Authors: K. J. Parker
âA bit,' Monach replied. âWe studied it at â when I was at school, but only really in passing.'
Spenno looked at him and blinked a couple of times. âDeymeson,' he said. âSword-monk. Yes?'
Monach nodded. âHow'd you guess?'
Spenno had an unexpectedly warm smile. âTakes one to know one. Been thirty years since I graduated, but you buggers always look the same. Spenno Perfirius, but my name-in-religion was Foy . . . Course, there won't be any more sword-monks now Deymeson's gone. And that's no great loss,' he added. âDon't suppose there's all that many who'll be sorry to see the back of them. It was a good life, though, apart from all that getting woken up in the small hours to go practising pulling a sword out of its sheath and then putting it back again. Reckon I'd be there yet, only they didn't want me and my dad was having trouble finding the fees. Good at sciences and Expediencies, they said, but there's more religion in an old rusty nail than in the whole of my body. Weren't far off, at that. Never could see the point of religion, to tell you the truth.'
Nor me, Monach thought; but I always supposed that was because there was something wrong with me. âA lot of us are from Deymeson,' he said. âMaybe even one or two of the old-timers are from your year â you might find there's someone you know.'
âUnlikely,' Spenno replied. âI didn't make friends back then. Seemed daft, when you were all going to be fighting each other come the end of the year. No, it's the other way about that's more likely. I mean,
you
might run into an old classmate or two while you're here. There's two more besides me working right here in the foundry.'
Monach looked up sharply. âIs that right?' he said.
But Spenno was frowning. âI say that,' he replied. âBut neither of them's here right now, come to think of it. One of them was took away by the soldiers, and the other one slung his hook. Course, neither of 'em said who he was. But it's like I said, you can spot one of us a mile off in a snowstorm. You can see their circles.'
âYou don't happen to know their names?' Monach asked, trying to sound casual. âTheir real names, I mean.'
For some reason, Spenno found that amusing. âI recognised one of them, for sure; I knew him straight off, soon as I set eyes on him, that's why I hired the bugger. And they said I couldn't do religion,' he added, grinning. âBut I knew him, just like I'd known him all my life. Scared the shit out of me to start with, but then I thought, why not? Where the hell else would you expect him to be, but working in a foundry? And then of course the government man rolls up and tells us we're going to be making Poldarn's Flutes. Laugh? I nearly wet myself.'
It was like that moment when the egg cracks from the inside, as the egg-tooth breaks through the shell. âCiartan,' Monach said. âOne of them's called Ciartan, right?'
Spenno shrugged. âNo idea,' he said. âI said I knew who he was, not his name. Names don't matter worth spit, you can put them on and pull them off like hats. Like the other one,' he added. âHe didn't say his right name either. But he knew his stuff, and I could tell he used to be a monk, so I gave him a job. Why not? After all, it's not like we're all still trying to cut each other's heads off once a year. And any bloody fool can learn how to dig clay.'
âCiartan was here,' Monach said, mostly to himself. âBut now he's gone. Do you know where he went to? When did he leave?'
Spenno shook his head slowly. âDeserted,' he replied. âSo chances are he'll have headed straight for Falcata; it's the one place round here you've got to go to before you can go anywhere else. And besides, he'll have had his reasons for going to Falcata, same as why he went to Josequin.'
Falcata, burned to the ground, just as Josequin was. When the god in the cart had visited Cric, he'd said,
I have business in Josequin
, and a few days later it had been wiped off the face of the earth by the raiders. But how could Spenno have heard about what had happened to Falcata? Or wasn't that what he'd meant?
âYou haven't seen a woman from our lot?' he asked. âAbout my age, tall and bony, calling herself Copis or Xipho Dorunoxy?'
âCan't say I have,' Spenno answered slowly. âAnd any woman'd stick out here like a bare bum at a prayer meeting. But I know who she is â she's that woman going round with the Mad Monk.' He looked at Monach and grinned broadly. âThat'll be you, I take it. I must be getting old, or I've been breathing in too many fumes. So
that
's what you're here for. When I heard there was a bunch of our lot roaming around like a load of hooligans I couldn't figure out what on earth they could be after. Should've been able to figure that one out. But you're too early,' he went on, before Monach could interrupt. âWe poured the first one the day after your mate skipped out on us, but it's nowhere near done yet. It came out all right and it's cooled without cracking, far as I can tell; but next it's got to have all the scale and shit chipped off the outside, and then we got to turn out the bore on the lathe and saw off the sprue. It'll be ten days at the earliest, so I hope you're not in any hurry; and what your army's going to eat while you're waiting I haven't a clue, unless you send 'em all out in the woods looking for truffles. Still, that's your problem. Meanwhile, we'll be pouring another six tonight. I wanted to wait and see how the first one came out, but Galand Dev said no, if it's fucked up somehow we can just break 'em up again and melt them down. How he ever got to be a master engineer beats me.'
That had answered Monach's original question, before he'd even got around to asking it. But he wasn't really interested in Poldarn's Flutes any more. Ciartan had been here; so obviously Xipho had known, and that was why they'd been headed this way. In which case, why would she have gone off like that (unless she'd wanted to get here first; but she hadn't been here, assuming Spenno was telling the truth). And there'd been two of themâ
âThe other one,' he said. âYou said there were twoâ'
âThat's right. And soldiers came and fetched the other one away. There was an accident.' Spenno shook his head, a sort of I-told-them-but-they-wouldn't-listen gesture that, Monach guessed, came very easily to him. âThat one got burned up, the other one saved his life. Anyhow, while he was laid up getting over the burns, soldiers showed up and took him on.'
A thought occured to Monach. âWhen you say soldiers,' he said, âare you sure they were regulars and not Amathy house or something like that?'
âNo idea. Assumed they were regulars, or why'd old Muno let them take the man away? Must've had some kind of warrant or whatever they call it. I didn't see them myself, though, you'd have to ask Muno or his staff. But, of course, you can't do that, can you?'
They were standing outside yet another shed, outwardly no different from the dozen or so they'd already visited; except that someone or something inside it was making the most appalling noise Monach had ever heard in his life. âEngine shed,' Spenno told him, raising his voice over the screaming, graunching, whining, squealing and juddering. âRight now, this is the place where it's all happening. Want a look?'
Before Monach could think of a way of refusing politely, Spenno had opened the door.
The roof was high, with open skylights all the way down one side. In the middle was an enormous brown tube, ten feet long, slightly tapered, and two feet thick at the thinner end, supported at each end by an âH' of thick oak posts that raised it three feet or so off the ground. Monach saw that the tube was in fact rotating slowly, and the unspeakable noise was caused by a short, thick steel flat-drill, which a man in a leather apron was driving into it by means of a turnscrew. At his feet, the beaten clay floor was littered with what looked like golden snowflakes â thin, flat fragments of swarf, roughly the shape of a butterfly's wing, which tumbled slowly out of the hole in the front end of the tube as the drill cut into it. At the back end of the tube, he saw a thick leather drive-belt looped round a cartwheel-sized flywheel; another belt whose end disappeared into a slit in the wall fed a smaller gearwheel that drove it. Another cradle of oak posts about halfway down the tube's length supported a T-shaped iron rest on which another man was leaning a foot-long chisel; as the tube turned, the edge of the chisel scraped more snowflakes off the dull, pitted brown skin of the tube, leaving behind a smooth, shiny golden surface. In the corner of the shed was propped a three-legged crane fitted with pulleys and chains. A bored-looking man was sweeping up the swarf with a birch-twig broom, though it was pretty obvious that he was fighting a losing battle.
âThere it is,' Spenno said. âThat's the first one we poured. They've been at it for a day, a night and the next morning so far, they're on their third cutting head for the drill, and last time I looked they were nine inches in.'
Monach thought about that for a moment. âIt's going to be a long job, then.'
âYou could say that, yes. We got a dozen mules on the treadmill on the other side of the wall there, in the mill shed; we daren't lay on any more, in case the lathe bed couldn't handle the torque. Got to keep it absolutely dead straight, see, or the hole up the middle's going to get skewed, and the whole thing'll only be fit for scrap.'
âI see,' Monach said, playing fast and loose with the truth. âAnd when you've finished in here, it'll be ready?'
âNot likely.' Spenno laughed, though Monach couldn't hear him over the scream of the cutter. âNext we've got to saw off the sprue â that's the rough old lump sticking out the arse end, where the hot metal was poured in. That's a week's work, running three shifts a day.'
âRight,' Monach said. âAnd then it'll be ready?'
âOnce the touch-hole's been drilled and the muzzle's been crowned, yes. Leastways, the tube itself'll be ready for testing. But it'll need a wooden carriage to hold it up â we can't just lay it on the ground and set it off; and we can't figure out the measurements for the carriage till we've done boring out the hole down the tube, because until we've fetched out all that waste metal, we won't have any idea how much the bloody thing's going to weigh. No point building a complicated carriage if we make it too flimsy and it just crumples up soon as we put the tube on it. Mind you, we could get everything right, and then at the last minute we could find there's wormholes or pockets in the tube, where there's been air bubbles that got caught while it was cooling. Something like that, and the whole thing'd be useless.'
Fine, Monach thought; any ideas he might have had about loading a dozen or so Poldarn's Flutes onto the backs of a team of mules and putting twenty miles or so between his little army and Dui Chirra before Muno came back with overwhelming reinforcements wilted on the vine and died. Obviously, Muno and the government in Torcea had been terrified about someone stealing the tubes; wasted anxiety. Even when it was eventually finished, assuming it survived that long and passed its test without blowing up, how in the names of all the gods could anybody hope to steal something that big?
(In which case, either Xipho had screwed up in her planning for once, or else her disappearance wasn't part of some ingenious plan for robbing the foundry and making a lightning-quick getaway into the depths of the forest.)
âSome machine you've got there,' he said. âDid you build it, or did you have it shipped in from Torcea?'
Spenno was contriving to look proud and offended at the same time. âThey haven't got anything like this in Torcea, not as far as I know. Don't suppose there's another like it in the world. Anyhow, that's it, more or less. Now, are you planning on taking the tube with you when you go? Or was it something else you were after?' Monach looked at him; it was like looking in a steamed-up mirror. âSomething that's nothing to do with the tubes?'
Monach nodded slightly. âActually,' he said, âwe only came here to get food.'
âIs that so? But I thought you said earlier that you came on past Falcata. Why didn't you take on supplies there?'
For a moment, Monach was sure that Spenno already knew, about Falcata and what had happened there. But how could he possibly know? âToo well guarded,' he said. âWe didn't fancy tangling with the garrison.'
âFair enough,' Spenno replied. âI can see the sense in that. Still, it's a pity you didn't come along just that bit earlier, you'd have been in time to see these two others I've been telling you about, from the old place. And you reckon he was from your year? Talk about coincidences. Anyhow,' Spenno said suddenly, âthat's pretty much it â you've seen it all now, what we got here. Now it's my turn to ask you a few questions, I guess. Like, exactly what is it you and your lot are after? Why're you Angels, and what is it you're avenging?'
Monach sighed. âThat's just a name I thought up,' he said. âBasically, most of us, we were at what you might call a loose end when Deymeson got destroyed, so we thought we might as well go into business on our own account, if you follow me. A free company, I believe the term is.'
âAh. Like the Amathy house.'
âYou could say that. Except we aren't mercenary soldiers, we only fight when we're attacked. We just â sort of wander about, looking after ourselves.'
âOh. That's not what I'd heard.' Spenno shrugged. âNot that I care. I mean, you or the government, who gives a damn, there's only ever predators and quarry. Not even sure which one you are, at that.'
After he'd thought about it for most of the rest of the day, Monach came to the conclusion that that was probably meant to be a compliment. Of a sort.
The dream had been going on for some time before he managed to figure out who he was, and who he was meant to be in the dream.