Spira Mirabilis

Home > Science > Spira Mirabilis > Page 47
Spira Mirabilis Page 47

by Aidan Harte


  ‘You understand that this is no idle construction – you know my methods, having seen the Molè from inside – its best vantage, I always thought.’

  ‘I didn’t appreciate the view. That’s why I burnt it,’ Sofia said, trying to keep the terror from her voice though the melan was flowing inexorably up the curved surface. It was rising at a steady rate, with occasional lurches when dark slivers like elongated maggots burst from its smooth surface and found a new purchase. It was just a braccia from her feet now, and it was getting closer.

  ‘You saved me a lot of work that night,’ the First Apprentice admitted. ‘The Molè’s work was done; fire was necessary to make way for the new crop. I have been ruminating upon this tower for millennia – once or twice in other lives I have even begun it, but it has always been torn down before it could do its work. I do not regret it; all those iterations have perfected it.’

  The melan touched her toes and Sofia gasped. It was like wet ice enveloping her feet, so cold it burned.

  ‘Yes, it is breathtaking.’ The Apprentice was looking skywards. ‘The graceless age it ushers in will extinguish Man – oh, not at first. He will pine and gratefully fade away. This needle reaches as high into the air as it reaches down into the pit below, which even now is filling with pure water from the subterranean rivers. The great animal I am hunting knows my intent; it can smell how close I am. Truly, He is a jealous God. Man has chosen me, by a thousand admissions and compromises, and He would rather drown the world than lose His pet. I ask you, Handmaid: is that love?’

  She remembered Ezra telling her why Abraham had been willing to sacrifice Isaac. The melan was clinging to her thighs now, making her shiver uncontrollably. ‘Better drowned by our Father than enslaved by you.’

  ‘You don’t know how right you are. That pain you’re feeling now? It is a mere fraction of my range. Tell me where Maestro Vanzetti has taken the child and I’ll end your suffering. You’re only brave because you don’t know how much I can make you suffer – but let me be plain, child: there is no limit. If it makes it easier, you should know that your boy was foreordained to die here. You tried to break free of the chains of necessity, but there never was any possibility of escape. Like all your species, you imagine you have free will – but if you are free, it is the freedom of the most infinitesimal drop of water in a torrent. Ah, but what misery you create for yourselves with that modicum of power.’

  ‘You’re no better—’ she started, but he cut her off contemptuously.

  ‘Ah, there you are wrong: I only wear this incompetent form. You shouldn’t have too much trouble with the concept; after all, you loved a creature pretending to be a man, didn’t you? And your boy – well, he’s something else entirely.’

  ‘You’ll never find him.’

  ‘Now you’re just being silly. Where can they hide him?’ he cackled. ‘Somewhere men are incorruptible? God made you imperfect in His image – poor thinkers, selfish lovers. Even now – admit it – your clenched fists still hold onto the memory of my grandson, or rather the buio that took Giovanni’s form. What do the minstrels say? True love is about letting go. But you take after your grasping, selfish Father. He seeks to drown me, but I will blind and poison Him. One eye of the needle scratches away the aether, the other has gone deep already. The melan is diffusing into the earth’s veins and arteries. The world is dying.’

  ‘And you will grow fat on its corpse like a worm.’

  ‘You think to insult me? If you could see my true form, you would fall down and worship.’

  The melan had reached her neck. Its tendrils coiled over her skin like sentient ivy.

  ‘Not long now,’ he crowed. ‘Die and keep your secret. I’ve waited patiently through a thousand turns of the wheel – I can wait another day. As for you, this is your last turn. You finally get to lay down your burden, Handmaid. You should thank me.’

  ‘I do,’ Sofia cried with joy.

  He stared at her, bemused – and suddenly doubt struck like a gut-punch. He wailed, ‘Why do you exalt so?’

  ‘Because I made a new Covenant. I am the Lamb, and I have lain freely upon your altar. Worm, thou art undone!’

  Comprehension came at last. ‘No. No. No!’

  ‘Yes.’ Sofia closed her eyes tight as the melan bled into her. The pain was horrific, but she could bear it: she was going home.

  Giovanni, wait for me. I’m coming.

  The melan discovered – too late – that it had crawled into a holy furnace, and it was consumed. And so was Sofia. Her shoulders sagged, her body gave up the ghost.

  Deep beneath the mountain, chambers collapsed and stones began grinding together. The heavy stormclouds over the city were illuminated by sheets of lightning within.

  The dancers in the Piazza dei Collegio ceased to hear any music and fell down, incapacitated by exhaustion. All those who loved the Contessa looked to Mount Nero and the divine storm that flashed about the mount.

  In astonishment Bernoulli’s ghost relaxed his grip on his earthly vessel and Torbidda, waiting and watching, shattered the coffin binding him. If it had been an equal contest between the will of Bernoulli and Torbidda, then the latter might have triumphed, for he knew that he fought for more than flesh and that the chance would not come again – but Bernoulli was a vessel himself of the Darkness, that will that eternally contested with God, and so the outcome was preordained. Yet while the two spirits wrestled for the boy, his uncaptained body did a queer circular jig that left him standing on the edge of the steps.

  His eyes sparked open to see Leto, conscious again and looking at him fearfully. ‘Leto, it’s me!’ Torbidda cried. ‘I can’t do it, his grip’s too strong. If you love me, Leto, kill me – do it now!’

  Leto didn’t hesitate. He threw himself into his truest friend, striking him with his shoulder and taking him from his feet. He kept going, and pushed them both into empty space until they were falling together down the stairway they had both struggled so long and so hard to climb.

  After a minute of shambling, cracking, rolling, falling, they came to rest: two broken dolls.

  Thunder clapped and dropped earthbound in heavy sheets. One of the dolls shifted. It was not the wind’s doing. It shifted again, and then, like a tumbled house of cards rearranging itself, it stood and once more ascended the steps. Those bones that were not shattered obeyed the commands that came from the commanding spirit, but the abused tendons and ligaments gave way before it reached the summit.

  And above the foul crawling groaning thing came a flock of little shadows that leaped and danced over the stones of Monte Nero. The host of annunciators loosed by Pedro Vanzetti were drawn by the homing beacons atop the tripod. There were hundreds of them. Some failed before they reached the top, some collided and exploded into little metallic fires, some were plucked away by the winds, but most converged on their destination and there erupted. The upper ring of the tripod was silhouetted against the blast – and then the shredded halo caught fire.

  As lumps of masonry crashed down onto the mount, what remained of the First Apprentice oozed over the final steps and pulled itself to the edge of the pool. Its head was facing behind, away from its chest, and it had to roll over like some alluvial fish. It regarded itself in the shiny glutinous tar and with a voice belched from inside, said, ‘I must be born and born again, and again—’

  The body shuddered with a prolonged death-rattle and then sagged and was still – for a moment.

  A bulge distended the throat. The cheek bulged. The jaw dropped open, as though the dead boy had remembered something of import. A long, wet and shiny thing emerged, too thick to be a tongue. Its brilliant white flesh was covered in a bloody mucus, like a newborn. It wriggled from the corpse’s mouth into the melan. As the storm gathered strength, it sank under the surface. Raindrops landing on the black liquid vanished in a hiss of vapour. After a few moments, the worm burst through the melan, shivering and throwing its coils around aimlessly. It resembled a flayed, limbless cat that did not
know how to decently die. Even as it writhed there, it grew at a fantastic rate. Great bulges engorged one segment, and others followed in spasmodic rhythm. The sheets of rain formed a barrage of caustic darts that punctured the pale membrane and it coiled itself against the base of the needle in agony. Even as it did so, its tail – or head, perhaps – slapped blindly against one of the tripod legs.

  The abused leg went first, crumbling like lice-riddled wood, and with that crutch gone, the other two tumbled towards the centre, dropping all their weight on the weakened needle, which groaned like a wounded beast. The upper third cracked and bent, slowly at first.

  The bloated white worm below was battered by that masonic rain until it was impaled by the falling spear. Its taut skin gave way and the bile that filled it spilled over the mountain. It died screaming from both ends – a strange reverberating sound that was heard miles away.

  Indeed, it was heard in heaven.

  *

  In every nook of the dark white city men slowly uncovered their ears and eyes. They walked out into the pelting rain and let it wash them. Concord, for all its error, crimes and weakness, was reprieved. So was the race of men.

  In the ruin that was left of the Piazza dei Collegio, Pedro Vanzetti felt the cold rain and knew that Sofia and Giovanni were one. It was not logical, but he had seen the limits of logic.

  He held Iscanno aloft so that he could see Levi flaunt the Lion of Rasenna, along with all the other banners – Sybaritic, Salernitan, Akkan and Byzantine. He thought of the man who had woven it and of how parents bequeath more than life to their children. By their characters, good and ill, parents delineated the bounds of their lives as sharply as rivers shaped fallen rain. He prayed that Iscanno’s life would be ordinary, and that he would be loved: not because his nature commanded it, but because that was the birthright of the children of this new world.

  He had enough experience of miracles to know they were shy things, that change would overtake them so slowly that people would take the remade world – a world where love came easy – for granted. One day he would tell Iscanno how his mother had made it so.

  ‘Where are you going, Maestro Vanzetti?’ asked a bandieratoro who saw him briskly walking towards the Ponte Bernoulliana.

  ‘Rasenna. I have a bridge to rebuild.’

  THE END

  ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

  Thanks to my brother Michael Harte for subjecting himself to an early draft. Thanks to Fergal Haran, and Michael again, for advice on matters technical and for finding a vaguely believable basis in science for Aether, ice bridges and other mediaeval esoterica. If errors or improbabilities remain, that’s when I foolishly chose to ignore your council.

  To all hands on the HMS Fletcher, to Nicola Budd who unravel all knots however complicated, answers all questions however inane and sees that I’m pointed in the right direction at conventions, to the new kid in the splendid jumper Andrew Turner, and to all the Quercus sales team who holler about The Wave Trilogy in a market where one needs to SHOUT, thanks.

  Thanks to my agent Ian Drury for swooping Irenicon – back when it was still called Drytown – off the pile that is slushy. Thanks to my editor Jo Fletcher who’s had a rough year but never lets it show. Lazy readers make for lazy writers, but Jo is the type of attentive reader – severe and sympathetic as required – that brings out the best in me, and all the writers that come her way.

  Aidan Harte 2013

  THE WAVE TRILOGY TIMELINE

  400–510 Etruscan League conquers Rome; then Sybaris

  500 to 01 Expansion of Etruscan Empire

  01 Anno Domina Christ killed in the Massacre of the Innocents

  01–30 Jewish Revolt; Etruscans expelled from Holy Land

  33 Madonna dies; Schism of Judaism between Marian and Ebionite

  30–150 Decline and Fall of the Etruscan Empire; Rise of the Radinate

  600–1100 Rise of Ariminumese commercial empire

  850–950 Radinate occupation of Southern Etruria ends, Radinate declining

  1098 First Crusade; Etrurian knights capture Jerusalem

  1180–1225 Ariminumese establish trade links with Ebionite Byzant; St Francis of Gubbio active

  1260 Battle of Ain Jalut won by Crusader-Ebionite coalition led by Old Man

  1260 to 80 Old Man disappears; King Tancred takes Byzant from weakened Radinate

  1309 Girolamo Bernoulli born; Duke Scaligeri born

  1321 Twelve-year-old Bernoulli wows Curia

  1325 Bernoulli writes Dialogue with Myself

  1327 to 1347 Second Concord Rasenna conflict

  1327 Jacopo, Bernoulli’s son (Giovanni’s father) born

  1328 Engineers’ Guild founded with Bernoulli Chief Engineer; Construction on Mole begins

  1329– Doc Bardini and Sofia’s father born

  1340 Rasenna defeats Concord at Montaperti

  1347 Wave hits Rasenna, Engineer Revolution in Concord

  1347–53 Expanding Concordian Empire; Experimentation on buio begins

  1349 Giovanni Bernoulli born

  1352 Counter-coup fails; Jacopo, Giovanni’s father executed; Purge begins

  1353 Sofia Scaligeri born; Girolamo Bernoulli dies, Luca Pacioli becomes First Apprentice

  1356 Sofia’s father assassinated

  1357 Giovanni Bernoulli enters Guild Hall

  1359 Hawk’s Company conducts Gubbio massacre; Giovanni Bernoulli killed by buio

  1360 Levi joins Hawk’s Company

  1364 Hawk’s Company declares war on Concord

  1367 Torbidda enters Guild Hall

  1368 Torbidda becomes Apprentice candidate in his second year

  1369 Giovanni builds Rasenna bridge; Hawk’s Company defeated at Tagliacozzo; Molé burned

  1370 12th Legion lays siege to Rasenna and is routed

  1371 Spinther invades Dalmatia; Sofia conceives and flees Etruria; Moor’s coup in Ariminum

  1372 Sofia gives birth in Akka

  1 The principle so picturesquely expressed in the Bernoulli family motto, In my end is my beginning.

  2 That these recruits were mostly second sons from lesser families makes it likely that some were men of frustrated ambition looking for alternate avenues to power.

  3 Senator Tremellius defended the interlopers: ‘Foundation must be dense. Stones closest to God at the summit must be refined. So with the Guild, tiers of rough craftsmen support a school of subtle philosophers.’

  4 ‘The old authorities never mention the unseen forces that I have shown spin and vitiate and illuminate the world,’ wrote Bernoulli. ‘What other winds and currents did the Ancients fail to discern?’

  5 When Bernoulli emerged as a central actor of the Re-formation, a cluster of critics emerged. The naysayers claimed that when he said, ‘Solomon, I have outdone thee!’, he was not comparing his Molè to the Solomon’s Temple but their sorcery. Both men, they whispered, had enslaved the elements to perform their prodigies.

  6 So it is said. Owing to the author’s delicate constitution, he has not made the journey south himself. However, every effort has been made to verify the facts of this survey.

  7 Their pedigree is, to put it mildly, inauspicious. They are descendants of Greek philosophers and Etruscan slaves – the foothills of nearby Vesuvius were long a favourite haunt of renegade slaves.

  8 The last of these tyrants now rules Akka. It is a matter of some controversy whether the Guiscards left voluntarily for the Crusade or were expelled. They have never renounced their claim to Salerno, and the Snake of Asclepius still features in the Guiscard coat of arms.

  9 Copho was one of the founders of the Schola Salernitana. Although mythmaking has made him into a cross between Moses and Solomon, he was simply the notary at Salerno’s constitutional congress.

  10 As must be apparent by now, argument by analogy is typical of Salerno’s primitive philosophy.

  11 According to Fra Copho, ‘The cardinal virtue is Harmony.’ Besides his Anatome Porci, Copho’s most influential trea
tise was the De Mensurabili Musica; in this erudite dissection of polyphonic music, he proposed the notation system now used throughout Etruria.

  12 There are two errors which the historian must avoid as mariners avoid Scylla and Charybdis. The first is to ascribe contemporary values to our ancestors; the second more grievous error is to speculate on the sundry ways events might have been different. To consider untaken pathways can be a diverting game, but ultimately it is an idle one. History, like a river, chooses the path of least resistance: what is so is so because it must be so.

  13 Some have suggested that Bernoulli dissected in order to build better machines, while the Doctors studied man’s humours to become better healers. Some have argued that they failed because they failed to abandon the Curia’s stifling dogmas. Some have contrasted their indolence with our vigour.

  14 The failure of this ploy may be why the Sybarites’ descendants are so notoriously inhospitable.

  15 This is a simplified retelling of what was the penultimate chapter of a wider conflict between Magna Grecia and the alliance of Etrusca and Carthage. Etrusca sought to dominate the peninsula; Carthage wanted Sicily. After Sybaris fell, the allies promptly went to war.

  16 Whence our modern Etruria. It is a diverting game to imagine how Etruria might differ were it known by one of the sonorous old names: Víteliú or Oenotria or Latium or Hesperia or Ausonia or Saturnia Terra or Italia.

  17 Self-invited guests invariably stay too long. The Eighth Century was the Radinate’s zenith, a period of expansion in which Byzant was won.

  18 Owing to their Grecian heritage all Southerners are dark, but the Sybarites are decidedly so.

 

‹ Prev