Authors: K. J. Parker
(Eyvind, he thought, in the burning house. And the crow. And rescuing Muno Silsny, whose legs had been broken, but who never cried out once.)
And the log moved slowly away, each bump and knot rasping Gain's broken bone, like a man roughing out a shape in wood. âYou bastard,' Gain was howling at him, âyou're fucking doing this on purpose â I'll kill you. This is just because she chose me, isn't it? It is, you know it is.' And eventually the log slid off his leg with a bump â a moment of sheer terror, because the jolt dislodged a double handful of burnt mud; Poldarn watched it tumble down the slope, observing every detail of its descent. But no more came after, or at least not yet.
âGain,' he said, âshut up.' He edged closer, a quarter step and then another, like a shy crab. âCan you sit up? Can you move at all?' Gain shook his head. Lazy bugger, he's not even trying, expects me to carry him all the way up the bastard slope like a babe in arms. Well, he can forget that. âGrab my hand,' Poldarn said, reaching out, âI can't get in close, I'll have to drag you out.'
âFuck you,' Gain replied.
So Poldarn went in a little closer, and then a little more, until he could get his hand under Gain's armpit and liftâ He could feel muscles and tendons coming to grief in his shoulder and back, because that was no way to go lifting heavy weights, any bloody fool knew that. But he carried on with it anyway, andâ
âGain,' he said, âwhat did you mean by that? Who chose you instead of me?'
âFor fuck's sake,' Gain yelled at him. âConcentrate on what you're bloody doing.'
âWho was it?' he repeated, because even Gain Aciava (assuming he was a liar) wouldn't tell lies at a moment like this. âWas it true, what you told me? Was all of it true, or just some of it?'
âYou
bastard
, Ciartan. Watch out, you nearly dropped me then.'
Poldarn stopped. If he let him go now, if Gain's intolerable weight slipped through his grip and slumped back into the powder-baked mud, the whole terrible lot would come thundering down on both of them, and somehow that made it fair. âTell me the truth, Gain,' he said. âWere you lying, or not?'
âOf course I wasn't lying, you shit,' Gain said. âFor God's sake, Ciartan,
please
â'
Oh well, Poldarn thought; and with his left hand he snatched at the rope tied round the log. âPull,' he shouted, and for a moment he was afraid they couldn't hear him or something; and then the log began to move, pitifully slowly, like an hourly-paid snail. More dirt tumbled down in his face; damn, he thought; never mind, it was worth a try, but then the log gathered pace as the men on the other end hauled and grunted, dragging Poldarn and his vituperative burden through the filthy dirt, across the face of the slope and upâ
The bank did give way after all, and the massive blob of heat did go thundering down. But by then, Poldarn was being helped off his knees by the rope-pullers, people were running up, shouting, calling for stuff. Their hands on his skin were sheer torture and he swore at them to leave him alone. Stupid clumsy fucking bastards, they were only trying to helpâ
âTell Galand Dev,' Poldarn heard himself say; and he wondered, tell Galand Dev what? What dark and amazing secret had he noticed while he was down there? âTell Galand Dev he's an arsehole,' he heard himself say. âAnd next time, to dig a bloody pitâ'
Later, they told him he was a hero, but he wasn't inclined to believe them.
Much later still, he woke up out of a confused dream that slipped away before he was finished with it, and deduced from memory and the look of the rafters overhead that he was probably in the charcoal store.
Industrial humour, maybe: where else would you put a partially burned foundryman? Or maybe it was the nearest convenient place for a makeshift hospital. He tried to move his head for a more informative scan, but the pain persuaded him to stay where he was and make do with the view of half a dozen dusty rafters.
âCiartan.' He knew the voice; then realised he knew it from recently: Gain Aciava, the unreliable witness. âCiartan, are you awake?'
âProbably. Dreams don't hurt as much. That you, Gain?'
âYes. Ciartan, what the hell did you go and do that for? Could've killed us both.'
Bastard, Poldarn thought. âI saved your stupid life, Gain. Or had you forgotten?'
âI hadn't forgotten. Are you all right?'
âI don't know,' Poldarn admitted. âAm I?'
âI think you got burned up pretty bad,' Gain replied. âI know I did, and my leg's busted where that prop fell on it. Hauling it across me didn't help much, but I suppose you had to do that. But they've sent for a doctor, from Falcata. He'll be here in a day or so, if the rain holds off.'
âWon't hold my breath, then,' Poldarn replied.
Silence for a while. Then Gain said, âCiartan, why did you ask me if I'd been telling the truth? Didn't you believe me?'
âI wasn't sure,' Poldarn replied. âI mean, I don't know you from a hole in the ground.'
âFine. Well, in that case, you risked your life for a stranger. I'm impressed.'
For a stranger, Poldarn reflected, I wouldn't have thought twice. âYou make it sound like it was out of character,' he said. âWas it?'
âYes,' Gain replied. âSeems you've changed since Deymeson.'
âGood or bad?'
âGood. Mind you, any change'd have been for the better.' Pause. âLast time, back at the inn, and afterwards, I got the impression you didn't want me to tell you; you know, stuff about the past. I probably should tell you; in your shoes, I'd rather not know either. Though of course, I wouldn't know that I wouldn't want to know, if you follow me.'
âSort of,' Poldarn said. âSo in other words I was an evil bastard back then.'
âAt Deymeson?' Strange question to ask, Poldarn thought. âWell, you weren't the most popular boy in the school.'
âFine,' Poldarn said. âWho was?'
âNo one,' Gain replied. âIt wasn't that kind of set-up. Friendships weren't encouraged, let's say.'
Poldarn wondered, but let it pass. âWho was it chose you over me?' he asked. âWas it Copis? Xipho,' he amended.
âYes. Though that's not strictly true either; I mean, she turned you down flat, but I never got anyplace with her either. Really I only said it to be nasty.'
âWater off a duck's back,' Poldarn replied. âI can't remember, remember?'
Gain laughed; the sound was familiar, not from recently. From a dream, maybe? âYou can't expect me to think of the finer points when I'm burning to death under a bloody great log,' he said. âAnd I don't know why I said it. Just plain terrified, I guess, and lashing out because you were the closest. I do that,' he added.
âHuman nature,' Poldarn said. âSo it really was all true, then? I've been wondering. Actually, I've been thinking about it a lot. I thought it might start the ball rolling, so to speak, and then I'd begin remembering things.'
âDid it?'
âNot sure,' Poldarn told him. âYou see, I took your advice, about how to remember my dreams when I wake up.'
âYou put crows in them, right?'
Poldarn shrugged. âActually,' he said, âI think the crows were there already; they've always been there in my dreams, since I was a kid. Probably because of all the time I spent trying to keep the horrible things off the growing crops, hence the deep-rooted symbolism or whatever.' He took a deep breath, though it was painful. He'd been burned before, in the forge or getting too close to the hearth, but never like this. He thought about Eyvind, and the crow at Haldersness. âBack at the inn that time,' he said, âyou seemed to know a lot about me. At least, more than I do. And there's a lot you couldn't possibly know, unless I told you, or I talk in my sleep.'
âYou do, actually,' Gain interrupted. âAt least, you always used to, don't know about nowadays. But we could never make out a word of it. Foreign language, or just plain gibberish. We reckoned it must be what they speak over where you came from.'
Poldarn thought about that. âFigures,' he said. âAll right,' he went on, âso here we are. Looks like we're going to be here some time.'
âUnless the Falcata doctor kills us,' Gain said. âI've heard it said that folks over that way are so damned tight that they only go to the doctor when they can't stand the pain any more. So all the doctors have to take other work, to tide them over between terminal cases. Some of them are clerks, some of them run stills or make perfume, some of them are carpenters and joiners â handy with a saw, I guess. Butchers, too, and there's one who's supposed to make a good living in the glue trade, boiling down bones and hides. Doesn't exactly inspire confidence.'
Poldarn hoped that in this instance Gain was lying. âHope it rains a lot, then,' he said. âMeanwhile, we're stuck here, just you and me. I guess you'd better tell me all about it.'
âAbout what?'
âMy life,' Poldarn said. âI get the feeling it's about time I knew.'
Silence. Then: âAre you sure?'
âNo,' Poldarn confessed. âBut I do know that for the next week or so I'm not going anywhere, so I can't suddenly lose my nerve and run away. Can't even move my hands to cover my ears. I figure it's the only time I'm liable to hold still long enough to hear you out, if I haven't got any choice in the matter.'
âThat's not a very good reason.' Gain sounded doubtful.
âFine. What else are we going to talk about? It'd be crazy to survive all that just to die of boredom.'
Gain laughed. âYou were always a kidder, Ciartan. Nobody laughed much, though, except the Earwig. He thought you were a scream. Must've shared a sense of humour that the rest of us didn't get.'
âTell me,' Poldarn said.
He counted up to fifteen while he was waiting for Gain to answer. âAll right. But if you want me to stop, just say stop.'
I first met you (Gain said) on the day before term started, third grade. I'd been back home to see my family, special compassionate leave because my sister was getting married. I ran into you on the road; long story, can't be bothered with it now. But I told you about Deymeson, suggested you might like to come along, see if they'd take you. Actually, I didn't think they would. For one thing, you were too old â you're two years older than me and the rest of us, so at the time you were, what, eighteen, we were sixteen. But either you were young for your age or the other way about; once you'd been there a month or so you'd never have guessed we weren't all the same age.
Well, they started you off in third grade. You had to cram all of grades one and two, it was a hell of a scramble, but you managed it all right. This probably sounds like I'm trying to be funny, but back then you had the most amazing memory; you only had to hear something once and it was in there for good. We all reckoned it was to do with your people all being these thought-readers. That really freaked us out when you told us, by the way, we were all convinced you could see inside our heads, what we were thinking. But you told us you couldn't, and we decided to believe you. Well, it was that or kill you and stash the corpse under the groundsman's shed, and we were only third-graders.
Anyhow, you picked it all up pretty damn quick; the theory side of it, I mean, the bookwork. The practical stuff, drawing and fencing and all, you were a complete natural; I think that's why they gave you a place. Essential religion, see? Someone who can draw that quick by light of nature must be a hundred miles closer to religion than someone who's had to learn it all painfully slow in a drill hall. Anyway, after a few sessions of private coaching you were a match for any of us. You weren't quite the model student, you made mistakes and there was a lot of stuff we all took for granted that you simply didn't know, stuff about the Empire, how things work here. But you were always a length or two ahead of the rest of us â Xipho excluded, of course. She was top in every damn thing; worked all the time, nose stuck in a book or extra sessions in Hall, hours and hours of practising draws and cuts. Because she was the only girl, you see; not in the whole of Deymeson, but in our class. Put her under pressure to be the best, I assume.
That's beside the point. You were good. You got on well, but truth is, the faculty didn't like you much. Basic stuff, really quite silly. Like, when you first came you had this weird accent you could have spread on new bread, and they didn't like that. Couldn't place it, for one thing, which drove them nuts. Being you, of course, you got rid of the accent in about two weeks; but they remembered even after you'd learned to talk normally. There were other things too. Attitude was a big one. There again, you were pretty quick to learn how not to get people's backs up, but even so they remembered you as the snotty kid, the one who always knew best and answered back. And I think how fast you picked things up spooked them a bit. I remember eaves-dropping when Father Tutor was talking about you to one of the others; he said it wasn't like you were learning at all, more like you knew it all already and it'd temporarily slipped your mind, and all they were doing was jogging your memory.
Yes, straight up, that's what he said â maybe not word for word, but the general idea, anyway. And now you mention it, the other one, I think it was one of the research fellows; anyhow, when Father Tutor said that, he went a funny colour and changed the subject double quick. That's stuck in my mind, because he took it so big.
So anyway, that's how you were in those days. Smart, no two ways about it, but not the teacher's pet, and not Mister Popularity. Don't get the wrong idea, the rest of us didn't hate you or anything. But it was a strange set-up at Deymeson, because of the year-ends. You know about them, don't you?