Authors: K. J. Parker
âYou killed him.' Xipho, stunned.
âYes.' His own voice. âNow follow me.'
Born leader, me
, he remembered thinking; maybe the first time it'd occurred to him that that was what he was born to do, lead others out of mortal peril. Of course, it had been his idea to steal the book in the first place; but the objective had been worthwhile, that stupid chain had just been sheer bad luck.
They'd hesitated, Gain and Xipho. But not for long. And the next day (by some miracle, none of them had tell-tale burns on their hands or faces and their burned clothes had been dumped over the wall into the cesspit, where self-respecting sword-monks would be too fastidious to think of looking) standing shocked, ashen-faced, gauntly silent, as Father Tutor broke the news to them: their friend Cordo, foolishly tried to break into the library, burned to death; the little Earwig sobbing (he'd refused to come with them, said it'd all end in tears; but at least he had the wit to keep his face shut in front of Father Tutor).
At least, Father Tutor was saying, at least they'd managed to save most of the books. But not (Father Tutor didn't say, but they knew) not
the
book, the one with all the answers in, unique, the only known copy, lost and gone irrecoverably for ever; memory consumed in fire, like the truth about Cordoâ
He woke up, and as he stirred the book slid off him and hit the floor. He'd been reading about how to fix files in their handles using powdered rosin, and had fallen asleep. Not the most enthralling book in the world.
Outside â he poked his head round the shed door, wondering how long he'd been asleep. For the first time in days, people were moving about, even running. Curious, he couldn't help thinking; the last he'd heard was that Galand Dev had finally admitted that the crack in the firebox couldn't be mended, and so nothing could be done until the whole furnace was torn down and rebuilt. The furnace was still there, but now there was smoke pouring out of its chimney.
Oh well, he thought. Might as well go to work.
In the yard he ran into one of the old-timers, a small, shrivelled man who'd been hanging round Dui Chirra for decades. âWhat's all this in aid of?' he asked, waving in the direction of the furnace.
The old man laughed. âWhere've you been?' he said. âThat short bugger' (Galand Dev, presumably), âhe's only gone and ordered a fire laid in. Spenno's shitting feathers but nobody's listening to him.'
âI thought he reckoned the whole thing'd crack up if they lit a fire,' Poldarn said.
âHe was wrong, then,' the old man replied. âAround about midnight he had the firehouse boys in there slapping cowshit and clay in the crack; laid in a bit of a fire just to cure it, and now they reckon it's good as new. Hasn't blown up yet, so they must've fixed it.'
âOh,' Poldarn said. âSo, how far've they got?'
âFire's been in full since dawn,' the old man told him, âso it can't be far off ready to pour. Moulds are all in, so they can go as soon as he likes.'
Poldarn shrugged. âSo why the hurry-up all of a sudden?'
âReckon the military's given Muno a boot up the arse,' the old man replied, with a grin. âThis way, if the whole lot goes up, he can say it wasn't his fault, he was only doing what he was told. But Spenno's in there cussing a blue streak, so maybe it'll work, at that.'
âRight,' Poldarn said. âSuppose I'd better go and see if I can make myself useful.'
By the time he reached the furnace yard, there was a ring of men standing round watching. That they weren't entirely convinced of Galand Dev's success in patching the firebox was evident from the healthy amount of distance they were keeping. Poldarn nudged his way through to the front; he had an idea that even if the furnace blew, he'd probably be all right.
Apparently he'd only just made it in time; because as soon as he reached the front of the crowd, Spenno (directing the operation from on top of a tall pile of scrap bronze) put his fingers in his mouth and whistled, someone pulled a lever, and a dazzlingly white stream started to trickle out of the side of the furnace tower. It crawled like a burning worm down a short clay gutter, and disappeared into the in-gate of the mould. Immediately a large round cloud of steam lifted into the air and hung over the mould pit, but there was no eruption or explosion of airborne white-hot spatter; that aside, it was like watching the fire-stream pouring out of the breach in the volcano above Haldersness.
Everybody seemed to be cheering, as though all their problems were over. Obviously premature; there were any number of things that could still go wrong. Even so, and in spite of the fact that he'd contributed next to nothing to the project, Poldarn couldn't help feeling relieved, even strangely proud. Crazy, he thought; or maybe he just liked seeing things burn.
The actual pour lasted less than a minute. Once the mould was filled and the leverman had cut off the stream of liquid metal, there was nothing to do except wait for the casting to cool down. It'd be hours before the mould could be chipped off the casting, and until then there was nothing anybody could usefully do. He sighed, and threaded his way back through the crowd, who seemed to be in no hurry to disperse.
So that's that, Poldarn thought; big deal.
That was the moment when he made up his mind to get out. If there was any connection with what he'd just seen, he couldn't pin it down: it wasn't as though he'd cared enough about the project that he'd been waiting to see if it'd come out all right; he hadn't been hanging on just in case they needed him for something. But it was as if someone else, for once, had taken the irrevocable step, so that now he had the unaccustomed luxury of proceeding safe in the knowledge that this time it wouldn't be his faultâ And where that came from, he had no idea.
Getting out of Dui Chirra wasn't going to be easy. A very quick, low-key reconnaissance was enough to tell him that: a ten-foot-high stockade, sentries on the gate, further sentries patrolling the perimeter, still others pulling lookout duty from the surrounding high points. Stowing away in an outbound cart wasn't a viable option; the sentries seemed to be working out their frustration at being cooped up in the lousiest posting in the Empire by spearing every handful of straw or bundle of rags that trundled through the gateway. The only vulnerable spot in the defences that Poldarn could see was the river, which came in and flowed out under two watergates at either end of the compound. But the idea of taking that route didn't appeal to him; if he could spot it, it was too obvious. There was, he vaguely remembered, a precept of religion on the subject.
It took him a day of nonchalant strolling, admiring the depth and ingenuity of Brigadier Muno's security arrangements, to remember that he had a stone-cold foolproof no-risk way-out buried in the pocket of his other coat â some kind of small badge or brooch, with a pin and a keeper on the back. Poldarn recalled what Muno Silsny had said about it:
combination safe passage and get-out-of-trouble token; show it to a watch sergeant or a guard commander and unless he's got specific orders to the contrary from the Emperor or myself, he'll say sorry for troubling you and forget he ever saw you
. Perfect, just what he needed â assuming that it was still valid, now that Muno Silsny was dead. He found it, stood it up on its pin on the palm of his hand and stared at it for a while. It looked like the sort of thing you could buy in Sansory market for a quarter, if you and your money were easily parted. Even so; only one way to find out.
It didn't take him long to pack: his one change of clothes, hat, blanket, the sword he'd nearly finished making, the book Gain had given him, the little axe he'd brought from Haldersness, an issue water-bottle and as many ration biscuits as he could cram into a medium-sized feed sack. In the other pocket of his good coat was Muno Silsny's other gift, the chunky gold ring that was supposed to be worth a nice, snug little farm. Having thought about it for a while, he decided that the best time of day for his departure would be somewhere around an hour before dawn, when the sentry on the gate would be thinking about being relieved and not getting involved in anything that might keep him from his bed a minute longer than necessary. The approach, he decided, should be as simple as possibleâ
âHere,' said the sentry. âWhere d'you think you're going?'
âOut,' Poldarn replied, raising his hand and opening his fingers.
âWhat's that supposed to be, then?'
Look of pained surprise. âYou mean you don't know? All right, then, we'd better go and have a word with your sergeant.'
Bad-tempered sigh from the sentry, who waved to his colleague outside the gate to come and take his place for a moment; then inside the guardhouse to wake up the sergeant, who was asleep under three blankets and a heavy non-regulation coat.
âThis one reckons he's got leave to go out,' the sentry said, âonly he hasn't got a pass or anything.'
The sergeant grunted and swung his bare legs to the floor. âAll right,' he said wearily, âwhat's the story this time? It'd better be good, becauseâ'
Poldarn held out his hand, opened his fingers once again. The sergeant stared, as if he'd just met his mother in a brothel.
âFuck me,' he said softly. âHaven't seen one of them since I was in Torcea.' He frowned. âHow do I know it's genuine?' he asked.
Poldarn clicked his tongue and dropped the brooch into the sergeant's hand. âMind you don't stab yourself on the pin,' he said. âIt's sharp.'
The sergeant turned it over a couple of times, then stood up quickly. âVery sorry to have bothered you, sir,' he said. âJust doing my job.'
âFine,' Poldarn grunted, holding out his hand for the brooch. âNo need to tell anybody about this, is there?'
âUnderstood,' the sergeant snapped. âAnybody asks, I never seen you in my life.'
And that was that: the gates swung to behind Poldarn, the outside sentry stood aside to let him pass, just as the first red gleam of dawn diluted the sky. Where next? he asked himself, as if it mattered. Falcata, presumably, not that he knew anything about the place. But from what he'd heard it sounded as though it was on the way to somewhere, and that was all he needed it to be.
â
Y
ou know her, then?' the driver was asking.
Pulling himself back out of his complicated train of thought, Poldarn shook his head; fat raindrops scattered from the sodden brim of his hat. âMet her a couple of times on the road, that's all. Crazy old bat, but fairly harmless.'
The driver shrugged. âShe didn't seem to know you.'
âHadn't seen her since I got myself all burned up,' he replied. âDon't suppose many people would recognise me after that.'
âThat'd be it, then.' The driver was silent for a while, thinking; a slow process but not without a certain grandeur, like the turning of a giant waterwheel. âSo why'd you help her out, then, if she's just some old nutcase you met on the road?'
Good question. Poldarn's turn to think for a moment. âI have this odd feeling she's good luck,' he replied. âLike a mascot or something. If I help her out, at some point I'll get a slice of good luck myself when I need it, later on down the line.'
âFair enough,' said the driver, in the manner of one humouring an armed lunatic. âHas it worked like that, then?'
It hadn't actually occurred to him to consider the point, so he considered it. First time he'd met the daffy old woman with the little wicker cage, he'd also met Gain Aciava. Second time, he'd taken part in that ghastly botched robbery shortly afterwards, when he'd had to kill the vicious teenager. âNo,' he admitted. âQuite the opposite, in fact. Only goes to show, intuition's an arsehole.'
That went over the driver's head like a skein of migrating geese, but he didn't seem to mind. The driver was one of those people who seem to treat the intelligent and articulate as speakers of a foreign language; if he understood one word in twenty, he was happy. âDoesn't seem much point to it, then,' the driver went on. âI mean, if you get bad luck for helping her out instead of good, why help her out? Anyhow, that's how I see it.'
âYou're probably right,' Poldarn sighed. âBut she was headed for Torcea, so I don't suppose I'll ever see her again.'
âJust as well, really.'
âJust as well,' he agreed.
It had happened on his last night in Falcata. He'd been there a whole week, instead of one night and one morning as he'd planned, but some river or other had flooded and washed away the causeway on which the main east road crossed some bog, or at least that was what he'd been told next morning at the stage office; the taproom of the Benevolence Rewarded had been thick with rumours about rebel armies, bandits, the Amathy house on the prowl again, the Mad Monk and all sorts. So he'd wandered up and down the damp grey city's uninspiring main thorough-fare, wondering why half the shops were shut and the other half were empty; he'd spent money he couldn't afford on needled beer he didn't want; he'd stood looking over the parapet of the covered bridge, watching the fat brown river licking the doorsteps and windowsills of the bankside houses; he'd tried to sell Muno Silsny's ring, but the goldsmiths were either closed and shuttered or weren't buying in off the street. Finally, in desperation, he'd taken shelter from the rain in a grim, dusty building that had turned out to be the law courts and, having nothing better to do, had sat down in the back row of the public gallery while the three resident magistrates worked their way through the morning's crop of drunks, debtors, vagrants, lunatics and inept thieves. Sleep was pressing down on him hard and he'd folded his arms and closed his eyes when he'd heard a voice he recognised â her, the mad woman, sounding dreadfully flustered and upset at being described as a vagrant; more concerned about her unidentified pets in their wicker basket than about her own fate as an indicted criminal. (The watch sergeant had taken the cage from her; she'd tried to grab it back and most unfortunately her elbow had gone in the poor man's eye; of course it was an accident and she was most dreadfully sorry, nothing like this had ever happened to her before, and did their worships think she could possibly have the cage back, because her babies would be so dreadfully hungry after missing two feedsâ) And, at some point in this wretched performance, he'd realised he was standing on his hind legs exchanging words with the clerk of the courtâ