford to stay here for long. "I need to send some letters," Andris told the jailer, once he had taken stock of the possessions which had been brought to his cell, "But I can't find my pens and paper- or my brushes and inks, come to that. I'm a mapmaker, you know." "Impounded," said the jailer dolefully. "No knickknacks allowed in the cell. You're only allowed spare clothing." "But I have to try to get in touch with a kinsman of mine. He might be able to get me out of here." "What's the address?" "I don't know his address. I want to write to the captain of the ship which brought me here, to ask him to make enquiries on my behalf. Surely you can let me have a piece of paper, and the use of a pen. " "Pen and ink, with one piece of scrubbed parchment and the carriage charge, would add up to half a crown," the jailer reported. "I have my own writing materials," Andris told him. "I only need to be allowed to use them." i The jailer shook his head. "Rules," he said stubbornly. "Don't know how things are in the dai-klan ds but here we do things by the rules. We're civilised, see. " ; Andris sighed heavily. "Just for the record," he said, "I'm not a dark lander I'm a civilised man. Are you telling me that all my tools have been confiscated? It's not that they're worth much, you understand it's just the principle of the thing." "What sort of tools were they?" enquired the jailer innocently. "Just the usual sort of thing," Andris said. "Scissors, skinning and gutting knives, fishhooks, eating implements . .. nothing out of the ordinary." "Hunter, are you?" "All travellers have to be hunters and fishermen when the need arises," Andris said. "I'm a long way from home." "I'll check to make sure they've been safely impounded," the jailer said. "Maybe not- these waterfront inns are full of thieves and foreigners. Can't have 'em, though. Have to get what you need from me. Half a crown." Andris still had a few coins in his waist-pouch. He produced a half-crown from one of the Thousand Isles. "No good," said the jailer, after testing it with his teeth. "Rotten right through. "I'll need two like that- have to go straight to the mint at half-weight. No one in Xandria takes coin that bad. There's always plenty of fresh about- benefits of civilisation, see." Andris gritted his teeth as his temper rose. Had the spy-hole not been so tiny he might not have been able to resist the temptation to reach out and seize the tubby man by the throat, but his fist was too big to pass through it. Although, sadly, the law was not the law the world over, its keepers seemed to be much the same. He did not doubt that the jailer already knew exactly how much coin he had, and would aquire it all before the day was out. He threw a second half-crown through the spy-hole. The jailer stooped to pick it up and ambled away. He returned, in his own good time, with a minuscule piece of old parchment and a pen whose nib was more direly in need of refreshing than the coins he had given for it. Presumably the royal metallurgists were far too busy re-minting coin to bother with mere implements of literacy. The ink was just as poor. It took Andris ten minutes to write the letter. He would have taken a lot longer if he could, but even though he agonised over the choice of every word there simply wasn't enough space on the parchment to permit much exercise of eloquence or ingenuity. The jailer took the letter without comment, ostentatiously neglecting to read it although Andris was certain that he would do so as soon as he was out of sight. He was welcome; the letter merely pleaded with the shipmaster to do everything he could to find one Theo Zabio and tell him that his nephew, who was confined in the citadel, had urgent news from Ferentina. In point of fact, Andris had no news from Ferentina less than six years old, and none at all concerning anyone more closely related to Theo Zabio than himself, but he felt obliged to make every effort to persuade his kinsman that it was worth taking an interest. Andris was fairly confident that even a Ferentinan could be relied on to do something for a kinsman in trouble- assuming, of course, that he was alive, and that he was still in Xandria, and that the shipmaster could be bothered to look for him. He was painfully aware that there might be several assumptions too many 49 in that chain of suppositions, but what could one expect for a couple of rotten naif-crowns? Later, as night was falling, the jailer returned and removed the beam covering the spy-hole. "The ship hadn't sailed, so the letter's been delivered," he said. "All a waste of time, mind." Andris got up from the bed, where he had been trying unsuccessfully to catch up with lost sleep, and came to the spy-hole. The stars were shining brightly, but Andris's window was very narrow and the corridor without was just as gloomy as the cell. Itwas difficult to make out the jailer's features. "Thanks anyway," he said. "Not just the letter," the jailer said. "This petition for a pardon you've put in. That kind of thing's not intended for the likes of you -- it's for aristocrats who want to buy themselves out of trouble with big bribes. You'll just get an extra fine." "I suspected as much," Andris confessed wearily, 'but that sneering magistrate annoyed me. I had to do something. I'm not guilty, you know- the guardsman who got hurt must know it wasn't me who hit him. I just thought that if I bought a little time, he might. . He stopped. He could easily imagine the pitying look that must have been on the j&iler's face. "You should never let magistrates annoy you," the fat man advised him, in a fatherly tone. "It's OK once in a while to lose your temper in a brawl, but never in a court of law. The guardsman won't say a word- only get' himself into trouble if he did." Andris sighed deeply as the jailer replaced' the beam and ambled away. He sat down on the mattress again, wondering how badly he had misplayed his hand, and whether there was any way out of his predicament. / should have stayed on the other side of the Slithery Sea, he thought glumly. / was far enough away from home, without being too far. I should have settled down when I had the chance. Unfortunately, he knew only too well that such slim chances as he had had to settle down wouldn't have been overly attractive even to a man without his tastes and fancies. To be an exile, unable to return to his homeland, was bad enough to be an exile educated in early youth to the inclinations and expectations of an aristocrat was doubly problematic. Try as he might, Andris had never been able to adjust his hopes and dreams to the level of his actual prospects. Andris had been the third and last of the sons of the king of Ferentina -- who had been the sort of king to whom tradition allowed but a single wife. That might have been difficult in itself, given that the city-state had been notorious for its wars of succession for tens of thousands of years, but it was made even more problematic by the fact that all three sons had survived and that none of them liked the others in the least degree. In a better- ordered world, kings of nations like Ferentina would doubtless have refrained from having more than one son, but the only thing likelier to cause a civil war in Ferentina than having more than one son survive to adulthood was having no sons surviving to adulthood, so every dutiful king adopted the safer course of having more than one son, and then trying to ensure that they would be able to avoid conflict. This could often be done, and had been fairly easily accomplished for three generations before Andris's time, but the pattern had to break eventually, and Andris had spent his entire youth and adolescence surrounded by people who expected it to break at any moment. The situation would not have become so desperate, Andris knew, had nature been more even-handed. If only his oldest brother, Marc, had been taller or cleverer- or even better-looking- than Andris, he might have felt more confident of his authority. It would not have mattered that Andris was such a brave and bad- tempered fighting man, if only those attributes had been counterbalanced by dull stupidity or unquestioning loyalty or openhearted generosity but even Andris had to admit that they were not. Cruel nature really had formed him to be a dangerous rival to his lean, sly and mean-spirited elder brothers, and by the time he was five years old the choice before him had been stark: had he not taken himself away he would either have been murdered, or cynically used as a figurehead in a bitter war whose outcome he could not control or foresee. In the best- or perhaps worst- tradition of the romantic tales which his nurses and tutors had been so enthusiastic to tell him when his formal studies became too tedious, Andris had departed to become a wanderer, a soldier of fortune, just as Uncle Theo had a generation before. Unfortunately, his career as a soldier of fortune had been infinitely more difficult to manage and infinitely less rewarding 5i than the tales had implied. The world was every bit as large and strange as the stoneS had promised- and his careful education in map-making had not prepared him for its diversity half as well as he might have hoped- but it was by no means so bountiful, even to one as clearly deserving as he. I should have been born in a nation like this one, Andris thought, where a king may have a hundred sons and every one of them might find a proper place, and none would ever dare to take arms against his brothers. It's true, I suppose, that a prince of Xandria must have far less power and prestige than a prince of ferentina, even at the best of times, by virtue of having to share it with so many others . . and it's probably true that the business of keeping things in order must be far more complicated in a sea- spanning empire than in a very modestly sized kingdom, but there's the tropic sun and the warm sea, and the stars shine so very brightly four nights in every five. . Why, oh why, couldnkt I. . . ? His reverie was cut short by the sound of the upper beam being drawn back yet again from the door, and he saw the glimmer of lamplight through the spy-hole. He stood up, and stood close enough to the door to be seen. "Got a visitor," said the jailer, briefly, before dumping his lamp on the floor and stalking away. Andris's hopes soared, as ^hey were ever wont to do when his fortunes improved, by however small a margin not did they sink when he saw that the visitor was a young serving-girl, whom he had never seen before. I "Have you come from Uncle Theo?" he asked hopefully. "I have come from Princess Lucrezia," was the reply, delivered in the automatic style of a careful recitation, "My name is Monalen. The princess asks me to inform you that there is a law in Xandria which provides that anyone who applies for a royal pardon may be granted such a pardon by any member of the royal family, provided only that the king agrees to the release and that the person to be pardoned agrees freely to render whatever service the pardoner requires of him for a period not exceeding half a year. Princess Lucrezia has heard what happened in the courtroom today, and asks whether you would be prepared to enter into such an agreement with her, if the king will permit." Perhaps there's justice in Xandria after all! Andris thought. A message of hope, and from a princess! Perhaps the old tales aren't such damned lies as they've so far seemed! Perhaps my luck has changed at last, and my destiny will now be set to rights . . . and half a year is, in any case, less than three hundred days . . . and whatever service the princess has in mind must surely be less arduous than breaking stone for that huge and horrid wall. Aloud, he simply said: "Yes, by all means. Tell your mistress that if the king will sanction it, I should be proud to be the princess's man for as long as she should need me." tacom cerri walked slowly down one of the many flights of | stone steps which descended the inner face of the citadel wall. It led to the wide roadway which connected the City Gate to the big courtyard flanked by the main stables and the treasury. He measured his paces very carefully, not for reasons of military precision but because he wanted to make the tour of inspection last as long as possible. It was the middle of the midnight, when the citadel was at its quietest. Except for the sentries and patrols of the citadel guard the only people at work were the coiners in the treasury mint, who were working around the clock to prepare the Thanksgiving payroll. Jacom had hoped that his second tour of citadel duty would be easier than the first, when the unaccustomed hours and the incessant tedium had proved surprisingly wearing. He had optimistically reassured himself that it was bound to be a welcome relief after the hurly-burly of the harbour patrol, but in fact the tedium seemed twice as bad now that he was' repeating something he had done before. The first ten day duty had at least been new, and he had been distracted by all kinds -of trivial learning experiences; this time he knew everything he needed to know at the procedural level- the names of all his men, the distribution of his sentries, the layout of all the citadel's coverts, courtyards and alleyways- but he still lacked any kind of mental equipment for making the time fly. The passing hours seemed to have slowed to a painful degree, and no matter how he regulated his own paces he could not adjust himself to their emptiness. His plight was not improved by the fact that the men under his command were, without exception, fully adapted to the business. Every one of them was utterly inured to all the trials and tribulations which custom imposed upon them. To the men, the routines which tested Jacom's patience were simply an opportunity to relax, even to loaf. They were forbidden to pass the time by playing cards or going to sleep, even when they were not actually posted as sentries or appointed to walk a beat, but they were experts in the business of self-distraction; they needed neither apparatus nor altered states of consciousness to attain an extraordinary aptitude in the underrated art of doing nothing. Sergeant Purkin was, of course, a past master of this particular art. As Jacom approached his present sentry-station, at the treasury door, the grey beard seemed set in stone, perfectly still and yet perfectly relaxed. When Jacom stopped before him he saluted with 'mechanical precision. "Nothin' to report, sir," he said, as though it were the best news in the world. "Don't you ever feel that this kind of duty is a complete waste of time, Purkin?" Jacom asked, on a confidential whim. "Certainly not, sir," the sergeant replied, with a certain ironic pride. "Who knows what'd be occurrin', sir, if we weren't here?" "Invading armies would doubtless be battering down the gates," Jacom said, with a sceptical sigh. "That too, like as not," said Purkin equably. "Though we'd probably get a few days' warning, like, so we could mobilise the regulars and the city militia. Pains me to admit it, sir, we being' the king's guard, not thief-takers, but the real problem's petty theft. This is a big place, see- hundreds of people come back and forth through the gates on legitimate business, an' quite a lot of 'em have illegitimate business on the side. A lot o' valuable goods pass through those gates, and not all the food reaches the kitchens, if you get my meanin'. Those livery stables over there are said to be the biggest in the world, and you might be surprised by how many fine animals just disappear into thin air. Then there's this place--all that coin comin' in by the barrel to be refreshed, and the raw metal to refresh it." "It seems secure enough," Jacom observed, examining the heavy door before which Purkin was standing. "It is, sir. Locked and barred. Take a barrel of plastic to get through it. No one allowed in or out till the new issue's ready always extra precautions when they have to pay everyone at once 'cause of the holiday. Treasury has its own guardsmen inside- real sticklers for the regs. Even so, out of every thousand coins there's 55 always thirty or forty which somehow go missin'. . . sometimes as many as a hundred'" "But we didn't catch a single person pilfering during our last tour," Jacom pointed out. "In fact, we never seem to arrest anybody at all." "Oh, we do, sir," Purkin assured him. "Last tour was unusually quiet, just like these last two days . . . which generally means, in my experience, that the evildoers're savin' themselves for a big push. As I said, though, the real point is that if we weren't here, there'd be three or four times as much stuff going' missin'. We're a deterrent, see. Just by being' here, we cramp the style of the thieves. They have to be twice as careful and twice as clever . . . and they try, sir, they surely try. We prevent an awful lot o' skullduggery just by doin' nothin' at all. Valuable work, sir, valuable work. " Jacom recognised that what the sergeant said made perfect sense. He supposed that his own problem would take care of itself once he had done a few more tours of duty, because he would simply get used to being out of phase with the rest of the world, wide awake during the midday and the midnight, catching his sleep in the teen hours and the thirties. As he strode away from Purkin's post, however, this seemed small enough comfort. He saluted the men on duty at the gate, and began to climb the steps on the further side of it, jmaking his way upwards yet again, to the walkway that ran aroupd the battlements. It was a long way to the top and by the time he got there his ankles were aching. He had always considered himself to be very fit, but climbing stairs in full armour-no matter how slowly and carefully he went-- was an arduous business. Once at the top, he felt a little better. His initial tendency to vertigo had quite disappeared by now, and there was something about being up so high which he found strangely exhilarating. It was an illusion, he knew, but the stars seemed so much closer here. There was something about starlight observed from on high which was conducive to philosophical reveries, and as Jacom marched along the walkway he found himself contemplating the question of how many stars were visible in the sky. He held his hand up, ten or twelve sims from his face, made a circle with his thumb and forefinger, and tried to count the stars contained therein. It wasn't easy. There were a dozen whose brightness was quite distinct, but it was impossible to say whether there were twenty, thirty or forty fainter ones glimmering in the background. Call it thirty altogether, he thought. Now, how much larger than that little circle is the whole skyf He gave up on the problem as soon as it had been posed. He was no mathematician, and the calculation was well beyond his meagre capabilities. He began wondering instead why, if the stars really were as numerous as the lore insisted, they could not fill the night sky with a light every bit as bright as that of day. Why, if the stars were simply distant suns, did they disappear into a sparkling blue mist when the sun shone? Sometimes, Jacom regretted that his practically inclined father had not seen fit to provide him with a scholar's education. It didn't seem quite fair that the only acceptable way for him to avoid intensive schooling in the arts and practices of fruit-growing and pig-breeding had been to declare a fervent interest in the Arts Martial. He discovered, a little belatedly, that while these thoughts had occupied his mind he had come to a complete standstill. He blushed when he realised exactly where he had stopped. He knew that it was not by coincidence that he had paused at one of the few vantage-points from which it was possible to look into the roof garden on top of the Inner Sanctum- which was, in effect, the only part of the citadel into which a captain of the citadel guard had no right to peer, even though his men provided an outer cordon of protection around it. There was a certain dangerous significance in the fact that he had paused on this particular spot without even thinking about it. It was, of course, impossible not to be aware of the phallic tower's presence- it was positioned at the very heart of the citadel, surrounded by an open space larger than any other courtyard, and thus had a prominence unshared by any of the other blocks and towers crammed and crowded into the available spaces of the eccentrically shaped and sprawling edifice- but that awareness ought, as a matter of duty, to be kept strictly in check. Officers in the king's guard could hardly be expected to be ignorant of all the romantic tales and obscene jokes in which the Inner Sanctum figured, but they were not supposed to let such notions preoccupy their thoughts, much less their instincts. Jacom, alas, had no more 57 mastered the trick of that kind of indifference than he had mastered the tricK of armouring himself against the tedium of night patrols. While he was at ground level jacom's Sanctum-inspired reveries tended to be of a fairly basic kind, along the lines of what it might be like to attempt sexual congress with a giant. To judge by the tenor of the oft-repeated jokes on the subject this was something many men thought about but few ever dared to try, on the very reasonable grounds that their equipment might be thought inadequate. When he was on the high battlements, on the other hand, his daydream fantasies tended to run on more elevated lines, involving beleaguered princesses and near-impossible feats of heroism. These might have been easier to control had he not been able to connect them up to the appearance of an actual princess, but he had and the place where he was now standing was the very spot where he had made that connection. It was from here, on several occasions, that he had seen Princess Lucrezia in the roof- garden. During the ten days of his first tour he had unwisely allowed such glimpses to become more and more important to him. He had begun to feel disappointed every time he found the roof-garden empty, and his heart had begun to beat a little faster every time it was not. During his ten day stint on the harbour patrol he had not given the princess a great deal of thought, but as soon as he was back inside the wall the prospect of catching brief glimpses of her had suddenly begun to seem immensely attractive and had just as suddenly begun to seem hazardous. The fact that he could get no closer to the roof-garden than forty mets, with a yawning gulf between, made such glimpses no less exciting and no less inappropriate. Sometimes, he had been able to watch Lucrezia working in the garden while she was unconscious of being watched, and whenever she chanced to look up it seemed easy enough to look away and reign total unconsciousness of her presence but he could never be quite sure that his attention had gone unnoticed, and he had no way to judge how unwelcome it might be if it had not. Whenever she was absorbed in contemplation of two particularly remarkable plants one of which bore an uncanny resemblance to a human torso, the other to the head and forepaws of a dog- she seemed utterly oblivious of all else, but he knew that the appearance might be deceptive. For a moment, during his first tour, he had almost been convinced that the strange plants actually were a human being and a dog, half-buried in the dark soil, but the green shoots sprouting out of them had convinced him that he had been fooled by some trick of perspective. The bright starlight allowed him to see that the larger of the two plants had gone. Only the one resembling a dog remained. Jacom wondered whether Lucrezia would now be less inclined to linger in the garden during her waking hours. He had heard, of course, that the roof-garden was reputed to be full of poisonous plants, kept by the witch-wife Ereleth - who was often seen in the company of Princess Lucrezia -- and he had also heard that the princess was a mass-murderess perennially in the market for broken-down slaves of either sex, but he had sense enough to know that such rum ours meant nothing. He knew how easily such preposterous tales could be cooked up, and how their fantastic and horrific elements tended to be amplified as they spread like wildfire within the citadel walls. Jacom was jerked out of his reverie by the sound of a challenge emanating from the roadway far below him, echoing eerily from the wall of the Inner Sanctum. The challenge evidently went unanswered, for it was followed almost immediately by a cry of alarm. Jacom turned on his heel and raced back to the steps which he had ascended a few minutes before. He ran full tilt, reckless of the danger involved. It was as though his feet, so long constrained to move with unnatural slowness, were intent on making the most of their sudden freedom. It took him three minutes to get down to the roadway. By that time four or five guardsmen were running this way and that, peering into shadowy coverts in search of the fugitive. Jacom turned round, then turned again, trying to judge which way the fugitive might have gone. He saw nothing at all until one of the men suddenly shouted: "Look out, sir!" He turned for a third time to find a dark sihouette hurtling out of the shadowed cloister which extended from the groom's quarters behind the big stables to the side door of the main kitchen. Convinced that he was under attack, Jacom reached for the 59 sword that was sheathed at his belt, but the man jinked around him, seemingly intent on scuttling into an alleyway which could take him clear of the men lumbering in his wake. Jacom immediately let go of the hilt of his weapon and hurled himself sideways. His aim was to tackle the man about the knees, but he had underestimated the effect of the breastplate he wore, and his grasping fingers closed instead about the falling man's left ankle. Had the captain's desire to complete the capture been compromised by the slightest irresolution the fugitive would probably have pulled away, but Jacom clung on desperately, and his armoured body was far too heavy to be dragged. Thus anchored, the man's momentum carried him forward to a crashing fall, which his cartwheeling arms could not soften. By the time his other pursuers arrived he was groaning in pain, all further thought of flight having been rudely driven out. Jacom came to his feet, feeling very pleased with himself in spite of the fact that he'd been severely shaken up in the encounter. He noticed that he had skinned both his knees on the hard flagstones. His midriff and ribs felt as if he had run full tilt into a five-barred gate. Two guardsmen grabbed thfe recumbent man's arms and hauled him upright. "What did he do?" Jacom risked, looking around for whoever had issued the first challenge. "Nothing!" complained the^ victim, while a third guardsman conducted a thorough search of his clothing He wore no belt and had no pouch of any kind. He was carrying no weapon. There was, however, a piece of parchment tucked inside his shirt. It was a pass to enter the citadel. The guardsman identified the signature as that of the senior kitchen steward, and pointed out that it was only valid until curfew. The man had long overstayed his licence to be on the premises. "Why didn't you answer the challenge?" Jacom demanded of him. "Because he warn't supposed to be 'ere," answered Kim, the guardsman who had conducted the search. "Came in b' day, hid when the gates closed, then came out thievin'. Poor fool! "Adn't got so much as a kitchen scrap 'fore we 'ad 'im." The guardsman seemed as pleased with the capture as Jacom had been, although it did occur toJacom that it might have been better had they caught the man in possession of stolen goods. "It was a mistake!" the prisoner objected. "I didn't mean to get shut in. I was just trying to clear out quietly, so as not to trouble anyone." "Horseshit!" said Kim. It seemed an apt comment. "What's your name and station?" Jacom asked. "Sart," the prisoner replied, promptly enough. "Zadok Sart, bone-man." "You appear to have left your bone-bag behind," Jacom observed. "Not to mention your cart. Still- you've five hours of the midnight left to think of a good excuse, before you see the magistrate. Shackle him in the guardroom by the City Gate, for now." "Yes sir," Kim replied, with a zest which made it clear that he too was fully appreciative of a welcome break in the normal routine. "We c'n get the truth out of 'im if'n you want us to, sir." "That's not our business," Jacom said loftily. "We're the king's guard. Our business is keeping order, not thief-taking. We can leave the sordid stuff to the constables." "Yes, sir," the guardsmen chorused. Jacom felt a thrill of pleasure at having demonstrated that he had learned the ropes as quickly as anyone could have expected. He tried not to limp as he strode away to resume his tour, but when he came to the stairway he decided that he'd seen quite enough of the battlements for one midnight, and went back to the guardroom instead, to inspect his cuts and bruises. Well, he thought philosophically, as he dabbed his bloody knee with a handkerchief, he might not he guilty of anything much, hut he's definitely guilty. That's an improvement. Next time, perhaps we can arrest someone worth arresting. After that. . . who knows what possibilities the future might hold^ 61 a ndris leaned on the wall of his cell and watched a spider patiently spinning a web across the pane of the window. It was a good place to have a web because any flies which got into the gloomy cell- and somehow they did, although the possible routes of ingress were blocked most of the time- naturally headed for the beam of light the window let in. There had, of course, been a web there before, but Andris had thoughtlessly swept it away on more than one occasion in order to peer out into the courtyard. To the spider, each such clearance must have been a catastrophe, but the creature had set about the work of reconstruction with infinite patience and care, and Andris had resolved to be more respectful in future. In fact, he had come to the conclusion that the spider was a useful resource in a situation which offered relatively few wards against boredom. He had decided to name it Belin'so that every time he looked at it he could be offering up a silent and subtle insult to the king of Xandria. ' "I won't do it again," Andris assured the' spider "It isn't as if there's anything out there worth looking at.-In all the time I've been here not a single person has been brought to the scaffold, or even to the whipping-post, and the traffic which passes in and out of the Inner Sanctum is no more interesting, seen from this height, than the comings and goings around the mint. The level of entertainment which this places provides is simply not up to scratch. I was once in a jail where my cell had a view of a crocolid pool, and I saw one poor wretch thrown in. I hadn't really believed in the logic of deterrents before that day, but I've believed in it since. I was very polite to the jail keepers after that, even though they were complete bastards who never wasted an opportunity to wind the prisoners up. That was a busy jail, not like this one at all but they didn't make people pay to be in it. I was innocent then, too. " The spider didn't answer, but Andris didn't mind. "It doesn't in the least matter that you don't understand a word of what I'm saying, Belin," he informed the indefatigable arachnid, with all due seriousness. "I've been travelling for a long time now, always a foreigner. You get used to not being understood, or even listened to. It isn't just that I'm an amber among gold ens perennially mistaken for a dark lander It's something deeper than that--something so deep that even when my skin colour blends in nicely my foreignness still stands out and marks me as a man apart. That's strange, isn't it? I mean, given that all human beings speak the same language and are heirs to the same lore, you'd think we'd all treat one another pretty much alike, but we don't. Not everywhere's as bad as Xandria, of course. Oddly enough, the places where people pride themselves as being civilised tend to be the places where foreigners get the worst treatment. There's something about the frame of mind which treats anyone unlike oneself as a barbarian which is profoundly distasteful- and I say that knowing perfectly well that I come from just such a place myself. I've learned from my experiences, you see." Belin continued to build bridges between the strands of his web- or possibly her web- neatly and cleverly. Somewhere in his travels Andris had heard a tale about an imprisoned king who watched a spider making attempt after attempt to climb up a sheer wall, undeterred by constant failure. This good example had allegedly boosted the king's own morale to the point where, once released, he set about winning backAis lost kingdom. It was one of those tales which was said to be very ancient which probably meant that it had been invented no more than a couple of generations ago. "In any case," Andris told the spider, "I have no plans to go home. A man has to have some pride. You can't let the world grind you down, no matter how often you get thrown in jail. Maybe that's what you're trying to teach me, by spinning that wonderfully intricate web. Maybe you're trying to tell me that it's cleverness and not morale that finally turns the tide of fortune. Maybe you're trying to tell me that there's a way to wealth and position, however mazy, in the Princess Lucrezia's offer to take me into her service if 63 and when she can gffyour august namesake to agree. Maybe . . ." He fell silent and spun around as the beam covering the spy-hole in the cell door was withdrawn. ' "Mother visitor," called the laconic jailer. "Never knew a man so popular . . ." Andris didn't consider two visitors in three days to be evidence of great popularity, but he was grateful to receive any attention at all. By the time he had crossed to the spy-hole the jailer was gone. In full daylight it was easy enough to make out the features of the person who stood in the corridor. It was not, as he had half expected the princess's servant Monalen, nor could it possibly be Theo Zabio. It was a middle-aged and bearded golden, tall for a Xandrian, grizzled without being in the least decrepit. His brown eyes were bright but oddly melancholy. Andris could see little of the man's costume, but the cloth of his coat was of very good quality and was showing not the slightest sign of deterioration about the collar or shoulders. In Xandria, where cotton-cleaners and other linen-hungry pests were exceptionally voracious, that was telling evidence of wealth. Andris was uncomfortably aware of the fact that his own clothing was practically falling apart. "My name is Carus Fraxinust," the visitor said, without waiting to be asked. "I'm a merchant. I've heard that you're a mapmaker from the far north. If that's so, I might be able to offer you employment rather more congenial than rebuilding houses and repairing The city wall." , "I thought that the people of Xandria considered the Arts Geographical to be a joke, utterly useless in navigating the Slithery Sea and the lands about its shores," Andris said warily. "They do," Fraxinus said. "That's why the city hasn't any map makers of its own . . but there's always a price to pay for the sin of forgetfulness, however venial it may seem. Is there, among the maps you memorised, one which includes a region called the Navel of the World? " "Yes there is," Andris said promptly. Can I remember it after all these years. he wondered silently. Can I still draw and colour it, given that I haven't been required to practise for seven years and more? Better not let on that there's any doubt, though. "Do you have any idea whereabouts that region might be located?" (he merchant asked innocently. Andris knew a test when he faced one. "Yes I do," he said, and pointedly neglected to continue. "You don't have to give away any secrets," Fraxinus assured him. "Just tell me where the region lies in relation to the Forest of Absolute Night, if you can." Andris closed his eyes, and tried to call the requisite image to mind. He imagined himself back in the schoolroom, labouring under the eyes of his stern mentors, drawing and drawing and drawing until his wrist cramped, dotting and stippling and colouring and labelling, driven all the while by such endlessly quoted homilies as "There is no sin but forgetfulness' and "A man without Art is a man without worth'. "South," he said eventually. "A long way south, beyond the Soursweet Marshes. The keys to the map are the five-pointed star, the bowshot and the nest of the phoenix." He was so glad to have been able to remember the mnemonic devices that he spilled it all out before pausing to wonder whether he might have given away something saleable. "Can you draw the map," Fraxinus asked, 'if I supply the requisite inks and parchment? " "Of course," Andris said. "I can interpret it too, to the extent that the interpretation is part of the lore. Are you thinking of going to the Navel of the World?" "Yes I am," Fraxinus said frankly. "It's long been held to be an impossible journey, but I have reason to think that it's no longer impossible. I'm trying to muster an expedition. A map would be useful -- provided, of course, that it were accurate." "It's my belief," Andris said, 'that the maps I was trained to draw of the Slithery Sea were accurate enough in their day- but the lore comes to us from an unimaginable antiquity, and the sea in question must have been so named because it is indeed inclined to slither. Its shores have changed over time, and so has the distribution of its lands. The map which includes the Navel of the World includes marshlands, but no sea. If my experiences in the north are any guide, it's likely to be accurate. I can offer no absolute guarantees, but for what the map may be worth, I can draw it. Would it be worth a thousand crowns to you? " "That's a very high price," the merchant said. "I'd want much more than a map for a sum like that." 65 "How much more?," Andris asked. He was not disheartened because he had not imagined for a moment that anyone would pay so much for a mere map. "You're a fighting man too, I think, and a much travelled one. I might see my way to clearing your entire debt, if I could have the strength of your arms as well as the knowledge in your head. Would you be prepared to join us on this adventure, as my employee?" The merchant seemed quite relaxed, as if he expected Andris to jump at the offer. Andris rather liked the man, but couldn't help taking a certain delight in upsetting his assumption. "I've already had an offer which might secure my release," he said amiably. "I've promised to accept it, if it comes to fruition." Fraxinus seemed both astonished and perturbed. "Who from?" he asked with revealing bluntness. "Princess Lucrezia," said Andris proudly. "She's offered to take me into her service, if the king will give his permission. I understand that she has already submitted her petition, but that these things take time." "Why in the world would Princess Lucrezia want to take you into her service?" the merchant' asked maintaining a polite tone in spite of the implied insult. , "Perhaps she wants a mapmaker," Andris retorted sarcastically. Fraxinus's brow was deeply furrowed, and Andris realised that he was actually considering this hypothesis seriously. "What has Keshvara started?" the merchant muttered into his beard, as he tugged at it reflexively with the fingers of his left hand. But then he looked up again and said: "I can't believe that.-' Neither can I, Andris thought- and belatedly realised that there really was a mystery here. Why did the princess want to petition for his pardon, when she could easily obtain the services of any of a thousand Xandrian men? He began to regret not having made enquiries. "I did promise," he said weakly. "Perhaps nothing will come of it, if the king refuses his permission but have I any reason to think that I would be better off in your service than in hers?" Carus Fraxinus was still puzzled and still hesitant. "I'm a good master," he said. "Anyone in Xandria will tell you so. I'm very well known in the city. As for Princess Lucrezia. . . it's not for me to say anything at all about the lady, but. . ." "I shouldn't need to be selling myself as a bondsman to any master," Andris said, deciding that it might be better to steer the conversation to safer ground. "I didn't injure the guardsman. I was simply trying to protect a blind man who was caught up in the brawl. If you have as much influence as you claim, can you not see that justice is done? Were I a free man, we could bargain on a fairer basis- and I'd have no need to sell myself for a royal pardon, for any purpose. " Fraxinus stared at him contemplatively. "How might I prove your innocence?" he enquired, seemingly taking the matter entirely seriously. "Ask the injured man where I was when he was hit from behind. Ask the story-teller- he's blind, but neither deaf nor stupid. The man who struck the blow was almost as tall as I am, but stouter. He was part of a company of villains who seemed to be plotting something. Other people who were in the tavern might know his name. I'd be very grateful for your help, if you could do this. I'd certainly draw you a map . . . and you'd be serving the ends of Xandrian justice, which the law has not." "Do you know the story-teller's name?" Fraxinus asked dubiously. "No, but if he regularly plies his trade about the harbour he shouldn't be too difficult to find. He told me a tale which he attributed to something called the Apocrypha of Genesys, of which I have never heard. It concerned a Serpent and a Salamander and a place called Idun. That's another name for the Navel of the World, is it not?" Andris had assumed in saying this that tales from the so-called Apocrypha of Genesys must be commonplace in Xandria, but he saw in Fraxinus's expression that this was not so. "Can you remember the tale?" the merchant asked curiously. "Only that it had to do with gifts of trees, in return for which the forefathers made bold promises. It was dressed up very ornately with proverbs and the like, like the Lore of Genesys which everybody knows. It wasn't the kind of tale which has a readily discernible meaning- I doubt if the man makes an abundant living unless he knows a few which are far funnier and somewhat dirtier. Is it of any significance?" "Probably not," Fraxinus admitted. "But still, I have become 67 interested of late inJaearing anything which has to do with those legendary regions. I shall try to find your story-teller, Andris Myrasol. . . and if I do, I shall see what might be done to reopen your case and prove your innocence. But I want your solemn promise that as soon as you are free you will draw me a map of the Navel of the World." "Prove me innocent," Andris said, 'and I'll draw you all the maps you want that I swear. But you'd better hurry, for I can't tell where I might be sent on the princess's service, if the king lends his blessing to the offer she has made. " The merchant nodded, and would have turned away, but Andris interrupted him. "By the way," he said, 'do you know of a man named Theo Zabio - an amber from Ferentina like myself, who might have come to Xandria a long time ago? " Fraxinus thought for a minute, then slowly shook his head. "Was he a merchant?" he asked. "I doubt it," Andris said sourly. "Like myself, he probably arrived a vagabond, although he was well enough born. If my own experience is anything to go by, I fear that he's as likely to have been enslaved to the wall, or embarked upon some criminal career, as to have become respectable and rich. Still, I had hoped . . ." Fraxinus nodded sympathetically. "I'll ask after Theo Zabio too," he promised. "If I don't hear of him in the better parts of town I'll go to Checuti, the so-calJed prince of thieves who's an amiable man in spite of his vocation, and who seems to know everyone. I need that map, you see, and I'm a (nan to be reckoned with, even if I'm not a princess of the realm. Be cheerful, my friend- one way or another, you'll not be going to the wall." As the man passed our of sight, Andris permitted himself a broad and beaming smile. He did indeed feel cheerful more cheerful than he had in many a year. "My luck is turning," he told the patient spider, as soon as he had regained his former position. "I feel it in my bones. Merchants and princesses are vying for my service and fighting for my rights. The worst is over, my friend. Tomorrow, or the next day, I'll be heading for fortune and fame!" Belin, ever the silent sceptic, didn't say a word. 9 tacom cerri removed his sword belt and sank down gratefully J on to the wooden bench that ran around the guardroom wall. It had once been upholstered with some fibrous substance but the cushioning had long since been devoured by assiduous pests, leaving nothing but the rotted wood to support a guardsman's weary bones. Half an hour remained until the end of the shift, when the men would be relieved of their posts, but captaincy had its privileges, and he was not compelled to keep a constant eye on his loyal watchers. Alas, he was not to be allowed to enjoy his early retirement from duty. There was an abrupt knock on the guardroom door, and he sprang to his feet as it opened. He was expecting his commanding officer, or some complaining courtier, but the man who entered was obviously neither of those. Jacom stared at him blankly for a few seconds, not knowing quite what it was that made him so hesitant. The other stared at him equally blankly. Then they realised, with a simultaneous shock of surprise, that they knew one another. "Carus Fraxinus!" said Jacom, who was the first to connect the familiar face with a name. Fraxinus was the merchant to whom his father sold the greater part of his produce. He had been a regular visitor to the estate at one time, although he had delegated that part of his business to his son in recent years. Fraxinus was every bit as surprised as he was. "Why," he said, 'it's Arnal Cerri's boy, isn't it? I remember you when you were just a babe in arms. So you're a guardsman now- and a captain, too! " " Yes indeed," Jacom agreed proudly. He knew that the merchant must be well aware of the fact that his commission was a purchase made by an ambitious father who wanted his favourite son to be something other than a fruit-grower and pig-farmer, but he 69 nevertheless felt entitled to be proud of his position. He advanced and shook the oldefman's hand firmly. "Of course," said Fraxinus, remembering. "You had a fencing master when I saw you last, and there were archery targets hanging from the branches of your father's plum trees. What luck! I come in search of a guard-captain, in trepidation as to how I might be received, and I find the son of an old friend." "Trepidation?" Jacom echoed dazedly. "Why trepidation?" "Because I came to ask a favour, and might have been rudely sent packing- not, of course, that I expect any favours from you because I know your father, but I dare to be confident that if you find it necessary to send me packing you'll do so politely and bear no grudge." "What favour?" Jacom asked, aware that he was being subtly flattered, and equally aware of his own susceptibility. "I've just come from the prison," Fraxinus said. "Don't look so astonished, I beg you. I came to visit a prisoner--a man who might be of considerable use to me if I could secure his services. I wanted to pay his fine in return for his entering my employ, but he has had another offer from within the citadel, and the matter now seems much more complicated thamit did before. It may be that I shall have to prove him innocent in Order to get what I need from him. I wondered if perchance the guard-captain or one of his men might have useful information. The prisoner in question is the exceptionally tall man who looks like a dark lander -- do you perhaps know who arrested him?" i Jacom felt a dreadful sinking sensation. He needed to sit down, but didn't feel able to do so until he had invited Fraxinus to do so too after which he seemed to have admitted the man entirely into his confidence, in spite of the fact that he didn't want to tell him anything that might make trouble for his men or himself. "You mean Myrasol -- the northerner," Jacom said cautiously, when they were both settled on the hard bench. "Do you know him?" "It was my men who arrested him, and one of my men whose leg was broken in the fight which occasioned the arrest." "Ah!" said the merchant, immediately seeing his difficulty. "I didn't realise that. When I spoke of his innocence, I didn't necessarily mean to imply that he actually is innocent. It simply seemed to be a possible avenue of exploration." "Of course," said Jacom tepidly. "As it happens, there is some doubt about it. He may well have been falsely accused by the other witnesses. The injured man wasn't well enough to testify, and neither I nor my sergeant saw the blow struck. But I'm not sure you'd be able to obtain more honest testimony than was offered to the magistrate- and in any case, wouldn't it be simpler to buy the man out than to drag the case back into court?" "Perhaps," Fraxinus agreed. "At least, it would be, if Myrasol hadn't applied for a royal pardon and the Princess Lucrezia hadn't offered to get it for him." "Princess Lucrezia?" Jacom echoed, not trying to conceal his astonishment. "What would she want with the amber? Male servants aren't allowed in the Sanctum, and even if they were . . ." "I don't know," Fraxinus said. "I'll have to ask my associate Hyry Keshvara -she knows Lucrezia well, and she might have said something to spark the princess's interest. I hope the princess wants him for the same reason I do- to draw a map but there's another possibility which . . . well, let's just say that I'd far rather she was interested in his mapmaking skills. If you happen to hear anything, I'd be grateful if you'd let me know." "Why should you be interested in a northern mapmaker?" Jacom asked. "Xandrian sailor men are the only ones who know how to find their way around the Slithery Sea and its shores." "It's a long story," Fraxinus said. "Was there an old storyteller present when you arrested the amber? A blind man?" "Yes. He was knocked out but he recovered quickly enough. What happened to him after that I don't know." "Had you seen him before? Do you know his name?" "No but he wouldn't be any use as a witness. He really was blind it wasn't an act put on for the sake of sympathy." "I've another reason for being interested in him, too. I dare say there've always been story-tellers in Xandria avid to recite the ApocryphaofGenesysfortbepriceofa jug of wine, and it's perfectly probable that the northern map makers disembark from foreign ships four or five times a year, but until now there hasn't been the slightest reason for anyone to take an interest, so I haven't. Isn't it always the way that as soon as you find out that you need something, it becomes frustraringly difficult to find? Such is life." 71 "Always the way," Jacom echoed un enthusiastically He wondered how mucntrouble he might be in if the amber were able to prove his innocence with Fraxinus's help. Sergeant Purkin certainly wouldn't be pleased if--or when- he found out what was going on. Fraxinus smiled, warmly enough but just a trifle wanly. "Should you discover anything," he said, "I'd be most obliged if you could send a messenger- of course, if you'd be able to come yourself, I'd be very happy to open a bottle of fresh Khalornian wine so that we could enjoy ourselves a little. I'd be glad to hear news of your father and his neighbours. My son Xury will be returning from his travels in three or four days- he'll doubtless be pleased to see you, and I dare say that you'll feel much more at ease in the company of someone your own age than you can in the company of an old man like me- but if you learn anything that might interest me, please call before then. The house is on the seaward side of Tore Hill. Anyone in the neighbour hood will point you in the right direction- everyone knows me thereabouts. I really would be grateful anything at all." Although he nodded in response to the invitation, Jacom felt that it might be better were he to be uAable to accept it, at least for a little while. On the other hand, he knew perfectly well that there was one item of information which Fraxfnus might be very glad to have. After a brief struggle, his conscience pressured him into spitting it out. "There was another man nearby when Herriman was hurt," he said slowly. "A man named Burdam Thrid. He might have been the man responsible. I believe he works for a man named Checuti." "Does he indeed?" said Fraxinus. "Everyone knows him, too, so I hear. Checuti, I mean." "Oh yes," Fraxinus confirmed. "Everybody knows Checuti, at least by reputation. Whereas my reputation works to my benefit, however, his will one day ensure his damnation. It really doesn't do to get a reputation as a prince of thieves it's the kiss of death to a productive career. If he has any sense he'll get out of Xandria while the going's good. I must admit that I rather like him, and I can't help wishing that he'd turn his cleverness to less dubious ends. I was going to send a message to him anyway, to enquire after some relative of Myrasol's. I'll ask him about Thrid -- delicately, of course. Thanks for the suggestion." "You're welcome," said Jacom dolefully. An uncomfortable feeling that he needed to justify himself made him add: "When one of my men gets hurt in a brawl, I like to see justice done and the true offender punished. I really don't have anything against the amber." Fraxinus raised a quizzical eyebrow. "Of course not," he said politely. "Should I find out anything further, I will of course be very glad to share the information. Do come to my house, even if you don't have any news for me. It really would be pleasant to see you there. Don't leave it too long. I expect to be setting out on a long journey in the not too distant future, and I might be away for a long time." "That's why you need a mapmaker, no doubt," Jacom observed, to prove that he had his wits about him. "It is," Fraxinus confirmed. "We'll need a few fighting men too. Aulakh Phar will hire us a dozen dark landers but it certainly wouldn't hurt if I could recruit a few extra men of Myrasol's impressive stature. If your sergeant knows any ex-guardsmen who are finding civilian life too dull tell him to suggest that they get in touch with me. " "Where are you headed?" Jacom asked curiously. "Across the Dragomite Hills and the Soursweet Marshes, to the legendary Pool of Life." "The Dragomite Hills are impassable," Jacom said. "Everybody knows that." "They always have been," Fraxinus admitted. "But it seems that some mysterious blight has starved all but a few of the drago mites and the few that are left are too busy tearing one another apart to attack travellers. The southern limit of the empire is a limit no longer- at least until the mounds recover from the catastrophe. I never could resist a window of opportunity, Jacom - and life has become so very tedious since Xury took over all the hard work. I feel the need for one last adventure, and I'd like it to be the greatest of them all. Perhaps I ought to petition Belin for a company of guardsmen, on the grounds that the breach in the hills might have political implications. How would you like to visit all those places of which the Lore of Genesys speaks so enigmatically?" Jacom was not the kind of man to place much credence in ancient myths, and he had heard all the familiar horror stories 73 pa bout the monstrously unearthly drago mites which had filled a vast swathe of territory with their castel late mounds. Nevertheless, he felt compelled to say: "I wish I could come with you, but .. ." He left the sentence hanging because he didn't know how to finish it. The merchant got up to leave just as the first of Jacom's men were returning from the shift, complaining in their usual ritual fashion about anything and everything. They stared after the merchant as he left, and Sergeant Purkin darted an insolently inquisitive glance in Jacom's direction. "He's an old friend of the family," Jacom said defensively. "I've known him since I was a child." "I guess you need connections like that to become a captain," the sergeant replied, in a carefully neutral voice. "Still, they do say that he's the only honest man in Xandria." The tone of his voice suggested that this was not a wholehearted compliment. 10 BY the time Lucrezia left the Inner Sanctum it was the twenty eighth hour. The stars were shining brightly, illuminating the worn stones of the courtyard but leaving the coverts and cloisters which hugged the citadel walls in deep shadow. There were lights in the stables and in the coinery, but the route which took her to the place appointed for her audience with the king passed through several unlit corridors. Because the meeting was to be in Belin's private quarters rather than the throne room- which he usually employed for all formally requested audiences, including those with his wives and children the latter part of the route was unfamiliar to her, but Lucrezia refused to allow herself the least feeling of discomfiture. She was an adult now, and her anxiety to see the world beyond the world far outweighed the childish unease of setting foot where she had never been before. Lucrezia kept in step with the servant sent to summon her, refusing to allow the woman to go ahead. Dhalla marched behind, a patient and indomitable guardian. As they approached their destination Lucrezia composed herself, reminding herself sternly that she must not show the least hint of displeasure regarding the time Belin had made her wait for the appointment. It was part of the art and craft of kingship to make everyone wait; that applied even to sons, let alone daughters. When she stepped into the chamber, however, she could not entirely supress her surprise at its bareness and its narrowness. She had never before seen her father in a room that was not large and lavishly ornamented. The throne room was commodious enough to hold a crowd of several hundred people, its great vaulted ceiling supported by awesome and intricately carved pillars. The throne itself was a massive construction, and the king always sat upon it in ceremonial garb. This room was no bigger than her own 75 bedroom, and the hangings which concealed its windowless walls were quite plain, nre ceiling was so low that Dhalla could not stand upright. She had to squat down, in what seemed an uncomfortable and undignified position. King Belin was reclining on a couch, reading a book by the uncommonly bright light of a tall but slender lamp. There was a low table by the couch, where there was a jug of wine and a single goblet, and three bowls of sweets, but nothing else. The king was dressed in a loose-fitting shirt and slack britches, almost as if he were an artisan. He seemed much smaller than he usually did, and the glaring lamplight showed every wrinkle in his aged face. There was nowhere for Lucrezia to sit, so she stood. She was forced to look down at her father, but if he was trying to seem like something other than a king he did not succeed. There was a bleak hardness in his eye which Lucrezia recognised and understood. She knew full well that whatever her father was, and however he might be dressed, he was the centre of an unimaginable vast web of authority and intrigue, which extended throughout the Thousand Isles, into every port on the southern shore of the Slithery Sea, and as far south as the province of Khalorn. He was the heart and foundation-stone of the political entity which the forefathers had declared impossible. "In this world," Goran was reputed to have said, 'there can be no empires, and the community of men which is their strength and their glory must be preserved in other ways. " To which the ministers of Xandria were wont to add, pridefully: " Except in Xandria, which has its own strength, and its own glory. " " Are you well, daughter? " Belin enquired, spftly, as the servant withdrew. "Yes, thank you, majesty," Lucrezia replied. She did not ask how the king was. The king was always well- protocol demanded that such things be taken for granted. Belin closed his book and laid it down on the table, carefully. Lucrezia could see that it was a very old book, perhaps eight or even ten years old. The binding had been expensive, but was thoroughly rotten now. The ink on the discoloured pages would almost certainly be blurred. She wondered what point he was making by exhibiting such a wreck. Xandria had by far the greatest library in the known world almost a thousand volumes- which employed a hundred scriveners, half of them fully occupied in copying. The strength and glory of Xandria was by no means limited to the mighty walls which enclosed city and citadel alike. Was Belin trying to imply that the empire itself was old, as direly in need of refreshment as the coins which the metallurgists were working so hard to re-cast in time for the Day of Thanksgiving? Was all this intended to inform her, subtly, that now was not a good time to plague the king with petitions? Belin leaned forward to fill his cup and swallow a sweet. When he moved, the looseness of his shirt was inadequate to conceal the protrusion of his belly. He didn't offer the bowl or the jug to her, nor was there any other gesture of intimacy. These days, Ereleth had told her, the king did not like to be touched or approached too closely, being wont to complain that it was bad enough being public property without being handled too. According to his dutiful witch-wife, Belin had long ceased to take any pleasure in the fact of being a king; like any common man he had come to take all the advantages of his station for granted while chafing against all its constraints. "You grow handsome," Belin observed. "You have the look of your mother when first I saw her- but you never knew your mother, did you?" "No, majesty," Lucrezia replied, wishing that he would get on with the business in hand. It was bad enough being forced to wait for days in the Sanctum, without facing further delay now. "They said she had Serpent's blood in her. Did you know that?" "Yes, majesty." "Nonsense, of course. Actual Serpents, according to the few men I've spoken to who've encountered them, are a dull lot. I prefer the ones which feature in fanciful folktales like those the dark landers tell. Darklander legend has it that some female Serpents are capable of metamorphosis into preternaturally lovely human-like creatures, in which guise they seduce hapless human males, whom they devour long before they give birth to the unnatural offspring thus conceived. You're supposed to be the remote descendant of some such creature. To the dark landers you're a kind of demon. Did you know that? " " Yes, majesty but Hyry Keshvara says that the dark landers aren't as primitive or as stupid as most Xandrians think. " "Who is this Keshvara?" Belin asked lazily- as Lucrezia had intended. 77 "She's the trader who brought me the seeds from the Navel of the World- the oneS' which are supposed to produce the most powerful poison known to man. That's why I need the amber, majesty. If I can't find a man strong enough to support the bush until it flowers, Xandria will not have the benefit of that treasure." "Your garden is over-full of poisons, daughter," Belin said, with a deliberate sigh. "I fear that Ereleth has become too determined a teacher, and you too apt a pupil. Witchcraft is supposed to be a healing art, not a murderous one. A witch-wife's true function is to protect her husband from the malice of others." "Has Ereleth not served you well, majesty?" Lucrezia asked, with no more than the slightest hint of sarcasm. "She has," Belin said gently. "I dare say that she will continue to do so. But it is time for her to find a new apprentice." He held up his hand before she could speak, and went on: "I know your education is not yet complete, but the state of the world is such that nine men in ten never reach full command of their Arts before they must apply them to the vulgar business of living, and royalty has no exemption from that rule. There is a certain sector of the Thousand Islands which is becoming troublesome, and I need a new link in the great chain of obligation and affection. I need to place trusted agents and ministers in Shaminzara, and their arrival must be welcomed rather th art resented. Were they to travel in the retinue of a princess of the realm destined for marriage to the prince of the island they'd have a sound basis for the execution of their duties." ( "I am not ready for marriage, majesty" ' Lucrezia objected, knowing even as she said it that she ought not be quite so forthright. "A half-formed princess is a blunt instrument in the game of diplomacy. A half-trained witch-wife would be an inefficient shield for her husband. " "Witchery is like any other lore," the king informed her coldly. "All knowledge is a mere heap of memorised facts unless and until it can be ordered by practice. You have been closeted long enough, my little lamia. Xandria has an adequate supply of poisons and poisoners. Some seeds grow and others don't-that's life. Necessity, little peach, is the mother of improvisation. You will be witch-wife enough for Shaminzara -- and should you ever be widowed, you'll return to Xandria a far sharper instrument than before." Lucrezia inferred from this remark that her duty as a witch-wife might in this instance be murderous rather than protective, but that did not affect her resolve. "I am, of course, utterly obedient to your will, majesty," she said, 'but I wonder if your advisors have properly judged the significance of the things which Hyry Kesh- vara has brought back from the far south. She believes that there is now a way to cross the land of the Dragomites which lies beyond the dark lands If so, regions which are no more distant than the isle of Shaminzara but which are utterly unknown to any man in Xandria are now accessible. To Keshvara, who is a trader, this seems an opportunity- but the king's advisors surely ought to consider the possibility that there might be danger. " "To Xandria?" "To the southern provinces. The way through the Dragomite Hills, if it exists, was not found by the men of Khalorn, majesty, nor by the dark land savages. It was found by bronze men from beyond the Soursweet Marshes: bold adventurers who took care to bring proof of the strangeness of the lands from which they had come. Keshvara's reaction was enthusiastic, and the expedition which she and others are mounting is motivated by curiosity and greed- but has she paused to ask why she was given these proofs? Has she paused to wonder what motive the men from the far south have for sending such tokens to Xandria?" "All very well, daughter- but what has this to do with the future queen of Shaminzara? I dare say that my ministers will take an interest in Carus Fraxinus's expedition. Trade is the lifeblood of the empire, and we are ever enthusiastic to assist its expansion. Our very best agents are our merchants. But none of this is your concern, and the fact that Keshvara brought her strange seeds to the Inner Sanctum knowing, I don't doubt, that Ereleth's garden was the one place in Xandria that such a cruel device of torture might be safely and secretly tested does not make it your business." "It is in Xandria's interests that the seeds be properly examined, majesty," Lucrezia said doggedly. "Not merely as a source of poisons, nor as a device of torture- in which capacity they seem strangely inefficient- but as a possible weapon of war." She was improvising as best she could, but having produced this notion out of desperation she immediately became fond of it. Perhaps, she 79 thought, there really was a threat from the far south, not merely to Khalorn but to the rural heartland of Xandria, whose fields fed the mighty city. "Even so, daughter," said Belin, mildly but unyieldingly, "I cannot see that this investigation requires a witch- and if it does, I have a perfectly good witch-wife in Ereleth. I need you to wed the prince of Shaminzara, and that is what you will do, willingly and gladly." "I need a hundred and thirty days, majesty," Lucrezia replied, shifting her ground yet again as her last position proved untenable. "I ask for nothing but time to complete my experiment, and I have found exactly the man I need. He's an amber, but not a dark lander He injured a guardsman in some petty dispute and was sentenced to the wall, but he's petitioned for a royal pardon. He's willing to pledge himself to my service if you will agree to release him to me." "Does he know what you intend to do with him, little darling?" "Of course not, majesty- but the law is the law. Once he's consented, he's consented. The wall won't miss his services; it's stood inviolate for thousands of years. Let me have him, please. If we can bring this last bush to term, it will produce enough new seeds to ensure that Xandria will never lose this treasure. Keshvara could have sold the seeds anywhere, to any one of a thousand curious buyers, but she brought them here, not to Ereleth but to me. This is something rare, precious and strange, majesty, and it's mine as well as Xandria's. Give me the foreigner, majesty, and let me see this through. " "He's a young man, daughter," Belin observed, indicating for the first time the possibility that he might relent. "I can't allow a young man to be brought into the Inner Sanctum." "His legs will be broken and his balls cut off before he's taken out of his cell, majesty," Lucrezia assured her father. "As long as it's done cleanly, by a good surgeon, it won't prevent his bringing the bush to flower." "The reason that the great wall of Xandria has endured so long while other empires have fallen into ruin," Belin told her loftily- almost as though he were practising his speech for the Day of Thanksgiving 'is that the people of Xandria have laboured tirelessly to maintain its solidity. Walls rot, but great houses may abide, as the proverb has it. There's great wisdom in proverbs, snake ling despite that they aren't part of some sacred lore packed away into the memory of Artists and Magicians. The wisdom that everybody has to know is the greatest wisdom of all, and what that wisdom says is that a city must protect its walls as ardently as a man guards his skin. Rare and strange and precious are fine words, daughter mine, but common and ordinary and useful are finer still, to those who know the true worth of things. "The great majority of men and women live in the everyday world, not in exotic enclosures, and everything which affects their well-being is familiar to them. Thorny bushes which grow in human flesh and produce venomous flowers might fascinate and horrify them for a fleeting moment of idle self-indulgence, but the wall which surrounds their city and preserves their civilisation is of the most urgent relevance forty hours a day, five hundred and fifty days a year- except for leap years, when there's a five hunded and fifty-first day, throughout which the wall still retains its urgent relevance. If there's ever a choice between giving a man to the stone masons and giving him to an inquisitive witch, the wise king will always give him to the stone masons at least until the day comes when he can no longer lift a block or fill a mould." It was obvious to Lucrezia that no argument she could launch would be allowed to prevail- and yet, the very fact that her father was devoting so much time to this interview, and bothering to make lengthy speeches instead of handing down abrupt commands, implied that she was going to get at least some of what she wanted. It dawned on her that her petition would be granted, but in such a way that she would be required to be exceedingly grateful. She suddenly understood the nature of the game she was being forced to play. On the one hand, she knew a measure of relief that she would get what she so ardently desired, but on the other, she felt seething resentment about the way in which it was being done. She hated being manipulated and manoeuvred in this fashion. "Only give me the man I need, father," she said sharply, deliberately setting protocol aside as a sop to her own wounded pride. "Make me a gift of him, for the Day of Thanksgiving or in celebration of my betrothal to the prince of Shaminzara. Only give me time to see this matter through to its end, and I'll go to the end 81 of the world thereafter, if you wish it, for Xandria's sake. I'll go gladly, it that is wifat will please your majesty." Belin condescended to smile. "Your mother had a tongue like that," he told her. "Quick and clever, but forked. In those silly nations where even the highest of men have but one wife, a man might be seduced and strangled by a tongue like that- but this is Xandria, where a king is a king and a wife but one of thirty-and- one . . . and a daughter, for all her charm and artistry, is a mere instrument of diplomacy. I need your loyalty, my child, if not your love. If I let you have this man, it will not be a gift, for you and I are above such things. We are royal folk, who neither offer gifts nor barter favours. We are honourable folk who recognise far greater dimensions of debt. Do you understand what I am saying, little darling? Do you understand what it will mean if I send this man to your garden instead of the wall?" It was always little darling, she noted, or little peach. In a silly, paradoxical way, she wished that she could now say no, or say yes without being able to mean it, but she did understand what she was required to understand. A year ago, she might not have been able to follow the chain of thought, but she was grown now; she had a mature brain as well asi mature breasts. "Yes, majesty," she said meekly. "I know what this means." Privately, with calculated' childishness, she added in silent thought: Perhaps I know better than you do, you fat old sot. You had but one teacher and I have had a hundred. Every sad, bored wife in the inmost tower understands her situation, because they have nothing else to do with their time and their wit but understand. If Xandria is indeed the oldest nation in the world it is not because it has a clever king who has thirty-and-one wives, but because it has thirty-and-one clever queens who have but a single king to distract them. All this was mere bravado, but it made her feel better to formulate the secret declaration. "I shall send an ambassador to the prince of Shaminzara," Belin announced. "I think you might like the prince, and he will certainly like you, for the firmness of your flesh and that cunning snaky sheen you have learned to impose on the liquid gold of your hide. A Serpent's granddaughter for a scion of the Slithery Sea- a rare, precious and propitious union. "In the meantime, you may have your dark land brawler, as skilfully castrated and broken in the limbs as the best of my surgeons can contrive... for just as long as you need him, and not a day longer." "Thank you, majesty," she said insincerely. She couldn't help feeling that she had been cheated by her father, her birth, her sex and the way of the world. How wonderful it must be to be as free as Hyry Keshvara, she thought. How proud one must be of honest bargains freely struck. How delightful to have a future unconfined by destiny and royal command. It was good to be out in the corridor again, where even a giantess could stand upright without bumping her head on a ceiling set too low. 83 somewhat to andris's disappointment, no word from Princess Lucrezia arrived on the day following his meeting with the merchant- nor, indeed, the day after that. Nor had any message come from Carus Fraxinus by the time night fell on the eve of the Day of Thanksgiving. "I realise that things move very slowly in these tropic lands," he confided to Belin the spider, who sat patiently in the corner of his or her reconstituted web, 'but I would have appreciated it had someone managed to secure my release before the holiday. Not that I could afford to celebrate in an appropriate style, but it would be nice to have something to give thanks for on the Day of Thanksgiving. If I were the lorrying kind of man- which, on occasion, I am disposed to be I might begin to suspect that something might have gone wrong. " What could possibly go wrong? he imagined the spider asking. "Good question," he replied. "Princess Lucrezia surely ought to be in a position to get her own way, and evert the greatest of kings must be inclined towards granting petitions at Thanksgiving, however little credence they may put in the legend of the ship that sailed the infinite void or the precise date of our ancestors' arrival in the world. Even if she were to fail, the merchant seemed like a very capable kind of fellow the sort who would make things happen, once he put his mind to it. He really did seem to think that I might be valuable ... a prize worth going to some trouble for." Beware of delusions of grandeur, my huge friend counselled the cynical spider, as characterised by Andris's overactive imagination. "I fear, my minuscule companion," he answered mournfully, 'that I gave those up a long time ago, in spire of the fact that there's no delusion about my being a prince in exile. Grandeur is something I carry in my bones, but I no longer expect it to affect my treatment by the world. Do spiders celebrate the Day of Thanksgiving at all? I suppose you must- after all, you're not unearthly, are you? If my ancestors arrived in the world from elsewhere, so did yours- and on the very same day. I suppose you have as much or as little reason to be thankful for that as we have. "Your ancestors must have made their first home in Idun alongside mine, even though they aren't mentioned in the Lore of Genesys. They must have been there, quietly spinning their webs about the windows and the gates, listening in when the old storyteller's Serpents and Salamanders came to call. Did my ancestors bring yours on purpose, do you suppose, or did yours just sneak a ride? Maybe the forefathers liked having your kinfolk around rather more than their decendants tend to do. Maybe you were useful for something then, but all we poor sinners have quite forgotten what it was. On the other hand, perhaps they just thought you'd be good company for all the poor fools their decendants would put in jail . . ." Andris could have continued in this rambling vein for a long time- and, indeed, already had on more than one occasion in response to the pressure that prolonged solitude exerted upon his idle brain- but he was interrupted in full flight by the scraping of the beam which normally covered the spy-hole in the door. He shut up immediately and swung around to face the door. The beam was not drawn back, but merely lifted for a moment and then replaced. While the spy-hole was uncovered, something small and round was flipped through it by unseen fingers. It plopped softly into the dark corner of the cell. Andris immediately went down on his hands and knees to search for it, and eventually managed to locate it. He got to his feet again, holding it up to the window to take full advantage of the starlight. It was a piece of soft parchment, carefully rolled up into a tiny scroll. The material was in such an advanced state of decay that it was difficult to unwrap it without inflicting any further injury, but he took great care while straightening it and finally had it spread out neatly on the windowsill. It wasn't easy to read what was written on the parchment, but 85 he patiently deciphered the untidily scrawled letters one by one. The ink had been intended for use on a more smoothly waxed surface, but it had not run too badly. You are in great danger, the missive informed him. An escape must be arranged. Keep to your cell at all costs. Help is at hand. Frustraringly, the only part of the message which had blurred so badly as to be ambiguous was the signature. After considering various possibilities he concluded that the second initial was certainly a Z, and that the remainder might well spell out the name Zabio, but that the first name couldn't possibly be Theo, beginning as it almost certainly did with an M. "Now there's a thing," said Andris to the spider, in a conspiratorial whisper. "What on earth am I supposed to make of this? Has the shipmaster or the merchant managed to find my uncle, or some descendant of his? If so, why hasn't the person in question simply come to visit me? How is it that I'm in danger, and from whom? Why should I need to escape when I have not one but two people willing to save me from the wall- and how on earth can an escape be contrived without the aid of a small army? Even if I were to escape, how could a man of my stature and colouring hope to hide when all the king's horses and all the king's men were sent forth to find me? This is surely not the princess's work . . . but if it's the work of Carus Fraxijius, he's decided to go about things in a very peculiar way." Belin had nothing to say. , "No good asking you for advice, is it?" Aridris said petulantly. "You don't even care. You're quite content to stay here, probably imagining that you're as free as a ... well, freer than any man, anyhow. Not that this is spider paradise, of course- the air's hardly humming with the sound of juicy flies- but it's good enough for you. You're lucky you don't know how fragile and meagre your circumstances are. Some human could come along at any time, suffering from a slight case of arachnophobia or simply a desire to clean up, and splat! . . you're gone, web and all. Still, ignorance is bliss, isn't that what they say?" Idly, he screwed up the piece of parchment and began rolling it between his warm fingers. Within minutes he had reduced it to a ball of anonymous and uninformative pulp. It could no longer be unrolled, let alone read. Personally, he had always preferred paper to parchment; it didn't last any longer, but it was cleaner and crisper while it did last and it didn't stink as badly when it rotted down. "Once," he told the uncaring spider, 'that was a bit of animal hide. Then it became a medium of communication: a vessel of vital knowledge, as rich as any loreful rhyme. Now it's just crap, like fecal matter. That's the whole human life-story in an allegorical nutshell. We begin life as little parasitic worms; we grow to become the vehicles of sacred lore, carrying it over from generation to generation; and when we've handed on our precious stocks of memory to its destined recipients we become nothing but waste-matter. Like everything else, we begin to decay before we're even born, and the ink of thought and knowledge isn't very well adapted to the gloss less parchment of memory and imagination. And yet we must give thanks every year to our beloved forefathers, who brought us out of the vast and empty wilderness of stars, that we might walk again upon a world, rejoicing in the sun, the soil and the silvery sea. "Don't you wish you were human too, so that you could spin philosophy instead of silken webs?" It seemed that the spider was no longer listening. Andris couldn't blame the creature; he wasn't really listening to himself. He was distracted by a profound unease, which arose from the suspicion that no one would go to the trouble of sending him a message like the one he had just received unless there was a very good reason. If someone were prepared to. take the risk of coming into a prison in order to inform him that he was in danger, in danger he must certainly be . and the fact that an escape was supposedly being arranged didn't necessarily mean that the rescue attempt would be successful. "There's been something very peculiar about this whole affair from the very beginning," Andris told the spider. "I should have known that it was all too good to be true, that my luck couldn't really have taken a turn for the better. For six years things have gone steadily from bad to worse, and my life has just about rotted down to pure unadulterated filth. What do princesses and merchants want with a wreck like me? What does anyone want with a wreck like me?" Self-pity, observed Belin, will get you nowhere. In my 8? experience, there ay^pniy two kinds of entity in the world--those which build webs and those which get caught in them. You 're just one of those who get caught in them. The question is, what are you going to do when the web-spinner comes for its supper? "One can easily get lost in a maze of spidery metaphors," Andris countered, dutifully setting self-pity to one side. "The real question's much simpler than that. The real question is ... just what the rotting filth is going on here?" Once he'd framed the question, however, he couldn't help feeling that the spider had indeed framed it rather more elegantly. He didn't bother to wait for the answer that would never come. He sat down on the crude pallet which was all the bedding he had, wondering whether it was safe to go to sleep- or, indeed, whether he could go to sleep given the discomfort of his circumstances within and without. 12 jacom came as quickly as he could in response to the summons from the jail but he found it impossible to bound up the steps with his customary easy grace. His knees were still rather sore and the unaccustomed hours he had lately been forced to keep had left him an uncomfortable legacy of lost sleep. His first impulse, on entering the jailer's room, was to curse the man for being a nuisance, but he managed to control himself. Sergeant Purkin was already present, and so was a guardsman named Kristoforo. The latter was standing behind a thin, grey- haired man in his twenties, holding tight to both his arms. The sergeant had a hammer in his right hand, whose lumpen iron head he was thumping suggestively into the palm of his left while the jailer looked on. Jacom closed the guardroom door discreetly behind himself. "What's the trouble, sergeant?" he asked, eyeing the hammer. The head was badly pitted and rusted, but it was still a serviceable tool. He couldn't imagine, though, that Purkin was contemplating some trivial exercise in carpentry- nor could the prisoner, who was looking distinctly fearful. "No trouble, sir," said the sergeant amiably, squatting down beside the prisoner. "Except that this poor fellow might he about to stub his toe. Funny how a reluctant tongue often has that effect." The thin man looked nervously down at the speaker, quivering with terror. "And why, exactly, should he be in danger of suffering such an uncomfortable effect?" Jacom asked, trying to enter into the spirit of the thing even though he didn't really feel like it. "Passed an illicit message to one of the prisoners," Purkin growled. "Very reluctant to tell us what was in it, or who sent it. In my experience, sir, a crushed toe is far the best method of refreshing a bad meg wry If it doesn't work the first time, doubling the dose is usually effective. Not many faulty memories can withstand two crushed toes ... let alone ten." Jacom had to admire the sergeant's gruesomely laconic way with words. To judge by the thin man's face, Purkin's eloquence was not going to waste. "What's your name?" Jacom barked at the frightened man. "Seril Sart, sir," the prisoner replied. "But I didn't do anything. It's all a mistake." "Sart?" Jacom echoed, knowing that he knew the name. "Brother of the man we caught in the grounds last night but one," Purkin supplied helpfully. "Oh," said Jacom. "You mean he's here." "Yes sir," said the jailer. "Convicted of trespass, fined thirty crowns. Elected to stay in jail while his family attempted to raise the money. His brother supposedly came to give him the news." "What's illicit about that?" Jacom asked, wondering if he had missed something. "Nothing, sir," said the jailer. "But being a dutiful man, sir, I kept a surreptitious eye on him anyway, just in case. He didn't know I was watching him. Whipped lip the top bar on Myrasol's cell he did, sir, and threw somethingin. Quick as a flash he was, sir, but I saw 'im all right." i "Search the cell if you want to," Seril Sart said nervously. "You won't find anything." ; "No, we won't," the jailer agreed. "The message was probably written on old parchment, easily pulped as soon as read. Standard method people take us for fools, you know, think we don't know what goes on. Only way to find out what was in it's to persuade 'im to tell us. " "Myrasol's the big amber, isn't he?" Jacom said, although he knew perfectly well who Myrasol was. "The one that. . . the one that's not a dark lander He had been about to say "The one that isn't guilty' but caught himself just in time. "Yes sir," said Purkin promptly. "I always knew there was something' funny about that one. He's into something', sir- him an' Sart both. Somethin's going' on, sir, and we're only one or two stubbed toes away from findin' out what. " "I d-don't. . ." the thin man began, but interrupted himself with a terrific howl of pain. Kristoforo gripped him even harder, and held him in place as he tried to hop away. "Get up, Purkin," Jacom said tiredly. "The poor chap might hurt himself if he trips over you again." "That was nothin', sir," said the sergeant, weighing the hammer carefully in his right hand as he brought himself upright. "Won't even leave a bruise. He ought to be careful, though. Next time, he might really hurt himself." "That's against the law," Seril Sart gasped. "This is a civilised country. There are laws . . . and lawyers. If you think I've done something' wrong you should charge me, lay your evidence before a court." "We're the king's guard," Jacom assured the man solicitously. "We wouldn't do anything that was against the law. Unlike you, apparently. What did the message say, Seril, and who paid you to bring it in? I don't suppose you did it out of the goodness of your heart, did you?" "Unless, of course, you and your brother and the amber are all in this together," Purkin suggested. "Maybe that was why your brother was lurking around the citadel two nights ago- planning a jailbreak." "I don't know any ambers!" Seril Sart was quick to say. "Zadok got shut in by accident. It's all a mistake!" Purkin crouched down again. Jacom put on his best predatory smile. "Look at it this way, Seril," he said. "You don't have any interest in Andris Myrasol. The only reason you brought in that message was that somebody made a contribution to the fund you're trying to put together to secure your brother's release. We don't blame you for that- and we're not particularly interested in taking advantage of what we know to make it more difficult for you to get your brother out, despicable thief though he may be. All we ask of you is that you stop stubbing your toe. Now, who gave you the message?" The thin man hesitated, but as soon as Purkin's hand moved he decided that discretion was the better part of valour. "A g-girl," he said, so hurriedly that he developed a distinct stammer. "Eight maybe ten. N-never sawer before. Don't know her name, on est He looked down fearfully as he spoke the last sentence but Jacom suspected that if this were the truth it certainly wasn't the whole truth. 9i "I need more," Jacpm said. "Tell me more." "I d-d-- . . . she was tall . . . t-taller than me. Mannish clothes, not dirty but well-worn. Looked like a p-pirate, or m-m-maybe a smuggler." Jacom made a small sound of disgust. "What's that supposed to mean?" he said- and then realised what it might mean. "She wasn't an amber, by any chance?" "N-not exactly," the thin man said, as doubt caught him up. "Not amber but not pure g-g-gold, mind. If she'd d-dark lander in erit was only a quarter. She warn't in lander though. Islander or sailor man C-could've had amber in 'er. . . certainly cc-could've." "What was the message?" Jacom said quietly, tiring of the man's panic-stricken rambling. "I d-don't. . ." Purkin raised his arm again, but he didn't have a chance to bring it down. Jacom neatly plucked the hammer out of the sergeant's hand. He was warming to his task now, and suddenly saw an opportunity to make an impression on his men. "Don't do that, sergeant," he said silkily. "I know a better way to cure bad memories." "You do, sir?" said Purkin interestedly. It was difficult to tell whether the tone of his voice signified honest curiosity or whether he was simply trying to play his part in the pantomime. Jacom gave the hammer back to Purkin as the sergeant stood up, and stepped past Seril Sart, brujshing Kristoforo's hands away with a casual sweep of his wrist. As the guardsman stepped back, Jacom took his place. Carefully, he removed a handkerchief from his pouch and reached around to stuff it in Sart's mouth. "Hold that in place, will you?" he said to Kristoforo. The guardsman obliged in time to stop the prisoner mumbling an objection. "Tell me, sergeant," said Jacom, as he took Sart's right hand in his own, and placed his left on the prisoner's shoulder. "Have you ever seen this method of treatment?" He took a firm grip on the middle finger of Sart's hand, and twisted it in the very precise manner which he had learned from his tutor in the Arts Martial. It was difficult to judge the exact extent of Sart's agony because the precautionary muffler stifled his scream, but Jacom noted the approving glint in Purkin's eyes. "Interestin', that, sir," said Purkin agreeably, as Jacom released the arm, stood the prisoner back on his feet and recovered his handkerchief. "I've seen it done, sir, but never learned the trick of it myself. Leaves no marks, I hear, but positively excruciatin' to experience. I don't suppose you could show me again, sir so I can try to get the hang of it, like?" "That depends, sergeant," Jacom said. Then he suddenly moved to transfix Sart's gaze with his own. "Don't try to tell me that you can't read, Seril," he said wolfishly, 'and don't try to tell me that because you were strictly forbidden to read it you daren't even look. What did the message say, Seril? Word for word, now. " Seril Sart was no hero, and he had taken more than enough punishment for one day. "G-g-great danger," he ground out, through teeth clenched against the pain. "Escape arranged. Stay p-p-put. Signed with a name begins with a z-zed. That's all, on est This time, Jacom was inclined to believe him. "Doesn't make sense," opined the jailer. "Mongrel's got people queuing up to buy him out all legal. What'd he want to escape for -even if he could?" Jacom signalled to the jailer to be quiet. "Thank you, Seril," he said. "That's all we wanted to know. You can go home now, if you want to. If anyone asks about the message, you'd be well advised to tell them you delivered it safely, and that no one was any the wiser. If you don't tell them that, I might not be pleased to see you the next time we meet. That's only one of a dozen little tricks I know, and I'd be glad of the opportunity to test the other eleven. Practice makes perfect, isn't that what they say?" Seril Sart nodded, perhaps to confirm, that that was, indeed, what they said. Jacom watched the thin man make his exit. "Shouldn't we have held on to him, sir?" asked the sergeant, in a pleasantly respectful tone. "No," said Jacom thoughtfully. This, he was sure, was a chance to get his nascent career back on the right track. "We'd never get to the bottom of it that way. If there really is an escape planned, the sensible thing for us to do is to arrange for it to go awry. That way, we catch the would-be rescuers instead of their messenger. He must be just a messenger, don't you think?" "But it still doesn't make sense," the jailer complained yet again. "The amber's as good as out. If the king won't give him to the princess, your friend Fraxinus'll buy him out." 93 Jacom was uncorp^prtably aware of the sergeant's curious gaze studying his face. Purkin was obviously wondering whether Carus Fraxinus was behind this, but wasn't entirely sure whether it was safe to say so. Jacom, on the other hand, was wondering whether he ought to tell Fraxinus that someone seemingly had plans to liberate his precious mapmaker before anyone had the chance to get him out legally. Why, Jacom asked himself, were northern map makers suddenly in such demand? "It seems that a competition is developing to claim the services of our unlucky vagabond," he said carefully. "When he was in court, he said he'd come to Xandria in search of a kinsman of his, by the name of Zabio. Sart's message was signed with a name beginning with a zed." "He wrote a letter to a shipmaster asking after a man of that name," the jailer put in, and was swift to add: "A legal letter, that is." "Perhaps this was his reply," Jacom said. "Carus Fraxinus is an honest man, who's exploring honest ways to take the mapmaker into his service. . . ifSeril Sart is right in thinking that he was hired by a pirate lass, it's possible^ that this Zabio fellow is a very different sackful of prunes." ' "And that the amber isn't what he claims to be, irrespective of whether or not he clouted Henriman," Purkin put in significantly. "I think we ought to set a trap, sergeant," said Jacom, who saw in this affair a golden opportunity to put the seal on his reputation, and perhaps to increase his standing in the eyes of Carus Fraxinus too. "I think we ought to employ a full measure of cunning in getting to the bottom of this not to mention-doing the amber a favour by saving him from getting any deeper in trouble than he already is." Sergeant Purkin condescended to laugh at that. "When was the last time anyone succeeded in escaping from the jail?" Jacom asked the jailer. "Before my time," the jailer replied stiffly. "Twenty or thirty years, at least. Every wall and every door's solidI'd stake my life on that. You couldn't tunnel out with a sack full of grinder worms and he hasn't got so much as a hairpin in there. Strikes me that his friends don't have a clue about what they're letting themselves in for. Foreigners! " "In that case," Jacom said, "I think we'll let them have a go, don't you? It might even be tonight. They probably think we'll be too busy with other matters, with the big holiday tomorrow. We'll keep a close eye on the place until they arrive, let them in ... and stop them on the way out. Maybe we'll even have time to twist an arm or two in the interests of finding out what in corrosion's name they're playing at." "Suits me," grunted the jailer. "Done my bit. Down to you now." "We'll take care of it," Jacom assured him. "You can depend on that." 95 i t was difficult to estimate Hyry Keshvara's age. Lucrezia judged that she must be at least eighteen, but she seemed amazingly fit and wiry for a woman of that age. The women of the Inner Sanctum mostly grew fat before they turned fifteen, and even those who didn't were soft, like pillows filled with feather foam Keshvara was by no means thin, but her flesh looked hard harder even than Dhalla's. Lucrezia had only once had occasion to touch the older woman's arm, but she remembered vividly that she had never felt muscles so taut and flesh so firm. She imagined that the best of the king's guardsmen would feel very similar- not those like the young officer who paused to watch her from the wall while she worked in the garden, but tHe old veterans who had seen action in the last of the wesrland wars. Keshvara was surely a veteran of sorts herself-- but Lucrezia had never before seen her as troubled or as hesitant as she now was,jand the princess was dismayed by the sight. ' Lucrezia had often urged Keshvara to visit her more frequently, but until this evening the trader had never come to see her without goods to offer for sale. When Keshvara had something to sell, she was a paragon of all the conversational virtues polite, charming, witty and completely at case with herself, even in the company of royalty- hut she was different now. She had refused food, and she was sipping her wine in a cautious manner that might almost have been insulting, given the princess's reputation. Her gaze was moving restlessly from side to side, as though she were reluctant to look Lucrezia squarely in the eye. Lucrezia wished that she could put the older woman at her ease. She wished she could tell her that out of all the people she knew, she envied none but Hyry Keshvara, no matter that the other women of the Sanctum except perhaps Ereleth - would have despised her on sight. She wished she could explain that although the great majority of the queens and princesses, and even the higher-ranking servants, measured their peers according to their beauty- envying the slenderness of a waist or the curve of a breast while feeling fully entitled to sneer at a hank of grey hair or a callused hand- she, Lucrezia, was different. Alas, politeness as well as protocol forbade her to say any such thing. There was simply no diplomatic way to inform someone generally considered plain that it really did not matter that a woman had narrow eyes, a lumpen nose and hairy arms, provided that the sights those eyes had seen, the odours the nose had smelt and the objects those arms had reached out for were worthwhile. Lucrezia studied the scar which scored Keshvara's neck and disappeared beneath the collar of her masculine blouse, where she had been caught by the teeth of a crocolid. She even envied the woman that, but knew how absurd it would be to say so. She was disappointed to discover that Hyry was capable of an altogether feminine confusion and trepidation, but she was doubly disappointed in herself for not being able to dispel that anxiety. When she groped for words, the best she could come up with was a leaden "Are you well?" and even that came out in a formal tone quite unsuited to the asking of a sincere question. "Yes, highness," the trader replied. "Very well indeed, I assure you." "I'm flattered that you found the time to come to see me," Lucrezia said, trying to make up for the awkward start. "You must he very busy with preparations for your new expedition into the south lands Keshvara seemed taken aback by that observation, and her narrow eyes narrowed further, as if she were wondering whether the princess might be mocking her. "I'm making ready for the journey," she admitted. "Carus Fraxinus wants me to go ahead, so I'll be setting out for Khalorn tomorrow or the day after." "So soon!" said Lucrezia, in mild surprise. "I'd hoped that you'd remain here to see the culmination of our experiment." The trader bowed her head shamefacedly. "Fraxinus has received news from Aulakh Phar in Khalorn," she said. "Phar urges us to make all possible haste there's trouble stirring in the dark lands it seems. All kinds of strange rum ours are spreading 97 through the forest, fcaxinus thought it best to bring forward all our plans. In fact, highness, it was Fraxinus who asked me to come here tonight, to ask a small favour of you. " "A favour!" the princess exclaimed, with a small thrill of delight. If Keshvara felt able to come here asking favours, no matter how smalt, that surely signified that there was more to their relationship than mere commerce. "You have only to ask," she added recklessly, 'and I will do whatever I can. " Hyry Keshvara nodded, but there was no evident diminution in her uncertainty. "It's about the tall amber who's presently held in your father's jail," she said. "He told Fraxinus that you had offered to secure a pardon for him if he would pledge himself to your service." Lucrezia tried hard to conceal her shock. "What of it?" she said evenly. "Do you, perchance, intend to feed him the third of the seeds I brought back from my last expedition?" "I do," Lucrezia said. "It seems to me that he will make a perfect host, and my father has said that I may have him the day after Thanksgiving, although I had to strike a bargain of sorts to get him." Hyry's lips were very tight; it was plain that this was the answer she had anticipated- and, fonsome reason, feared. "Why do you ask?" Lucrezia added. "What has the northerner to do with you- or with Carus Fraxinus?" "I know it's not my place to say this, highness," Keshvara said haltingly, 'but I wish that you might see your way clear to finding a different host. Carus Fraxinus would like to buy the amber out himself. " Lucrezia made every effort to remain calm, and to be seen to remain calm, although this request caused her some distress. "I fear," she said, as mildly as she could, 'that I've gone to a certain amount of trouble to secure the man's services. I've made promises in order that I might have this man, and I can't simply abandon him. With the whole realm to chose from, can't Fraxinus find a substitute? " The trader's head was deeply bowed, concealing her expression. "Of course, highness," she said unhappily. "I understand. Perhaps, though, you might order the amber to perform one brief and simple task on our behalf before you give him to the seed. We would be eternally grateful, and it shouldn't inconvenience you at all. He's a mapmaker, you see. He knows how to draw a map of the region we desire to explore. " "Are there no other map makers in Xandria?" Lucrezia asked, in genuine astonishment. The trader looked up. She was blushing, although her cheeks were so dark that they hardly showed the red. "I fear not, highness," she said. "At least, none who practise openly. The Art fell into disrepute many generations ago, and although there may be patient scholars somewhere within the empire's bounds who preserve the lore on the grounds that forgetfulness is a sin, we don't know where to look for them. Carus Fraxinus has been looking for a mapmaker for some time, and when news reached him- I believe the information came from one of the clerks who serve in the king's court- that one had been found he was enthusiastic to secure his services. Alas, he discovered that his offer to buy the man out had been preempted ... by your highness. When he told me, I guessed what had happened, and he asked me to come to see you, in the hope that something might be done. I knew that you were interested in the prospects of our expedition, highness, and dared to hope . . ." "I see," said Lucrezia, quickly taking up the conversational slack as her visitor's voice faltered. "I really am sorry that this accidental clash of interests has arisen . .. but if the map is all you need, there'll be no problem. I'll instruct him to. draw it before turning him over to the surgeon." "The map is all we need," Hyry agreed, stressing the word need very slightly to indicate that there was a measure of compromise in the agreement. "Fraxinus is, of course, willing to pay a fair price for it." Lucrezia could see that Hyry was more than willing to leave the matter there, but she wasn't prepared to release the trader so easily. She had questions of her own that required answering, and she could hardly help but remember what she had told her father regarding the political importance of the expedition that Fraxinus and Keshvara were mounting. "Tell me more about this Carus Fraxinus," the princess commanded. 99 "He's a merchany^Hyry replied uneasily. "One of the richest in the city- a man respected by everyone. He's not one of those who've made their fortunes by issuing usurious loans and bargaining with rapacious fervour. He's . . ." "An adventurer like you," Lucrezia put in, hoping that the compliment might smooth the trader's explanatory path. "Far better and far bolder than I," Hyry answered modestly. "I'm glad to be his hireling in this business, although the initial inspiration for the venture was mine. He and Aulakh Phar are the ideal men to equip and undertake such an expedition." "Is Phar a merchant too?" "He's more of a scholar," Hyry said, a little uneasily. "He makes his living as a healer but his wisdom extends far beyond any single branch of the lore. Fraxinus has often called upon his services as an agent and advisor, and thinks that his cunning will be invaluable if we can indeed cross the Dragomite Hills." "And you think the amber might be useful too?" Hyry shrugged her shoulders uncomfortably. "Fraxinus formed a good impression of him, highness. He has the look of a fighting man and he seemed to be in desperate need of a generous master . . . but the map is the main thing. If only we can obtain the map, we can hire fighting men aplenty in the dark lands At least, we can if . . ." She trailed off. i "This trouble in the dark lands you mention," Lucrezia said, quick to pick up the thread of the argument. "What exactly are the rum ours you've heard?" "Dragomites are said to be moving out of the blighted hills into the southern regions of the forest. Humans are said to be moving with them actually frith them, although Phar thinks that's probably mere confusion on the part of anxious dark landers Anyhow, the dark landers are making preparations for an all-out war against the people as well as the dragomkes. If possible, Fraxinus wants to make peaceful contact before a war starts." "Has all this been reported to my father's ministers?" Lucrezia asked, having heard nothing of it. "Undoubtedly, highness," Hyry assured her. "Phar was unable to send a detailed report, but he has doubtless informed the governor of Khalorn of everything he has heard. The govenor will certainly include the information in his own reports." One of which might reach Xandria in ten or twenty days, Lucrezia thought, and might catch a minister's attention ten or twenty days after that. Or might not. "I tried to impress upon my father," she said earnestly, 'that the existence of the seeds which you brought me was no trivial matter. I tried to make him see that it was of some importance to the realm that a way might now be open to the legendary lands beyond the Forest of Absolute Night. I even suggested that he should take an interest in your expedition himself- but he didn't take the suggestion seriously. I'm only a princess, you see . a mere pawn to be sacrificed in the game of diplomacy. But this is important, isn't it? More important than a simple experiment in witchery . . . and more important than a new trade-route. The dark landers may not be subjects of the empire, but their wars are our business nevertheless. In any case, the Navel of the World is where it all began. It's where the forefathers did their work, made their plans and issued their commandments. It's where the Pool of Life is. If the bronzes who sold you the seeds really did come from there, we don't want communication with them disrupted by dark land barbarians. " "Yes, highness," said the trader dutifully. "It seems to me that this is important. But not everyone sees things the same way. The common view is that the Lore of Genesys is just a set of pretty tales, full of ringing phrases which signify nothing. It's not surprising that the king and his ministers aren't very interested by news that there's a blight in the Dragomite Hills and that its effects have spilled over into the Forest of Absolute Night. In any case. . ." Hesitancy overtook her yet again. "You're not so sure that you want the king's agents involved in your expedition," Lucrezia guessed. "You don't want to have some minister's lackey or some over-polite courtier in tow, telling you what to do in the name of the crown. I don't blame you." "We're hoping to go farther than any man from Xandria has been for many generations," Hyry said, carefully avoiding any direct response to Lucrezia's observation. "We're hoping to visit places which are mentioned in the most ancient lore, but we have no reason to expect that we'll find any relics of former times. Even if the grains of truth contained in the old tales and romances haven't been corrupted in being handed down from generation to 101 generation, the reality, to which they refer must have decayed into dust long ago. We can't possibly guess what we might find there now . . but Fraxinus thinks, even so, that myth and legend offer some reason to believe that whatever is there now might be of interest to scholars and traders alike. " "You're not looking for incorruptible stone, then?" Lucrezia said teasingly. "You don't expect to happen upon the draught of longevity or any other fabled miracles?" "No, highness," the trader replied soberly. "What Carus Fraxinus is looking for is profit. I dare say that he hopes that there might be miracles- or if not miracles, wonders- but he's a hardheaded man after his own fashion. He believes that the people of today have lost much of the heritage that once was theirs, and he'd be very happy indeed were we to recover a little of that loss, but he'll gladly settle for knowledge of ordinary things if that's all there is to he had. He's not a wild-eyed treasure-hunter, highness. He's a trader." "That's Fraxinus," Lucrezia observed softly. "What about you?" Hyry Keshvara seemed rather disconcerted by the intrusion of such a personal note into the conversation. She opened her mouth automatically, perhaps to protest that she had meant to include herself in all these judgments, but then she closed it again while she thought the matter over. Lucrezia knew that she might simply be hunting for an acceptable lie, but dared to hope that she might be trying to weigh her motives m^re accurately than she had ever had cause to weigh them before. ( Eventually, the trader said: "Perhaps I'm no more than a victim of silly pride. Were I to tread my accustomed pathways for a thousand years I should never be as rich as Fraxinus. Perhaps I lack the money-hunger of a true merchant. Your highness might not understand, but I've always taken a childish delight simply in being where no man of Xandria -- and I use the word man narrowly has ever been. I always seem to be happier in dark and dangerous places than I am when sturdy and well-maintained walls are layered about me. Perhaps I'm a barbarian at heart, or a madwoman. Either way, when Carus Fraxinus proposed that we combine forces to find a way through the Dragomite Hills my heart leapt up, because that's precisely what I had desired of him, and precisely what I hoped." Having finished this speech, Keshvara seemed so profoundly discomfited that Lucrezia felt sorry for her. "I do understand," the princess insisted, grateful for the opportunity to do so, and to do so with passion. "Indeed I understand perfectly- and I wish with all my heart that I might go with you." Keshvara made no response to this, and Lucrezia continued after a brief hesitation. "My father, alas, has other plans for me. But Fraxinus shall have his map; I can promise you that, at least. As soon as the amber is delivered into my care- before, if I can contrive it- I shall demand the very best map he can draw, in triplicate. I'll send Monalen to your house as soon as it's done or to the house of Carus Fraxinus, if you're already on your way. All I ask in return is that you'll promise me faithfully that you'll come to me when your adventure is done, to tell me every detail of it-- no matter whether I'm in Xandria, or Shaminzara, or anywhere else in the known world." "Yes, highness," the trader said. "That I'll gladly do. Thank you, highness. A thousand thanks." It seemed that the vehemence of Lucrezia's speech had startled her, but she made no comment on it. Lucrezia would have liked to expand upon her theme, but she had no wish to torment someone she would like to be able to think of as a friend. She gave the trader permission to leave, and Keshvara accepted it with a joy which the princess tried with all her might to see as a natural relief rather than an insult. When Keshvara had gone, escorted by the ever-patient Dhalla, Lucrezia threw herself back upon the cushions which decked her couch, and stared at the pitted ceiling of her little room. The hour at which she usually retired to her bed for the midnight had already passed, but she didn't feel at all tired. Indeed, her head was buzzing; she had never felt so vibrantly alive and alert. What a prison this is! she thought fervently. And what a fine, brave woman Keshvara is! How much kinder fate would have been had my birth consigned me to her vocation, instead of the rigid duties of a princess! If only . . . She knew, of course, that dreaming of 'if onlys' was a waste of time but she had time enough to waste, for the present, and she was, after all, a princess. joj a ndris was A light sleeper even at the best of times, and the citadel was home to so many slight noises that he continually drifted back and forth across the borders of unconsciousness while he lay on his bed. He was forced to shift his position constantly in the ultimately hopeless attempt to make himself comfortable upon a pallet which was too small to contain him. These circumstances were no more distressing now than they had been when he had first been put into the cell, but on this particular night he felt frustration building up inside him like pus in a boil. It might not have been so bad if he had been certain that he was waiting, but the message thrown into his cell had not given any firm indication as to when' the promised rescue attempt might take place. The awareness that he might be dangling in unwarranted suspense made the suspense itself that much harder to bear. ; He tried to relax by means; of all the conventional tricks, but they all failed. When he tried to rehearse his earliest and most pleasant memories of Ferentina he found that they had become flat and insipid, and that his once-beloved mother had begun to seem ineffectual and uncaring. When he tried to work up a hopeful fantasy about entering the service of a Xandrian princess, who would fall completely in love with him and launch him upon a wonderfully successful military career, the plot faltered at every step and he could not shake the suspicion that a big dagger might at any moment be plunged into his back by any one of a hundred hired assassins. When he tried to strike up a philosophical dialogue with the bugs infesting the mattress they so devastated him with their vicious logic that it was difficult to cling to the most stubbornly elementary dogma. He had no option but to wallow in his wretchedness, savouring his misery. In spite of all this, however, he had to be rudely jerked from semi-slumber when his attention was caught by the sound of bolts being withdrawn from other doors in the corridor. Such was his mood that his first thought was: Why are they letting all the other prisoners out? His second was: What if the others don't want to go? His third was: What if I don't want to go? He heard muffled voices as some of the puzzled prisoners to whom release was being offered enquired as to the cause of their good fortune. Shut up, you fools! he thought, heedless of all inconsistency. Do you want to wake the jailer and bring the guard running to the door? None of the prisoners was completely stupid, though; those who spoke at all were wise enough to whisper. By the time the three bars were withdrawn from his own door Andris was up on his feet, groping for the few possessions he had been allowed to retain- which he had bundled up for convenience, just in case. The door opened and someone slipped in. The starlight which shone through the narrow window was just adequate to inform him that the person was slim and fairly tall by Xandrian standards, if not by his. He moved forward but an extended hand blocked the way. "Not this way, cousin." The whispering voice was female. While he paused to consider this unexpected development she hauled one of the wooden bars through the doorway and thrust it towards him, implicitly commanding him to take it. When he had done so she brought a second one through and propped it against the wall. She was obviously strong in spite of her slimness. When the third bar was inside she shut the door again. Having sealed them in, she laid the third bar down crosswise so that anyone who tried to open the door would have to shove hard. She took back the one Andris held, and placed it on top. "What. . . ?" Andris began- but the woman silenced him immediately by placing a firm forefinger against his lips. She stood on tiptoe to speak softly into his ear. "Listen! You may not know it, but if you don't get out now, you're dead. This is your only chance. The citadel guard are lying in ambush at the door we came in by. The only way out is up, along and down." 105 Andris looked upatthe ceiling, remembering the stains that had made him slightly anxious before he had got used to the height. "We can't," he muttered feebly. "Yes we can!" she hissed fiercely. "There's a cavity up there. Water-tanks are set in rows over the walls- there's a narrow space between them, above the middle of the ceiling. Lift me up and let me squat on your shoulders. Now, cousin! " Cousin? he thought, as she said the word a second time. Was it my letter to the shipmaster that has brought all this about, or that merchant to whom I told my troubles? One or other of them must have found my uncle, or some relict of him. But . . . While he thought, he hesitated, and the woman quickly became impatient. "Squat, idiot," she said, putting her hands on his shoulders and pressing down. "How can I reach the ceiling unless I can climb on you?" How indeed? he thought. He gave in to the insistence of the hands and knelt. The woman- or was she merely a girl? -- clambered on to his shoulders with alacrity. She was heavy in spite of her relative slenderness, by virtue of being un girlishly tall, but Andris bore her weight easily enough. "One step right!" she instructed impatiently, as if he should have known by instinct what to do. Outside, the corridor was ru(l of barely suppressed whispers and noises of movement. Andris had already figured out that a prison which charged fees to its imnates might be a useful source of revenue to a prosperous city whose courts were perpetually busy, but until now he hadn't paused to wonder what effect the privilege of paying to be in jail might have on the politics of escape. It was obvious that not everyone had been forewarned of the plan of which they were now being made part, and that he was not the only one to have doubts about the best course of action. Some of the querulous voices, moreover, were rapidly escaping their users' sense of discretion. It seemed entirely possible that a fight might break out even before the alarm was raised. He wondered whether all the others were being told that an ambush had been laid. He also wondered why, if she knew about the ambush, the slim woman had come to save him regardless . . . and, if an ambush had been laid, why the would-be ambushers hadn't simply stopped her . . There were too many questions, none of which was easily answerable. He realised that he was completely out of his depth. The fact that the woman wriggled somewhat as she worked on the ceiling of the cell made the task of supporting her more troublesome, but Andris stood firm, proud of his ability to do so. Had he been able to get a good look at her face and found it lovely he might have been able to derive more erotic excitement from the experience, but anxiety and ignorance combined to make that difficult. He didn't need to ask what the woman was doing. She was smearing on some fast-acting solvent which would soak into the ceiling, loosening its solidity as it went. It would normally require an hour or two to make stone or wood crumble by any such method, but the ceiling was made out of some unnatural substance designed for the convenience of stone masons with the appropriate tools it could be demolished in minutes. Andris imagined a heavy rank filled with water toppling from above, but the woman obviously knew what she was talking about- and common sense dictated that the middle of a ceiling would not be subjected to such a burden. "According to the jailer," he whispered, 'there's no way out up there. " "He would say that," she observed, 'wouldn't he? Squat! " She hopped down as he bent his knee, and grabbed the beam she had leaned against the wall. "Hold it upright," she said. "Get your hands under the bottom end. When I give the word, drive it upwards with all your might. Then do what you have to do to enlarge the hole." He did as he was told, moving like an automaton. He expected her to give the signal almost immediately, but in fact she just stood still, listening. When a full minute had gone by, he said: "What are we waiting for?" "Rot needs time," she said tersely. "Better if we wait till the noise starts. Any second, pure chaos will break loose." As if on cue, pure chaos did indeed break loose. There was a sudden cacophony of shouted challenges, barked orders and howls of anguish, quickly supplemented by the urgent beating of an alarm-drum. Then as if the drum were merely a signal for the outbreak of further mayhem there was a series of very loud explosions. There seemed to be four in all, although they were so precisely timed as almost to fuse into a single mighty roar. Their echoes multiplied around the legendary walls like a barrage of mortar-bombs. That must have cost a fortune! Andris thought, astounded by the economic insanity of it. It would be cheaper by far to buy out every prisoner in the jail! "Now!" the woman yelled. In spite of the thunderous ness of the explosions, the sudden amplification of her words from a whisper to a shout made him wince. He got his fingertips under the end of the beam that was sitting on the floor, and drove it upwards like a vertical battering-ram. It smashed the weakened ceiling to smithereens. Bits the size of pebbles rained down on him. It was easy to move the beam back and forth, expanding the hole. He felt the top end bump against more solid objects to either side- presumably the water-tanks carefully sited above the solid walls. "Are you crazy?" he said. "Surely you're not releasing every prisoner in the jail and blowing up the citadel just to get me out!" "Don't be silly," she said breathlessly, as she put a hand on his right shoulder, indicating that' he could put the beam down now. "That's Checuti's people bringing off the crime of the century. We're just a sideshow to distract the guard a diversion. You've got to go first -- I'll do my best to give you a lift." Andris felt a sudden sinking feeling. Crime of the century? he thought. What crime? What on earth have^ I got myself into? They'll hunt me down to the ends of the rotting earth for this'. "Who exactly are you?" he asked, belatedly, as the woman squatted down beside him. "MerelZabio," she replied, bracing herself. "My grandfather was your uncle Theo. This is the difficult bit don't crush me!" Andris stared up at the gap he had made in the ceiling. It looked awkwardly narrow, in spite of all the stuff that had come tumbling down when he moved the beam about. He wasn't sure that he could fit into it, and he wasn't sure that there would be anywhere to go if he did. The ledges to either side of the hole would undoubtedly be fragile; they might well collapse under his weight as soon as he was up there. There was now a fight going on out in the corridor, but no one was trying to get into the cell- yet. Some of the prisoners must be taking on the guards who had lain in ambush for them. Even those who were reluctant must have had little choice about getting involved. There was no sound of clashing steel- which implied that the blades the guardsmen carried were far superior to the weapons ranged against them but the soldiers didn't seem to be winning an easy victory on that account. Sheer confusion must be making things very difficult for everyone concerned. I'm doomed, he thought, as the woman adjusted her position, preparing herself to be used as a stepping-stone. If they catch me now, I'm done for. It won't even be the wall this time- it'll be that rotting gibbet. He stepped on to his new-found cousin's back and reached up for the edges of the hole, trying to move as swiftly and as smoothly as possible so as to minimise her burden. He took a firm grip, but the moment he tried to transfer his weight from foothold to handhold the substance crumbled and he had to leap clear. Merel Zabio moved half a met closer to the door, and made herself small again. Again he stepped on to her back and reached up for the ragged edge of the hole. This time, the edge hadn't been weakened by the gluttonous seepage of the solvent. It didn't crumble but he still didn't dare put his whole weight on it. "Stand up!" he commanded, as he steadied himself. "Push!" It couldn't have been easy for her, given that he was so nearly a giant, but she was kin to him and she was no frail flower. She heaved with all her might, gasping with the effort. He knew that she would only be able to bear him up for a few seconds, and he knew exactly what he had to do. He reached out with his two arms, groping for the edges of the water-ranks placed to either side of the hole. He knew that he had to grip them both at the same time, or risk unbalancing one of them to the extent that it came crashing into the cell and he couldn't be certain that he wouldn't bring them both crashing down -- but it was the best chance he had. He guessed that the tanks couldn't be so very deep, and he just had to take it on trust that their rims would be reachable. He found one, then the other . . . and nearly slipped back as Merel Zabio collapsed under him- but when she fell away, he found himself safely suspended. He swung his legs up, groping with his feet for the edge of the hole, and found it. He sent his feet 109 scurrying along the-n^rrow corridor between the tanks, gaining enough support to iuTow him to inch his hands forward along the rims. Within thirty seconds he was lying full length along the narrow corridor between the rows of the tanks, with his head and shoulders above the hole. He had only to turn over and reach down, dangling his arms to catch his cousin. "Take hold!" he said. He already knew how heavy his kinswoman was, but it was still a shock when he had to bear her full weight at the end of his arms, and a momentary stab of panic threatened that the rest of the ceiling would surely come down, spilling them back on to the floor of the cell. Fortunately, she was as agile as he, and every bit as determined. As he lifted her she swung herself up, and got her legs up on the further ledge, squirming along it just as desperately as he had. When they were both up, she told him to back off, so that she could work her way past the hole, supporting herself on the two tanks to either side. It was very dark in the space between the tanks, and there was no room to stand up. He scrambled along the narrow alleyway on his hands and knees, and the woman fell in behind him. "Don't go too far!" she told! him. "Go to the left, between the rows of tanks." Mercifully, the attic space ii which they found themselves was not completely dark. Starlight leaked in through a number of slender cracks in the ill-maintained roof. Once his eyes had adjusted, Andris found that it was just possible to see the silhouettes of the tanks and to, pick a path between them. As soon as it could be managed, the woman squeezed past him. She evidently knew how to find the trapdoor which let workmen up into the space to carry out repairs. It wasn't possible to follow a straight path, but it didn't take long to get to the place she was aiming for. The trapdoor was closed, bolted below, but that was no problem. She didn't have to ask him to use his superior strength- she took a heavy-bladed dagger from her belt, inserted it through the narrow gap beside the bolt so that she could use it as a lever, and exerted a steady pressure. The screws holding the bolt in place yielded easily enough. There was a wooden stairway- little more than a ladder leading down to a corridor that must have been on the same level as the prison but didn't seem to be connected with it. At the far end of the corridor was a sturdier flight of stairs. "May be a problem there," she said, dropping her voice to a whisper again as she pointed to the downward-leading steps. "Those take us down to a barrack-room. It ought to be empty, given that every guardsman in the citadel should be fully occupied in chasing his tail and picking his way through the rubble left by the petards, but you can't depend on anything in this place. Once we get through the barrack-room, it's still a long way to the stables. Checuti's carts will probably have gone by the time we get there, so we'll have to make our own arrangements to get through the City Gate. Our only ally is confusion, but there'll be a lot of that. Stick close to me, and for Goran's sake be careful. If we're caught, we'll both end up waist-deep in Princess Lucrezia's poison garden with five-sim thorns in our guts." "What do you . . . ?" Andris began- but he had no time to finish the question. Merel Zabio was off down the ladder, and by the time he reached the floor of the corridor he had to scurry to catch up with her. Well, he thought, there's no stopping now. It's full steam ahead and damn the consequences. This was not a comforting metaphor. He had once seen a steam engine at work, and although it had not actually blown up while he was watching he had thought it the greatest folly which the human mind had ever devised, whose loss from the lore could not have been reckoned. a sin by any sane man. in A," 15 ucrezia's mind was so full of thoughts inspired by what _iHyry Keshvara had said to her that even when she finally retired to bed she made not the slightest attempt to go to sleep. She simply lay there in the comfortable darkness, wondering what kind of magic lands might lie to the south of the Forest of Absolute Night. In spite of what Ereleth had often said about the Lore of Genesys being no less vulnerable to corruption than any other aspect of traditional wisdom she could not help but consider it the best place to look for guidance, and in the deepest midnight she lit a lamp so that she could consult a written version she had borrowed from the king's library. L The book was not old- no (more than a year- but there was no way of knowing how many times the words within it had been copied by faithful scribes. Rumour spoke in terms of hundreds of thousands, but she knew well t'enough what inflationary tendencies rumour had. It was probable, she judged, that the figure could be cut by a considerable order bf'magnitude- but even if one thought in terms of tens of thousands, each reproduction carried out at intervals of a year or two, the words themselves must be unimaginably ancient. The majority of civilised men believed that the whole thing was a set of fictions, invented by the men of old to explain an origin of which they had no true memory or record, hut even if that were not so Hyry Keshvara was surely right to argue that no relic of what was described there could possibly have survived into the world of today. And yet the words somehow retained their magic, even after all this time. Lucrezia found the passage she wanted easily enough, and read it through. She had read it before and had often heard it read by others, but she had not been trained in the Art of Remembrance, and could not remember it well enough to recite it aloud without the aid of the written page. 112 The place where humans first came into the world, the text read, was named Idun by the people of the ship, in memory of a place which never was but was remembered and revered nevertheless. The people of the ship built a city there, but their sons and daughters were not permitted to live long in the city. "You must go forth into the world and multiply," the forefathers said to the people of the world. "You must go to every region which will support you: to every forest, every plain and every seashore. You must build cities of your own wherever you can, and protect them as best you can against corrosion and corruption. Where you cannot build cities you must follow other ways of life, but you must leave no land alone, even in the farthest reaches of the world, for the purpose of human life is to fight evil wherever it may be found." When the city of Idun crumbled into dust, as the cities of the world are ever wont to do, the forefathers made no attempt to rebuild it. To their remaining sons and daughters they said: "Go follow your brothers and sisters into the regions of the world, for we have other work to do here before we leave. Where there was a city we shall make a garden, but it will be a garden of poisons. Do not forbid your descendants to visit this garden, but bid them beware of it, for they will be wise to avoid it for many generations." The garden of Idun became the source of many evil and dangerous things, for which reason the people of the world called it Chimera's Cradle, hut they also named it the Navel of the World, to remind themselves that they too were chimerical beings. The best of the new chimeras spawned and cradled in the garden followed the people of the world as they dispersed themselves through the forests and the plains, but the worst of them tainted the region around the garden. The people of the world complained of this injustice, but to no avail. "Even that which has never been known before may yet be created," the lore masters said, 'but it cannot be designed. The cradle in which it will be hatched and nourished must give birth to evils too, but in the end evil will be defeated and Order will prevail. " The people of the ship gave what earthly gifts they could to the people of the world, but the most precious gift of all was one they did not have to give and that was an incorruptible stone. Aboard the ship, there were many kinds of stone that had been "3 incorruptible there^ but corruption had no dominion aboard the ship and incorruptibility was easily achieved. In the world, alas, corruption reigned supreme. "The war against evil will be hard fought in the world," the lore masters told theirs sons and their daughters, 'but war is the mother of all weapons, and the war against evil is the mother of the weapons by which evil shall one day be defeated. There is as yet no incorruptible stone in all the world, but it will not always be so. We have planted the garden ofldun so that the incorruptible stone might one day be born from the Pool of Life, nourished by milk and blood. When that day comes, your children's children must seize and use the stone, and turn the evil of corrosion to the good of inscription. " "That is what Carus Fraxinus and Hyry Keshvara hope to find," Lucrezia whispered aloud. "They may deny it- they may not even know it- but this is the lure which attracts them. They are setting forth in search of the garden of Idun itself, of Chimera's Cradle and the Pool of Life. They do not know the meaning of what is written here, any more than I do, but they know that it means something." When she had closed the Book Lucrezia dressed herself fully. She clasped her many-pouchejd belt about her waist- not because she had any need of it, but becjause Ereleth had told her a thousand times that it was too dangerojus a thing to leave aside. She tiptoed down the long stairway as quietly as she could, and came eventually to the room beside the door of the tower, from which the night-guard kept watch. Dhalla was by the window, as she was honour-bound to be, intently staring out into the darkness. When the giant heard the door opened she turned swiftly around, her huge hand reaching out for the spear that was propped up against the wall. As soon as she saw who it was, though, her hand dropped away again. "Highness," she said, politely inclining her head. She did not seem surprised; she was accustomed to Lucrezia's nocturnal wanderings. "Is all well?" Lucrezia asked, as she crossed the room to join Dhalla at the window. She did not doubt for a moment that all was well, but she felt obliged to ask. "I don't know, highness," the giant replied uneasily. Lucrezia started in astonishment. "What's wrong?" she said. "Perhaps nothing--but there are two sentries missing from their posts, and the patrol is taking three rimes as long as normal to complete its round. I called out to the guardsmen to ask them what was happening, but they told me I must be silent, because they had some secret operation in progress. After that, I heard someone moving in the darkness, but I dared not sound a challenge. I've seen men moving stealthily, over by the stables. They're probably just playing their usual boys' games, but I don't like it. At least three of the lamps which usually stay lit all night have gone out, and there's no sign of the lamplighter. " Boys' games was Dhalla's term for almost everything the king's guard did: their ceremonies, their drill and their occasional training exercises. Lucrezia was profoundly uninterested in boys' games of every shape and form, but she didn't like to see the giantess so anxious. "It's probably nothing," she assured her. "True," Dhalla agreed. "But I wish the captain would pass by, so that I could ask him what's happenng. There's never any sense to he had from his boorish men." "I've been thinking about what Hyry Keshvara said," the princess told the giant. "About the amber being a mapmaker. If he really can draw a map to guide Keshvara and her friends to the place where Chimera's Cradle once was, we have to make sure he does it. We'll have to handle the matter carefully, though- we don't want him to think that he's in a position to strike bargains, or to realise how desperately he might need to." Dhalla said nothing in reply to this. Whether that was because she thought it was nonsense or simply because she was preoccupied by her own anxieties there was no way to tell. "What Keshvara really wants, of course," Lucrezia added, 'is for me to hand the amber over to Fraxinus -- but I can't do that. I'd like to help her, of course, but I can't go back on the agreement I made with my father. " Dhalla continued staring out into the shadows. "What do you see out there?" the princess asked, rather petulantly. "I see nothing," Dhalla replied uneasily. "It's what I hear that troubles me. I'm almost sure that someone was at the door- and " J something's goingDp in the stables. If the guardsmen are playing practical jokes again . . . " "Practical jokes aren't important," Lucrezia said firmly. "What I'm trying to talk to you about is. Please listen to me, Dhalla." In any normal circumstances, Dhalla would never have disobeyed such a direct command, but all she did was hold up her hand. Her whole body had stiffened. "Go, highness, I beg you," she said. "You should not be here. Please, highness!" Lucrezia had not the slightest intention of going anywhere. If something really was about to happen, she wanted to have the best possible view. "Something's wrong," Dhalla said, more positively than before. "The guardsmen should have gone past by now. I'm sure something's happening in the stables." "It's just part of their secret operation," Lucrezia said, hoping now that it might not be true and feeling a thrill of excitement at the thought. "Boys' games." "No," Dhalla said. "It can't be. I ought to raise the alarm ... I ought at least to find out what's happening." "Find out what's happening," Lucrezia advised. "That's best. Look before you leap." "Please, highness," Dhalla sjaid, moving back from the window, "I wish you would rouse my sisters while I go to see. Tell them that they must guard the door. " , " I will, if you think it necessary," the prihcess said, savouring another sharp thrill of excitement at the thought that Dhalla surely must be right. "Be careful." The giant moved swiftly from the room and Lucrezia followed her. As Dhalla went down to the door the princess turned the other way, rounding the corner to go along the corridor which led to the barrack-room where the giants were lodged. She had no need to rouse anyone two of them were in the antechamber, wide awake but utterly engrossed in a game of cards. When the princess looked in they both stood up. "Dhalla's gone over to the stables," Lucrezia said. "She thinks something's happened to the guardsmen who should be patrolling the inner court. She says that you should . . ." She was abruptly interrupted by the sound of an explosion. The floor beneath her feet shuddered. While the princess stood still, rooted to the spot by astonishment, the two giants reached for their spears. They had not completed the action when a second explosion followed the first, much louder and much closer at hand. This time the floor leapt instead of shuddering, and Lucrezia put her hands to her ears. She had not been able to tell the direction of the first explosion, but she knew immediately that the second one must have been at the very door of the Inner Sanctum: the door through which Dhalla had passed- or had tried to pass- only seconds before. The second explosion was instantly followed by a third and a fourth, and the princess was seized by the terrifying thought that the whole tower might be coming down. Panic-stricken, she turned to run for the door. The corridor was already filling up with thick, choking smoke. From the floors above she could hear the sound of screaming, which grew in a stridulant crescendo as more and more voices joined in. The damage was not as bad as she had expected, although the wooden doors had been blown open, sagging from their hinges. Ignoring the thickening smoke, Lucrezia ran out through the gap. She looked wildly about for Dhalla's body, but it was nowhere to be seen. She must have got through in time! Lucrezia thought. She must hare been clear before the charge went off! Thank Goran she didn 't catch sight of it and stop to see what it was! Without pausing for further thought, Lucrezia raced off in the direction of the stables. The one thought in her head was to make sure that the giant was all right, and the stables seemed the obvious place to look for her. The other two giants stayed behind, clearing the debris from the doorway. Their first duty was to see to the safety of the occupants of the tower. Although the stars were bright the shadows gathered about the fringes of the Great Courtyard deep and dark. There should have been lighted lamps set to either side of the stable doors, but these were among the three which had reportedly gone out- or, as now seemed likely, had been deliberately doused. It was not until she was almost there that Lucrezia could see that one of the huge doors had been drawn back, and that a cart was waiting within with a team of horses ready hitched. "7 The horses had ej^dently been disturbed by the explosions, and the princess's precipitate arrival set them to whinnying wildly, but the beasts were making far less noise than the women in the Sanctum, who were creating enough racket by now to drown the sounds of even the most strenuous boys' games. Lucrezia barely had time to dance aside as the horses hitched to the cart were started forward by a whip-crack, but she evaded them gracefully enough and did not fall. "Dhalla!" she shouted, seeing no reason why she shouldn't add her own voice to the gathering cacophony, since she at least had a good reason for shouting. As soon as the cart was gone Lucrezia moved once again towards the open doorway, but saw her mistake immediately. This time it wasn't possible to be graceful about the business of evasion. She had to dive sideways, and surely would have fallen had not strong arms reached out to catch her and put her upright again. There was no mistaking those arms, and Lucrezia cried out in wordless relief-- but the giant did not hold on to her for long. As soon as she was out of the way the giantess let go of her, and moved past her. As the cart swept by, Dhalla" leapt up behind, vaulting over the backboard without any apparent effort or difficulty. Lucrezia heard the sound of a violent souffle, and knew that the giant must have landed among men eager to thrust her back again. Lucrezia was quite certain that her friend did not have her spear with her, for her hands had been empty when she reached out to steady her stumbling mistress. Indeed, as the princess took another step back her foot fell upon the abandoned-weapon. Lucrezia immediately knelt down to grope for it with her hands- and was glad that she did so, for it became obvious almost immediately that there was a third cart yet to come, and a company of men gathered on top of it. There were other men coming on the scene too, hurrying from every direction, and Lucrezia was certain that she would be trampled if she stayed where she was. The third cart didn't move forward quite as precipitately as the others, and Lucrezia had time enough to run towards it, casting the spear as she ran. She hurled the weapon as hard as she could, but it was too heavy for her un practised arm, and she could not raise it high enough into the air to make it fly as she had intended. It fell low, clattering along the ground- but its head went between the spokes of the leading wheel of the cart, and it was carried around by the turning wheel so that its head smashed against the underside of the cart. With better luck the spear might have broken the wheel, but the wheel was stronger than the shaft of the weapon, and it was the spear which broke as the cart lurched and rocked, temporarily interrupted as the horses were gathering pace. The interruption was time enough for Lucrezia to leap nimbly up on to the step that gave access to the driver's bench, and in a trice she was beside him, reaching out as though to dispossess him of his whip. There was no thought in her head to tell her how foolish and how reckless she was; she was entirely possessed by wrath and determination. The carter did not even deign to glance at her. He simply swept his arm back in a short and brutal arc, so that his forearm cannoned into her upper body, catching her just beneath the neck. She had no chance of riding the blow. The impact tumbled the princess backwards, and she fell into the body of the cart. Already off-balance, she had no way to cushion or interrupt her fall. She felt a sudden wave of dizziness . . . 119 f from the tiny window in the south-west tower Jacom Cerri watched the two stealthy figures sidle along the deserted walkway to the door of the jail. They moved through the shadows as if darkness were their natural habitat, but they had to come out into the starlight when they came close to the door. Even so, it was impossible to tell whether they were young or old, male or female. Jacom presumed that the two had come into the citadel in much the same way as Zadok Sart, using legitimate passes. It was obvious that the issuing of such passes had become reckless, and that the places of legitimate tradesmen and their hirelings were being taken by dubious characters. If two men could get in that way, then so could half a hundred . . . but Jacom smiled as he thought of the difficulties these two would face in getting out again, i The door of the jail was barred on the inside, as it always was, but the two felons were prepared for that. The door itself was very sturdy, being renewed at regular intervals, but the glazed loophole let into it at eye height was a weak point. Jacom deduced from their actions that they had pushed aside the shield which protected the spy-hole, removed the glass, and let a pair of threads through the grille. The threads would doubtless carry hooks which could be used as miniature grappling-irons to lift the bar securing the door. It seemed impossible that they could lift the bar free and lower it without sending it crashing to the floor, but they managed it. The two were obviously highly skilled practitioners of the black arts of thievery. Jacom couldn't even be sure that the jailer and the men he had set to lie low in the jailer's anteroom would have heard the bar fall- but someone would have an eye glued to a tiny peephole drilled through the anteroom door, and there was a lantern just inside the jail door whose light the intruders would have to occlude in order to get to the darker corridors beyond. Jacom had given his men strict instructions to lie low and let the invaders through; he wanted to catch them in the company of the prisoner they had come to release, so that they would have little or no scope for invention when the time came to question them. When the two were safely inside Jacom signalled to four more of his men, indicating that they should move along the walkway and rake up a position outside the door to the prison. He was confident that the trap was now sealed tight. Jacom stayed where he was. To Guardsman Aaron, the one man who remained by his side, he said: That's it. Signed, sealed and delivered. " He was smugly confident that the prisoner and his would-be rescuers would surrender rather than risk a fall from the un railed walkway, even if they were armed. "Should be," Aaron admitted un excitedly As the seconds dragged by, though, Jacom began to grow impatient. What on earth could be taking so long? When he heard the sound of a challenge, his heart leapt with exultation- but it lurched sickeningly as he realised that the challenge had not been sounded inside the jail, but had come from far below. Someone somewhere began beating an alarm-drum very fervently, but he wasn't sure exactly where the sound was coming from and had not the slightest idea why anyone should think it necessary to rouse the whole citadel. "What the . . . ?" he began- but the rest of the question was drowned out by an almighty explosion which stunned his eardrums. He felt the tower shake beneath his feet and then there followed three more explosions in very rapid succession, each one seemingly louder than the last. Bright flashes blinded his eyes for a moment, although he could not have caught more than the merest glimpse of the explosions. The first petard, he knew, must have been placed at the City Gate. As his sight readjusted it became horribly clear that one of the others had been set against the doors of the coinery, and one against the doors of the Inner Sanctum. Flickering flames and thick black smoke were billowing about in both doorways, and from his lofty station Jacom could see running figures hurdling the wreckage in both directions. His first though^ was that such things couldn't happen, and never did. What sort of man would take the enormous risks involved in handling so much explosive material? And what sort of man could possibly be mad enough to smuggle such stuff into the citadel of Xandria? It occurred to him that he had removed half a dozen of the sentries whose purpose was to ensure that such things never happened. The terrible possibility that he had been tricked and manipulated was suddenly all too clear. "They've blown the gate!" said Aaron disbelievingly. They've only gone and blown the rotting gate! " Jacom calculated, with icy lucidity, that the four men he had left on guard at the City Gate were highly likely to have been injured, perhaps killed, and that he had removed the men who would normally have been first to run to their aid. The alarm-drum would rouse a hundred and fifty extra guardsmen from their various barrack-rooms plus another hundred constables and servants authorised to bear arms and twenty officers to yell orders at them, but he was the commander of the watch: the one man who was supposed to be able to judge what ought to be done, and by whom, in immediate answer to this carefully sown havoc. With this thought in mind he ran full tilt from the room, ignoring the residual pain of his bruises, taking the steps three at a time as he headed for the City Gate, forgetting all about the jail and the men he had stationed there. "Assemble by the gate!" he howled to anyone within earshot. "Keep the bastards out at all costs!" There seemed little point in the alarm-drum continuing its urgent throb, given that no one within the walls could possibly have slept through the explosions, but the boy whose task it was clung to his duty regardless. The sound laid down an ominous undercurrent to the screams of panic which were emanating from the Inner Sanctum and the cries of anguish which were rising from the mint. There were four men waiting at the foot of the stairway, not knowing which way to run. "The gate!" Jacom yelled again, only realising as his words were drowned out how difficult it was to make himself heard. He raised his arm and stabbed the index finger in the direction of the City Gate. One of the men saluted him, and all four ran alongside him. As they arrived at the gatehouse a guardsman staggered back from the doorway, evidently having been expelled by force. He collapsed to the ground in front of them. Jacom leapt over the prostrate body and two of the men who had accompanied him hurled themselves through the open doorway, intent on punishing the invisible assailants. Jacom did not follow them- instead he went to the great gate himself, which had been blown apart. The huge and gaping hole which was still belching forth thick clouds of acrid smoke was more than wide enough to drive a horse and cart through, but nothing of that size was coming through as yet. Indeed, nobody seemed to be coming in at all- although there were several figures hanging back within the gate, waiting to run out as soon as the smoke cleared. For a moment Jacom thought that they must be with the attackers, but they were liveried as servants, and he realised that they simply wanted to get away. He understood why they were in such a hurry. Xandria's citadel might be famed for the awesome strength of its walls, but everyone who lived within it knew full well that rot worked in its heart, just as it worked in the heart of every other structure. The instinct of every man and woman said that no edifice was to be trusted in the face of such sudden violence. In theory, the walls of the citadel had been built to withstand the shock of any and all explosions, but if a chain reaction of cracking and crumbling got to work on the stone, anything might happen. No one now alive in Xandria had ever been forced to withstand siege or bombardment, and Jacom knew that untested courage usually proved fragile. The crowd about the gate was swelling rapidly. Half a hundred servants were quartered in the lower levels of the towers to either side of the City Gate, and allot them had leapt out of their beds, grabbing whatever came conveniently to hand as they made their exits. Not one in five of those authorised to bear arms had bothered to seize anything which might be used as a weapon, and even those who had taken up cudgels seemed bent on self-defence rather than the apprehension of whoever had set the explosives, but Jacom knew that he had to impose some order on the gathering confusion. "Form a cordon across the gateway!" Jacom yelled, relying on his own men to take notice and set an example. "What's without, for Goran's sake?" ^3 "No enemy in siaht!" came back the cry. What's happening here? Jacom asked himself silently. What kind of corruption is thisf It was then, and only then, that he guessed the truth. No secret army waited beyond the gate, eager to take the citadel by storm. The marauders within were not an advance guard but a whole expeditionary force, whose target could only be . the royal treasury. As the smoke cleared Jacom fought his way through the milling throng to stand within the arch of the shattered gate. He was relieved to see that there were no corpses mingled with the wreckage. His men were barely holding a formation while the panic-stricken servants began to flock past them and spill out into the square beyond. It was obvious that the guardsmen could not hold the yawning gap against any substantial assault. Those who had so far gathered only carried swords; they had not a single pike between them. Jacom joined the line and began yelling at the crowd, telling the servants to be calm. He might as well have tried to howl down the wind. He looked out into the open concourse outside the gate. There were plenty of people about, hundreds having hurried from the nearby houses and the wooden shanties erected along the wall to see what was afoot, and the (nob was swelling by the minute, its members eagerly receiving-the refugees from. the citadel, plying them with urgent questions as to what was going on. Jacom suppressed an impulse to wave his arms about and order the crowd back. Let them stay, he thought. Let them all stay, to form a barrier with their bodies even though they have no weapons. "Hold the line solid!" he cried out to his men. "Let no one pass, inwards or outwards. Hold the line!" He had no idea what was happening inside the gatehouse, and no idea how long it would take for an adequate number of reinforcements to gather. He supposed that help must be on its way but asked himself anxiously whether it would come in time. The answer, it seemed, was no. A large cart pulled by four horses came hurtling towards the gate from the direction of the Great Courtyard, scattering the crowd before it. Jacom's hope that an impenetrable wall of human flesh might build up spontaneously before his thin line of armed defenders was instantly dashed. The panic-stricken people were entirely ready to respond to any threat, and they scattered with awesome alacrity before the juggernaut of fevered horseflesh and seasoned hardwood, whose clattering hooves and thundering steel-rimmed wheels struck sparks from the stones. The driver was standing up, plying a huge whip with considerable vigour, and Jacom had not the slightest doubt that a two-deep rank of tight-wedged pikes inscribing a line of steel before the horses would not have been adequate to turn them back. A single line of swordsmen had no chance at all. "Look out!" he howled at his men- a quite unnecessary order, given that they knew only too well that anyone who tried to block the passage would be ridden down and crushed. They were already scattering in disarray. Four or five missiles were hurled at the cart-driver as he passed by, but he did not flinch and did not fall. As the horses blasted their way through Jacom caught the edge of the driver's bench with both his hands and tried to vault up on to it, but the cart was travelling so fast that the wrench nearly dislocated his shoulders, and he could not complete the daring manoeuvre. The force of the impact threw him sideways and he sprawled full length on the cobblestones. His quilted armour provided some cushioning but the crash jarred him very painfully, awakening all his old bruises and inflicting dozens more. Aaron and Kim attempted to catch hold of the back of the cart, evidently hoping to leap up behind. They might have succeeded where Jacom had failed, but there were half a dozen men on the back of the heavily laden cart, and one of them was quick to bring down a club of some kind to break Aaron's grip, while Kim simply could not get a firm hold. Aaron fell back upon the merciless stones, howling with pain, while Kim spun away. Jacom looked in vain for a company of mounted guardsmen to pour forth in hot pursuit. "Get horses!" he yelled from where he lay. "Get after them!" But it was not clear to whom the order was addressed, and the men who had tried to block the gateway made no attempt to run for the stables. All but a few formed up again as a second cart came into view, while the remainder went to help "j their fallen comrad|^