Upon the
Cliff
I left the palace grounds by one of the
landward gates. There were six troopers on guard there, with
nothing of the air of relaxation that had characterized the two at
the river stairs a few watches before. One, politely but
unmistakably barring the way, asked me if I had to leave so early.
I identified myself and said that I was afraid I must—that I still
had work to do that night (as indeed I did) and would have a hard
day facing me the next morning as well (as indeed I
would).
“You’re a hero then.” The soldier
sounded slightly more friendly. “Don’t you have an escort,
Lictor?”
“I had two clavigers, but I dismissed
them. There’s no reason I can’t find my way back to the Vincula
alone.”
Another trooper, who had not spoken
previously, said, “You can stay inside until morning. They’ll find
you a quiet place to bunk down.”
“Yes, but my work wouldn’t get done.
I’m afraid I must leave now.”
The soldier who had been blocking my
way stood aside. “I’d like to send a couple of men with you. If
you’ll wait a moment, I’ll do it. I have to get permission from the
officer of the guard.”
“That won’t be necessary,” I told him,
and left before they could say more. Something—presumably the
committer of the murders my sergeant had told me of—was clearly
stirring in the city; it seemed almost certain that another death
had occurred while I was in the archon’s palace. The thought filled
me with a pleasant excitement—not because I was such a fool as to
imagine myself superior to any attack, but because the idea of
being attacked, of risking death that night in the dark streets of
Thrax, lifted some part of the depression I would otherwise have
felt. This unfocused terror, this faceless menace of the night, was
the earliest of all my childhood fears; and as such, now that
childhood was behind me, it had the homey quality of all childhood
things when we are fully grown.
I was already on the same side of the
river as the jacal I had visited that afternoon, and had no need to
take boat again; but the streets were strange to me and in the dark
seemed almost a labyrinth built to confound me. I made several
false starts before I found the narrow way I wanted, leading up the
cliff.
The dwellings to either side of it,
which had stood silent while they waited for the mighty wall of
stone opposite them to rise and cover the sun, were murmurous with
voices now, and a few windows glowed with the light of grease
lamps. While Abdiesus reveled in his palace below, the humble folk
of the high cliff celebrated too, with a gaiety that differed from
his chiefly in that it was less riotous. I heard the sounds of love
as I passed, just as I had heard them in his garden after leaving
Cyriaca for the last time, and the voices of men and women in quiet
talk, and bantering too, here as there. The palace garden had been
scented by its flowers, and its air was washed by its own fountains
and by the great fountain of cold Acis, which rushed by just
outside. Here those odors were no more; but a breeze stirred among
the jacals and the caves with their stoppered mouths, bringing
sometimes the stench of ordure, and sometimes the aroma of brewing
tea or some humble stew, and sometimes only the clean air of the
mountains.
When I was high up the cliff face,
where no one dwelt who was rich enough to afford more light than a
cooking fire would give, I turned and looked back at the city much
as I had looked down upon it—though with an entirely different
spirit—from the ramparts of Acies Castle that afternoon. It is said
that there are crevices in the mountains so deep that one can see
stars at their bottoms—crevices that pass, then, entirely through
the world. Now I felt I had found one. It was like looking into a
constellation, as though all of Urth had fallen away, and I was
staring into the starry gulf.
It seemed likely that by this time they
were searching for me. I thought of the archon’s dimarchi cantering
down the silent streets, perhaps carrying flambeaux snatched up in
the garden. Far worse was the thought of the clavigers I had until
now commanded fanning out from the Vincula. Yet I saw no moving
lights and heard no faint, hoarse cries, and if the Vincula was
disturbed, it was not a disturbance that affected the dim streets
webbing the cliff across the river. There should have been a
winking gleam too where the great gate opened to let out the
freshly roused men, closed, then opened again; but there was none.
I turned at last and began to climb once more. The alarm had not
yet been given. Still, it would soon sound.
There was no light in the jacal and no noise
of speech. I took the Claw from its little bag before I entered,
for fear I would lack the nerve to do so once I was inside.
Sometimes it blazed like a firework, as it had in the inn at
Saltus. Sometimes it possessed no more light than a bit of glass.
That night in the jacal it was not brilliant, but it glowed with so
deep a blue that the light itself seemed almost a clearer darkness.
Of all the names of the Conciliator, the one that is, I believe,
least used, and which has always seemed the most puzzling to me, is
that of Black Sun. Since that night, I have felt myself almost to
comprehend it. I could not hold the gem in my fingers as I had done
often before and was yet to do afterward; I laid it flat on the
palm of my right hand so that my touch would commit no more
sacrilege than was strictly necessary. With it held thus before me,
I stooped and entered the jacal.
The girl lay where she had lain that
afternoon. If she still breathed I could not hear her, and she did
not move. The boy with the infected eye slept on the bare earth at
her feet. He must have bought food with the money I had given him;
corn husks and fruit peels were scattered over the floor. For a
moment I dared to hope that neither of them would
wake.
The deep light of the Claw showed the
girl’s face to be a weaker and more horrible thing than I had seen
it by day, accentuating the hollows under her eyes, and her sunken
cheeks. I felt I should say something, invoke the Increate and his
messengers by some formula, but my mouth was dry and more empty of
words than any beast’s. Slowly I lowered my hand toward her until
the shadow of it cut off all the light that had bathed her. When I
lifted my hand again there had been no change, and remembering that
the Claw had not helped Jolenta, I wondered if it were possible
that it could have no good effect on women, or if it were necessary
that a woman hold it. Then I touched the girl’s forehead with it,
so that for a moment it seemed a third eye in that deathlike
face.
Of all the uses I made of it, that was
the most astounding, and perhaps the only one in which it was not
possible that any self-deception on my part, or any coincidence no
matter how farfetched, could account for what occurred. It may have
been that the man-ape’s bleeding was staunched by his own belief,
that the uhlan on the road by the House Absolute was merely stunned
and would have revived in any event, that the apparent healing of
Jonas’s wounds had been no more than a trick of the
light.
But now it was as though some
unimaginable power had acted in the interval between one chronon
and the next to wrench the universe from its track. The girl’s real
eyes, dark as pools, opened. Her face was no longer the skull mask
it had been, but only the worn face of a young woman. “Who are you
in those bright clothes?” she asked. And then, “Oh, I am
dreaming.”
I told her I was a friend, and that
there was no reason for her to be afraid.
“I am not afraid,” she said. “I would
be if I were awake, but I am not now. You look as if you have
fallen from the sky, but I know you are only the wing of some poor
bird. Did Jader catch you? Sing for me …”
Her eyes closed again; this time I
could hear the slow sighing of her breath. Her face remained as it
had been while they were open—thin and drawn, but with the stamp of
death rubbed away.
I took the gem from her forehead and
touched the boy’s eye with it as I had touched his sister’s face,
but I am not sure it was necessary that I do so. It appeared normal
before it ever felt the kiss of the Claw, and it may be that the
infection was already vanquished. He stirred in his sleep and cried
out as though in some dream he were running ahead of slower boys
and urging them to follow him.
I put the Claw back into its little bag
and sat on the earthen floor among the husks and peels, listening
to him. After a time he grew quiet again. Starlight made a dim
pattern near the door; other than that, the jacal was
utterly dark. I could hear the sister’s regular breathing, and the
boy’s own.
She had said that I, who had worn
fuligin since my elevation to journeyman, and gray rags before
that, was dressed in bright clothing. I knew she had been dazzled
by the light at her forehead—anything, any clothing, would have
appeared bright to her then. And yet, I felt that in some sense she
was correct. It was not that (as I have been tempted to write) I
came to hate my cloak and trousers and boots after that moment; but
rather that I came in some sense to feel they were indeed the
disguise they had been taken to be when I was at the archon’s
palace, or the costume they had appeared to be when I took part in
Dr. Talos’s play. Even a torturer is a man, and it is not natural
for a man to dress always and exclusively in that hue that is
darker than black. I had despised my own hypocrisy when I had worn
the brown mantle from Agilus’s shop; perhaps the fuligin beneath it
was a hypocrisy as great or greater.
Then the truth began to force itself
upon my mind. If I had ever truly been a torturer, a torturer in
the sense that Master Gurloes and even Master Palaemon were
torturers, I was one no longer. I had been given a second chance
here in Thrax. I had failed in that second chance as well, and
there would be no third. I might gain employment by my skills and
my clothing, but that was all; and no doubt it would be better for
me to destroy them when I could, and try to make a place for myself
among the soldiers who fought the northern war, once I had
succeeded—if I ever succeeded—in returning the Claw.
The boy stirred and called a name that
must have been his sister’s. She murmured something still in sleep.
I stood and watched them for a moment more, then slipped out,
fearful that the sight of my hard face and long sword would
frighten them.