CALDE OF THE LONG SUN botls-3

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CALDE OF THE LONG SUN botls-3 Page 7

by Gene Wolfe


  perished in battle were accounted her sacrifices, just as those struck

  by lightning were said to have been offered to Pas.

  The kitchen was exactly as he recalled it; if Gulo had eaten since

  moving into the manse, he had not done it here. Oreb's water cup

  still stood on the kitchen table beside the ball snatched from Horn.

  "If it hadn't happened, the big boys would have won," he murmured.

  "I beg pardon, My Calde?"

  "Pay no attention--I was talking to myself." Refusing the captain's

  offer of help, he toiled at the pump handle until he could splash his

  face and disorderly yellow hair with cold water that he could not

  help imagining smelled of the tunnels, soap and rinse them, and rub

  them dry with a dish towel.

  "You'll want to wash up a bit, too, Captain. Please do so while I

  change upstairs."

  The stair was steeper than he remembered; the manse, which he

  had always thought small, smaller than ever. Seated on the bed that

  he had left unmade on Molpseday morning, he lashed its wrinkled

  sheets with Doctor Crane's wrapping.

  He had told the crowd he would burn his tunic and loose brown

  trousers, but although soaked and muddy they were still practically

  new, and of excellent quality; washed, they might clothe some poor

  man for a year or more. He pulled the tunic off and tossed it into the

  hamper.

  The azoth he had filched from Hyacinth's boudoir was in the

  waistband of the trousers. He pressed it to his lips and carried it to

  the window to examine it again. It had never been Hyacinth's, from

  what Crane had told him; Crane had merely had her keep it, feeling

  that her rooms were less likely to be searched than his own. Crane

  himself had received it from an unnamed Idlanum in Trivigaunte

  who had intended it as a gift for Blood. Was it Blood's, then? If so,

  it must be turned over to Blood without fail. There must be no more

  theft from Blood; he had gone too far in that direction on Phaesday.

  On the other hand, if Crane had been authorized to dispose of it

  (as it seemed he had), it was his, since Crane had given it to him as

  Crane lay dying. It might be sold for thousands of cards and the

  money put to good use--but a moment's self-examination convinced

  him that he could never exchange it for money if he had any right to

  it.

  Someone in the crowd beyond the garden wall had seen him

  standing at the window. People were cheering, nudging each other,

  and pointing. He stepped back, closed the curtains, and examined

  Hyacinth's azoth again, an object of severe beauty and a weapon

  worth a company of the Civil Guard--the weapon with which he had

  slain the talus in the tunnels, and the one she had threatened him

  with when he would not lie with her.

  Had her need really been so great? Or had she hoped to make

  him love her by giving herself to him, as he had hoped (he

  recognized the kernel of truth in the thought) to make her love him

  by refusing? Hyacinth was a prostitute, a woman rented for a night

  for a few cards--that was to say, for the destruction of the mind of

  some forsaken, howling monitor like the one in the buried tower.

  He was an augur, a member of the highest and holiest of professions.

  So he had been taught.

  An augur ready to steal to get just such cards as her body sold for.

  An augur ready to steal by night from the man from whom he had

  already bullied three cards at noon. One of those cards had bought

  Oreb and a cage to keep him in. Would three have bought

  Hyacinth? Brought her to this old three-sided cage of a manse, with

  its bolted doors and barred windows?

  He placed the azoth on his bureau, put Hyacinth's needler and his

  beads beside it, and removed his trousers. They were muddier even

  than the tunic, the knees actually plastered with mud, though their

  color made their state less obvious. Seeing them, it struck him that

  augurs might wear black not in order that they might eavesdrop on

  the gods while concealed by the color of Tartaros, but because it

  made a dramatic background for fresh blood, and masked stains

  that could not be washed out.

  His shorts, cleaner than the trousers but equally rain-soaked,

  followed them into the hamper.

  Rude people called augurs butchers for good reason, and there

  was butchery enough waiting for him. Leaving aside his proclivity

  toward theft, were augurs really any better in the eyes of a god such

  as the Outsider than a woman like Hyacinth? Could they be better

  than the people they represented before the gods and still represent

  them? Bios and chems alike were contemptible creatures in the eyes

  of the gods, and ultimately those were the only eyes that mattered.

  Eyes in the foggy little mirror in which he shaved caught his. As

  be stared, Mucor's deathly grin coalesced below them; in a travesty

  of coquetry, she simpered, "This isn't the first time I've seen you

  with no clothes on."

  He spun around, expecting to see her seated on his bed; she was

  not there.

  "I wanted to tell you about my window and my father. You were

  going to tell him to lock my window so I couldn't get out and bother

  you any more."

  By that time he had recovered his poise. He got clean undershorts

  from the bureau and pulled them on, then shook his head. "I wasn't.

  I hoped that I wouldn't have to."

  From beyond the bedroom door: '_My Calde?_"

  "I'll be down in a moment, Captain."

  "_I heard voices, My Calde. You are in no danger?_"

  "This manse is haunted, Captain. You may come up and see for

  yourself if you like."

  Mucor tittered. "Isn't this how you talk to them? In the glasses?"

  "To a monitor, you mean?" He had been thinking of one; could

  she read his thoughts? "Yes, it's very much like this. You must have

  seen them."

  "They don't look the same to me."

  "I suppose not." With a considerable feeling of relief, Silk pulled

  on clean black trousers.

  "I thought I'd be one for you."

  He nodded in recognition of her consideration. "Just as you use

  your window and the gods their Sacred Windows. I had not thought

  of the parallel, but I should have."

  Unreflected, her face in his mirror bobbed up and down. "I

  wanted to tell you it's no good any more, telling my father to lock

  my window. He'll kill you if he sees you, now. Potto said he had to,

  and he said he would."

  The Ayuntamiento had learned that he was alive and in the city,

  clearly; it would learn that he was here soon, if it had not already. It

  would send loyal members of the Guard, might even send soldiers.

  "So it doesn't matter. My body will die soon anyway, and I'll be

  free like the others. Do you care?"

  "Yes. Yes, I do. Very much. Why will your body die?"

  "Because I don't cat. I used to like it, but I don't any more. I'd

  rather be free."

  Her face had begun to fade. He blinked, and nothing but the

  hollows that had been her eyes remained. A breath of wind stirred

  the curtains, and those hol
lows, too, were gone.

  He said, "You must eat, Mucor. I don't want you to die." Hoping

  for a reply, he waited. "I know you can hear me. You have to eat."

  He had intended to tell her that he had wronged her and her father.

  That he would make amends, although Blood might kill him

  afterward. But it was too late.

  Wiping his eyes, he got out his last clean tunic. His prayer beads

  and a handkerchief went into one trouser pocket, Hyacinth's

  needler into the other (He would return it when he could, but that

  problematic moment at which they might meet again seemed

  agonizingly remote.) His waistband claimed the azoth; it was

  possible that augury would provide some hint of what he ought to do

  with it. He considered selling it again, and thought again of the

  howling face that had been so like Mucor's in his minor, and

  shuddered.

  Clean collar and cuffs on his second-best robe would have to do.

  And here was the captain, waiting at the foot of the stair and

  looking nearly as spruce as he had in that place--what had it been

  called? In the Rusty Lantern in Limna.

  "I was concerned for your safety, My Calde."

  "For my reputation, you mean. You heard a woman's voice."

  "A child's, I thought, My Calde."

  "You may search the upper floor if you wish, Captain. If you find

  a woman--or a child, either--please let me know."

  "Hierax have my bones if I have thought of such a thing, My

  Calde!"

  "She is a child of Hierax's, certainly."

  The Silver Street door was barred, as it should have been; Silk

  rattled the handle to make certain it was locked as well. The window

  was shut, and locked behind its bars.

  "I can station a trooper in here, if you wish, My Calde."

  Silk shook his head. "We'll need every trooper you have and

  more, I'm afraid. That officer in the floater--"

  "Major Civet, My Calde.

  "Tell Major Civet to station men to give the alarm if the

  Ayuntamiento sends its troopers to arrest me. They should be a

  street or two away, I suppose."

  "Two streets or more, My Calde, and there must be patrols

  beyond them."

  "Very well, Captain. Arrange it. I'm willing to stand trial if I must,

  but only if it will bring peace."

  "You are willing, My Calde. We are not. Nor are the gods."

  Silk shrugged and went into the sellaria. The Sun Street door was

  locked and barred. Two letters on the mantel, one sealed with the

  Chapter's knife and chalice, one with a flame between cupped

  hands; he dropped them into the large pocket of his robe. Both the

  Sun Street windows were locked.

  As they hurried through the garden again and into the street, he

  found himself thinking of Mucor. And of Blood, who had adopted

  her; then of Highest Hierax, who had dropped from the sky a few

  hours ago for Crane and the solemn young trooper with whom he

  and Crane had talked in the Rusty Lantern. Mucor wanted to die, to

  yield to Hierax; and he, Silk, would have to save her if he could.

  Had it been wrong of him, then, to call her a child of Hierax?

  Perhaps not. Women as well as men were by adoption the

  children of the gods, and no other god so suited Mucor.

  Chapter 3 -- A Tessera for the Tunnel

  "Bad thing," Oreb muttered, watching the burning talus to see

  whether it could hear him. When it did not react, he repeated more

  loudly, "Bad thing!"

  "Shut up." Auk, too, watched it warily.

  Chenille addressed it, stepping forward with her launcher ready.

  "We'd put out the fire if we could. If we had blankets or--or

  anything we could beat it out with."

  "_I die! Hear me!_"

  "I just wanted to say we're sorry." She glanced back at the four

  men, and Dace nodded.

  "_I serve Scylla! You must!_"

  Incus drew himself up to his full height. "You may rely upon me to

  do everything in my power to carry out the goddess's will. I speak

  here for my friend Corporal Hammerstone, as well as for myself."

  "_The Ayuntamiento has betrayed her! Destroy it!_"

  Hammerstone snapped to attention. "Request permission to

  speak, Talus."

  The slender black barrel of one buzz gun trembled and the gun

  fired, its burst whistling five cubits above their heads and sending

  screaming ricochets far down the tunnel.

  "Maybe you better not," Auk whispered. He raised his voice,

  "Scylla told us Patera Silk was trying to overthrow them, and

  ordered us to help him. We will if we can. That's Chenille and me,

  and his bird."

  "_Tell the Juzgado!_"

  "Right, she said to." Dace and Incus nodded.

  A tongue of flame licked the talus's cheek. "_The tessera! Thetis!

  To the subceltar..._" An interior explosion rocked it.

  Needlessly, Auk shouted, "Get back!" As they fled down the

  tunnel, fire veiled the great metal face.

  "She's done fer now! She's goin' down!" Dace was slower even

  than Auk, who tottered on legs weaker than he had known since

  infancy.

  A second muffled explosion, then silence except for the sibilation

  of the flames. Hammerstone, who had been matching strides with

  Auk, broke step to snatch up a slug gun. "This was a sleeper's," he

  told Auk cheerfully. "See how shiny the receiver is? Probably never

  been fired. I couldn't go back for mine 'cause I was supposed to

  watch you. Mine's had about five thousand rounds through it." He

  put the new slug gun to his shoulder and sighted down the barrel.

  Oreb squawked, and Auk said, "Careful there! You might hit Jugs."

  "Safety's on." Hammerstone lowered the gun. "You knew her

  before, huh?"

  Auk nodded and slowed his pace enough to allow Dace to catch

  up. "Since spring, I guess it was."

  "I had a girl myself once," Hammerstone told him. "She was a

  housemaid, but you'd never have guessed it to look at her. Pretty as

  a picture."

  Auk nodded. "What happened?"

  "I had to go on reserve. I went to sleep, and when I woke up I

  wasn't stationed in the city any more. Maybe I should've gone

  looking for Moly." He shrugged. "Only I figured by then she'd found

  somebody else. Just about all of them had."

  "You'll find somebody, too, if you want to," Auk assured him. He

  paused to look back up the tunnel; the talus was still in view but

  seemed remote, a dot of orange fire no larger than the closest light.

  "You could be dead," he said. "Suppose Patera hadn't fixed you up?"

  Hammerstone shook his head. "I can't ever pay him. I can't even

  show how much I love him, really. We can't cry. You know about that?"

  "Poor thing!" Oreb sounded shocked.

  Auk told him, "You can't cry either, cully."

  "Bird cry!"

  "You meatheads are always talking about how good us chems

  have it," Hammerstone continued. "Good means not being able to

  eat, and duty seventy-four, maybe a hundred and twenty, hours at a

  stretch. Good means sleeping so long the _Whorl_ changes, and you

  got to learn new procedures for everything. Good means seven or

  eight tinpots after every woman. You want to t
ry it?"

  "Shag, no!"

  Dace caught Auk's arm. "Thanks for waitin' up."

  Auk shook him off. "I can't go all that fast myself."

  More cheerfully Hammerstone said, "I could carry you both, only

  I'm not supposed to. Patera wouldn't like it."

  Dace's grin revealed a dark gap from which two teeth were

  missing. "Mama, don't put me on no boat!"

  Auk chuckled.

  "He means well," Hammerstone assured them. "He cares about

  me. That's one reason I'd die for him."

  Auk suppressed his first thought and substituted, "Don't you

  think about your old knot any more? The other soldiers?"

  "Sure I do. Only Patera comes first."

  Auk nodded.

  "You got to consider the whole setup. Our top commander ought

  to be the calde. That's our general orders. Only there isn't one, and

  that means all of us are stuck. Nobody's got the right to give an

  order, only we do it 'cause we've got to, to keep the brigade

  running. Sand's my sergeant, see?"

  "Uh-huh."

  "And Schist and Shale are privates in our squad. He tells me and I

  tell them. Then they go sure, Corporal, whatever you say. Only

  none of us feels right about it."

  "Girl wait?" Oreb inquired. He had been eyeing Chenille's distant,

  naked back.

  "Sooner or later," Auk told him. "Snuff your jaw. This is interesting."

  "Take just the other day," Hammerstone continued, "I was

  watching a prisoner. A flap broke and I tried to handle it, and he got

  away from me. If everything was right, I'd've lost my stripes over

  that, see? Only it's not, so all I got was a chewing out from Sand and

  double from the major. Why's that?" He leveled a pipe-sized finger

  at Auk, who shook his head.

  "I'll tell you. "Cause both of them know Sand wasn't authorized to

  give anybody orders in the first place, and I could've told him

  dee-dee if I'd wanted to."

  "Dee-dee?" Oreb peered quizzically at Hammerstone.

  "You want the straight screw? I felt pretty bad when it happened,

  but it was a lot worse when I was talking to them. Not 'cause of

  anything they said. I've heard all that till I could sing it. 'Cause they

  didn't take my stripes. I never thought I'd say that, but that's what it

  was. They could've done it, only they didn't 'cause they knew they

  didn't have authority from the calde, and I kept thinking, you don't

  have to tell me to wipe them off, I'll wipe them off myself. Only that

 

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