Gaunt snorted. “You look rather like a monkey to me, up there.” Her tone was not entirely warm.
Ravens squawked at them. Snow Pine shook her head at her friends. She was a wiry bean-pole of a woman, with short, straight black hair, wearing a gray tunic that seemed to defy any attempt to scrutinize her, as a nondescript boulder might shelter a glittering chameleon. Her eyes regarded all the wild nature about her coolly, trying to peer beyond surfaces into the interplay of contrasts that gave birth to the physical world. Such meditations helped soothe her in the midst of trouble.
But of late Gaunt and Bone seemed to exemplify that clash of contrasts, and their arguments did not inspire calm.
“You two can always head back to civilization,” Snow Pine ventured. “I won’t be offended. Whatever the Great Sage is, he—or she, or it—belongs to these lands. Like me. This might be something I should try alone.”
Gaunt shook her head, though her expression softened. “Our child is just as imprisoned as yours. Together we’ve braved the Ghast Emperor’s tomb, and the Goldfish Kingdom, and the Geomancer Gangsters, seeking an answer. We must dare the demigod. You said it’s our last hope.”
As she spoke Bone looked west toward the rising mountains, and toward the tangle of alpine forest blazing green like a jade necklace entwined with pearls of clouds, and toward the sun plunging behind those clouds toward the fabled cities of Madzeu and Qushkent and Anoka—and toward many other sights in that moment that weren’t the eyes of his wife.
“I said,” Snow Pine replied, “the Great Sage, Equal of Heaven, is the last chance I know of. There could be others in the wide world. I can only offer the knowledge I’ve got, such as it is. And my knowledge is fading as fast as that path ahead.”
“We might as well continue, Snow Pine,” Bone said mildly, scrutinizing the five-peaked range blazing like an icy weapon ahead. “We can help you dodge a few more monsters, if nothing else.”
“All right,” Snow Pine said.
“All right, all right!” mocked a raven, before Gaunt threw a monkey skull.
After they had frightened away the nine-headed Jiufeng-bird by mimicking barking dogs, and fled from the gibbering Fei Lian that seemed a mix of serpent, stag, leopard, bull, and sparrow, Snow Pine led them gasping to a second marker, appointed much as the first.
GO BACK. THE GREAT SAGE DECLINES ALL VISITORS.
“Hell,” Bone said.
“Hell!” a raven agreed.
“These surroundings lie,” Gaunt said.
“Oh?” Bone asked.
“They indicate great antiquity and neglect, Bone. Yet these markers have a perfect grisliness to them. Too perfect. I don’t trust the sudden appearance of ravens.”
“Hell!” said another bird.
“You feel we’re being mocked,” Bone said.
“I do,” said Gaunt. Snow Pine thought Gaunt was studying Bone for signs of mockery of his own. Gaunt continued, “This Great Sage must maintain the warning through some magic. The demigod may even be aware of our approach. I find this annoys me.”
Snow Pine said, “You’ll keep going, then?”
“Of course,” said Gaunt, and “Indeed,” said Bone.
In truth, Snow Pine felt better for their companionship. Still, she hoped they could rise above their own troubles when they ascended the mountains.
The third marker did not manifest until they had reached the very slopes. By then the proliferation of bizarre wasteland creatures had acquired a certain charm. Not all were harmful. The trio marveled at strange, one-horned, goat-like creatures climbing the foothills, their shaggy coats rippling golden in the wind; and at a pair of one-eyed, one-winged birds with clawed feet intertwined, such that they formed one unit.
“Now there’s matrimony for you,” Bone said, whistling. “If either withdraws, both tumble.”
“Pecking each other’s still possible,” Gaunt said.
“As well you would know,” he muttered.
“I beg your pardon.”
“Well, you have been throwing me looks like daggers the entire journey.”
“Well, what do you expect? We’re on a quest to rescue our son. And yet you act as if we’re on a picnic.”
He waved a hand airily. “A picnic among monsters and monkey skulls, Gaunt?”
“That’s it, that’s just it! You mock everything. Nothing’s sufficiently serious for the untouchable thief Imago Bone.”
“Says the poet Persimmon Gaunt. Who would rather wallow in despair than take action. Who thinks words matter more than deeds.”
“Uh—” Snow Pine began. “Friends—”
She’d known them before they’d lost their son, and it hurt her to see them argue thus. She, who’d likewise lost a daughter, understood their grief.
But unlike Gaunt and Bone, Snow Pine had no spouse in which to seek solace or blame. She was a widow at nineteen. She sometimes wished her friends, in the midst of their bickering, would remember that.
She blinked at something salty she’d no time for. As her vision refocused on the foothills, she sucked in her breath.
“You’ve had decades to grow up,” Gaunt was saying. “Don’t you think it’s time you got started?”
“Do you know where all injustice begins? It begins with someone declaring themselves a grownup.”
“You speak of injustice, O thief?”
“Have you managed to overlook just how we’ve been maintained, O poet?”
“Friends!” Snow Pine repeated more urgently. “I think I know those horned goats. Unless I’m crazy, they’re xiezhi. Empathic beasts. And they hate arguments . . .”
The xiezhi, their golden coats flowing, their hooves echoing like mad machinery through the foothills, were charging down in their dozens from the heights.
“Oh,” Bone said.
“Will they attack?” Gaunt asked.
“It’s said,” Snow Pine said quickly, “they’ll gore the person in the wrong, in any dispute. Unless either of you wants to live like a one-winged bird . . . run!”
They ran.
The three of them bore weapons, of course—Bone his many daggers, Gaunt similarly armed and with a short bow besides, and Snow Pine a curved dao-sword of Qiangguo. But they were none of them warriors. Snow Pine was perhaps the closest to a true combatant, with her hardscrabble upbringing and a little training from fighting monks and a warrior-woman of the wulin.
Now, if that wulin were here, perhaps they’d have a chance. But Snow Pine couldn’t leap halfway to the clouds, nor shatter bones with her hands, nor disrupt the life-force of her foes. And Lightning Bug was as dead as Snow Pine’s husband.
The ground ahead pitched and twisted with lurches and curves of granite, covered here and there with pebbles and fine silt. The treeline loomed on the right with its deceptive promise of sheltering woods but also gangs of tripping roots, trapping shrubs, swatting branches. The steep leftward slope looked ready to crumble into a minor avalanche at the first footfall.
A narrow path of firm untangled ground lay between. It led into a defile between vast rocks leaning like giants’ abandoned playthings.
As they entered the passage, it bent left, and there they met a third marker, rising up from its own batch of skulls.
GO BACK AND HONE YOUR READING SKILLS. THE GREAT SAGE DOES NOT WANT YOU!
Ten crows flitted and squawked around the plinth. Each bird possessed three legs, and even with angry xiezhi on their tail, something about the birds made Snow Pine silent and wary.
But Gaunt and Bone gasped outrage at the marker.
“If there was any chance,” Bone said, “that I would not . . . bother the Great Sage . . . that chance is done.”
“Indeed,” Gaunt said, “he has earned my spite . . .”
“If you want to hide on a mountain . . .” Bone said.
“Then hide on a mountain!” Gaunt finished for him. “Don’t put up signs saying, ‘Ha, ha, behold, I am hiding on a mountain.’”
“‘Look at me, look a
t me, how reclusive I am!’”
They chuckled bitterly, leaning against one another. “We’d best prepare to be gored,” said Bone, drawing a pair of daggers.
“Ha, yes,” said Gaunt, with something near giddiness, as she prepared to fire an arrow.
As the spouses and their bewildered companion peered back along the path, they saw the horde of xiezhi sweeping toward them, horns aimed toward the defile like cavalry spears, less than a minute away.
Snow Pine drew her sword, and Bone’s daggers were already out. For whatever good they would do. At least first blood would go to Gaunt, who raised her bow.
Looking at Gaunt’s face, Snow Pine recalled the saying that dangerous as a tigress was, she never harmed her own cubs.
The xiezhi were in a sense between Gaunt and her cub. Snow Pine would not want to be them.
Persimmon Gaunt was sighting along the arrow, thinking, I don’t want to kill them. I don’t want to kill anything, ever again. The xiezhi were beautiful things; while they’d initially resembled goats, their gait was reminiscent of cats, and their eyes had the mournfully intelligent gaze of hunting dogs.
A ruthless part of her mind offered answers. Lovely pretty killers. At most you’ll slay one. They’re herd creatures; one death may disperse them.
When did I become such a cold thing? she wondered.
She fired, aiming for the ground ahead of the lead xiezhi.
The arrow raised gray dust, and the lead xiezhi snorted and blinked and growled.
Such is the last act of the adventuress Persimmon Gaunt, said the cold voice.
“Climb!” she told the others, and took her own advice.
Somehow she managed to keep hold of the bow as she hauled herself onto the huge, roughly shaped boulders defining the defile.
She slipped once, before Bone caught her arm. Of course he was already up here.
“Thanks. Where is Snow Pine—no!”
Their companion had not climbed. She was instead walking into the gap, sword raised.
The xiezhi rushed her. They were elegant but stank. Like moralists. Gaunt readied another shot, knowing there’d be no time.
Bone leapt.
Her idiotic glorious thief leapt.
Once again he survived something he truly didn’t deserve to and landed on the lead xiezhi’s back.
He yanked on its woolly neck, and it lurched about toward the heights. Bone was nearly knocked off. Yet miraculously he kept his hold around the neck, flopping to the xiezhi’s left side as it hurled itself upslope.
He was well on his way to climbing Five-Toe Peak without her. About half the herd followed him.
The rest crowded before Snow Pine, snorting, stamping, looking confused. Snow Pine yelled obscenities and swung her sword in the air. They would not attack nor back off.
Somehow neither Bone nor Snow Pine were yet dead. Goddess of Swanisle, Gaunt thought, I am not a lunatic, but I collect them.
Light flared.
For a moment Gaunt assumed the sun had emerged from behind the clouds. Her crisp shadow fell upon the herd of xiezhi as if Krummara the Dead Huntress, a goddess of the West, had manifested here in the remote East. The xiezhi pounding the ground beside Snow Pine reacted as much, charging after their fellows toward the heights. Then Gaunt recalled that save for the clouds attending the mountaintops, the sky was clear.
The blazing light shifted and split, and Gaunt’s shadow divided and whirled.
Gaunt whirled as well, arrow at the ready.
The three-legged crows from the marker had taken to the air. Along with this new liveliness their eyes had seemingly caught fire. Dazzling energies twisted in complex knots as the crows whirled and squawked. Gaunt’s vision was soon a weave of searing threads, the rest of the world but a shadowy suggestion beyond.
“Sun-crows!” Snow Pine was yelling. “That’s impossible! Sun-crows!”
“Back off!” Gaunt shouted at the birds, hoping anything so supernatural would have the gifts of language and reason.
Crows squawked and swirled around her, and lashes of light burned her way.
She dodged in a way that might have impressed Bone—had he not been busy playing with xiezhi—and kept her perch and her grip on the bow. Her skin felt as though she’d napped uncovered in a desert. She ignored her pain and fired at a dark shape concealed in a skein of light.
The sun-crow screeched its pain, and dark feathers fluttered toward the defile.
“Crows!” Snow Pine called.
Your mastery of the obvious, Gaunt thought, drawing a fresh arrow, rivals my husband’s.
But Snow Pine was not addressing Gaunt. “Crows, behold the lineal descendent of Yi the Archer, he who shot your ancestors out of the sky! See how her line has been hidden in a benighted sunless land, for behold her pale skin, nearly the color of death! Now the legacy of Yi comes again. Where once there were ten suns, only one remains. How will you fare? Flee! Flee!”
Gaunt, who’d trained as a bard, felt a twinge of jealousy: cheering on a combatant was surely her job, and Snow Pine showed a knack for it.
Nevertheless Gaunt was the one with the bow.
She fired again, and this time luck was with her, if not sight.
A crow cried its outrage and flapped away on a damaged wing. Gaunt barely noticed the whips of crackling energy that descended upon her boulder—she tumbled off in a low roar of pebbles and dust, landing inauspiciously on her face.
Snow Pine helped her up, and Gaunt reclaimed the bow. Yet there was no need. With much invective in the manner of crows, the flock relocated to a cliff a quarter-mile away.
“Their eyes are still burning,” Snow Pine said.
“So are mine,” Gaunt said.
“You probably can’t see Bone on his way to us.”
“No, but I think I hear him.”
“Run!” Bone was shouting from somewhere upslope. “Run!”
“What is he fleeing from?” Gaunt said, squinting. “I can barely see him, running down the slope.”
“He seems to have found more xiezhi,” Snow Pine said.
“He has a talent for finding things,” Gaunt said.
“Maybe we should take his advice.”
It might have been the light still blazing within her eyes. It might have been the return of violence, yet again, to her life.
Something dark and stony rose within her mind, and she stepped forward, as Snow Pine had done.
“Gaunt!” Bone was shouting desperately. “Run!”
“Persimmon?” Snow Pine was saying.
“You do not need to run, my friend,” Gaunt heard herself answer, setting down her bow. “I realize now you were in no danger.” The shadowy form of Bone came toward her, on foot now.
“I know! That’s why I blocked the gap. They were attracted by you and Bone.”
“I know.”
“Gaunt!” Bone yelled, nearly in her face. She could barely see his beloved, vexing face. Golden forms rose behind him like a dark wave. She whispered a prayer that she was right and grabbed Bone, forcing him into a kiss.
“Mmmph?” he said.
“Shut up,” she said, though it came out as “Shmp.”
It was a good kiss. Standing at the edge of disaster was like that, sometimes.
Nothing gored them.
When she opened her eyes, she saw more, and perceived Bone’s astonished face and a herd of golden beasts nuzzling the ground for feed.
One by one the animals began snuffling away. Meanwhile the sun-crows’ distant mockery blended with the wind.
“How did you know?” he asked when they pulled apart.
“I didn’t, really,” she said. “Well, perhaps I guessed when half the herd followed you and half stayed with me—until the sun-crows dispersed them. Since we were both at fault, I thought together we could mend things.”
“Sun-crows?” He stared across the defile at the distant birds. She was beginning to make out his face. She liked it. Wilderness travel became him.
�
��You’re burned,” he said, touching her face.
“This comes of getting close to fires,” she said.
Snow Pine said, “I’m glad you two put aside your troubles for now. No! Don’t start! I’m sorry I said anything. So, how about we leave and come back in ten thousand generations?”
Bone smirked. “The Great Sage. I’d almost forgotten.”
Gaunt shook her head. “I’ve advice to him on how to reword his markers. It begins with a hammer.”
As they passed the third marker, Gaunt pocketed a fallen feather the color of obsidian. One never knew what might come in handy.
Bone led the way. We altitude aficionados, he mused, have our uses.
Up and up. Between the third marker and the shining ice of the five summits he saw a region of swift-moving clouds. Here and there the veil of white ripped to expose gray-tan contours of misty rock, perforated here and there by gangly trees. Bone should have been terrified. He was exhilarated. To have something to scale was a great mercy compared with the terror of stumbling through an ordinary day.
Stone steps rose into a whiteness that was almost an absence of form. Bone plunged in.
Now all the world was a pocket of ghostly shapes with three inhabitants upon a shifting landscape about three yards across. The steps narrowed and switchbacked.
Up and up.
A sudden shift of wind, and the world expanded, sun blazing upon a cliff inches to Bone’s right, treetops far below like a green army’s spears.
One misstep and I’ll be even more gone than my son.
The thought drove Bone on. For the boy it was a magical form of Gone . . . and as such there was no giving up for Bone and Gaunt, they who, though husband and wife, still found it more comfortable to use old surnames than to abandon one of them or form a new or, outside of intimacy, to call each other Persimmon or Imago.
And the intimacy was a bit rare of late.
“I have the notion,” Bone said to escape his own thoughts, “that when we reach the end of the path there will be only a marker. It will say, THE GREAT SAGE HAS GONE FISHING.”
“COME BACK IN THE NEXT CYCLE OF THE EARTHE!” Gaunt added.
It was good they could laugh at something. Or grimace anyway. In normal times (to the extent that Bone had normal times) it was the glue between them. That and lust for new vistas . . . and lust for the bedroom—well, tent, inn floor, riverbank, graveyard, and on one memorable occasion—
The Silk Map Page 2