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Authors: K J. Parker

The Belly of the Bow

BOOK: The Belly of the Bow
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The Belly of the Bow
 
 
K J PARKER
 
 
Hachette Digital
Table of Contents
 
Having worked in the law, journalism and numismatics, K. J. Parker now writes and makes things out of wood and metal (including prototypes for most of the hardware described in this book).
Parker is married to a solicitor and lives in southern England.
By K. J. Parker
THE FENCER TRILOGY
Colours in the Steel
The Belly of the Bow
The Proof House
 
THE SCAVENGER TRILOGY
Shadow
Pattern
Memory
 
THE ENGINEER TRILOGY
Devices and Desires
Evil for Evil
The Escapement
 
 
 
 
The Belly of the Bow
 
 
K J PARKER
 
 
Hachette Digital
 
Published by Hachette Digital 2009
 
An
Orbit
Book
 
 
First published in Great Britain by Orbit 1999
 
Copyright © K. J. Parker 1999
 
 
The moral right of the author has been asserted.
 
 
All characters in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
 
All rights reserved.
 
No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without the prior permission in writing of the publisher, nor be otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.
 
 
A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
 
eISBN : 978 0 7481 1392 7
 
 
Typeset by Solidus (Bristol) Ltd
Printed and bound in Great Britain by Clays Ltd, St Ives plc
 
This ebook produced by JOUVE, FRANCE
 
 
 
 
 
Orbit
A Division of
Little, Brown and Company (UK)
Brettenham House
Lancaster Place
London WC2E 7EN
 
 
Hachette Digital
An imprint of
Little, Brown Book Group
100 Victoria Embankment
London EC4Y 0DY
 
 
 
An Hachette Livre UK Company
For my mother
(Who
hated
the bit about the rabbit)
 
And Tim Holman
(In compensation for all the pork pies he’ll never eat)
Author’s Note
All the bows described in this book are based on prototypes I’ve made myself; except for one (you’ll know which one when you get to it) which was inspired by a description of something fairly similar in Jim Hamm’s book
Bows & Arrows of the Native Americans
. To the best of my knowledge, the project is technically possible; if anybody ever succeeds in building one, I’d really rather not hear about it.
 
KJP
CHAPTER ONE
The sergeant was pulling at his sleeve. ‘Get out of here, Father,’ he said urgently, only just audible over the shouting and the nearby clatter of weapons. ‘They’re coming. You’ll be killed if you don’t get out now.’
Doctor Gannadius stared at him and grabbed his wrist. It felt solid enough. ‘This is wrong,’ he mumbled. ‘I can’t be here.’
‘Get
out
!’ the sergeant screamed; then he pulled his wrist free and set off at a clumsy skidding run down the corridor, crashing into a book-case as he went and scattering book-rolls on the floor. In the other direction, far away but getting nearer, Gannadius could hear more shouting - orders, by the sound of it, yelled by an officer at the end of his tether, but he couldn’t make out the words or tell whether it was the enemy or his own side.
‘This is wrong,’ Gannadius repeated softly. ‘I was never here. I left before this happened.’
A few yards away from him, a shutter flew open and a man’s head appeared through the window, backlit in orange. It was a nightmare face, foreign and dangerous, and Gannadius instinctively shrank away. Logically, he should be running. Very far back in second place was the notion of grabbing one of the discarded weapons that lay on the floor and trying to kill this intrusive stranger before he got through the window. Gannadius couldn’t do either. In the back of his mind, he was making a note on the effect of blind terror on the unwarlike, sedentary individual: paralysis, involuntary bladder activity, an apparent extension of the moment, as if time was frozen or no longer applied.
‘But this is
wrong
,’ he insisted loudly, except that his voice didn’t work. ‘I escaped from the City before it fell. I was never here.’
‘Tell it to the judge,’ grunted the enemy soldier as he wriggled his left shoulder through the window frame. ‘I expect you’ve got a note from your mother, too.’
An enemy soldier shouldn’t be talking with a strong City accent, using City phrases. But on the other hand, Doctor Gannadius, Perimadeian refugee currently domiciled in Shastel, shouldn’t be here talking with him. Someone was breaking the rules, he thought, how horribly unfair; but once he’d been killed, who would ever know?
The sordid and uncomfortable feeling of piss running down his leg, and the smell of burning bone filtering through the window - how much more real can it be? I’m here. Damn.
‘Please,’ he said. The enemy soldier grunted again, swung one leg through the window and put his foot to the ground. ‘Go on,’ he said, ‘run. Well?’
‘I’m sorry,’ Gannadius replied. ‘I can’t. I don’t seem able to move.’
The enemy soldier shrugged and reached behind his back for an arrow.
I’m not really bothered
, his eyes said,
one way or the other. You can run if you like, or I can kill you now. You’re dead anyway
. Gannadius closed his eyes: it would be too horrible to watch the arrow actually coming towards him, and with time running slow like this he was sure he’d be able to see it in the air, observe for himself the operation of the phenomenon known as the Archer’s Paradox, whereby the arrow actually bends round the bow at the moment of loose. A true scientist would want to see that.
Not me
, he said aloud, but the words didn’t work any more.
I don’t understand. Unless this is some horrible mess-up in the operation of the Principle, which means that instead of going forward, I’ve been hauled back, maybe to where I should have been all along. Is that the way it works? We think we can spot the flaws in the Principle, prise open cracks in the points in the future where momentous things happen and slide in our acts of intervention. But what if it works both ways, and the flaw’s closing up on me? In which case it’s all Alexius’ fault, and mine for getting involved. Perhaps

Something prompted him to open his eyes; and he saw the enemy soldier staring at him, his face suddenly contorted with a fear that mirrored Gannadius’ own. There was an arrow in the man’s chest that hadn’t been there before.
‘Loredan,’ he said, then turned round. A man stood in the archway, a short black bow in his hand, his face frustratingly in shadow. Loredan, yes; but which one? Not that it mattered if he was safe now, but there were two Loredan brothers, and one was good and one was bad, and the elder of them was taller and bald-headed (but he still didn’t know which one he was looking at).
Whichever Loredan it was took a step forward, then called out, presumably some warning. It came too late, because Gannadius could see the arrow coming, spinning elegantly around the axis of the shaft—
So I died here, after all. How ironic
.
Someone touched his arm, and he jerked round. It was a girl, one of his students, not the most promising of them but terribly enthusiastic. She was smiling, amused to see an old man fallen asleep in his chair, so peaceful.
‘Doctor Gannadius,’ she said. ‘I’m here for my tutorial. It was today, wasn’t it?’
His mind was still fuzzy with sleep, because he replied with something like, ‘I thought so too, but it turned into then, and now it’s now again.’
‘Doctor Gannadius?’ She was staring at him, eyes puzzled and worried; very sweet she looked, too.
‘I’m sorry,’ he sighed, stretching his legs and finding them afflicted with pins and needles (maybe they explained the arrow). ‘It’s this hatefully comfortable chair. The moment I sit in it I’m fast asleep, and there doesn’t seem to be anything I can do about it.’ He had a splitting headache, too.
‘If you like, I can come back later.’ Oh, how disappointed she looked, and how brave she was trying to be - was he ever that enthusiastic about anything, ever in his life?
‘That’s fine,’ he said. ‘No, stay. I’m awake now. Please, sit down.’
She was one of those awkward perchers, the sort who balance on the very edge of a chair as if they’re afraid they’ll break it or that the person who’s really entitled to it might show up at any minute. Her name - absolutely no chance, he admitted to himself, of remembering her name this soon after waking up. Machaera.
Fancy remembering that.
‘Remind me,’ he said. ‘What were you doing for me this week?’
She straightened her back even more until she looked like a human plumb-bob. ‘Projection exercises,’ she said. ‘Like you showed us.’
(
Hah! Savage irony, if you like. You want to stay well clear of projection exercises, my girl. They’re not safe. In fact, they could be the death of you
.)
‘I see,’ he said, steepling his fingers and trying to look as if he had a clue about anything. The truth was that these famous secret Perimadeian projection exercises, which were basically what had got him this superb job, were little more than his garbled attempts to duplicate the techniques by which Alexius and he had (accidentally) managed to achieve a number of projections (with disastrous effects) shortly before the City fell. About the only thing that could be said in favour of these exercises he was now teaching was that they didn’t work. At least, he devoutly hoped they didn’t, or they were all due to be in ever such a lot of trouble.
‘Shall I . . . ?’ she mumbled. She was embarrassed, like a patient taking off her clothes in front of a doctor. Gannadius nodded. ‘When you’re ready,’ he said.
‘All right.’ She huddled up in her chair, as if she was out in the rain without a coat, her eyes squeezed painfully tight. He could almost feel the gigantic effort of will she was making - counter-productive, of course. Which was all to the good.
Nevertheless: ‘Relax,’ he said, ‘try and—’ How to describe it? Not a clue. ‘Try and make everything seem as normal as you can. If you think about it, all you want to be doing is standing still in a room or a street somewhere, which is about as mundane as you can get. The only difference would be, you’d be out then and not back now. Chances are you won’t feel any different at all. It’s not magic, remember; it’s a perfectly natural phenomenon, like dreaming.’
She relaxed - relaxed
savagely
- and Gannadius had to make an effort not to laugh. ‘Ah,’ she said. ‘Oh, I
see
. Yes, I think it’s working.’
It can’t be, surely
. ‘Are you sure?’ he said, forcing himself to stay calm. ‘Just look around you and tell me what you see.’
‘I’m not sure,’ she muttered. ‘It’s somewhere I’ve never been. The nearest place to it I can think of is the library. And there’s—’ She lifted her head, her closed eyes directly in line with his (although he’d moved since she closed them; how did she know where he was?). ‘Doctor Gannadius, you’re—’ Suddenly she screamed, a horrible, shrill, painful noise that seemed to vibrate along the very same nerves in his head that the headache was affecting. He jumped up and grabbed her hands, which she was paddling wildly in the air like a drowning cat; she pulled her hands free and pushed him in the face so hard that he fell over on his backside, and swore.
BOOK: The Belly of the Bow
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