Authors: Stephen Baxter
She said grudgingly, ‘As long as it’s convenient.’
He laughed. ‘I wouldn’t expect anything else. Well, I’d better go have a nap before it’s time to service the Tawananna again. Goodnight, Annid’s daughter.’ He leaned over and kissed her cheek, quite gently. Then he got to his feet in a single bound, and walked off to the house he shared with Kilushepa.
She wiped away the meat grease he had left on her cheek. And then she touched the place he had kissed her, again.
19
The Year of the Fire Mountain: Midsummer Solstice
The visitors from the Land of the Jaguar were staying at Medoc’s home, a place called The Black, a few houses, sheep and cattle pens and potato fields tucked into the lee of the Hood. This place had taken its name from the layered black rock that protruded from the ground hereabout. Deri liked to go whale-hunting from the little natural harbour on the coast below.
On midsummer morn itself, and despite the rolled eyes of his wife Vala, Medoc decided it would be a good idea to take Tibo and Caxa for a walk up to the summit of the Hood. A unique chance to see a fire mountain in its pomp!
It was almost noon by the time Tibo met Medoc with the Jaguar girl, at the head of the track leading out of the little settlement. Already The Black was alive with its own celebration of midsummer, the day of Northland’s Giving. A party of boys, both Northlanders and Ice Folk, went from house to house, handing over gifts of food, leather, carved stone, fine bone fishhooks, and receiving gifts in return. They were followed by a procession led by the village’s chief priest, singing songs of earth and sky in a mixture of tongues. It was noisy, pleasant chaos. And nobody seemed bothered by the tremendous column of smoke that loomed into the sky from the mountain just to the north, or by the steady drizzle of ash that turned everything and everybody a faint grey, coming down in the brilliant sunshine of the year’s longest day.
As Tibo arrived, Medoc was loading a pack on his back the size of a mountain itself, stuffed with water and food. Caxa stood beside Medoc, with sturdy boots on her feet and a leather cap on her head to keep the drifting ash out of her hair. She looked bewildered, as so often since she’d arrived on this island. But today she had particular cause, Tibo thought. Medoc was explaining to her what was going on. ‘See, we’re a mix of Northland folk and Ice Folk, each with their own traditions. But we merge them happily together. To us, the whole world is a gift of the little mothers, and today we give back in return. And where the Ice Folk come from there’s nothing to eat but animals and fish and the beasts of the sea, and they know that an animal will only give you the gift of its flesh if it is willing. So today everybody gives back, you see, in thanks for the gifts of others. And at the end of the day there’ll be the Burial of the Bladders. The hunters keep the bladders of every single sea animal they kill during the year, all the way since last midsummer, and tonight they’ll climb this slope to bury them. It’s quite a sight, I can tell you, and quite a stink too . . .’
Caxa just listened to all this, expressionless. There was a rumble, like distant thunder, and Tibo thought the drizzle of ash fell a bit more heavily.
Medoc hitched his own pack on his broad shoulders, turned, and began the walk up the steep path out of the village. ‘Keep up, you youngsters. You’ll soon warm up.’
Tibo followed, grumbling, with Caxa at his side. ‘We’re hardly cold, grandfather. And we’re walking up a fire mountain . . .’
That column of smoke towered before them, black at the base and feathering in the air. Birds swooped around the column, distant specks of darkness themselves.
‘Ravens,’ Medoc said. ‘The Ice Folk believe they are the souls of the dead, guarding an entrance to the underworld. Whatever you do don’t kill one, or you’ll spend the rest of your life apologising to the gods for it. Step out, you two!’ He strode boldly on.
They breasted a shallow rise, and the Hood was revealed before them. It was a bleak, ridged formation that loomed above the greener lowlands, streaked with flows of black rock – a lifeless thing, Tibo thought, like a skull emerging from the living earth. And after a few more paces, it seemed to Tibo that the ground was growing warm beneath his feet.
Milaqa’s party of Northlanders, Hatti and one Trojan reached Etxelur and the Wall in the early morning of the midsummer solstice itself. Their journey had been long and arduous, and to make it here for the special day they had had to finish the journey overnight, hurrying along the last few tracks in the eerie light of a night that was never quite dark.
Bren brought them to his own home, one of the famous Seven Houses of Etxelur, an ancient neighbourhood of properties demolished and rebuilt many times, that overlooked the Bay Land itself. Inside they dumped their packs, drank nettle tea, and hastily smartened up for the day. Bren and Voro donned their ceremonial cloaks of jackdaw feathers, cheerfully complaining about how heavy and hot they would be to wear. Qirum polished his bronze armour clean of dust with a corner of his tunic.
Kilushepa meanwhile borrowed some garments and a bolster of cloth from Bren’s wife and used Qirum’s knife to make some brisk modifications. The result, when she emerged into the light of day, startled Milaqa. The Tawananna wore a sweeping gown that left her arms bare but covered her legs to the floor. Her growing hair was brushed back into a tight bun, and she wore a necklace of iron pieces borrowed from the traders. Picking at a stray thread, she noticed Milaqa watching her. ‘How do I look?’ she asked in her own tongue.
‘Like a queen of Hattusa,’ Milaqa replied honestly.
Kilushepa snorted. ‘Well, since you’ve never been near Hattusa I won’t take that remark too seriously. But your words are meant kindly, so I thank you.’
Now Qirum emerged from the house, alongside Bren. Strutting, Qirum had his armour on and his horned helmet jammed on his head. As usual he looked as if he was spoiling for a fight. He saw Milaqa and winked at her. Then he sniffed the air. ‘Can I smell something? Like smoke, ash?’
‘Some of the Swallows, the travellers, say there’s a mountain spewing fire on Kirike’s Land.’
‘Where’s that?’
‘Across the Western Ocean – a long way from here. But it’s not unknown for ash and dust to be carried far across the sea. Anyhow I think it’s more likely you’re smelling meat cooking up on the Wall.’ She gestured. ‘Take a look.’
The party turned, and Qirum and Kilushepa looked upon the Wall, at close hand and in full daylight, for the first time.
They were only a few hundred paces from its base, where its tremendous growstone flank met the Wall Way, the rough roadway that ran along its length from east to west. Towering over the houses that clustered at its feet, the exposed face shone brilliantly in the sun, but today great cloth panels hug over wide sections of the face, alive with colour, many of them adorned with the concentric-circle design that was the root of the symbolism of Northland. The huge scaffolding structures for the endless repair work were abandoned today; nobody worked at midsummer. But the staircases and galleries chipped into the sheer face swarmed with people walking and eating, leaning on balconies to look out over the country, and children ran along the corridors. For the Giving, people travelled from across Northland – from across the world, indeed – and on first arriving almost all of them made straight for Great Etxelur, the ancient heart of the Wall. If you listened closely you could hear a merged rumble of voices, the calls and shouts and laughter of the tremendous vertical crowd.
Qirum took off his helmet and scratched his scalp. ‘It just deepens the mystery for me. Why, if you people can conceive of a tremendous monument like this, you would choose to live in wooden barns, like animals.’
Bren said portentously, ‘We are all, perhaps, a mystery to each other. It will soon be midday, and before then we must find our way to the Chamber of the Solstice Noon. I am not as agile a climber of the staircases as I once was . . .’
As they formed up into a little procession behind the trader, Qirum looked blank. ‘What chamber is that?’
Milaqa murmured, ‘There will be beer.’
He grinned. ‘Whatever tongue you use, Milaqa, you always speak my language, and for that I’m grateful!’
Medoc had led them high up the flank of the mountain, high above the last of the green, and Tibo walked on a carpet of ash like fallen snow, studded with the stumps of burned-down trees. The ground was hot enough now to feel uncomfortable through the thick soles of his boots, and they passed pools of mud that bubbled and steamed, the stink of sulphur strong. Nothing lived as far as he could see, no creatures walked here save Medoc, Tibo and Caxa – even the belching mud pools lacked the green mosses that usually grew there, even the ravens wheeling overhead did not land. It was a dead country, a place of rock and fire and ash, a place for the little mother of the earth, perhaps, and her alone. It was too hot, the air was thick and increasingly hard to breathe, and there was a continuous rushing roar, like falling water.
And now, it seemed to Tibo, the land actually
bulged
under their feet.
They passed a dead goat, on its back, its limbs sticking up into the air.
‘This isn’t a place for us,’ Tibo muttered.
‘What?’ Medoc did not break his stride. ‘What did you say, boy? Keep up, keep up.’
‘I said,’ he called, shouting over the noise, ‘we shouldn’t be up here. It’s too dangerous.’
‘Nonsense. Though I can’t remember the mountain being quite as restive as this before. Maybe nobody in the world has seen what we’re seeing! We are explorers, like Kirike the ancient who found this island, and then crossed the ocean to be the first to the Land of the Sky Wolf.’
‘We’re not explorers.’
‘Nonsense! Anyhow it’s just a little further to the summit. We can’t turn back now . . .’
Tibo slowed, and walked alongside Caxa. ‘Are you all right?’
The Jaguar girl walked on doggedly, keeping up the pace, coated with ash, grey as a corpse. ‘My people too live in the shadow of fire mountains. We run from the heat, not towards it.’
‘So do we – most of us – most of the time . . .’ He saw that she was staring at flickers of flame that emerged from the rocks. ‘What are you thinking?’
‘About fire. Keeps you warm. But too close, you burn. Yes? And even as it warms, cold on your back. The unending cold, just beyond.’ She shivered.
‘You are . . .’ He had no idea how to say what he wanted to say, in words she might understand. ‘You have many layers.’
‘Layers?’
‘I see a fire. You see life and death. All in the same thing. Maybe that’s why you’re a sculptor. You think strange thoughts, with layers.’
She grabbed his arm. Her grip, through his sleeve, was surprisingly strong, the grip of a sculptor, belying the slenderness of her body, her thin face. ‘Let me stay.’
‘What?’
‘Not go with Xivu. Not back to land of Jaguar.’
He was bewildered, a rush of emotions flooding him – fear of the consequences of this, a kind of tenderness that this girl should ask
him
for help. ‘They need you there, don’t they? Who else can carve the King’s face? And before that you have to go to Northland, for the Annid.’
Caxa said softly, ‘Sculpture finished, Caxa finished, I die.’ She shivered, despite the heat of the fire mountain.
He didn’t know what to say. He had no idea how he could help her.
‘Aha!’ Medoc had reached the summit. He stood silhouetted against a wall of rising steam, hands on hips, panting hard.
Tibo clambered up the last few paces, with Caxa at his side – and faced a bowl of fire. It was a wound in the summit of the mountain, deep-walled. A kind of liquid pooled in it, red hot and crusted over with a black scum that crackled and creaked as it flowed. Plumes of fire rose up, and sprays of hot rock, cooling as they fell. Steam rose from cracks in the rock at the rim of the containing bowl. The noise was different now, like huge, fast exhalations – chuff, chuff, chuff. There was a sense of huge energies, as if they stood on the shoulder of some immense, angry animal.
Medoc laughed, exhilarated. ‘I’ve never seen the like – never seen it before, or heard of it. It’s one for the grandchildren, Tibo.’
Tibo turned around so he looked down the flank of the mountain, to the lower land below with its pockets of forest and farmland, and then the line of the coast, the impossible blue of the sea beyond. ‘We should go back.’
Medoc shook his head. ‘Sometimes you sound like your grandmother.’
The ground shuddered. Caxa grabbed Tibo’s arm.
There was a tremendous bang, and a rush of boiling-hot air hurled Tibo backwards.
20
The party led by Noli and Bren was not alone in being late to get to the Chamber of the Solstice Noon.
As they clambered up the staircases scratched into the face of the Wall, people crowded with a kind of stiff dignity, all trying to get to the ceremonial hall before the crucial moment of midday arrived. And it was an exotic crush, Milaqa thought. In among the robed seniors of the Houses of Etxelur there were representatives of many of the Wall’s own Districts, and country folk from Northland in simpler shifts, and foreigners, men from the Albia forests in their bearskins and bull’s-head caps, and women from the World River estuary in seal skin, and men dressed much like Qirum, as warriors or princes of the eastern empires, with armour and helmets adorned with horns and plumes and bones. Milaqa wondered if there were more of them than usual; maybe the drought had driven them here in hope of a dole of Kirike-fish or potato for their starving peoples. Some of the more elderly or overweight nobles, having trouble with the stairs, were carried in litters, and the big structures with their teams of sweating, stumbling bearers only added to the crowding and confusion.