Evenmere (The Evenmere Chronicles Book 3)

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Evenmere (The Evenmere Chronicles Book 3) Page 16

by Stoddard, James


  struggling to hold the vial in place. The suction grew; he felt

  the skin of his jowls being pulled downward. The force

  became nearly unbearable; the second hand trembled. He bent

  his strength of will toward keeping the container in position.

  Just when he thought he could bear no more, a flash of

  golden light passed from the second hand into the vial. With a

  click that seemed to shake the entire house, the clock moved

  forward one second.

  Armilus stoppered the container and the vacuum ceased.

  Triumph flushed his heavy face. Eyes shining, he retrieved his

  bowler hat, which had tumbled to the floor during the struggle.

  As he looked at the vial, however, glistening golden with the

  captured time, his expression grew somber. Whatever the true

  nature of the Eternity Clock, he had just stolen a fragment

  from it. If, as some said, it marked the amount of time

  remaining until the end of the universe, millions of people

  might never have time to be born.

  “Yet one must break eggs,” he muttered to the beast. He

  gave a rueful smile, feeling suddenly like a god.

  Summoning and dealing with the police in the aftermath of

  the murders in the library had made Lord Anderson late

  entering the dream dimension, but he was soon hurrying

  through the gray mist of the Long Corridor beside the Green

  Door leading into the Inner Chambers. As he passed down the

  men’s corridor and the butler’s corridor from the back of the

  house to the transverse corridor, he glanced out the narrow

  window alongside the door leading into the Yard, halted in

  disbelief, and rushed into the twilight to face the charred

  countryside and the white gash hanging surreal in the evening

  light beside the melted lamppost. A half-sob escaped him. He

  drew a deep breath and slumped onto a bench beside the well,

  an empty throbbing in his chest. The charring continued to the

  horizon, leaving the few standing trees in scarecrow ruin.

  When he spoke the Word Which Brings Aid, he expected

  Mr. Hope to appear, but after several moments, the back door

  opened and Sarah stepped out, dressed in blue silk.

  “Carter?”

  He rushed forward and hugged her fiercely, speaking in a

  hoarse whisper, “I am glad it was you. Very glad. Are you and

  Jason all right?”

  “We are both fine, except for worrying about you. We have

  heard strange reports.”

  “I’ve had a dreadful time of it. And now, seeing this …

  Father and I used to ride our horses through that wood. I was

  afraid something had happened to you. It would be more than I

  could bear.”

  She held him close, stroking the back of his hair with her

  hand. “I know. We’re sick at heart. How little significance we

  give to place until it is gone.” She glanced down at her

  garments. “This isn’t what I was wearing. I don’t even own a

  dress like this.”

  “It has to do with your self-image in the dream-world.”

  Sarah spread the skirt to study the material. “It’s rather

  fetching. Perhaps I’ll have one made.”

  Carter released her and sat down on the bench beside the

  well. “Tell me the whole story.”

  Sarah did so, ending with, “Chant is as disconcerted as

  I’ve ever seen him. Captain Nunth brought a contingent of the

  Fireman of Ooz, but the flames were spent by the time they

  arrived. Mr. Hope sent riders at dawn, who reported the

  devastation ends four miles down the road. Nunth was baffled

  both by the speed with which it consumed the trees, and the

  way it died instead of continuing through the forest, as if it

  worked with purpose. The poet could not penetrate into the

  Inner Chambers, but at least three of his fellows have been

  sighted within the house, often accompanied by anarchists;

  they melt away before our troops arrive.” She glanced at the

  twisted lamppost and said bleakly, “No humor intended. If

  they unleash such flames inside Evenmere …”

  She took his hand. “Tell me what has been happening to

  you.”

  When he had finished, she said, “Oh, Carter, how horrible!

  Seeing your mother like that!”

  “Lady Order said the poets would strike at the Circle of

  Servants,” Carter said. “I wonder how she knew?”

  “Chant,” Sarah said, placing her hand over her mouth.

  “He was clearly the target. You must have Major Glis

  dispatch men to accompany both him and Enoch on their

  rounds. We must also station guards at once at Shadow Hall,

  the Tower of Astronomy, the Quadrangle of Angles, all the rest

  of the Circle. And tell Mr. Hope to send men to make a

  thorough search of the College of Poets. Where are Chant and

  Enoch now?”

  “Chant left for Keedin this morning, and Enoch has gone

  to wind the Hundred Years Clock.”

  “The Clock! I forgot about it. Of all the times for him to be

  so far away.”

  “I know, but Mr. Hope has pored over the records; there

  isn’t any question of Enoch not going. Disaster will follow

  unless the clock is wound.”

  “Enoch told us as much already,” Carter said, suddenly

  overwhelmed. “A fine use of Hope’s time when he should be

  seeking information on the poets.”

  Sarah’s eyes flashed. “Don’t get irritable with me, love. I

  sharpen my tongue each night with a file. You haven’t a

  prayer.”

  A bolt of anger ran through Lord Anderson, but it vanished

  when she gave him a smile.

  “Oh, bother!” he cried. “It isn’t you I’m frustrated with.

  Nor William. I’m sure you’re as worn as I.”

  “Worn but not filed down.”

  “It’s just … my course is clear; and it isn’t what I want. I

  have to find Erin Shoemate and The Book of Verse . I believe

  she is the key to the poets’ might. Her diary said she journeyed

  first to Jossing, then to the Tower of Astronomy. With Jossing

  in ruins, I must seek the Grand Astronomer, to see if he knows

  where she went. But I want to be here with my son.”

  She laid her palm against his face. “There is no help for it.

  And we even lack verse to comfort us. When last I went to my

  books, I found the lines dissonant. When I tried to play the

  flute the tones were garbled and hideous. Chant is the same.

  He suspects the poetry is being siphoned away and used as raw

  power.”

  “Poetry as a weapon? It sounds ludicrous. And yet … He

  paused, considering. “Lady Order said the poets were tapping

  into Chaos, but I think that is only her perception, based on the

  results of their actions being so chaotic. The power I have

  witnessed is fundamental, elemental force, not unlike the

  Words of Power or the energy of the Cornerstone.”

  “Words have strength,” Sarah said. “Civilization is built

  upon them. Chant spoke of facing what he called Immortal

  Fire, the word fire given physical form, the essence of flame.”

  “Whatever it is, it is too terrible to be controlled.” C
arter

  repressed a shudder. “I’ll speak to Jonathan of this. Being a

  master bard, he may have some insight.”

  “You seem to trust this Storyteller,” she said. “We have all

  heard of him; but how do you know he is who he says? It

  seems suspicious, his attaching himself to you at this time.”

  “His first appearance probably saved my life.”

  “A ruse perhaps, to set you off your guard.”

  “Have you been spending too much time with Chant? His

  cynicism is rubbing off.”

  Sarah blushed. “Is it? Or is it just the constant intrigues of

  the house? If I suspect conspiracies, it is because there is

  always one going on at some level or other. You would not

  believe what the upstairs maid did yesterday to undercut the

  hall boy.”

  For the first time that evening, Carter laughed. “I wish that

  were the worst of our troubles.”

  “You find it amusing; I threatened to send her to debtors’

  prison. Told her Major Glis would escort her personally. I

  haven’t time for such nonsense.”

  “We haven’t any debtors’ prisons.”

  “She doesn’t know that. It’s in all the romances.”

  “You always cheer me,” he said, kissing her cheek and

  rising. “You needn’t worry about Storyteller, or I am no judge

  of men. I should look at that gash.”

  “Must you? It frightens me.”

  “You’d best stay in the Yard.”

  He passed beneath the grape arbor and unlocked the white

  gate. The grass up to the fence line was black ash that

  powdered on his boots as he approached the mysterious gap.

  The white void hung in the air, a two-dimensional hole in the

  world, obscuring the sky behind it. He walked around it. It

  appeared exactly the same from the back. He shivered.

  “Can you give me a tree branch?”

  Sarah found one lying on the ground and handed it over

  the low wall. He used it to prod the opening. The part of the

  limb that crossed into the gash disappeared, but returned

  whole when Carter withdrew it. He pitched it into the

  blankness and it vanished without a sound. He disregarded the

  impulse to thrust in his face.

  He realized just how exhausted his day’s battle had left

  him when he tried to summon the Word Which Seals. It came

  only with the greatest effort, but finally appeared in his mind,

  floating in darkness, the letters aflame. When he spoke it, it

  echoed over the distant hills. The air quivered expectantly; the

  rent began to close, the blankness shrinking upon itself. Within

  moments, all trace was gone, leaving only scorched earth and

  the warped lamppost.

  “Much better,” he said, staggering from his effort. “I seem

  to be using the Word Which Seals too much lately, as if the

  universe were springing leaks.”

  He and Sarah made the rounds of the house together that

  night. When at last the lamp drifted from the dresser to the

  night stand, Carter held his wife in a long farewell.

  “I wish I had known I could reach you through dream

  during our early years,” he said. “There were so many nights

  when I longed to see your face.”

  “Much of your experience as Master has been trial and

  error. It seems a chancy way to run the universe.”

  “We live a chancy existence.”

  “A burden shared is a burden halved,” Sarah said. “A

  scientific fact, like osmosis and steam engines.”

  They kissed and Carter ordered their awakening.

  Lord Anderson awoke back in his room in Aylyrium. He

  groaned, ran his hands over his eyes, and rose to bathe and

  dress. Trudging wearily down to breakfast, he threw himself

  into a chair across from Storyteller, who sat eating strips of an

  orange.

  “You have had a bad time of it,” Jonathan said, in a voice

  that was not a question. “Is your Lamp-lighter all right?”

  Carter gaped. “How could you possibly know about that?”

  “The walls of Evenmere have ears, Master Anderson.”

  Carter studied his companion, wondering just how far his

  abilities went. He wished he knew more about the man. When

  the minstrel gave no further explanation, Lord Anderson said,

  “On top of everything else, I am beginning to feel—I don’t

  know. Not exactly weary. Thin. Stretched. My mind seems

  fogged. In my previous experiences, I always woke refreshed

  from the dream world. But the last few days … I don’t know

  how much longer I can continue these nightly excursions.

  Some sort of cumulative effect, I suppose.”

  As they ate, Carter related all that had occurred.

  “We have too many mysteries,” Jonathan said, frowning

  down at his plate. “I have never heard of the tower where you

  saw Professor Shoemate, just as I had never heard of this Book

  of Lore you discovered.”

  “You can hardly be blamed for that. Evenmere is too large

  for anyone to know everything about it.”

  “You misunderstand me.” The minstrel’s brow was

  unusually furrowed. “Storyteller has been in this house for

  centuries. Over the ages, I have learned many things, some

  small, some great. The tower I might have overlooked, though

  it seems strange not to have even heard the rumor of it, but this

  book is too important to have escaped my notice. There are

  many in Evenmere who know me. I will put out the word and

  see if we can learn more about the book and tower.”

  “Good. Have you noticed any change in your own abilities,

  as far as the draining away of poetry, writing, and music?”

  “I have not. Perhaps my talents are so small there is little

  to lose.” He laughed, then grew grim. “Each of these things

  you mention, even music, stems from the love of story.

  Everything grows from it. It is the root that raises us above the

  animals. The dog and the cat tell no tales; they do not sit

  before the fire and speak of the old days. If these poets grow

  strong enough, I too may fail. I should like to continue on with

  you.”

  Carter brightened. “I would be greatly pleased. You will

  save me the dreariness of traveling alone. But I need to leave

  at once.”

  “My bags are always packed, Master Anderson, for I carry

  their contents on my own two shoulders.”

  The companions were soon trudging down a red corridor

  leading away from the university. They journeyed that day

  through Aylyrium, and at Jonathan’s suggestion stopped for

  the evening at Brown Study, a series of chambers entered

  through a plain, four-panel door, filled with leather chairs, oak

  beams, and fireplaces with massive inglenooks. Most of the

  rooms were deserted, but a servant soon appeared, a thin

  fellow with a thatch of gray hair sticking almost straight up,

  dressed in a red coatee with white trim, epaulets, and a double

  row of brass buttons down the front.

  “Steward Moonslack at your service,” the man declared,

  giving a half bow. “Welcome to Brown Study. If you like, my

  wife can prepare your d
inner.”

  “Thank you,” Carter said. “That would be most agreeable.

  The generosity of Brown Study is legendary.”

  “It is due to the beneficence of Father Brown,” Moonslack

  replied in a bored monotone, as if reading the lines. “These

  chambers were deeded to his family seven centuries ago by a

  house-grant from the Aylyrium Polenuein Council. A bit of a

  traveler, he was known for his kindness, and dying without

  heir, set aside a trust to ensure sojourners should always be

  well treated, as is only good and proper.”

  “Yet you do not truly think so,” Jonathan said.

  Moonslack’s long face contracted in surprise. “I said

  nothing of the sort, sir.”

  “No, you did not.”

  Moonslack shrugged and rubbed his hand over his chin in

  what Carter soon realized was an habitual gesture, as if he

  searched for a missing goatee. “It ain’t always worked out the

  way the father thought it would. He was smart enough to make

  sure no one remains more than two days, but we get a lot of

  unsavory characters, ne’er-do-wells rather than gentlemen like

  yourselves.” He gave Storyteller’s patchwork coat a look of

  obvious disfavor.

  “Then you are a fortunate man,” Jonathan said, “for

  perhaps you have entertained angels unaware.”

  “Them stories sound good to children, but my wife and I

  ain’t seen no angels hereabouts. And don’t believe people are

  grateful. They take plenty and give little.”

  The man halted, perhaps wondering if he had said too

  much. “But that ain’t your concern nor mine, gentlemen.

  Dinner will be served in the upstairs drawing room at six

  o’clock sharp. If you will follow me, I’ll show the way.”

  The drawing room, like the rest of Brown Study, was

  furnished with the sort of careless bachelor comfort that made

  Carter wish he liked smoking a pipe. The meal, a simple fare

  of stewed rabbit served on a small table in one corner, was

  overdone and under-seasoned, but neither of the travelers

  complained to their dour host.

  As Moonslack poured the after-dinner coffee, Jonathan

  said, “If you and your wife would like, I would repay your

  kindness with a tale or two. I have a small gift that way.”

  “We usually go to bed early,” Moonslack said.

  “As you wish. Should you change your mind, I will be

 

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