14
Once, they say, Agramon came
down and took a walk through the world, dressed in rags. She came
to a town and asked for a room at a tavern. “This is all I have,”
she said, showing a purse with one coin. Beneath her coat the
glimmer of her dress was silver. The greedy innkeeper winked at his
wife.
“Is that so?” he
muttered.
Agramon’s Purse
THE WEATHER GOT STEADILY
WORSE.
For three days it rained without stopping, a
bitter sleet that made all the tracks quagmires; and on the fourth
Raffi crawled out of exhausted sleep in a broken sheepfold to find
the world white, every tiny blade of grass crusted with spines of
frost. All that day, trudging over open fields, he felt the
stricken shock of the soil, frozen in trampled ridges, all the tiny
sprouting seeds seared and dead.
Everything was wrong. There was nothing left to
eat. Solon was suffering from his Watch-injuries but walked
steadily, uncomplaining. Each of them was soaked to the skin and
could not get dry. The sense-lines had to struggle deep to find
life; in every bare hedge and frozen stream all the energies had
withdrawn, the creatures huddled and hidden, the embryos unborn.
There was no spring—it had been shattered. And at night the skies
were black, the stars frosty, the moons oddly brilliant in their
colors and crescents.
Galen was worried. Late that evening, after the
Litany, he looked across the meager fire to Solon, and Raffi knew
what he would ask.
“Is this weather Kest’s work?”
“I fear it, my son.” Solon leaned back against the
tree, rubbing anxiously at the dirt on his hands. “When Kest
tampered with the Makers’ creation, he began something that has
never stopped. Only the efforts of the Order held the world in
balance, but with our hold broken, the Unfinished Lands will soon
overwhelm us. In twenty years or less. Perhaps this evil spring is
the beginning.”
“Didn’t the console say something about the
weather?” Raffi spoke quietly; Marco was a little way off, looking
out over the fields beyond the copse.
Galen glanced up. “Yes. ‘The weather-net holds’
were the words. And then ‘We’ll leave the Coronet active as a
stabilizer.’ ”
He sat in shadow, but as he said the Maker-words,
even casually, a rustle of power stirred around him, something so
vivid and yet gone so quickly Raffi could only pray Solon had not
noticed it.
If he had, the Archkeeper controlled his surprise.
After a moment he pushed a branch farther into the flames and said,
“Perhaps the weather-net isn’t holding anymore.”
“You mean the Makers could control the weather?”
It was a new idea for Raffi.
“They made the world, boy,” Galen growled in
disgust. “All of it. If the Coronet is . . .”
Something snagged in Raffi’s head. He hissed with
the pain of it. “Sense-lines!”
Instantly, they were listening. Men. A whole
group. Riding fast.
“Marco!” Solon warned.
Galen was stamping the fire out. The bald man
rustled hurriedly back between the bushes. “What?”
“Watch! Get down!”
All at once the night was an enemy, prickling with
danger. Flat under the hazels, praying there were no vesps, Raffi
felt the old terror surge up in him. He could hear them coming,
galloping hard along the farm track, and under his forehead the
thunder of hooves made the ground vibrate and shudder.
It took all his willpower to raise his head a
fraction and look out.
A full patrol, maybe more. They were well-armed,
the moonlight catching swords and bows, a few helmets swinging from
saddles. In the dark it was hard to see much more, but they were
riding at speed; even as he watched, they had crunched across the
stream and were gone, racing in a long column up the farther
fields.
Galen rolled over. He dragged leaves from his
hair.
“Something’s going on,” he said. “The Sekoi know.
The Watch know.”
“And you don’t?” Marco mocked.
Galen gave him a dark stare. “I know where we can
find out.”
THE NEXT AFTERNOON they lay under the hedgerow and
looked up.
The town of Arreto was built high on the hilltop.
One road wound up to it that they could see; there were probably
others. It had a strong-looking wall, with bastions. Inside that,
Raffi could see roofs and parapets, and the Watchtower near the
broken dome of what once must have been a shrine of the Order. From
the dull sky the wind whipped sleet against his face. His breath
smoked with the bitter cold.
“This is a terrible risk,” Solon muttered.
That was no use, Raffi thought. Galen thrived on
risks. He sometimes wondered what the keeper would have done in a
safe Order, an Order that was rich and unthreatened, its
disciplines rigid and unbroken. Set off for some remote edge of the
Finished Lands, probably, or been martyred trying to convert the
Sekoi.
“If you want,” Galen said, turning his head, “you
and Marco can go around. Raffi and I will go through the town and
meet you beyond, where the road turns north to the
observatory.”
Solon looked rueful. “My son, don’t tempt
me.”
“What about you, dealer?”
Marco laughed. “I know you’d like to get rid of
me, Galen. But my stomach says no.”
Raffi scowled. Why did he have to mention food? It
was lack of food that had brought them to this; they had eaten all
their supplies and there had been little in the frozen fields to
forage. Marco had shot a wood pigeon, but that had been two nights
ago and he had eaten it alone; neither Solon nor Galen would touch
it. Raffi had even tried begging at a few farms, but the raw spring
was obviously bringing famine; he had been seen off at all of them,
and even now the thought of one great ox of a man roaring abuse in
the doorway made him sweat.
This was populated country, full of Watch,
crisscrossed with roads, busy with trade. Dangerous. And yet they
had to pass it. Beyond the town the observatory lay on the slopes
of Mount Burna, only two days’ walk. But first they needed food.
And information.
They waited till night to scale the walls. Galen
had selected his spot carefully, where a crag jutted above a
stream; it was fairly easy to climb up, though Solon slipped once.
Close up, the wall was rough and ramshackle; in places it had
collapsed and slithered away, the mortar dry and crumbling between
the stones. Watchpatrols passed across the top at regular
intervals; when one was out of sight Galen climbed up, crawled
through a gap, and vanished.
Seconds later his hooked face peered out of the
shadows.
“Come on.”
Raffi came last, bruising his knee and scraping
his wrist and finally dropping down onto a wide, dim terrace.
Without a word they ran across it, the light of four moons suddenly
silvering them, and pattered down a small stone staircase. They
found themselves in a narrow alley. On each side were tall, dark
buildings, the sky a strip far above where flittermice screeched.
The alley was silent, cobbled, leading downhill. Trying to walk
casually, they followed it.
Raffi felt lightheaded with tension and
starvation. After so long out in the wilds, towns were alien
places, crowded, full of secrets.
The alley led onto a street, past shops. One had
food sizzling outside; at another a potter was packing up, carrying
in huge urns and vases.
Raffi smelled the cooking, painfully.
At the end of the street they came to a square.
Trade was ending for the day but there were still plenty of people
around, a few carts being loaded, someone selling cut-price flagons
of wine. Marco bought one with his last coppers and they crouched
under a colonnade and drank thirstily.
“What now?” Solon muttered.
“We could steal some food,” Marco said. Catching
Solon’s eye, he grinned. “You people! All right. Somewhere to
sleep.”
“An inn?”
Galen frowned. “Too risky. Besides, we can’t
pay.”
“Yes we can.” Raffi pulled something out of his
pocket guiltily. “We’ve got this.”
He laid it on the step and they all stared at
it.
A gold coin.
Galen picked it up in disbelief. “By Flain, boy,
if you’ve . . .”
“I didn’t steal it. It must have fallen out of the
money belt. It was inside my shirt.”
The keeper flung it down. “It’s not ours.”
“The Sekoi wouldn’t mind,” Raffi said sulkily,
knowing very well that it would mind most bitterly.
“You’re a sharp one!” Marco reached out for the
money, but Solon was already turning it in his scarred fingers. The
Archkeeper smiled.
“It has come to us,” he said. “Certainly that was
the Makers’ doing. If we sleep out in some alley, Galen, we risk
being moved on, or taken up as vagabonds. And one night in a bed
would ease my weary bones, I have to say.”
Galen looked at him darkly. “If you’re willing to
take the risk.”
Solon flipped the coin. “I’ve taken worse, my
son.”
AFTER A CAREFUL SEARCH they chose an inn called The
Myrtle Branch, in a dim back street far from the Watchtower. It
looked clean, and through the smoke fug from its windows they saw
the downstairs room was quiet, with only half a dozen customers.
Serving them was a young woman, looking tired and harassed.
“I’ll do the talking,” Marco announced.
Galen looked at him. “You will not.”
“Still thinking I’ll sell you to the Watch?”
“I,” Solon said firmly, “will talk to her, and the
boy will come with me. You two sit by the door and try not to look
so disreputable.”
He went in quickly, before they could argue, Raffi
tripping over the step in his haste.
Solon was wise, he thought. Galen would have
scared her, and Marco she would have distrusted, but Solon was
polite and kindly and travel-worn, and soon she was fussing over
him as if he were her grandfather, fetching a hot drink and helping
him off with his pack. He winked at Raffi and eased himself down by
the fire with a sigh, stretching his legs out, clots of mud falling
from his boots.
“We’re visiting relatives. You’re my grandson, and
those two are your uncles. We’re all the way from Marnza Bay. Know
it?”
Raffi shook his head.
“Never mind. With luck no one else will
either.”
Galen and Marco came over and sat down. “All
right?” Galen asked, looking around. No one seemed to be taking
much notice of them.
“Safe as houses.” Solon held out his hands to the
flames, looking happy. “She’s even cooking for us.”
Halfway through the meal, two Watchmen stalked in.
Raffi nearly choked with terror, but after one glance Solon poured
him a cup of ale, calmly. “We are in the Makers’ hands, Raffi. Let
their will be done.”
Gulping it down, Raffi thought that in his own way
the Archkeeper was as reckless as Galen. He picked at his food,
glancing in the mirror as the two men questioned the ale-wife. She
pointed over toward them.
Raffi’s heart thudded.
He couldn’t swallow. The palms of his hands were
slippery with sweat.
“If they arrest us, go quietly,” Galen murmured.
“Outside we can do something.”
But the Watchmen nodded, took another look around,
and went out. Raffi breathed out in silent relief, but Galen’s eyes
narrowed.
“We seem to be lucky,” Marco whispered, lifting
his cup.
The keeper looked at him. “Too lucky,” he
said.
They were given an attic room for the night.
A bed was wonderful, even if it was only stuffed
with straw. Raffi threw himself on the nearest and rolled over, one
arm over his eyes, as Solon went to close the hangings on the
windows.
“Tomorrow,” Galen said, dropping the relic bag
down in one corner, “we spend the rest of the money on food and
leave as soon as we’ve asked about Watch movements.”
“I’m not sure, my son, that that will be
possible.”
Something dry in Solon’s voice made Raffi sit up.
He went over to the window and stood beside the old man, looking
out.
What he saw made him groan.
The roofs of the town were already white.
It was snowing. Hard.