1
IT BEGAN WITH A FIGHT
foundling (noun) also wastrel. Stray
people, usually children, found without a home or shelter on the
streets of cities or even, amazingly, wandering exposed in the
wilds. The usual destinations for such orphaned children are
workhouses, mills or the mines, although a fortunate few may find
their way to a foundlingery. Such a place can care for a small
number of foundlings and wastrels, fitting them for a more
productive life and sparing them the agonies of harder labor.
ROSSAMÜND was a boy with a girl’s name. All
the other children of Madam Opera’s Estimable Marine Society for
Foundling Boys and Girls teased and tormented him almost daily
because of his name. And this day Rossamünd would have to fight his
worst tormentor, Gosling—a boy who had caused him more misery than
any other, a boy he worked hard to avoid. Unfortunately, when it
was time to practice harundo, there was no escaping him.
At Rossamünd’s feet was the edge of a wide chalk
circle drawn upon floorboards so fastidiously cleaned that the
grain protruded as polished ridges. Opposite stood his enemy.
Regretting the ill fortune that had paired him with his old foe,
Rossamünd frowned across the circle; sour-faced and lank-haired,
Gosling stared back contemptuously. The blankness behind Gosling’s
eyes terrified Rossamünd; his opponent was a heartless shell. He
delighted in causing pain, and Rossamünd knew that he would have to
fight better today than he ever had before if he was to avoid a
beating.
“I’m going to thrash you good, Rosy Posy,” Gosling
hissed.
“Enough of that, young master Gosling!” barked the
portly cudgel-master, Instructor Barthomæus. “You know the Hundred
Rules, boy. Silence before a fight!”
Both Rossamünd and Gosling wore padded sacks of
dirty white cotton, tied with black ribbons over their day-clothes.
Each boy held a stock—a straight stick about two and a half feet
long. Harundo was a form of stick-fighting, and these were their
weapons.
Rossamünd was never able to get a comfortable hold
on a stock. With the fight about to start, he shifted his awkward
grip again. He tried to remember all the names, the moves, the
positions he had ever been taught. The Hundred Rules of Harundo
made perfect sense, but no matter how often he had trained or
fought in practice, he could never make his body obey them.
In Madam Opera’s Estimable Marine Society for
Foundling Boys and Girls the only room large enough for harundo was
the dining hall. Trestles and benches had been dragged clear and
left higgledy-piggledy against the walls. The cudgel-master raised
his whistle and the two dozen other children standing around the
circle fell silent. Rossamünd noticed some of them grinning
knowingly. Others stared—slack-jawed and wondering—while the
littlest shuddered with fear.
Gosling twirled his stock with a swagger.
Rossamünd looked to the overcleaned floorboards and
waited.
The whistle shrilled.
Gosling strutted into the ring. “Time to get your
scourging, Missy,” he gloated. “You’ve managed to dodge me all
week, so you’ll suffer extra today.”
“That is enough, Gosling!” bellowed
Barthomæus.
Rossamünd barely heard either of them. The Hundred
Rules were racing madly about his mind as he stepped into the chalk
circle. If he could just get them straight in his head, surely his
limbs would follow!
With a venomous snarl, Gosling rushed him.
The tangle of Rossamünd’s thoughts served only to
tangle his body. Were his hands in the right place? What about
his feet? How close was he to the edge of the ring? What was
Instructor Barthomæus thinking of what he was doing? What would
happen if he actually did land a blow?
Gosling swept up his stock clumsily. He was not
much better at harundo than Rossamünd. Any other child, even many
of the little ones, would have stepped out of the way, just as they
should, and given Gosling a good crack on his back or shoulder.
Instead, Gosling’s vehemence forced Rossamünd to take a clumsy
backward step. By a small miracle, he got his stock up in time to
swat away this first strike. The sticks collided with a deeply
satisfying chock!
Gosling gave a furious curse as he was thrown back.
He bared his teeth.
That felt right! Rossamünd thought, a tiny
glow of triumph within.
“No, dear boy! No! Left decede, then
counteroffend with a culix!” Instructor Barthomæus hollered at
Rossamünd. “You’ve seen it done. You’ve practiced it, lad! Just
step away, then behind, then a jab-jab-jab with the handle!
A halfhearted sustis is just not enough, boy!”
Rossamünd was deflated. Just when he thought he was
getting it right, he was actually doing things worse than
ever.
Gosling was on him by then, chopping at his head
again and again with his stock. Rossamünd blocked one strike,
swatted away another, then let one through. It smacked him
crunchingly hard across his cheek and mouth. His head bursting with
agony, his face stinging, Rossamünd flung his own stock out wildly,
skewering Gosling right under his ribs.
With a wheeze and a gurgle, Gosling lurched
backward.
Some of the littlest children gave a tiny cheer,
but quickly went silent as Gosling swung around and glared at them.
Rage clearly boiled within him. He threw down his stock and leaped.
Instructor Barthomæus tried to intervene, but Gosling darted beyond
his grasp, tackling Rossamünd about his stomach.
“No one stops me!” Gosling hissed through
gritted teeth as he drove Rossamünd down to the glistening
floor.
That’s not true, Rossamünd thought as they
tumbled. The others beat you all the time!
Gosling smashed at him over and over with his
fists. Rossamünd saw stars as Gosling struck him once, twice,
three more times in the head. Instructor Barthomæus
blustered sharp warnings that were ignored. Finally he grabbed at
Gosling and dragged him off, but not before Gosling had landed
cruel blows in tender places. The boy swatted at the air as the
cudgel-master hefted and flung him to the other side of the
ring.
“Get back, you miserable child!” roared
Barthomæus.
Dazzled, his head ringing with pain, Rossamünd
thought the instructor was shouting at him, and so he stayed down.
Indeed, he found that he much preferred to lie still while the
world swam.
Though clench-fisted and seething, Gosling did not
move.
Rossamünd groaned. He felt powerful, serious pains
he had never felt before.
Fransitart, the stoop-shouldered dormitory master,
was called, and Verline, Madam Opera’s parlor maid, too.
The telltale sound of Verline’s rustling skirts
arrived well before her. When she saw Rossamünd stricken within the
chalk ring, she gave a startled cry.
Rossamünd’s senses began to fade. He was vaguely
aware of voices raised in shrill anger. He dimly felt a cloth
dabbing at his face. Somehow Master Fransitart was already
there.The old dormitory master was growling at Gosling as the other
children were shepherded out of the dining hall with a loud
scuffing of boots.
Instructor Barthomæus lifted Rossamünd to his feet
and wrapped him in a blanket. Verline let him lean on her all the
long, crooked way to the boy’s dormitory, murmuring soothing,
almost wordless things as they went. The dormitory was very long
and very narrow and very, very smelly. Side by side, end on end,
was crammed a clutter of cots—there was never enough room in Madam
Opera’s. The dormitory was empty now. The other boys were still
attending to classes and day-watch duties. Rossamünd’s own cot was
at the farthest end from the short, narrow door. With the parlor
maid’s help he stumbled through the inadequate gap between the
beds, adding a stubbed toe to his woes. At last he could lie down,
his head pounding, his cheek pounding—throb, throb—sharp,
iron-tasting.
Verline fussed over him. “You’ll need a dose of
birchet to set you to mending. I will fetch some from Master
Craumpalin right away! You lie still, now. I’ll return as soon as I
can.” With that, she swished away.
Master Craumpalin was the foundlingery’s
dispensurist. This meant that he made most of the medicine and
potives the marine society needed. From what Rossamünd could
gather, Master Craumpalin had once served in the navy, just as
Master Fransitart had done, though not always on the same vessels
or for the same states. The old dispensurist had seen half the
known world, and cured the rashes and fevers of a great many
vinegaroons—as sailors were called—but that was all anyone seemed
to know of him. He talked even less of his past than Master
Fransitart did. Nevertheless, he let Rossamünd sit with him for
hours at a time while he dabbled and brewed. Most of the time
Craumpalin worked in silence and the boy would just learn what he
could by watching. Occasionally, however, the dispensurist became
talkative and would instruct him on the uses of potives, showing
him how to pour and blend and stir and store. One of the greatest
thrills for Rossamünd was to watch the wonderful and often violent
reactions between ingredients as Craumpalin mixed and matched
them.
Red goes with green and makes purple, blue
powdered in yellow makes off-white with olive spots, black boiled
in white makes vermilion with orange vapors—how
wonderful! These moments were so exciting, Rossamünd would hop
about and usually get under the dispensurist’s feet. At this
Craumpalin would yell, “Pullets and cock’rels, boy! Get out of me
way before I spill this on ye and melt ye to a puddle!”
Rossamünd smiled woozily at the thought. Now he
wanted to sleep but his aching face would not let him. He stared
dumbly at the ceiling, obscure with shadows that seemed to creep
and lurch. It had been a long time since he had been in the
dormitory on his own—he had forgotten just how weirdly unnerving it
could be in here, alone.
Such glimpses of the oppressive dark naturally led
his thinking to Gosling—Gosling Corvinius Arbour of the
Corvinius Arbours—a powerful family with ties to some of the most
ancient bloodlines of Boschenberg and Brandenbrass, far away to the
south. He was notorious at Madam Opera’s for many reasons, but the
chief of these was the vigor with which he strove to make
everyone’s life a misery. He would cut the hair of sleeping girls,
glue shut the eyes of sleeping boys, put earwigs and dead things in
unguarded shoes or untenanted beds, blab any secret he might
discover. Punishment, no matter how severe, proved useless, for
Gosling just did not care. He had been abandoned at Madam Opera’s
foundlingery by his family. It was said that his parents had given
him up so that they might afford to keep a pair of racehorses. Such
a pathetic tale of rejection had not stopped Gosling from declaring
to everyone just how important he really was, that he was not some
ordinary fellow with only one name, but that he had three: a first
name, a forename and a family name!
This grim line of thinking led Rossamünd to brood
over his own, single and unfortunate name. He had spent his entire
life beneath the high, peeling ceilings of Madam Opera’s Estimable
Marine Society for Foundling Boys and Girls. He had arrived when he
was little more than a wailing pink prune, left on the doorstep
with an old piece of hatbox lining pinned to his swaddling. Upon
this bit of card had been written one word, scratched awkwardly in
charcoal:
With that word he was named. The fact was
officially sealed with its entry into the grand ledger that all
foundlingeries possessed, and which gave all foundlings the family
name of Bookchild.
In the warren that was Madam Opera’s, Rossamünd
often hid himself away from the taunts and snickers that he still
endured from the other children. He would lose himself in his
favorite books and pamphlets, reading them avidly. He dared to
dream that there could be a better lot for him beyond the marine
society’s corroding walls, and let his head fill with scenes of
battles, and marauding monsters and the mighty heroes that
conquered them. He might have trouble remembering the Hundred Rules
of Harundo, but the things he discovered within the dogeared pages
of his precious readers would stay with him forever.
Soon enough, Verline returned. She slid discreetly
along the creaking wood, her great tent of many-layered skirts
making their telltale rustling. The high ceiling bounced the
hissing echoes softly back till the room was filled with the gentle
susurrus of her passage. He was certain she floated with her feet
some inches off the floor and, to him, this added to her virtue. In
his tiny world, Verline was Rossamünd’s favorite. She was short and
slight, her earth-dark hair hidden beneath the white cotton bonnet
that female servants wore. She adored ribbons and bows, and even
the plain, workaday clothes she wore had several knotted here and
there, the biggest being a great white knot made from her apron
straps, tied in the small of her back. Within the crook of her left
arm, and wrapped in a cloth, she held a small porcelain crock. From
it putrid, mustard-colored fumes boiled and evaporated in the close
air of the dormitory, leaving a bad stink.
Birchet!
Befuddled as he was, he still recognized the yellow
steam and rank smell. Birchet was a torture masquerading as a
cure.
Verline extracted a turned ladle from one of the
many pockets in her white apron. She swilled about in the crock
with this and brought it out filled with what he knew would be the
most disgusting muck he would ever have the unhappy luck to
swallow.
“Now hold your nose and open your mouth,” she told
him sternly.
Pinching closed his nostrils, and squeezing shut
his eyes, Rossamünd opened his mouth. Verline spooned the
restorative potion as best she could into the tiny hole he had
reluctantly made of his lips. Rossamünd’s whole head instantly
flared with the fires of a thousand burning lamps. His nose was
filled to bursting with the stinging stench of the mangy armpit of
a dead dog, and his nostril hairs withered like straw on a fire. He
was certain that cadmium-colored steam was squirting from his ears.
Just when he thought he could stand it no more, the
burning-bursting subsided and left him feeling well and
whole.
Better.
He burped a little yellow bubble. “Thank you,
MissVerline,” he gasped.
Verline told him to rest, that she would be back
with a jar of water. She left again, and before she returned
Rossamünd was asleep.