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CALDE OF THE LONG SUN botls-3 Page 30

by Gene Wolfe


  that he, too, had been forced by something in himself stronger than

  himself.

  The pool and the miniature vale that contained it, always dark,

  grew darker still. Looking up after countless kisses, he saw idling

  fish of mottled gold and silver, black, white, and red, hanging in air

  above the goddess's upraised hand, and for the first time noticed

  light streaming from a lamp of silver filigree in the branches of a

  stunted tree. "Where did they go?" he asked.

  "Was--somebody--else here?" She gasped for breath and smiled,

  giving him sweeter pain than he had ever known.

  "His Eminence and a fencing master." Silk felt that he should look

  around him, but would not take his eyes from hers.

  "They must have done the polite thing," she kissed him again, "and

  left quietly."

  He nodded, unable to speak.

  "So should we. I've got a room here. Did I tell you?"

  He shook his head.

  "A suite, really. They're all suites, but they call them rooms. It's a

  game they play, being simple, pretending to be a country inn." She

  sank to her knees with a dancer's grace, her hand still upon his arm.

  "Will you kneel by the pool here with me? I want to look at myself,

  and I want to look at you, too, at the same time." Abruptly. the tears

  overflowed. "I want to look at _us_."

  He knelt beside her.

  "I knew you couldn't come," a tear fell. creating a tiny ripple, "so I

  have to see us both. See you beside me."

  As in the ball court (though perhaps only because he had

  experienced it there) it seemed that he stood outside time.

  And when they breathed again and turned to kiss, it seemed to

  him that their reflections remained as they had been in the quiet

  water of the pool, invisible but forever present. "We--I have to

  go," he told her. It had taken an enormous effort to say it. "They

  know I'm here, or they soon will if they don't already. They'll

  send troopers to kill me, and if you're with me, they'll kill you, too."

  She laughed, and her soft laughter was sweeter than any music.

  "Do you know what I went through to get here? What Blood will do

  to me if he finds out I took a floater? By the time I got onto the hill,

  past the checkpoints and sentries--Are you sick? You don't look at

  all well."

  "I'm only tired." Silk sat back on his heels. "When I thought about

  having to run again, I felt... It will pass." He believed it as soon as

  he had said it, himself persuaded by the effort he had made to

  compel her belief.

  She rose, and gave him her hand. "By the time I got to Ermine's, I

  thought I'd been abram to come at all, drowning in a glass of water.

  I didn't even look in here," happy again, she smiled, "because I

  didn't want to see there wasn't anyone waiting. I didn't want to be

  reminded of what a putt I'd been. I got my room and started getting

  ready for bed, and then I thought--I thought--"

  He embraced her; from a perch over the filigree lamp, Oreb

  croaked, "Poor Silk!"

  "What if he's there? What if he's _really down there_, and I'm up

  here? I'd unpinned my hair and taken off my makeup, but I dived

  down the stairs and ran through the sellaria, and you were here, and

  it's only a dream but it's the best dream that ever was."

  He coughed. This time the blood was fresh and red. He turned

  aside and spat it into a bush with lavender flowers and emerald

  leaves and felt himself falling, unable to stop.

  He lay on moss beside the pool. She was gone; but their reflections

  remained in the water, fixed forever.

  When he opened his eyes again, she was back with an old man

  whose name he had forgotten, the waiter who had offered him

  wine in the sellaria, the one who had told him of Remora, the

  footman who had opened the door, and others. They rolled him

  onto something and picked him up, so that he seemed to float

  somewhere below the level of their waists, looking up at the belly

  of the vast dark thing that had come between the bright skylands

  and the glass roof. His hand found hers. She smiled down at him

  and he smiled too, so that they journeyed together, as they had

  on the deadcoach in his dream, in the companionable silence of

  two who have overcome obstacles to be together, and have no

  need of noisy words, but rest--each in the other.

  Chapter 8 -- Peace

  Maytera Marble smiled to herself, lifting her head and cocking it to the

  right. Her sheets were clean at last, and so was everything else--Maytera

  Mint's things, a workskirt that had been badly soiled at the

  knees, and the smelly cottons she had dropped into the hamper

  before dying.

  After strenuous pumping, she rinsed them in the sink and wrung

  them out. Her dipper transferred most of the sink water to the wash

  boiler before she took out the old wooden stopper and let the rest

  drain away; when it had cooled, the water in the wash boiler could

  be given to her suffering garden.

  With her clever new fingers, she scooped the white bull's congealing

  fat from the saucepan. A rag served for a strainer; a chipped cup

  received the semiliquid grease. Wiping her hands on another rag,

  she considered the tasks that still confronted her: grease the folding

  steps first, or hang out this wash?

  The wash, to be sure; it could be drying while she greased the steps.

  Very likely, it would be dry or nearly dry by the time she finished.

  Beyond the doorway, the garden was black with storm. That

  wouldn't do! Rain (though Pas knew how badly they needed it)

  would spot her clean sheets. Fuming, she put aside the wicker

  clothes-basket and stepped out into the night. a hand extended to

  catch the first drops.

  At least it wasn't raining yet; and the wind (now that she came to

  think of it, it had been windier earlier) had fallen. Peering up at the

  storm cloud, she realized with a start that it was not a real cloud at

  all--that what she had taken for a cloud was in fact the uncanny

  flying thing she had glimpsed above the wall, and even stared at

  from the roof.

  A memory so remote that it seemed to have lain behind her

  curved metal skull stirred at this, her third view. Dust flew, as dust

  always does when something that has remained motionless for a

  long time moves at last.

  "_Why don't you dust it?" (Laughter.)_

  She would have blinked had she been so built. She looked

  down again, down at her dark garden, then up (but reasonably

  and prudently up only) at the pale streaks of her clotheslines.

  They were still in place, though sometimes the children took

  them for drover's whips and jump ropes. Started upward thus

  prudently and reasonably, her gaze continued to climb of its own

  volition.

  "_Why don't you dust it?_"

  Laughter filled her as the summer sunshine of a year long past

  descends gurgling to fill a wineglass, then died away.

  Shaking her head, she went back inside. It was a trifle windy yet

  to hang out wash, and still dark anyway. Sunshine always made the

  wash smell b
etter; she would wait till daylight and hang it out before

  morning prayer. It would be dry after.

  When had it been, that sun-drenched field? The jokes and the

  laughter, and the overhanging, overawing shadow that had made

  them fall silent?

  Grease the steps now, and scrub them, too; then it would be light

  out and time to hang the wash, the first thin thread of the long sun

  cutting the skylands in two.

  She mounted the stair to the second floor. Here was that

  picture again, the old woman with her doves, blessed by Molpe.

  A chubby postulant whose name she could not recall had admired

  it; and she, thin, faceless, old Maytera Marble, flattered, had said

  that she had posed for Molpe. It was almost the only lie she had

  ever told, and she could still see the incredulity in that girl's eyes,

  and the shock. Shriven of that lie again and again, she nevertheless

  told Maytera Betel at each shriving--Maytera Betel, who was dead now.

  She ought to have brought something, an old paintbrush, perhaps, to dab

  on her grease with. Racking her brain, she recalled her

  toothbrush, retained for decades after the last tooth had failed. (She

  wouldn't be needing _that_ any more!) Opening the broken door to

  her room... She should fix this, if she could. Should try to,

  anyhow. They might not be able to afford a carpenter.

  Yet it seemed tonight that she remembered the painter, the little

  garden at the center of his house, and the stone bench upon which

  the old woman (his mother, really) had sat earlier. Posing gowned

  and jeweled as the goddess with a stephane, the dead butterfly

  pinned in her hair.

  It had been embarrassing, but the painter had wonderful brushes,

  not in the least like this worn toothbrush of hers, whose wooden

  handle had cracked so badly, whose genuine boar bristles, once so

  proudly black, had faded to gray.

  She pushed the old toothbrush down into the bull's soft, white fat,

  then ran it energetically along the sliding track.

  She could not have been a sibyl then, only the sibyls' maid; but

  the artist had been a relative of the Senior Sibyl's, who had agreed

  to let her pose. Chems could hold a pose much longer than bios. All

  artists, he had said, used chems when they could, although he had

  used his mother for the old woman because chems never looked

  old...

  She smiled at that, tilting her head far back and to the right. The

  hinges, then the other track.

  He had given them the picture when it was done.

  She had a gray smear on one black sleeve. Dust from the steps,

  most likely. Filthy. She beat the sleeve until the dust was gone, then

  started downstairs to fetch her bucket and scrub brush. Had the

  bull's grease done what it was supposed to? Perhaps she should have

  paid for real oil. She lifted the folding steps tentatively. The grease

  had certainly helped. All the way up!

  Grafifyingly smooth, so she had saved three cardbits at least,

  perhaps more. How had she gotten them down? With the crochet

  hook, that was it. But if she did not push the ring up she would not

  need it. The steps would have to come down again anyway when she

  scrubbed them, and she itched to see them work as they should. An

  easy tug on the ring, and down they slid with a puff of dust that was

  hardly noticeable.

  "_Why don't you dust it?_"

  Everyone had laughed, and she had too, though she had been so

  shy. He had been tall and--what was it? Five-point-two-five times

  stronger than she, with handsome steel features that faded when she

  tried to see them again.

  All nonsense, really.

  Like believing she had posed, after she had told Maytera over and

  over that she had lied. She would never have taken these new parts

  if... Though they were hers, to be sure.

  One more time up the steps. One final time, and here was her old trunk.

  She opened the gable window and climbed out onto the roof. If

  the neighbors spied her, they would be shocked out of their wits.

  _Trunk_ evoked only her earlier search for its owner.

  _Footlocker_, that was it. Here was a list of the dresses she had worn

  before they had voted to admit her. Her perfume. The commonplace

  book that she had kept for the mere pleasure of writing in it,

  of practicing her hand. Perhaps if she went back into the attic and

  opened her footlocker, she would find them all, and would never

  have to look at the thrumming thing overhead again.

  Yet she did.

  Enormous, though not so big you couldn't see the skylands on

  each side of it. Higher up and farther west now, over the market

  certainly and nosing toward the Palatine, its long axis bisected by

  Cage Street, where convicts were no longer exposed in cages. Its

  noise was almost below her threshold of hearing, the purr of a

  mountain lion as big as a mountain.

  She should go back down now. Get busy. Wash or cook--though

  she was dead, and Maytera Betel and the rest dead, too, and

  Maytera Mint gone only Pas knew where, and nobody left to cook

  for unless the children came.

  Enormous darkness high overhead, blotting the sun-drenched

  field, the straggling line of servants in which she had stood, and the

  soldiers' precise column. She had seen it descend from the sky, at

  first a fleck of black that had seemed no bigger than a flake of soot;

  had said, "It looks so dirty." A soldier had overheard her and called,

  "Why don't you dust it?"

  Everyone had laughed, and she had laughed, too, though she had

  been humiliated to tears, had tears been possible for her. Angry and

  defiant, she had met his eyes and sensed the longing there.

  And longed.

  How tall he had been! How big and strong! So much steel!

  Winged figures the size of gnats sailed this way and that below the

  vast, dark bulk; something streaked up toward them as she watched--flared

  yellow, like bacon grease dripping into the stove. Some fell.

  "Here we are," Auk told Chenille. It was a break in the tunnel wall.

  "This leads into the pit?"

  "That's what he says. Let me go first, and listen awhile. Beat the

  hoof if it sounds a queer lay."

  She nodded, resolving that she and her launcher would have

  something to say about any queer lay, watched him worm his way

  through (a tight squeeze for shoulders as big as his), listened for

  minutes that seemed like ten, then heard his booming laugh, faint

  and far away.

  It was a tight squeeze for her as well, and it seemed her hips

  would not go through. She wriggled and swore, recalling Orchid's

  dire warnings and that Orchid's were twice--at least twice!--the size

  of hers.

  The place she was trying so hard to get into was a pit in the pit,

  apparently--as deep as a cistern, with no way to go higher, though

  Auk must have found one since he was not there.

  Her hips scraped through at last. Panting as she knelt on the

  uneven soil, she reached back in and got her launcher.

  "You coming, Jugs?" He was leaning over the edge, almost

  invisible in the darknes
s.

  "Sure. How do I get out of here?"

  "There's a little path around the sides." He vanished.

  There was indeed--a path a scant cubit wide, as steep as a stair.

  She climbed cautiously, careful not to look down, with Gelada's

  lantern rattling on the barrel of her launcher. Above, she heard Auk

  say, "All right, maybe I will, but not till she gets here. I want her to

  see him."

  Then her head was above the top and she was looking at the pit. a

  stade across, its reaches mere looming darkness, its sheer sides

  faced with what looked like shiprock. A wall rose above it on the

  side nearest her. She stared up at it without comprehension. turned

  her head to look at the shadowy figures around Auk, and looked up

  at it again before she recognized it as the familiar, frowning wall of

  the Alambrera, which she was now seeing from the other side for

  the first time.

  Auk called, "C'mere, Jugs. Still got that darkee?"

  A vaguely familiar voice ventured, "Might be better not to light it, Auk."

  "Shut up."

  She took Gelada's lantern off the barrel of her launcher and

  advanced hesitantly toward Auk, nearly falling when she tripped

  over a roll of rags in the darkness.

  Auk said, "You do it, Urus. Keep it pretty near shut," and one of

  the men accepted the lantern from her.

  The acrid smell of smoke cut through the prevailing reek of

  excrement and unwashed bodies; a bearded man with eyes like

  the sockets in a skull had removed the lid of a firebox. He puffed

  the coals it held until their crimson glow lit his face--a face she

  quickly decided she would rather not have seen. A wisp of flame

  appeared. Urus held the lantern to it, then closed the shutter,

  narrowing the yellow light to a beam no thicker than her

  forefinger.

  "You want it, Auk?"

  "I got no place to put it," Auk told him; and Chenille, edging

  nearer, saw that he had his hanger in his right hand and a slug gun in

  his left. The blade of the hanger was dark with blood. "Show her

  Patera first," he said.

  On legs as thin as sticks, the shadowy figures parted; a pencil of

  light settled on a dark bundle that stared up at her with Incus's

  agonized eyes. A rag covered his mouth.

  "Looks cute, don't he?" Auk chuckled.

  She ventured, "He really is an augur..."

  "He shot a couple of 'em with my needler, Jugs. It got 'em mad,

 

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