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Authors: Guy Gavriel Kay

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BOOK: The Sarantine Mosaic
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It amazed him how calmly he accepted this. On the other hand, he'd had twenty-five years to live with the knowledge.

‘The Imperial Posting Inns, whenever you can,' Zoticus was murmuring, head lowered still to the map, a curved, polished glass in one hand to magnify it. ‘Comforts and food are unreliable elsewhere.'

Crispin nodded, still distracted. ‘Dog meat instead of horse or swine, I know.'

Zoticus glanced up, his expression wry. ‘Dog is
good
,' he said. ‘The risk is getting human flesh in a sausage.'

Crispin kept a composed face with some effort. ‘I see,' he said. ‘Well spiced, I'm sure.'

‘Sometimes,' said Zoticus, turning back to the map. ‘Be especially careful through Sauradia, which can be unstable in autumn.'

Crispin watched him. Zoticus had taken a quill now and was making notations on the map. ‘Tribal rites?'

The alchemist glanced up briefly, eyebrows arched. His features were strong, the blue eyes deep-set, and he
wasn't as old as the grey hair and the staff might have suggested. ‘Yes, that. And knowing they will be mostly on their own again until spring, even with the big army camp near Trakesia and soldiers at Megarium. Notorious winter brigands, the Sauradi tribes. Lively women, as I recall, mind you.' He smiled a little, to himself, and returned to his annotations.

Crispin shrugged. Sipped his tea. Resolutely tried to put his mind away from sausages.

Some might have seen this long autumn journey as an adventure in itself. Caius Crispus did not. He liked his own city walls, and good roofs against rain, and cooks he knew, and his bathhouse. For him, broaching a new cask of wine from Megarium or the vineyards south of Rhodias had always been a preferred form of excitement. Designing and executing a mosaic was an adventure … or had been once. Walking the wet, windswept roads of Sauradia or Trakesia with an eye out for predators—human or otherwise—in a struggle to avoid becoming someone else's sausage was
not
an adventure, and a greybeard's cackling about lively women did not make it one.

He said, ‘I'd still like an answer, by the way, silly question or not. How did you know I was here all those years ago?'

Zoticus put down the quill and sat in a heavy chair. One of the mechanical birds—a falcon with a silver and bronze body and yellow jewelled eyes, quite unlike the drab, sparrow-like Linon—was fixed to the high back of the chair, screws adjusted so its claws held fast. It gazed inimically at Crispin with a pale glitter.

‘You
do
know I am an alchemist.'

‘Martinian said as much. I also know that most who use that name are frauds, hooking coins and goods from innocents.'

Crispin heard a sound from the direction of the fire. It might have been a log shifting, or not.

‘Entirely true,' said Zoticus, unperturbed. ‘Most are. Some are not. I am one of those who are not.'

‘Ah. Meaning you know the future, can induce passionate love, cure the plague, and find water?' He sounded truculent, Crispin knew. He couldn't help it.

Zoticus gazed at him levelly. ‘Only the last, actually, and not invariably. No. Meaning I can sometimes see and do things most men cannot, with frustratingly erratic success. And meaning I can see things
in
men and women that others cannot. You asked how I knew you? Men have an aura, a presence to them. It changes little, from childhood to death. Very few people dare my orchard, which is useful—as you might guess—for a man living alone in the countryside. You were there once. I knew your presence again this morning. The anger in you was not present in the child, though there was a loss then, too. The rest is little enough altered. It is not,' he said kindly, ‘so complicated an explanation, is it?'

Crispin looked at him, cupping his drink in both hands. His glance shifted to the jewelled falcon gripping the back of the alchemist's heavy chair. ‘And these?' he asked, ignoring the observations about himself.

‘Oh. Well. That's the whole
point
of alchemy, isn't it? To transmute one substance into another, proving certain things about the nature of the world. Metals to gold. The dead to life. I have learned to make inanimate substance think and speak, and retain a soul.' He said it much as he might have described learning how to make the mint tea they were drinking.

Crispin looked around the room at the birds. ‘Why … birds?' he asked, the first of fully a dozen questions that occurred.
The dead to life
.

Zoticus looked down, that private smile on his face again. After a moment, he said, ‘I wanted to go to Sarantium myself once. I had ambitions in the world, and
wished to see the Emperor and be honoured by him with wealth and women and world's glory. Apius, some time after he took the Golden Throne, initiated a fashion for mechanical animals. Roaring lions in the throne room. Bears that rose on their hind legs. And birds. He wanted birds everywhere. Singing birds in all his palaces. The mechanical artisans of the world were sending him their best contrivances: wind them up and they warbled an offkey paean to Jad or a rustic folk ditty, over and over again until you were minded to throw them against a wall and watch the little wheels spill out. You've heard them? Beautiful to look at, sometimes. And the sound can be appealing—at first.'

Crispin nodded. He and Martinian had done a Senator's house in Rhodias.

‘I decided,' said Zoticus, ‘I might do better. Far better. Create birds that had their own power of speech. And thought. And that these, the fruits of long study and labour and … some danger, would be my conduits to fame in the world.'

‘What happened?'

‘You don't remember? No, you wouldn't. Apius, under the influence of his Eastern Patriarch, began blinding alchemists and cheiromancers, even simple astrologers for a while. The clerics of the sun god have always feared any other avenues to power or understanding in the world. It became evident that arriving in the City with birds that had souls and spoke their own minds was a swift path to blinding if not death.' The tone was wry.

‘So you stayed here?'

‘I stayed. After … some extended travels. Mostly in autumn, as it happened. This season makes me restless even now. I did learn on those journeys how to do what I wanted. As you can see. I never did get to Sarantium. A mild regret. I'm too old now.'

Crispin, hearing the alchemist's words in his mind again, realized something.
The clerics of the sun god
. ‘You aren't a Jaddite, are you?'

Zoticus smiled, and shook his head.

‘Odd,' said Crispin dryly, ‘you don't
look
Kindath.' Zoticus laughed. There came that sound again, from towards the fire. A log, almost certainly. ‘I have been told I do,' he said. ‘But no, why would I exchange one fallacy for another?'

Crispin nodded. This was not a surprise, all things considered. ‘Pagan?'

‘I honour the old gods, yes. And their philosophers. And believe with them that it is a mistake to attempt to circumscribe the infinite range of divinity into one—or even two or three—images, however potent they might be on a dome or a disk.'

Crispin sat down on the stool opposite the other man. He sipped from his cup again. Pagans were not all that rare in Batiara among the Antae—which might well explain why Zoticus had lingered safely in this countryside—but this was still an extraordinarily frank conversation to be having. ‘I'd imagine,' he said, ‘that the Jaddite teachers—or the Kindath, from what little I know—would simply say that all modes of divinity may be encompassed in one if the one is powerful enough.'

‘They would,' Zoticus agreed equably. ‘Or two for the pure Heladikians, three with the Kindath moons and sun. They would all be wrong, to my mind, but that is what they'd say. Are we about to debate the nature of the divine, Caius Crispus? We'll need more than a mint infusion in that case.'

Crispin almost laughed. ‘And more time. I leave in two days and have a great deal to attend to.'

‘Of course you do. And an old man's philosophizing can hardly appeal just now, if ever. I have marked your
map with the hostelries I understand to be acceptable, and those to be particularly avoided. My last travels were twenty years and more ago, but I do have my sources. Let me also give you two names in the City. Both may be trusted, I suspect, though not with
everything
you know or do.'

His expression was direct. Crispin thought of a young queen in a candlelit room, and wondered. He said nothing. Zoticus crossed to the table, took a sheet of parchment and wrote upon it. He folded the parchment twice and handed it to Crispin.

‘Be careful around the last of this month and the first day of the next. It would be wise not to travel those days, if you can arrange to be staying at an Imperial Inn. Sauradia will be a … changed place.'

Crispin looked his inquiry.

‘The Day of the Dead. Not a prudent time for strangers to be abroad in that province. Once you are in Trakesia you'll be safer. Until you get to the City itself and have to explain why you aren't Martinian. That ought to be amusing.'

‘Oh, very,' said Crispin. He had been avoiding thinking about that. Time enough. It was a long journey by land. He unfolded the paper, read the names.

‘The first is a doctor,' said Zoticus. ‘Always useful. The second is my daughter.'

‘Your what?' Crispin blinked.

‘Daughter. Seed of my loins. Girl child.' Zoticus laughed. ‘One of them. I told you: I did travel a fair bit in my youth.'

They heard a barking from the yard. From farther within the house a long-faced, slope-shouldered servant appeared and made his unhurried way to the door and out. He silenced the dogs. They heard voices outside. A moment later he reappeared, carrying two jars.

‘Silavin came, master. He says his swine is recovered. He brought honey. Promises a ham.'

‘Splendid!' said Zoticus. ‘Store the honey in the cellar.'

‘We have thirty jars there, master,' said the servant lugubriously.

‘Thirty? So many? Oh dear. Well … our friend here will take two back for Carissa and Martinian.'

‘That still leaves twenty-six,' said the glum-faced servant.

‘At least,' agreed Zoticus. ‘We shall have a sweet winter. The fire is all right, Clovis, you may go.'

Clovis withdrew through the inner doorway—Crispin caught a glimpse of a hallway and a kitchen at the end before the door closed again.

‘Your daughter lives in Sarantium?' he asked.

‘One of them. Yes. She's a prostitute.'

Crispin blinked again.

Zoticus looked wry. ‘Well. Not quite. A dancer. Much the same, if I understand the theatre there. I don't really know. I've never seen her. She writes me, at times. Knows her letters.'

Crispin looked at the name on the paper again.
Shirin
. There was a street name, as well. He glanced up. ‘Trakesian?'

‘Her mother was. I was travelling, as I say. Some of my children write to me.'

‘Some?'

‘Many are indifferent to their poor father, struggling in his aged loneliness among the barbarians.'

The eyes were amused, the tone a long way from what the words implied. Crispin, out of habit, resisted an impulse to laugh, then stopped fighting it.

‘You had an adventurous past.'

‘Middling so. In truth, I find more excitement now in my studies. Women were a great distraction. I am
mostly freed of that now, thank the high gods. I actually believe I have a proper understanding of some of the philosophers now, and
that
is an adventure of the spirit. You will take one of the birds? As my gift to you?'

Crispin put his drink down abruptly, spilling some on the table. He snatched at the map to keep it dry. ‘What? Why would you—?'

‘Martinian is a dear friend. You are his colleague, his almost-son. You are going a long way to a dangerous place. If you are careful to keep it private, one of the birds will be of assistance. They can see, and hear. And offer companionship, if nothing else.' The alchemist hesitated. ‘It … pleases me to think one of my creations will go with you to Sarantium, after all.'

‘Oh, splendid. I am to walk the arcades of the City conversing with a companionable jewelled falcon? You want me blinded in your stead?'

Zoticus smiled faintly. ‘Not a choice gift, were that so. No. Discretion will be called for, but there are other ways of speaking with them. With whichever of them you can
hear
inwardly. You have no training. It is not certain, Caius Crispus. Nothing is in my art, I fear. But if you can hear one of the birds, it may become yours. In the act of hearing, a transference can be achieved. We will know soon enough.' His voice changed. ‘All of you, shape a thought for our guest.'

‘Don't be absurd!' snapped an owl screwed onto a perch by the front door.

‘A fatuous notion!' said the yellow-eyed falcon on the high back of Zoticus's chair. Crispin could imagine it glaring at him.

‘Quite so,' said a hawk Crispin hadn't noticed, from the far side of the room. ‘The very idea is indecent.' He remembered this jaded voice. From twenty-five years ago. They sounded utterly identical, all of them. He shivered, unable
to help himself. The hawk added, ‘This is a petty thief. Unworthy of being addressed. I refuse to dignify him so.'

‘That is enough! It is commanded,' said Zoticus. His voice remained soft but there was iron in it. ‘Speak to him, within. Do it now.'

For the first time Crispin had a sense that this was a man to be feared. There was a change in the alchemist's hard-worn, craggy features when he spoke this way, a look, a manner that suggested— inescapably—that he had seen and done dark things in his day. And he had
made
these birds. These crafted things that could see and hear. And speak to him. It came to Crispin, in a rush, exactly what was being proposed. He discovered that his hands were clenched together.

BOOK: The Sarantine Mosaic
11.13Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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