6
MEETINGS ON THE ROAD TO HIGH VESTING
threwd (noun) threwd is the sensation of
watchfulness and awareness of the land or waters about you. Though
no one is certain, the most popular theory is that the land itself
is strangely sentient, intelligent and aware, and resents the
intrusions and misuses of humankind. Paltry threwd, the mildest
kind, can make a person feel uneasy, as if under unfriendly
observation. The worst kind of threwd—pernicious threwd—can drive a
person completely mad with unfounded terrors and dark
paranoias.
THE plunge into the river was like a
stinging slap in the face, and his heavy proofing tugged Rossamünd
deeper. Yet the valise somehow floated and, despite the weight of
its contents, prevented him from sinking altogether. He bobbed to
the surface and spluttered and gasped. He could swim, though a lot
of people could not—a benefit of living in a marine society in a
city by a river—and swim he did, as he had never done before. The
current was slow, but enough to pull him away from the Spindle and
away from the fleeing Hogshead. He splashed and flailed for
shore, terrified he might end up part of the dinner of some
bottom-dwelling river bogle.
The cromster had straightened somehow and was well
distant from Rossamünd now, smoke trailing from some unseen fire,
still making good its flight downstream. Shots from the vessel
popped and those of the rivergate thundered. More casualties were
inflicted on the Hogshead’s crew by accurate fire, while
misses sprayed gouts of water about. With a mighty slap! one
of these misses struck the water off to his right. He could see it
clearly, a rapid, round shadow skipping once on the surface of the
river before plunging with a meaty chock! into the water.
With a panicked surge, he pushed for the bank.
The Humour carried him toward its eastern side. The
muddy shore was almost treeless except for a thicket of tall and
knotted she-oaks a little further downstream. Roots poked into the
water and graceful boughs hung their long needles thickly into the
same. It was an obvious landmark, and Rossamünd struggled toward
the trees as hard as he could. There was no one to be seen on the
bank. He prayed that those in the Spindle had not seen him leap
from the Hogshead, and would not see him climb out of the
river and into those trees. He would be associated with the
bargemen of the Hogshead in the wrong way, he was sure, and
that was trouble anyone would want to avoid.
His feet finally found grip on the slimy riverbed.
Dragging the valise from the current’s tow, he waded ashore among
curtains of soughing needle-leaves. Once out of the water he
staggered and lay on the grassy bank in the shadows of the copse,
sobbing, shivering, thoroughly lost. For a long while he remained
dazed, unwilling to move for memory of the violence just gone and
the fear of violence ahead. How could he possibly survive alone out
here in the wilds, where all the monsters lived? Surely he would be
eaten by the next gluttonous nicker to cross his path! If not
today, then tomorrow or the next day—it was just a matter of
time.
The thumping of great-guns ceased. The
Hogshead had disappeared behind a bend in the river.
Rossamünd watched from where he lay as two dark vessels moved out
from their moorings by the Spindle and headed downriver in pursuit.
They were monitors—much larger than any cromster, and more than a
match for the Hogshead. He continued watching until they
slowly disappeared around the same bend.
With a sigh he lay back, his mind blank. He had no
idea what to do next.
Come on! Think! Think! Rossamünd schooled
himself. Like Master Fransitart would do!
It occurred to him that the mysterious Mister
Germanicus would still be expecting him in the fortress-city of
High Vesting. Just how he was going to get there was the
troublesome part. There was no going back to the Spindle to ask for
another barge: he would probably be recognized and certainly
prosecuted. There was no other option—he was going to have to
walk.
But walk to where? Rossamünd tried to
marshal his thoughts.
All about, the land was uniformly flat—mile upon
mile of broad farming land. The most obvious landmark was the black
threat of the Spindle to the north and the small wood growing about
its eastern bastions. Rossamünd was grateful for the stand of
she-oaks that sheltered him now, for he could see little other
cover for miles about. He could well recall how the maps in the
back of the almanac showed the region to be almost
featureless.
Of course—my almanac! He took up his
waterlogged satchel. Mucky water drained from a seam at the bottom.
With a grimace, Rossamünd looked inside. It was a sodden mess. He
gloomily took out his almanac and sat it in his lap.
Now I’ll find out just how waterproof this
is. He gingerly opened the cover to find that the waxy pages
had survived their dunking. They were not even slightly damp. There
were no illegible smears in the print—not even a smudge. What a
wonderful gift! Encouraged, he looked up the map of the region
among the handful of other charts at the rear of the book. A thin
line of communication showed from the Spindle to High Vesting. It
was evidence of a road. Winstermill showed closer, but he had been
told to go to High Vesting first. So it was south to the port, some
eighty miles away, in a straight line, though much longer by road.
It’s a long walk, but I reckon it’s what Master Fransitart would
decide . . . And that settled it for him.
Rossamünd began to plan. First, he would inspect
the rest of his belongings, then, when it was evening, head out
first east and then south until he found the road—that spidery line
on the map. Hidden among the black trunks and dense needles,
Rossamünd struggled off his jackcoat and hung it over several
branches to dry. Although it had saved his life, saturated it was
unbearably heavy.
Freed of its constriction, he shivered with the
cold and set to work. The execution of the first part of his plan
was straightforward enough. Several things had been ruined by the
water: most of his remaining food—the crust of rye bread was soaked
and dirty; the dried must—dry no more—was still edible but would
not keep for long; the slats of portable soup were sticky, as they
were starting to dissolve. Happily, the gherkins and the fortified
sack cheese had survived. The apples he had eaten days ago. His
instructions and letters of recommendation, written in ink, were
smudged beyond legibility. The bill of folding money that was his
advance on wages was now a useless, sodden clump. Remarkably, the
sealed paper had remained sealed. His other book, the lexicon of
words, was a swollen ruin twice as thick as it used to be, its
spine bulging. Much of the ink had spread, making words fuzzy,
although fortunately still readable. Of the repellents, only the
bothersalts were affected, now doses of sludge inside their little
sacks. Having never encountered bothersalts before, Rossamünd had
no idea whether or not they were still useful, but decided to keep
them anyway. The restoratives remained unspoiled in their tiny
bottles, as did Craumpalin’s Exstinker in its brown clay bottle. As
for clothes—shirts and smalls and all, and for most other things in
his possession—these were wet but still intact. Unfortunately,
though, his hat and his cudgel were gone— and, Rossamünd
thought regretfully, Verline once said that one should never
travel abroad without a hat.
Tipping water from the valise and the satchel,
Rossamünd arranged his belongings about him so that they might dry.
He would repack them before he set out—damp, ruined or otherwise,
preferring them wet and wrecked to lost. Hanging his weskit next to
the jackcoat, so it too might dry, he lifted up his shirt and
messily splashed Exstinker on the sodden bandage. Tucking himself
back in, he settled himself in the most secluded nook to wait out
the rest of sunlight. After five days on the cromster, he had
become accustomed to the subtle movements of the vessel in the
water. His senses still pitched and swayed gently as he lay there,
almost rocking him to sleep.
Some small bird squeaked three times, then shot
away, with a whir.
Rossamünd blinked heavily. In his hand he gripped a
bottle of tyke-oil. With the bothersalts ruined, it was all he had
to ward off monsters. At the first sign of one, he would splash it
in its face and run. With this determination the memory of the
frightening stories told by the older boys at the foundlingery came
unsought. Night, they used to say, was when monsters grew bold,
when the nickers roamed and the bogles haunted. He had not the
slightest doubt that night was when all sorts of strife could
occur, but night would also allow him to travel unnoticed by
people—especially those in the Spindle. At that moment, search
parties from the rivergate scared him more. Hugged in his own arms,
Rossamünd managed to doze the rest of the afternoon, his chest
hurting where the musket ball had struck. At one point he woke and
thought he could reckon the faint pounding of guns again, carried
from a long way off by gentle afternoon breezes.
The monitors must have caught the Hogshead .
. .
When evening came, he put back on his clothes, now
dry enough to wear. He gathered his near-dry gear and packed it all
once more, tidy and secure, as he had watched Master Fransitart do.
Reluctant to leave, he took his time, gently shaking both valise
and satchel several times to test for unnecessary rattles, and
repacking them again and again till there were none. All the time,
a gurgling knot of fear churned in his middle. For a time he was
stuck between terror of the dark and the unknown dangers ahead, and
the anxiety of still being so close to the Spindle. In the end, out
of sheer frustration, he set out from his hide of she-oak needles,
his pulse pounding in his ears with every step.
He walked as quickly as he might across the
too-soft earth of the plowed, open field that went back from the
riverbank. To his left, lantern and limn-thorn lights of yellow,
orange and green twinkled in a deceptively friendly way all along
walls and in the slit windows of the Spindle. Dark shadows lurked
beyond its eastern end—the shapes of the trees that made the small
wood there. A distant line of lamps extended east from the
rivergate through and beyond this wood, then turned south where
flat open field and pasture spread to the horizon. This land
offered easy traveling but little cover. The faintly sparkling line
was evidence of the road Rossamünd had counted on to take him south
to High Vesting, the lights much like those he would be employed to
service on the Worm way. It was hard to see, but he went on,
keeping the lantern line to his left. When it ceased he did not
stop, but kept walking till the last glimmer was lost in the
distance and night. He stopped then. There was no point going back,
he thought, and certainly nothing to be gained from staying put. He
caught his breath for a moment, then sighed. Onward, onward he
would go till the path became clear again.
The gloom of cloud was blown northwest, to reveal a
high silver moon glittering coldly. Phoebë, the moon was sometimes
called—Rossamünd liked that name—and her timely appearance allowed
him to set his bearings. He had felt her there, hidden behind the
clouds, felt her like the moving of the great ocean tides in his
guts. Certain he was going in the right direction, he adjusted the
valise once more and went on into the dangerous dark.
As he walked, Rossamünd heard every so often odd,
far-off shriekings or infrequent and muffled hoomings, and once a
strange rumbling coming from the east. Refusing to be thwarted by
fear, the foundling put his head down when he heard any of these,
walking faster for a time, every sense tingling with terror, till
eventually he tired and then slowed, sure that he could go no
further.
He stopped for a moment, took a sip from his biggin
and looked to the heavens to get his bearings. The great
yellow-green star Maudlin had risen high and bright, proving how
late it was and making him feel desperately weary. Putting away the
water, he walked on.
A black bulk appeared, silhouetted and obvious on
this flat land. His heart leaped! The memory of the terrible beast
he had glimpsed several nights earlier reared in his imagination.
Ears ringing with tension, Rossamünd crouched low and crept in a
wide arc about the shadowy bulk. Several times he was sure, with
the cold grip of dread, that it had moved—yet somehow it also
stayed strangely still. He was almost upon it before he realized it
was a haystack, right in the middle of the field. He nearly
collapsed with relief: instead of a threat, here was a place to
rest. He staggered through plowed soil so soft it almost tripped
him, flopped down on the leeward side of the haystack and burrowed
into the straw, dragging the valise with him. He sagged, exhausted.
Sleep came quickly. Even when another shriek wailed a little too
close, he slept.
A numb ache in Rossamünd’s left shoulder, near
where he had been shot, woke him. He rubbed his shoulder, but that
only made it hurt more. He was still so very tired. He had survived
his first night alone. Crawling cautiously out from his haystack
burrow, he peered about. It was early morning, the sun barely over
the horizon. Showing against the pale sky were giant windmills
marching away to the eastern horizon in long, staggered rows.
Although the very flatness of the land made him feel conspicuous,
it also let him see if he was being followed. As far as the eye
could see in the early dawn, nothing moved on the road or the
fields about except the great sails of the mills.
Yet the fear of a patrol from the Spindle still
dogged him, and Rossamünd struggled through the fields for an hour.
Soon it became too wearisome to tread in the soft soil and he was
forced onto the road. He walked on and on but met no one else.
After a while the way was intersected by a path. There was a single
sign there, pointing down the main roadway. The Vestiweg it
said—or Vesting Way—the road to High Vesting. He was on the right
road and upon it he would stay.
The day became unusually warm and remained so. A
southeasterly breeze came, welcome and cool, as luggage and harness
began to weigh on him. Eventually the valise became too hard to
carry on his back and he resorted to towing it along behind him by
the straps, its metal bindings dragging dustily in the sandy
gravel. With stubbornness beyond his years, he walked on steadily,
his thoughts completely taken with reaching High Vesting. Stops
were frequent, and Rossamünd always looked furtively about as he
rested. The boy found that he was not as alone as he had first
felt: cows in sturdily fenced pastures lowed and chewed; birds of
many kinds—warbling magpies, shrilling mud larks, tetching wagtails
and silent swallows—dashed about, often calling, chasing off
strangers, hunting insects that also flitted hither and thither. Of
the insects the birds’ favorite seemed to be the large
wurtembottles. These fat black flies from warmer northern lands
insisted on bumbling about Rossamünd’s face, neck and especially
his ears. No matter how often or how furiously he thrashed and
shooed them, these wurtembottles returned to their lazy harassment.
There was a moment as he stepped along that he thought he spied a
person—a farmer perhaps—cutting across the fields far to his left,
but he could not be certain who or what it was and dared not call
out. Other than this the road had been eerily empty of any other
traffic. Having grown up surrounded by people, crowded with them,
he had thought space and solitude a golden prize. Now isolated and
far from comfort, he wished very much to be pressed by the crowd
once more.
Onward, onward. He had to get to High
Vesting.
Fortunately Rossamünd still carried enough food to
keep him from desperation, including that day’s main meal: a sludge
that used to be the dried must and the now almost gluelike rye
bread. Craumpalin had once said that hunger was the best sauce, and
Rossamünd could not have agreed more as he took to the bland slop
with relish. The supper was still soggy enough to even wet his
thirst. This was important, for although he had enough to eat, he
had little water. Rossamünd had filled his biggin with the Humour’s
dark waters and tried to conserve it on the way. It tasted like
composting leaves, yet by the unseasonably hot day’s end it was
almost gone. He did not know exactly what would happen when one had
no water, though he knew that it had to be bad. By sundown he could
see distant trees growing in scruffy stands along the road and
hoped a source of water might be among them. When he finally
reached them he discovered no water, and so walked on. When, a mile
later, he settled to sleep in a cavelike gap between the boughs of
a huge boxthorn, he had drunk his last mouthful from the
biggin.
Huddled in the shelter of the lonely tree,
Rossamünd stared into the gathering dark with equally increasing
disquiet. A nameless fear that something or someone dogged him made
every shadow jump and loom. As the unfriendly night weighed down,
punctuated as it was by distant, frightening noises, he sought to
distract himself by humming happy, peaceful hymns, as he had heard
Verline do for a troubled child. Still the deep dark oppressed. He
hummed on softly, hoarse with thirst, until somehow he coaxed
himself to sleep.
A sound stirred him. It was early morning, the sky
pale, the still air cold again. His throat rasped with pain, but he
had survived a second night.
The sound came again, unusual and out of
place.
Rossamünd quickly blinked away the sleepy grit and
listened. Morning birds welcoming the rising sun with their
calls—these had not woken him; the buzzing of the wur tembottles
waiting for him to evacuate his thorny room—neither had these. Then
it came once more, this sound, and remained, getting louder: a
jangling, steady clop-clop-clop, then the unmistakable snort
of a horse.
The musketeers of the Spindle have come for
me! He turned his body and craned his head as quietly as
possible to see if he could catch sight of his pursuers through the
spiny tangle of many intertwined boughs. Up on one elbow, neck
stretched to straining, he did see something and it was not a
company of musketeers, but rather a landaulet—an open four-wheeled
carriage with a folding top drawn by a single, heavy-looking and
mud-brown nag. It was being driven by a figure with a pronounced
hunch, his face hidden behind the upturned collar of a dark maroon
coachman’s cloak and beneath the shadow of a thrice-high of almost
matching color. Behind the driver reclined an elegant passenger of
unclear gender in clothes so fine that Rossamünd could tell the
refinement of their cut from his obscure vantage point. As the
carriage came near, the elegant passenger called with the clear
ring of an educated woman’s voice. “Well, stop here if you must!
You know I have places to be and can’t be troubled by every quibble
or suspicion. But, stop I say, if it will cease your
twittering!”
Accordingly the vehicle was pulled to a halt just
before the boxthorn.
Rossamünd froze.
There was a pause, and then the woman’s voice spoke
clearly again. “Go on then, I shall wait!”
The driver obediently got down and began to swing
his head about as if searching, revealing his face—or what should
have been a face. Instead it was a rectangular wooden box pocked
occasionally with small round holes on its front and two larger
openings, one on the lower end of each side. Thick leather straps
held it to his head. A sthenicon! Rossamünd stared, horrified. The
driver was a leer! Rossamünd knew there was no escaping a
leer: the sthenicon revealed every scent of every living thing big
or small that moved within an area of a mile or more. What is more,
they were reported to be able to see things everyday folk could
not, to peer into secrets and search in hidden regions. The
box-faced driver shuffled nearer to the overgrown boxthorn bush and
peered within, his head swaying and poking forward. He became
still. Rossamünd sucked in a breath and lay very still, every nerve
and fiber straining, waiting.
How he wished he had not lost his cudgel. How he
regretted the spoiled bothersalts.
Eventually the box-faced driver stepped back to the
landaulet and appeared to address the elegant passenger, as the
latter leaned over and both heads nodded, at times with pronounced
emphasis. A conclusion seemingly reached, the woman alighted from
the carriage and, straightening her fine clothes, stepped with
determined poise over to where the driver had stood before the
boxthorn. She wore the most luxurious and unusually cut frock coat
of deep scarlet, buttoned and buckled at the side, and the
shiniest, blackest equiteer boots Rossamünd had ever seen. The hem
of the coat hung low and flared extravagantly, rustling as she
approached.
She stopped and squinted vaguely into the little
grove. “In here, you say?” she asked over her shoulder. Her
chestnut hair was gathered up behind her crown in a bun, held with
a pointed comb pinned by a hair-tine ending in a clenched crow’s
claw. Long wisps of flyaway fringe danced in any small movement of
air.
A frown.
A sigh.
She leaned forward. “You in there, little one,” she
called quite softly.
Rossamünd did not know what to do.
“We’ve certainly no intention to harm you, so you
can stop pretending you’re not there and come out.”
Maybe she spoke the truth? Maybe she had water?
Rossamünd was about to act when his leg was gripped and tugged.
Involuntarily he screamed and kicked with his free foot. This too
was grabbed and he was pulled out from his hiding-hole into the
blinkingly bright morning, hanging upside down—valise and all—in
the irresistible grip of the driver. Rossamünd squealed like a
little piglet, struggling violently—but all his twisting and
writhing did not alter his position.
“Put me down, you looby!” he spluttered,
serving up the worst curse he knew.
The box-faced driver ignored his almost foul
language and carried him around to the roadside, where he held him
out in much the same way someone might have held a frantic,
just-caught fish. Rossamünd continued to twist and writhe.
The elegant woman approached him as someone might
approach a cornered snake.
“Now, now,” she soothed, “put him down, Licurius.
We’ve said we’d not harm him, so we had better not now, had
we?”
As soon as his ankles were released, Rossamünd
scissored wildly with his legs for a moment to make sure they
stayed free, then rolled over frantically and sprang to his feet.
He looked left and right, hoping to dart away and escape. The woman
regarded him closely for a long while, and he became still under
her keen stare. Rossamünd was not so young as not to see that she
was a great beauty, but there was a hardness to her and a
darkness. It was then that he noticed a small blue mark
above her left eye—a diamond-shaped spoor. She was a
lahzar—one of those fabled monster-fighters who went to some
far-off place to have secret surgeries done to their bodies, secret
surgeries that made it possible for them to do strange and terrible
deeds and fight monsters. He knew immediately by the spoor this
elegant scarlet woman wore that her special talent was to generate
and manipulate electricity and lightning. Among lahzars, this group
were known as fulgars.
The lady fulgar smiled. The smell of her wafted
about Rossamünd, a strange scent—sweet, yet salty and sharp
too.
“Hello, little man,” she offered, in what was
probably her kindliest voice. “My name is Europe. This is my
factotum,” she said, indicating the box-faced driver. “His name is
Licurius. What do they call you?”
Rossamünd did not answer.
Europe pursed her lips, glanced at Licurius and
sighed.
“As I have said, we really have no thought of
hurting you. Indeed, little man, you are of little
consequence to us. I might care enough to help you, but not nearly
so much as to hurt you.” She gave a mirthless chuckle and then
became serious. “You see, I believe you have to particularly care
about somebody to put the effort into harming them. Now, tell me
your name and when you’ve done that you can tell me what a little
fellow like yourself is doing out here in the hinterlands without
his hat?” She smiled in a knowing way, an expression that promised
either malice or friendship, depending upon what might happen
next.
For the briefest moment Rossamünd weighed his
options. He relented and said, “My name is Rossamünd Bookchild and
I lost my hat in the river.”
“I gave you your chance, boy!” Europe was suddenly
lit with a powerful yet suppressed rage. “If you’re going to dash
it with saucy nonsense, then this is where we part ways!” She
turned on her heel as if to leave, coat hems swirling.
“I-fell-off-a-boat-bound-for-High-Vesting-and-swam-ashore!”
Rossamünd yelped in one frightened breath. He continued almost as
quickly. “And my name really is Rossamünd, and I know it’s not the
right kind of name for a lad but I was given it while I was too
young to argue and now it is written in the ledger and there is no
going back on that . . .”
Europe stood still, cocked her head and made a wry
face.
“I am a book child—a foundling—and I’m supposed to
be in High Vesting so I can start my job and now I’m probably lost
and I’ve got no water to drink and . . . and . . .” Rossamünd
trembled on that awful verge where tears begin and poise is
lost.What is more, he had revealed more about himself than he had
intended. He was sure that if Fransitart could see him now, his old
dormitory master would be shaking his head in dismay.
“I see.” The fulgar pondered for a moment. “You
have very fine proofing for a foundling, little man. Did you happen
to steal it?”
“No, ma’am!” Rossamünd was simultaneously startled
and offended.
The fulgar shrugged. “Either way, maybe I can be of
help to you after all. If it is water you need, there is plenty on
the carriage.” She paused sagely, then smiled an oddly cheeky
smile. “I could even do as much as cart you to High Vesting, if you
would like, though you will have to join me as I work. What do you
think, Licurius? Shall we aid this poor, lost, well-dressed book
child? You never know, with your poor eyesight an extra pair of
peepers could be handy on our way.”
Licurius nodded just once.
“There you go!” Europe kept grinning in mild
triumph.
So they climbed into the landaulet, all
three—Licurius handing his mistress aboard—and set off down the
Vestiweg once more. Rossamünd’s thoughts sang happily as he drank
his fill of water and the flat fields rocked by. Whatever anyone
else said, he thought lahzars were the finest folk he had ever
met.