18
WRETCHEDNESS REVEALED
Considine, the ~ one of the alternats or
subcapitals situated at strategic places within the Haacobin
Empire. Alternats were founded to allow the Empire to keep greater
control over its subject states, most of which lie beyond
inveterately threwdish land, well past easy reach. Large armies and
navies are kept at each alternat, ready to venture forth and
chastise any overweening state or peer or defend the lands against
the monsters. In the Soutlands, the Considine is the larger, older
and therefore senior of two alternats, the other being the
Serenine, farther south.
THE prentices were not even properly awake
when the Lamplighter-Marshal, Sebastipole, the Marshal’s adjutant,
accompanying secretaries and a small quarto of lifeguards left in
three lentums that next morning. Preparing for parade with a heavy
heart, Rossamünd marched out with his subdued fellows to find the
entire pageant-of-arms in similar mood.The sudden departure of
their beloved Marshal to duties in the Idlewild was not so
uncommon, yet word had got about that it was a sis edisserum that
had taken him away—and this was shocking. Rossamünd could almost
sense resentment bubbling under this veneer of fine martial order
as they gathered on the Grand Mead.
The weather shared the oppressive mood.There had
been frost that morning after a clear, cold night. But as the sun
climbed to its meridian, powerful winds blew from south of
southeast, their gusts only partly foiled by Winstermill’s
ponderous walls. Clouds so thick they were almost black arrived on
its threatening breath, and the tang of rain and lightning was
heavy on the air.
Standing preeminent before the entire population of
the manse, Podious Whympre, Master-of-Clerks and next in line of
command after the Lamplighter-Marshal, looked out upon all those
now under his sway, peacock-proud, and peacock-preened. Laudibus
Pile, Witherscrawl and his genuflection of sycophants stood close
behind.
Wooden screens had been pegged to the ground with
guy ropes and stakes to spare Whympre and his tail any ruffling
buffets of wind. His audience simply endured and, during the course
of the pageant, many hats found wing in the gusts and crashed into
the northern wall or sought the broad meadows of the
Harrowmath.
“Our beloved Lamplighter-Marshal has been recalled
to the Considine,” Whympre began with clerkly sobriety. “The
Emperor is concerned for the proper administration of his beloved
highroad and seeks an accounting from our own faithful Marshal. A
Most Honorable Imperial Secretary”—murmurs through all
ranks—“arrived from High Vesting bearing the directive of the
subcapital late yesterday evening with a sis edisserum marked by
the Emperor’s own Chief-of-Staff.” He took a breath, waiting for
the troubled rumbling of the assembly to still. “Therefore, our
dear, dear Marshal was compelled to leave at first change of watch
this morning and may well be gone for an extended time.”
Though the lighters and auxiliaries already knew
the Lamplighter-Marshal had departed, there was nevertheless a
small roar of dismay at this final confirmation. It was unheard
of—powerfully discomfiting to all—and only with the severest
reprimands was a pretense of order maintained.
“With his absence,” the Master-of-Clerks continued,
“need must fall to me to take the daily toil of our glorious manse
in hand. I shall endeavor to lead in his stead, in a manner truly
befitting an outpost of the most Serene and Mighty Emperor. In that
capacity I shall be forced to assume the rank of Marshal-Subrogat .
. .” He continued like this for a numbingly long stretch. His loyal
aides did the same, extolling the Master-of-Clerks, inflating his
virtues, sounding as if they were trying to convince those gathered
of the clerk-master’s fitness to lead. Within all this gabbling
came the first significant announcement: the Master-of-Clerks was
to allow vigil-day visits to Silvernook—beginning on that very day.
Even as he said this, near a dozen lentums began to roll out from
the yard, ready to take those interested in a day on the town. In
their delight the wind of many lifted and they began to think their
new executive officer a capital fellow after all. A happy mumbling
stirred through the prentices, though Rossamünd did not share their
easily won enthusiasm.
“Button it shut, flabberers, or ye’ll all be
staying in yer cells for the day!” Grindrod growled huskily, and
stillness was purposefully restored. For the entire pageant till
now the lamplighter-sergeant had been glaring up at the
clerk-master, mustachios bristling in disgust. “What does he know
of lighting?” Rossamünd heard him mutter to Benedict.
The Master-of-Clerks mollified them all still
further by adding that they could expect roasted mutton with thick
gravy for mains and treacle crowdy for puddings, with rich
bully-dicey to be served at middens for those left behind. Had it
been allowed, all the other prentices and many lampsmen and
pediteers and the clerks would have shouted for glee.
“The hearts of the crowd are found in their
bellies,” Threnody muttered after they were marched back to the
Cypress Walk and dismissed by their unusually subdued
officers.
“Perhaps the change of command might be a turn for
the good,” a prentice pondered a little too loudly.
“Cleave yer tongue to yer teeth, Gall!” Grindrod
bawled, sending the loose-lipped prentice white with fright. “Ye’re
as shatterbrained as yer nuncle the lictor! Pots-and-pans for ye
tonight and the rest of the long week! The marshal-lighter is as
fine a man and officer as anyone could ever hope to share a
generation with! And if a single one of ye goes down to Silvernook
today, ye’ll have my mark as a baseborn runion fink not worthy of a
lighter’s fodicar!”
All the lantern-sticks were astounded at his
outburst. None said another peep about the Marshal’s departure—good
or bad—for fear of another flaring of temper. Not one prentice took
the day in Silvernook either, and if any were disappointed by this,
he dared not show it.
Brooding, Rossamünd sat on his cot in his
cell.Threnody, having invited herself in, was perched on his bed
chest, her back against the wall.
“Is it just me,” said Threnody, “or have the
Lamplighter-Marshal’s troubles turned out rather nicely for our new
- Marshal-Subrogat?”
“I suppose they have,” Rossamünd agreed guardedly.
“It cannot be helped that the clerk-master is next in rank.”
Mister Sebastipole does have a notion that someone might
be seeking the Marshal’s ruin. “How long would it take a
message to get from here to the Considine and back?” he
asked.
“You would need a fortnight,” Threnody said
huffily. “Why?”
Rossamünd scratched at his bandage. “What has my
head turning is Mister Sebastipole saying yesterday that someone in
the subcapital must have already heard about the rever-man and was
calling for an explanation. Barely a week has passed—”
“You already knew the Marshal was leaving on a sis
edisserum and you did not say?”
“It was not my information to tell!” Rossamünd
returned indignantly.
“Oh truly? Very convenient.” Threnody rolled
her eyes. “Will you always be this dim?”
“I cannot say,” Rossamünd countered, an angry rush
in his belly. “Will you always be this rude!” His mouth spoke
before his kinder thoughts could marshal themselves to
intervene.
THE MASTER-OF-CLERKS
Threnody gaped.
“Oi, Rosey!” called Arabis down the steps of the
cell row. “I saw your old middens-chum blubbering on the
Mead.”
Rossamünd leaped off his cot and put his head out
of the cell door. “You saw what?”
“Aye, what’s-his-name—the Numps or somewhat like
it.” The older prentice shrugged. “The daffy cove looked mighty put
out by something.”
Numps! Blubbering on the Mead?
Leaving Threnody flabbergasted in his cell,
Rossamünd was up the steps, down the passage and out on to the
Cypress Walk in a twinkling. Before he was clear of the Walk, he
could hear a distant, agonized wailing coming from the Grand Mead,
and very quickly he recognized it as coming from the throat of
Numps. There were rapid steps behind: Threnody was following.
Clear of the manse, he saw—at the farther end of
the Grand Mead on the edge of the gravel drive—Numps, hampered
between two hefty troubardiers of the Master-of-Clerks’ own
foot-guards. The glimner was writhing and pulling against their
restraint. Rossamünd had never seen him so wild and so awfully
animated.
Then he saw why.
Upon the gaunt beams of the Scaffold, the great
dead tree that stood at the northern end of the manse, great
tendrils of still verdant bloom were hanging upon the gaunt
branches to dry and slowly die. As Rossamünd well knew, glimbloom
will not live long out of water, becoming parched and yellow, its
tiny leaves finally rotting to slime. Between the ladders and the
many, many barrows holding the bloom stood the Master-of-Clerks
directing an industrious band of peoneers with remonstrative gusto.
Beside him a man Rossamünd recognized as the portly works-general
stood, shamefaced, determinedly avoiding the sight of the
grief-racked glimner while Witherscrawl wrote Phoebë-knows-what in
a portable ledger.
The old dead tree was already draped with such a
vast amount of bloom that it looked to have wondrously returned to
life; and the stuff was so vigorous-green and thick it could have
come from only one place: Numps’ secluded undercroft.
A shout of anguish escaped Rossamünd before he even
knew to stop it. He ran the length of the gravel drive, heedless of
any shouts or reprimands, groaning, “ . . . This is all my fault,
this is all my fault . . .”
Doctor Crispus ran into the narrow scope of
Rossamünd’s panicked vision, striding fast on his long, stiltlike
legs, crying something to the troubardiers that Rossamünd could not
understand in his rush.With a great waving of hands and arms, the
physician remonstrated with the foot-guards—who did not relax their
detention of Numps—before turning away sharply to confront the
Master-of-Clerks.
As Rossamünd got closer he could see that one of
the men had a pincer grip on Numps’ arm while the other corralled
him with the shaft of his poleax.Though the two foot-guards were
much heavier men than the glimner, they were hard-pressed to keep
him in hand.The prentice pulled up smartly before the struggling
three, skidding on the quartz pebbles of the drive, cut to his
heart at the expression of utter desolation wrenching Numps’already
distorted, tear-washed face. Bent with agony, the glimner howled,
“My friend! My friend! They’re killing my friend!” pushing and
pulling at the grip of the foot-guards.
“Let him go! What are you doing?” Rossamünd
hollered.
“Clap up your squealing, little sprat!” one of the
soldiers spat. “Get back to your quarters!” For added effect the
man shied at Rossamünd with a steel-shod boot, roughly shoving him
away.
Rossamünd yelped as the force of the push sat him
on the gravel. All he wanted to do was set Numps free. A burst of
Frazzard’s powder in the foot-guards’ vile puds would have served
perfectly, but the prentice was without his salumanticum.
Amid the horrible yawling, he heard a shout of
anger behind him.
“Poke at him like that again, you bamboozle-winded
dung sop, and you’ll spend the rest of Chill confusing your head
for your tail!” It was Threnody, arriving to intervene. She planted
herself before the lofty foot-guard, hand raised to temple in a
wit’s telltale attitude.
The man looked down at her, his expression
thunderous. “Shove it up your wheeze-end, little harridan!”
His fellow foot-guard glanced at Threnody
hesitantly; however, Rossamünd was sure he could see nervous
perspiration twinkling on the fellow’s brow.
“All this fuss and trouble is hardly worthy of you,
my people,” the Master-of-Clerks declaimed, interrupting the
contest of wills as he strode imperiously toward them. “The bloom
must be left to die.They are well likely to be responsible for that
wicked gudgeon finding its way in and causing our generous,
unfortunate Marshal such embarrassment!”
Rossamünd knew this was a bald, pettifogging lie:
monsters did not care two figs for bloom. “That’s not tr—”
The Master-of-Clerks raised his hand.
“Silence! Stop your rabble-rousing and get back to your
duties! I will not tolerate such affronts.What a foolish weight of
grief wasted over a few dripping weeds. Foot-guards, stuff a rag in
its nose and return this one to its place of labor—”
“Your sturdy roughs have done their worst, man!”
Doctor Crispus said with cold deliberation, glowering at one of the
fellows as if he should know better. “As the manse’s physician, I
declare this poor fellow has taken a great strain of soul today and
now needs a gentler hand. By the rights granted me through the
Accord of Menschen over the health of pensioned military persons, I
demand he be released to my care and relieved of any more
manhandling.”
“We are not at war, sir!” Whympre
contradicted.
“I think you shall find that the Accord differs
with you, sir.” Crispus was not to be so easily beaten. “As would
the brave lighters out there on the road.”
The Master-of-Clerks considered, eyes narrowing,
lips pursing. “This is most decidedly irregular, Doctor. I would
advise you to go back to your infirmary and keep your opinions
within its four walls.”
“The clerking of our Emperor’s manse is for you to
determine, sir—the healing of its limbs is mine.” Crispus stood
tall, looking down on the clerk-master with the peremptory
authority of the learned. “Inside the infirmary’s four walls and
out!”
Tear-diluted spittle was running freely from Numps’
nose and mouth as he began to sag in the cruel grip of his
restrainers.
With a cold glare the Master-of-Clerks eventually
nodded. “I can see the wretch is ridiculously distressed. Please!
Take him and set him to ease if he needs it. He will see the wisdom
of today as time brings clarity. Guard-Sergeant!You may let that
Numplings fellow go.”
The troubardiers obeyed and Numps collapsed.
Rossamünd was at his side in an instant.
“Lady Threnody.” The Master-of-Clerks gave a
slight, barely respectful bow to the girl lighter. “If I see you
attempt to strive again I shall call your mother here and have her
take you away.”While the peoneers worked callously on, he strode
into the manse, Witherscrawl, the works-general and foot-guards
scuttering after.
“Look at them leave to heel, like the curs they
are!” Threnody hissed.
Numps lay curled about himself, making strange
gulping noises, whispering “Oh, my friend . . . oh, my friend” to
himself between sobbing gasps, his eyes red and swollen, his cheeks
gray and drawn. Oblivious to the sharp pebbles of the drive,
Rossamünd knelt and embraced the glimner as best he could, an
awkward, inadequate reach across the man’s convulsing back.
Doctor Crispus was unwilling to provoke Numps
further by taking him into the manse. Calling for two porters and a
stretcher, he had the glimner taken to the lantern store. Rossamünd
and Threnody accompanied them as, whimpering and unresponsive,
Numps was set gingerly on his pallet in a small, nestlike domestic
nook of the store.
“I shall return presently with a soothing draught
for the poor fellow,” Crispus instructed Rossamünd. “There is no
circumstance under which this would have happened if the Marshal
was still present,” he concluded heatedly.
“My, how kitten does play with father cat away,”
Threnody concurred. “The clerk-master behaves a little differently
without someone to check him.”
“Indeed, my dear. The worm has turned, I think.”
With a bow, the physician left.
Speechless with shame and regret, Rossamünd could
think of no comfort as Numps lay curled about himself, rocking on
his cot by the clean, cold light of the well-kept great-lamp. When
he did finally find voice, all he could say for a time was, “Sorry
. . . I’m so sorry.”
But all he got in reply from Numps was, over and
over, “My friend . . . you’re killed again . . .”
“If I had known the Master-of-Clerks would treat
your baths so, there is nothing that would have made me tell of
them!” Rossamünd said bitterly, tears threatening.
“There’s no way you could have guessed ahead to
that fellow’s wretchedness, Rossamünd,” Threnody murmured, touching
him on the arm and actually managing to bring some comfort. “I’m
sure Dolours would say something much the same were she here,” the
girl added as a qualification for her soothing.
When Crispus returned, it was a bitter fortune that
the glimner, so insensible with shock, went quickly to sleep under
the influence of the physician’s soother. Crispus, Threnody and
Rossamünd sat for a while by Numps’ side, watching over him.
“What is going to happen to him, Doctor?” whispered
Rossamünd.
“He will recover, my boy.” The physician smiled
kindly. “I have seen him through worse and will see him through
again.”
Rossamünd was in doubt. “He should have gone with
Mister Sebastipole.”
“I do not think the Considine is a good place for
him either,” Crispus replied. “In fact, you would have a hard time
getting him out of Winstermill. It was remarkable that he even
ventured up on to the Mead today.”
Rossamünd sat in silent thought. “Doctor Crispus,
what will happen to Winstermill—to us all—without the Marshal
here?”
The physician sighed, deep and sad. “I have not one
notion, my boy, though if today’s travesty is an indicator of our
new leader’s method, then it just might be an unhappy end for us
all.”
“Here I was beginning to enjoy the life.”
Threnody’s muttered words were heavy with irony. “I was telling
Rossamünd before, good Doctor, that events have fallen very
well for our dastardly clerk-master.”
“Why, child, I suppose they have.” Crispus stroked
his chin. “Yet I can hardly conceive of him orchestrating all the
manifold trials that have beset us and the brave Marshal most of
all.”
“I have been a pupil of Mother’s long enough to
know only a prod here and a coaxing there is enough to bring
another down,” Threnody waxed sagaciously. “Their troubles do the
rest for you.”
The physician looked at her for a moment. “Is that
so, child? I wonder at the rather bleak nature of the lessons your
good mother holds.”
Rossamünd marveled at this glimpse of the bizarre
life the girl must have led before she joined the lighters.
Inevitably Crispus’ duties called him away, and
middens’ call coaxed Threnody back to the manse.
Rossamünd was left to continue the observance
alone. Sitting there in the quiet of the store, he began to arrange
a plan in his grieving thoughts: a scheme to offer some small
consolation to the harrowed man. It was quite simple, and required
only a clear occasion to be done. He would go to the Scaffold and
rescue what bloom he could. The best time was mains, when the manse
was a little stupid with the filling of its myriad stomachs, and
the vigilance of its watch directed more outward to the Harrowmath.
Prentices were allowed a relative freedom of movement during meals,
and he was going to make full use of the privilege. Rossamünd would
take a smock and a barrow—of which there was a conspicuously ample
supply all about this part of the Gutter—and, like a gardener,
steal on to the Mead and take back the bloom. The plan fixed so
firmly in his mind as the only way he might make any kind of
amends, he determined to go through with it that very
evening.
He stood to put the plan into motion. The smock
would be from his own trunk. Of all its intended uses, he
reflected, impersonating a groundsman was probably not among them.
The wooden barrow—found in the lantern store itself—he hid in a gap
between the Principal Stair and front boarded wall of the store,
wedging it behind a rain barrel, and with it a rusty fodicar to aid
him in hooking the bloom down.
Preparations done, the prentice looked in on the
insensible glimner one last time and returned to the manse.
The evening was as blustery a one as Rossamünd
could recall. Clouds blossomed and expanded, unraveling from
horizon to horizon over the whole Harrowmath: low,
mountainous-dark, and turned an oddly luminescent, muddy hue by the
westering sun they hid. Southerly, loam-perfumed winds blustered
over the shorter walls of the Low Gutter; wild, freezing vortices
spun across the Mead and down the Cypress Walk, prodding Rossamünd
with every gust, bringing to his cold aching ears the angry hiss of
the tempest-tossed grasses on the plain.
Gripping the thin linen smock and its meager extra
warmth about him, the prentice skipped down the postern stair and
scurried along the poorly lit lanes of the Gutter. His healing
crown aching under the bandages, he wished he still had his hat to
protect his head from the blustery buffeting. This was a bad night
to be in the open, but it was a good night for clandestine or
nefarious deeds. He reckoned upon less chance of discovery or
questions by this route, and his reckoning proved right. Not one
other soul crossed his way but a gray grimalkin, one of the tribe
of mousing-cats allowed free roam of the whole fortress.Wise enough
to leave the vermin to themselves on such an ugly eve, it blinked
knowingly at him from its shelter beneath a stack of unused
hogsheads, puncheons and barrels.
Past the bill-posting trees, across the All-About,
by the Magazine and between the warehouses and work-stalls he went,
arriving at the lantern store in a state of thrumming anxiety. He
hastily pulled the barrow from behind its rain-barrel nook.
Rossamünd pushed it up the long cartage-ramp—the Axial—to the edge
of the Grand Mead, the axle creaking quietly and the wheel making a
pleasant, continuous crunch on the gravel.The Mead proved as empty
of people as it had been that very first evening the coach had
deposited him at Winstermill. Back then he had thought the manse
huge and vacant, but now he knew the Mead’s current state of
inoccupation made a lie of the fortress’s hectic daytime activity.
Honey-hued window-lights flickered invitingly—glimmering like
watching eyes in the gatehouses, the Cursory, the Feuterers’
Cottage and the Yardsman’s Row. Snatches of ribald songs reached
him modulated on the wind’s frenetic breath, but the great, walled
valley before him was deserted.
Rossamünd paused. He knew that it was possible
hidden eyes were looking from cavities in the structures where the
most faithful house-watchmen kept a diligent eye.There was very
little he could do about these unseen observers but hope his thin
ruse of a groundsman on a late errand would fool them.
Rossamünd took a steadying breath.
Lit behind by one of the few lamps on the grounds,
the Scaffold was unmistakable: a stark shadow of limbs so
unnaturally perpendicular that Rossamünd could well see how it
earned its name. The dying bloom still thickly furbished every
branch as high as the peoneers’ ladders had reached, warping and
writhing violently in stormy gusts. Touched with a ghastly yellow
hue, the plants were clearly drying, their vigor failing. Steeling
himself, Rossamünd pushed the barrow steadily along the left-hand
edge of the drive, walking with a show of purpose directly to the
dead tree, hurrying only when he crossed the brightly lit ground
before the manse’s front doors. Under the tree, the hanging bloom
was far too high for him to get with his diminutive reach. Even the
corroding fodicar was little help, the single hook requiring
impossible precision to snag the wildly wind-dancing tendrils. Over
and over Rossamünd swung and poked at these elusive targets till he
was near to sobbing with the futility of the task. Too often when
he did achieve a hooking, the failing plant would tear and shower
him with its wilting leaflets.
Frogs and toads! Confinations will be starting
soon.
It had been his great Plan with a capital P
to fill the barrow with great armfuls of the stuff, but now he was
hard-pressed to gather a handful. He threw the fodicar down in
disgust and it bounced butt-end first off the iron-hard roots of
the Scaffold, flipped over several times and skidded clatteringly
to a stop against the wall of the manse.
With a clinch of dread at such a din, Rossamünd
froze—he had never meant to hurl the fodicar so hard or so far—and
instantly realized he need not have toiled so fruitlessly. For
there, all about the fodicar’s final rest were intact fragments of
bloom, ripped from the tree by the gale, scattered now like
summer-fallen blossoms on the Scaffold’s leeward side.The
prentice’s entire soul leaped for the joy of it, but quickly
squeezed to fright again as the noise of watchmen stirring in one
of the many structures on the Mead’s edge reached him. With
terror’s thrill, Rossamünd dashed the barrow over to the
fodicar.Voices were becoming more distinct, sounding nearer, coming
from the coach yard around the corner. He grabbed at all the bloom
he could reach, dumping it rapidly in the barrow. The crunch of a
footfall on gravel was all too clear.The prentice snatched up the
fallen lantern-crook, took grip of the barrow’s handles and hurried
off across the Mead, dark excitement broiling in his innards. At
any moment he expected to be hailed. He forced himself not to
run.With every step nearer the Axial, he dared to hope he might
escape unseen, and hope and dread seesawed desperately till—at
last!—he was trundling down the ramp descending to the Low Gutter.
Only when he was back by the gap between the Principal Stair and
the lantern store did Rossamünd finally begin again to
breathe.
Not waiting to discover if he had been seen or
followed, the prentice fumbled off his smock, tipped all the bloom
from the barrow on to it, put the barrow back behind the rain
barrel, and the fodicar with it. Rolling up the smock and hefting
this bundle over his shoulder, he scampered back through the
comparative calm of the Low Gutter, up the Postern Stair and into
his own cell just as mains was ending.
Never had he prized the privacy of his cell as much
as then. In the quiet of the tiny room, with the door shut,
Rossamünd spread the smock out, and heart a-thump with hope, sorted
through all the scraps of bloom. He was quickly and bitterly
dismayed to find much of the stuff terribly yellowed. Yet among all
the dying bloom-shreds he found six still-healthy tendrils, limp
but not beyond restoring. He could have whooped for joy.
His messmates began moving and stomping about
outside, shifting about the cell row as they readied for bed.
Rossamünd got into his own nightclothes and, with a quick check out
the cell door, made three rapid forays. Some of the other prentices
gave him odd looks but none stopped him. Bare feet slapping on the
cold slate, he carried water from the cistern, via his biggin, to
pour into the chamber pot. Thus the aquatic environment the bloom
required was in some way restored. Rossamünd took his time tenderly
arranging the survivors so that each was properly submerged.
His nerves were so tightly strung, a soft bang at
the door spooked him mightily.
“It’s douse-lanterns, Bookchild,” came a hard,
warning voice.
Intent on tending his haul, Rossamünd had missed
the day’s-end cry. All clatter and flurry, the prentice tried to
hurry the last two precious sprigs into the chamber pot.
The cell door opened and in thrust the
lamplighter-sergeant’s head. “Did ye not hear the—” he began, then
saw the bloom. Grindrod’s eyes went wide, but sharp anger was
quickly replaced with understanding. “Where did ye get those,
prentice?”
“I—ah—from the—the—” Rossamünd floundered: it was
theft either way—a flogging offense, twelve of the best under the
lictor’s hand.
“From the Scaffold?”
“Aye, Lamplighter-Sergeant.”
“Good man, Master Lately. As ye were.” The merest
hint of an untypical smile showed on Grindrod’s face. “Douse yer
lantern, the day’s deeds are done, lad . . . and keep those
well out of sight. What our new Marshal doesn’t fathom won’t turn
into trouble.”
Confused, relieved, Rossamünd pushed the chamber
pot under his cot, tumbled all the dead bloom together with his
smock, stuffed it into the bed chest and turned his bright-limn. In
the fading light he readied for sleep. His heart still pattered
fast and he lay awake for a long time, astounded at his own
audacity and wondering why Grindrod had just abetted him in his
crime.
Immediately after the sunup call “A lamp! A
lamp to light your path!” rang through the cell row, Rossamünd
was out of his cot and pulling the chamber pot with its leafy
guests out from under his bunk. He had continued to use the pot for
its intended purpose during the night, having learned from Numps
that one’s night waters were good for the bloom. Seltzerman 1st
Class Humbert had reluctantly said the same when, amid much
snickering and guffawing from his fellows, Rossamünd had sought to
confirm the fact during readings. Nevertheless, one of the bloom
sprigs had not survived the night, and he was down to five.
While the others lads washed, Rossamünd hid the pot
between his bed chest and the wall under his valise and
salumanticum to foil the questing chambermaids on their morning
rounds.
Food gobbled (farrats, raisins and small beer) and
barely more than an awkward “good morning” exchanged with Threnody,
Rossamünd was rushing back to his cell, an idea illuminating in his
mind like a thermistor’s bolt. He fished out the chamber pot from
its hide, took out his lark-lamp, prized off the lugs and opened
the top of the bell. Into the glass-bound cavity he managed to fit
all five fronds, stuffing the sixth in with all the dead bloom
wrapped in his smock and hiding it again in the bed chest. He
filled the lark-lamp with water from the cistern and by
breakfast-end had the bell-top secured back in place and the lamp
safely back in his bed chest.
All through the rest of the day, he was in anxious
expectation of discovery. At morning parade he waited for the
Master-of-Clerks to arrive and announce the wicked theft of
bloom-rubbish from beneath the Scaffold.Through morning evolutions
Rossamünd kept looking guiltily over at the gaunt tree, convinced a
mercer would run up and announce that “some unknown miscreant had
meddled with the rightfully exposed collucia plants!”
None of this happened.
By middens, Rossamünd was eager to restore the
rescued glimbloom to Numps.
The glimner was still in bed, sitting up, sipping
at some fine-smelling broth—probably a kindness of Doctor
Crispus—and looking utterly spent from all his grieving. Gratified
the man was cared for, nevertheless Rossamünd felt his heart ache
to see Numps so woebegone.
“Mister Numps,” Rossamünd ventured, “I—I tried to
save your bloom yesternight, but . . . but this was all I could
get. The rest was too high off the ground.” He proffered the
bloom-packed lark-lamp and the glimner’s eyes went so round
Rossamünd feared they might pop right from their sockets. For a
terrible beat or three of his anxious heart, the prentice thought
he had woefully miscalculated, and simply added to the glimner’s
distress.
“You rescued poor Numps’ poor friends,” the man
managed brokenly. He took the small lamp in shaking hands and
gradually his hauntedness gave way to profound delight as joy
blossomed into ecstasy. “Oh, my friends!” Numps cried, in both
shouts and tears. “Oh, my friends!” The unscarred side of his face
became wet with weeping, yet the riven side stayed dry, his ruined
eye tearless.