The Burning City

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The Burning City Page 11

by Jerry Pournelle


  His skill impressed his uncles but not the girls. What did impress them? No man knew.

  Girls were never found alone. They were with older, tougher boys, or even men; a few had brothers who guarded them fiercely. Whandall spoke of trying his new skill with a knife. The next night he was summoned to speak with Resalet.

  “So you’re able to fight all of Bull Pizzle, and possibly Owl Beak as well,” Resalet said. “Alone, without help. It seems we taught you well.”

  Whandall at thirteen thought he was immortal, but part of him knew better. There was a black pit in his stomach when he said, “Only kinless are abandoned by their kin.”

  Resalet said, “Now think on this. You will fight for a woman. You will win, and her man, or his brothers, or her brothers, or all of those, will fight you. You are skilled, but you’re small. Blood will flow. Someone will die. When you are killed, the Placehold will demand blood money from those who killed you.” He eyed Whandall carefully. “For fools we don’t need much blood money.”

  Whandall shuffled his feet, unable to reply.

  “You’re too young to fight for a woman,” Resalet told him.

  “I feel like I could,” Whandall said.

  Resalet grinned, showing wide gaps in his teeth. “Know what you mean. But the Placehold can’t start a war over getting you a woman. Shall we buy you a woman for a night?”

  Whandall understood that the word buy was an insult. Still, he considered the offer….

  There were women who lived with their children but no men. Some were always popular. Others might have a suitor for a few days after Mother’s Day; then they were around for a jewel or a shell or a skirt, or a shared meal and a place to sleep, or for nothing. What would any of them do for soap? But Tras’s soap had near killed Whandall, and Tras was dead or gone, and what kind of woman would look at a strange, scarred boy this soon after Mother’s Day?

  “Not just yet,” he said, “but thanks.”

  Resalet nodded sagely. “You’ll be a good Lordkin, someday. But you’re not one yet. Grow more before you take a tattoo.”

  “You won’t take my knife!”

  “No. But carry it softly while you grow.”

  Ask! But who could he talk to? Boys his age were afraid of him, and older boys laughed because he knew so little. His mother had no time for him.

  He used a shell Samorty had given him to buy a melon—fruit soft enough to eat without teeth—and brought it to Mother’s Mother. Dargramnet hacked it with her sleeve knife and ate it noisily.

  “Girls,” Whandall prompted, and waited.

  The thin lips parted in a smile. “Yes, yes, I see them now. Not like they were when I was a girl. Go with anyone now. They’ll learn. Too late, they’ll learn too late. I warned them, I warned them all. It’s very hot today, isn’t it?”

  She didn’t always hear or remember what Whandall said. Whandall wasn’t sure she knew who he was. Still, the stretch of years within her mind must be worth exploring. What had the girl Dargramnet wanted in a man?

  He asked, “What were the men like?”

  Mother’s Mother spoke of the men she’d known. Strif, Bloude, Gliraten—old lovers came and went in Dargramnet’s mind as they must have in life, interchangeable inside broken stories, until Whandall couldn’t tell one from another. Her second son Pothefit, strong enough to lift a wagon, stubborn as a Lord. Wanshig and Whandall, her first grandsons, Thomer’s sons by Pothefit and Resalet, cousins who shared everything. “Most of them dead, now. Killed in knife fights. Burnings. Just gone.”

  Whandall nodded. Many of the boys he’d grown up with were dead. They’d survived the forest, but not the city. Tep’s Town killed boys. Did other cities? Did boys die so young in Lord’s Town or in the Lordshills or Condigeo?

  One could watch and try to learn.

  Unattached women without kin to protect them were hard to find, and they wanted big men to be with… except on Mother’s Day. The Lords didn’t give their gifts to women who had men. Women went to Peacegiven Square alone, and one need only listen to learn who had a man waiting.

  Most girls wanted to marry. Most men didn’t, but they wanted their sisters married. One or two of Whandall’s sisters’ friends might be ready to marry, but that was too big a bite for Whandall at thirteen.

  Not that he’d reasoned any of this out, exactly. But every Lordkin knew that there was a time when a man need not ask. Whandall remembered a high optimism, a firelight feast for eyes grown bored with daylight, frenzy and excitement, couples pairing off, when he was seven years old….

  “Shig, when will the Burning come?”

  Wanshig laughed. “You’re a looker now?”

  They were at dinner in the Placehold courtyard. The sky was red with sunset. Speech ran softly round the circle of adults and the smaller circle of children.

  Wanshig was eighteen now. He’d watched Whandall practicing with his knife and twice had joined him on the roof, not ashamed to learn from his younger brother. Whandall liked him best of all his kin.

  Now Wanshig set his spoon down and said, “Nobody knows. Long ago it was once a year. Now, every four or five. Even when Mother was a little girl, they couldn’t tell anymore. Maybe gods sleep, like your Uncle Cartry after a Lordsman whacked his head. Maybe Yangin-Atep isn’t dead—he just never wakes up.”

  “Did Yangin-Atep take you?”

  Wanshig laughed again. “No! I was only… twelve, I think.”

  “Someone, then.”

  “They say Yangin-Atep possessed Alferth and Tarnisos. You don’t know them, Whandall. They’re crazy enough without help. All I know is, we see fires south of us, smoke blowing our way. Resalet whoops and dives into Carraland’s Fine Clothes, and we all follow. Carraland runs away shouting out looker gibberish—”

  “What happened to Pothefit?”

  That snapped Wanshig out of his wistful nostalgia. “Whandall, do you remember when they came in with the cook pot?”

  “Yes, Shig.”

  Pothefit and Resalet were shadows against the dancing blaze from the granary, carrying the cauldron through Placehold’s main door while Wanshig and another brother pretended to help.

  “We gathered it out of a wizard’s shop on Market Round. We piled stuff in the cook pot too, but we went back for more, and to burn the place. An Atlantis wizard, a stranger, he didn’t know any better than to come back to his shop during the Burning. He found us. Pothefit was trying to set the shelves alight. The wizard waved his hand and said something, and Pothefit just fell over. Rest of us got away.”

  Lord Samorty’s courtyard… “I saw him. Morth of Atlantis.”

  “Me too. That shop on Market Round, he built it again after the Burning.”

  “No, Shig, Morth of Atlantis was too old for that. He was almost dead.”

  “Right, and cook fires burn inside. Whandall, that is Morth of Atlantis, the shop on Market Round.”

  “Where does he go at night?”

  Wanshig cuffed him hard enough to make the point. “Don’t even think it. Never remember a killing after the Burning.”

  Whandall rubbed his ear. “Shig, you’ve killed.”

  “Barbarians, lookers, kinless, uglies, anyone who’s insulted you… you can kill. But that’s only during the Burning, Whandall, and it’s not a big part of it. It’s only… it’s bad to hold your anger locked in your belly for too long. You have to let it go.”

  Something in the conversation had attracted Resalet’s attention. “Whandall, how do you reckon we keep the Placehold when everybody wants it?”

  “We watch. We can fight—”

  “We can fight,” Resalet said. “But we couldn’t fight everyone.”

  “Serpent’s Walk,” Whandall said.

  Resalet nodded gravely. “But Serpent’s Walk can’t fight Bull Pizzle and Owl Beak and Maze Walkers all together. And what happens if Lord Pelzed wants to live here?”

  Whandall had never thought of that.

  Resalet grinned, showing as many black spaces a
s teeth. “We’re smarter than they are. We have rules,” he said. “And the first one is, don’t start fights you can’t win. Don’t even start fights that will cost you strength. But once you do get in a fight, win it no matter what happens, no matter what it costs. Always win! Always win big. Make an example of your enemies, every time.”

  “Lords do that too.” They’d done it to Whandall. “What if you can’t win?”

  Resalet’s grin widened. “You never think about that once it’s started.” He went back to his soup.

  Whandall was about to say something, but Wanshig put his bowl aside and stood up. “Show you something.”

  “What?”

  “Come on.” Wanshig pulled a burning stick from the cook fire and ran, whirling it round his head.

  He was through the courtyard’s narrow entrance with Whandall just behind him. The flame gleamed pale in the dusk. Wanshig skidded around another corner, crossed the street diagonally, and…

  Whandall, running behind him, saw Wanshig hurl the torch through the window of Goldsmith’s wire jewelry shop. The owner was just about to pull the shutter down for the night. He screeched as the torch went past his ear—

  And the flame snuffed out.

  Wanshig kept running past the store, whooping. Whandall followed. In the shadow of an alley they stopped to breathe, then to laugh.

  “See? If the Burning isn’t on us, indoor fires just go out. Then maybe you get laughed at and maybe you get beat up, depending. So don’t be the one to start the Burning. Let someone else do it.” Wanshig grinned. “You were about to get a beating,” he said.

  “I just wanted to know—”

  “You wanted to know what happens if so many come after us that we can’t win,” Wanshig said. “Whandall, you know what would happen. We’d run away. But Resalet can’t say that! Not even inside the Placehold. If the story got out that you could take the Placehold without killing every one of us, that any of us even thinks that way—we’re gone.”

  CHAPTER

  14

  One day a fire began in the brush behind a kinless house just outside Serpent’s Walk territory. All the kinless in that area turned out. They brought a big wagon pulled by the small kinless ponies. It had a tank on it, and kinless men dipped water from it and threw it on the fire until it was out.

  Whandall watched from behind a flowering hedge. On the way home he gathered an apple to give Resalet.

  “Why do they bother? The fire would go out. Wouldn’t it?” Whandall asked.

  Resalet was in a mellow mood. “Kinless don’t believe in Yangin-Atep,” he said. “So Yangin-Atep doesn’t always protect them. Against us, yes, unless there’s a Burning. Sometimes against accidents. Not always, and the kinless don’t wait to find out.”

  “Those wagons—”

  “They keep them in the stable area,” Resalet said.

  “What if the fire is too far away?”

  Resalet shrugged. “I’ve seen them turn out with buckets when there’s water in the River of Spirits.”

  The River of Spirits flowed out of the forest and down through Lordkin territory before it reached the kinless area. It stank. Whandall thought he’d rather see Placehold burn than have a fire put out with what was in that river.

  There was much to learn about Yangin-Atep, and one could ask. Mother’s Mother told him some. When she was a girl she had heard a tale that the kinless had once been warriors with a god of their own, before Yangin-Atep and the Lords brought the Lordkin to Tep’s Town. She couldn’t remember who had told her the story, and she thought the days were hotter than they used to be.

  Days were long for Whandall. He was smaller than other boys his age, and the months spent healing, and afterward doing children’s work, had lost him what friends he might have had. His best friend was his older brother Wanshig, and Shig didn’t always want a smaller boy hanging around with him.

  There was little to do. His uncles were content to have him hang around Placehold in case of need, but that was no life.

  His younger brother Shastern had grown while Whandall was recovering. Now anyone seeing them together took Shastern for the elder. Shastern was deeply involved in Serpent’s Walk activities. He was leader of a band that gathered from the kinless in Owl Beak.

  “Come with us, Whandall,” Shastern urged. “Lord Pelzed wants us to look at a street in Bull Pizzle territory.”

  “Why? I can’t run fast.”

  “No, but you can lurk. If you don’t do it, I’ll have to.”

  Whandall thought about that. “You didn’t used to be very good at lurking.”

  “I’m learning. But you’re better.”

  “What are we looking for?” Whandall asked.

  “Dark Man’s Cup Street. It’s right at the border—”

  “I know where it is,” Whandall said. “There’s nothing there! Shaz, there’s nothing to gather. What would Lord Pelzed want with that place?”

  Shastern shook his head. “He didn’t tell me. He said to find who’s living there now. When was the last time you were there?”

  Whandall thought back. “Six weeks? I was following a kinless, but maybe he knew I was behind him.” Whandall shrugged. “I lost him in the trash on that street. It’s that bad.”

  “Come tell Lord Pelzed.”

  “I think he’s mad at me—”

  Shastern shook his head. “Not that I know of. Whandall, you have to see him sometime. This way you can do him a favor.”

  “All right.” Whandall felt his heart beat faster. Suppose Pelzed—Lord Pelzed!—wanted him to pay for the cart and clothes? Or the roof Tras Preetror had promised? But Shastern was right—he had to know sometime.

  Pelzed found time for the boys that afternoon. “Shastern says you followed a kinless to Dark Man’s Cup,” he said. “Have some tea.”

  The tea was weak and didn’t do anything to Whandall’s head. He sipped and found it good. “He was kinless,” Whandall said, “but he didn’t live there.”

  “Who does?”

  “I only saw some women.”

  “Lordkin?”

  “Yes. I think so,” Whandall said. “Lord Pelzed, Dark Man’s Cup looks like there hasn’t been a kinless there for years! It’s all trash and weeds in the street, and it stinks.”

  “Children?”

  “Two babies,” Whandall said. “Dirty, like their mothers.”

  “No men?”

  “I didn’t see any.”

  “Go find out,” Pelzed said.

  “Lord—”

  “Go find out. There’ll be men. Find out who they are.”

  “Lord, why? There’s nothing there!”

  “But there could be,” Pelzed said. “And I’ll send Tumbanton with you. Have some more tea.”

  Dark Man’s Cup lay on the other side of a small gully that had running water during the rainy season but was usually dry. The creek bed was filled with trash and sewage, and there was no bridge. Three boys and an older man picked their way through the trash, with Whandall in the lead.

  Tumbanton was usually seen at Pelzed’s right hand. He was the whip hand, the trainer, when a boy joined Serpent’s Walk. He’d saved Pelzed’s life twenty-six years ago, when they were both no more than gatherers. He’d defended their retreat when a raid on Maze Walkers went disastrously wrong. Six had died. Tumbanton and Pelzed had escaped. Tumbanton usually went without a shirt to show the maze of scars from that event. He loved to tell the story.

  But he’d picked up a trace of a limp too, and a noisy, wobbly walk. His son Geravim, with no scars to speak of, seemed as clumsy as his father.

  “What’s Pelzed want with this place anyway?” Geravim asked as he shook filth off his sandals.

  Tumbanton must know that, but he didn’t speak.

  “Maybe he thinks he can get the kinless to build a bridge,” Shastern said.

  “Wish they’d done it already,” Geravim muttered.

  And why would they, when the Lords and Lordkin would only gather what they bu
ilt? But they did. Kinless did work, sometimes, and only men like Pelzed knew why.

  Pelzed’s family had never been important. How had he become Lord Pelzed?

  Whandall caught a whiff of cooking meat. It was faint, nearly masked by the smells of sewage and decay, but it was there.

  “Something?” Shastern asked.

  “Probably not,” Whandall said. “Wait here, I’ll be right back.”

  There was no wind, but when he’d smelled the cook fire there had been a puff of air from the south. Whandall went that way, downstream if there had been any water in the gully. There were thickets of greasewood and sharp plants like lordswords except these were smaller and didn’t move to strike at him. Another patch looked like a variety of lordkiss, three leaves and white berries, but the leaves were sickly red. Ahead was a patch of holly, thorns, and berries. There was a tunnel in the thorns and rabbit droppings on the path. He sniffed. Fresh.

  The way led steeply down. The center of the gully was deep, a dry streambed, but on the sides there were shelves of flat land fifty feet wide and nearly that far above the streambed. Above them were thickets all the way to the top of the gully and beyond, but the shelves themselves had clear patches among the weeds and chaparral. The smell of cooking meat got stronger as he went south. When he reached the end of the narrow twisting passage through the holly bushes he stayed prone and used his knife to part the weeds ahead of him so he could look without being seen.

  He saw a cook fire. A slab of meat roasted on a spit above it. Behind the fire was a cave into the gully bank. The entrance was hidden from above and most other directions by holly bushes and scrub oak.

  Three kinless men sat by the fire. They were sharpening axes. A kinless girl came out of the cave and put sticks on the fire.

 

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