Page 6 of The Dark City


  With the thought I was up, running, head bent low, into the muddy yard. The horse whinnied; I slashed the rope and was on its back kicking my heels in hard; we were halfway through the gate when the shouts erupted. I didn’t look back but drove the beast hard, mud splashing high, cows scattering. Barking and yells and the whistle of a shot smacked from somewhere, but we were slithering down the red bank into the water; I shouted and kicked anxiously.

  The river was sluggish; boulders choked the peat-brown water, the shingle underneath soft and treacherous. The horse sank in it; a splash and a bark behind warned me, and turning I saw a dog close, its white teeth snapping at the horse’s tail.

  That probably helped. The horse kicked. Then its hooves grounded in firm soil; I felt it and whooped with delight as we raced over the grass and into the tree cover beyond, a steady joyous run with the wet mane flicking drops into my face like diamonds. Defiant, I sat up. Another bolt splintered bark a meter to my left, but by then I was too reckless to care, and in seconds the trees were around us, and I had to slow the horse.

  It took me an hour to calm down.

  When I did, I was tired and hungry, and suddenly cold. The wood had petered out; I found myself climbing the slopes of a high bare landscape of chalk, the turf cropped low, and the huge sun in a furnace of gathering cloud. Rain began, drizzling lightly. There was nothing to eat, and no shelter.

  Coming carefully over the skyline, I sat still, watching the clouds gather. The empty country stretched out below; dark, smooth green slopes. Pulling the bags off, I let the horse rest, pulled out this book, and wrote. I’m lucky to still have it.

  Harn must be far from here by now. He must be out in the middle of these downlands, somewhere. I sit silent, writing, and the horse crops the grass. The tearing of the stalks is loud in the drizzle.

  10

  Flain the Tall built a tower, and he called it the House of Trees. This was because the trees gave their wood for it freely, without pain. All the trees of the wood offered a branch, and the House was fragrant with calarna and yew and oak, pale willow, red hazel, dark mahogany.

  “This,” he said, “will be the court of the Makers; without guile, without hardship.”

  And the battlements were living branches, woven tight in a web.

  Book of the Seven Moons

  “WHAT ARE THEY?” Raffi whispered.

  “Burial places.” Galen didn’t turn. He was staring out at the strange country before them, the short grass, the hard white stony track that led away so clearly they could see it mount the ridge and vanish over the top. The sky was immense, Raffi thought, pale blue, as if he could brush it with his hand.

  “But are they safe?”

  Galen glared at him. “Don’t fear the dead. They’re not our enemies.” Carefully he poured the last drop of red wine into the cleared circle of chalk; it sank into the dry rubble, as if the ground was thirsty, and the small ring of pebbles seemed charged for an instant with clarity. Far ahead the green downs brightened.

  They had stayed on the island a day and a night, resting. Nowhere else was safer and, despite Galen’s restlessness, he knew they’d needed it. Raffi had fished, mostly. Galen had eaten little and then gone off on his own, and hours later Raffi had come across him sitting in the ruined house, deep in trance, his fingers moving over the black and green awen-beads.

  Uneasy, Raffi had retreated to the fire and eaten the rest of the fish. He knew Galen like this. He just had to wait, sleeping on and off, sitting up to stare anxiously into the dark.

  At last, late on the second night, the keeper had stumbled through the nettles, thrown himself down, and slept. Raffi sat up and looked at him. He was exhausted, soaked with sweat. Tugging the blanket over him, Raffi curled up in his own worry. Galen was killing himself. The constant struggle, the useless desperate search for his lost power was driving him to madness. They had to get some help! And with Galen’s magic gone, all their defenses against the Watch had dwindled to his own sense-lines, frailer the farther he sent them.

  Rubbing the bee sting, he wondered what more he could do. Someone had followed them down that path. That overgrown, unused path.

  NOW, HIGH ON THE DOWNS, he thought of it again. “I don’t like traveling in daylight.”

  “Maybe, but the woman is right. Here, daylight is best.” Galen had shouldered the pack, his long hair tied back in a knot of string. “Keep the lines out.”

  “You don’t have to tell me that!”

  Abruptly Galen caught up his stick; Raffi jerked back but the Relic Master gave a sour laugh. “Come on.”

  They walked all morning, quickly, not speaking. The track climbed the smooth slopes easily, the grass green and short, spattered with rabbit dung. Distant flocks of fat sheep grazed.

  On the top of the ridge they lay low, till Galen was sure no one was near; they crept over, not straightening till they were well below the skyline. The stone they had seen from the valley leaned beside the white track, glinting with quartz.

  “Sekoi,” Raffi said, seeing the carved spirals.

  Galen grunted, walked around it. Then he touched it, feeling for the bands of energy, but Raffi knew by the way he turned away that he had failed.

  “What’s that?”

  It was a small red flower, lying propped against the stone. Galen picked it up. “Not from here. It’s been brought.”

  “Alberic’s Sekoi! He’s come past here—and not too long ago. It’s still fresh.”

  Galen nodded, then tossed it down. “Then I hope the creature puts on speed. I want Tasceron, not him.”

  It was a bare place, green to the world’s end, and the sky blue and empty. Trudging, Raffi felt exposed, open to attack, and through the eyes of the one circling hawk high up he managed to see himself briefly, a tiny dusty figure, hot and tired and thirsty, moving with infinite slowness over the green hollows. The bird swooped and swerved; giddily he came back to himself, stumbling over a stone.

  Then they came to the tombs. A few loomed up, huge, on each side of the track, smooth humps of grass, some with ditches around them, one with a rowan tree sprouting from the top. For each Galen spoke prayers, chanting under his breath, mile after mile. It was a dry country, incredibly still, with only a sudden arrowbird darting up to break the crisp silence.

  Raffi trudged on. The tombs oppressed him; their silence was a weight on his shoulders. He wondered if Galen felt it. Unlike the cromlech, these kept their dead, and passing one he saw for a moment the hidden dark chamber under the grass, the scrawled spirals on the long bones.

  Ahead, a ridge rose up. To the left of it a single treeclump stood, dark tops moving in the breeze. Rooks flapped and cawed above it, a black, restless colony.

  Galen stopped. He looked up at the trees, his face stern. Then he stepped off the track. “This way.”

  Raffi stared. “Why over there?”

  “Where I go, you go.” He hadn’t slowed. Raffi had to hurry to catch him.

  “But why?”

  “Because I say so.”

  “That’s not enough. It’s not enough!” Suddenly angry, Raffi grabbed his sleeve and forced him around. Galen stared at him, eyes black. Raffi forced himself not to step back. Then he said, “I have to look after us both. I have to read the signs, as well as I can. You can’t do it. You wouldn’t know, if anything was wrong.” He let go of the keeper’s sleeve and said quietly, “You have to let me warn you, Galen.”

  Galen didn’t move. It was the truth, but Raffi knew he felt it like a blow to the face.

  “So what is wrong?” he growled.

  “The tombs. They’re watching us.”

  “And the tree?”

  He shrugged. “It feels strange.”

  Galen stabbed the ground with his stick. Then he said, “Listen. Yesterday, I had a dream. The only dream I’ve had for months. Faintly, in all the pain and the darkness, I saw this place. Those trees up there. Nothing else.”

  Raffi was silenced. He knew the importance of dreams, knew
that Galen would clutch at anything that might help him.

  “I can’t ignore it, Raffi.”

  “No,” he mumbled unhappily.

  They climbed up. The turf was springy, studded with yellow gorse-bushes. Warm, Raffi loosened the fastening of his dark green coat for the first time in days. The slope was steep; Galen stumbled once and picked himself up stubbornly. The dark grove hung above them, the rooks clamoring, disturbed. Anyone for miles would hear them. Catching his breath, Raffi stopped and looked back.

  The downs stretched endlessly to the horizon. Great cloud banks hung, hazed with sunlight; white darkening to ominous gray, their slow rain-curtains dragged across the green land.

  He turned and walked into the gloom of the trees. Yet as he passed the outer trunks he realized that this was not many trees, but one, immensely old, its trunk fibrous and dark, centuries old, maybe even older than the barrows.

  Coming closer, they saw the central trunk was hollow; split wide enough for a small room. Trunk upon trunk had grown out of it, root upon root; the bark was ridged and scored, and Raffi guessed that six or seven men couldn’t have joined hands around it. And yet it was alive. His feet sank in a thousand years of needles.

  Around it, almost lost in gloom, stood three stones that might once have been some cairn or building. Pieces of rag hung from the branches. On one a piece of quartz swung and glinted in the sun.

  “The Sekoi.”

  “Again.”

  Galen was bent under the thatch of branches. He put his hand on the central trunk. “How old this is. The secrets it knows. If I could . . .” He stopped himself. Then he sat down, closing his eyes.

  “Galen,” Raffi said anxiously. “How long are we going to stay here? We should get on!” There was no answer. Shaking his head, he sat down himself, against one of the outer trunks.

  By late afternoon he was still there, watching the rain come. The gray curtain swept toward him over the downs, it swallowed the barrows and was on him, the first drops pattering in the thick green growth above, but none of it came through to him; the great yew was like a hut, its central trunk and pillars, its meshed roof. With the rain came the darkness, early. The rooks cawed and settled into a cowed silence. Nothing but the pattering of drops disturbed him. Glancing back stiffly he saw Galen still meditating, a shadow.

  There was no way of lighting a fire; they were so high up it would be seen, and besides, he felt the tree wouldn’t like it. Sitting there, against its back, he knew its hollows and veins and ridges; his fingers buried themselves in the woody debris, the crumbling rich stink of needles and grubs and tiny wriggling things that it nurtured. Nothing grew under here; it was too dark, but the tree’s roots spread far out under the ground, he could feel them, widening to the nearest tombs, groping deep in the chalk, to the hidden waterlines, the fractures and fissures of rock, the strange magic that moved there. And the tombs clustered around it; he saw that now. The Sekoi had put their dead here, to watch with the tree.

  And deep in his mind the tree said to him, Raffi, get up and come in.

  He turned, thinking he’d misheard, but Galen was standing, looking at him, and though his face was in darkness there was something about him that gave Raffi a shiver of fear.

  “What did you say?”

  “I didn’t say anything.” The Relic Master stared at him in the gloom. His voice was dull with weariness.

  “I thought . . . you said, ‘Get up and come in.’ ”

  Galen stiffened; then he got down in the soft mulch and grabbed Raffi’s hood and hauled him closer. “It spoke to you!”

  “I don’t . . I’m not sure.”

  But Galen breathed out harshly. He turned to the inner trunk, the seamed split. “Sit there,” he hissed, pushing Raffi down.

  Don’t fear me, the tree said, and its voice was old, textured like wind and rain on stone, the knock of a hammerbird in wood.

  “It says not to be afraid.”

  “Afraid!” Galen had the threaded stones off his neck; he snapped the string, tipped them out, his long fingers arranging them hurriedly into patterns Raffi didn’t know. Then he looked up, and his face was sharp and eager and desperate all at once. “Ask it to come out. To show itself. Tell it I can’t see, or hear. Get it to come!”

  Raffi barely knew how. Then training took over; he made a space in his mind, opened the third eye. Please come out, he asked, over and over. He knew it was close, and could hear him.

  Galen crouched at his shoulder, his hand gripping tight. When Raffi looked now he saw rain, glinting on the trunk, dripping in places from above. The yew was huge; one edge of the split a bent contorted angle of wood, but as he looked closer he saw that he was mistaken, that it was a man, an old man in russet flaking, shapeless clothes, his eyes deep as knotholes, turning toward him.

  Galen’s fingers shook him.

  “Has he come?”

  Raffi nodded, silent.

  The yew-man smiled at him and nodded too. I’ve come, keeper.

  “He can’t hear you,” Raffi muttered, his throat dry.

  How is that?

  “There was an accident; he was hurt.”

  Glancing up, Raffi saw Galen’s wild excitement. “Go on! Ask him! Can he help me!”

  “There was an accident,” Raffi said again, stumbling for words. “The keeper has lost . . . He can’t enter the land now, or hear it when it speaks to him.” He felt torn with awe at the yew-man’s eyes, and embarrassment at Galen having to hear this.

  The yew-man, too, seemed fascinated. He turned his brown old gaze on Galen, moved a fold of cloak to show two gnarled hands clasped on a root.

  That must torment him. There is no loss as great as that.

  “Yes . . .” Raffi wondered if Galen could hear. “Can you help? The yew is a tree of poison and healing. Do you have some way . . . ?”

  No. The old man shook his head. Only the Makers can give back what they have taken.

  “But the Makers are gone.”

  Tormented with impatience, Galen hissed, “What does he say about the Makers?”

  But Raffi waved him back.

  Yes, they are gone. The old man sighed. I remember them, long since.

  “Remember them!”

  I’m old, child, older than anything here. I guard the bones of the cat-kings, but before them all, I was. And when the Makers came and walked on the grass I saw them when they were young, Tamar and Therris and Flain. Even Kest, whose sorrow burns us all. They could have helped your master.

  “But . . .” Raffi grew dizzy; he shook his head, stunned.

  “Hold on to it!” Galen’s voice snapped. “Hold on!”

  “The Makers are gone. We can’t speak to them. The only messenger was the Crow.”

  The Crow is still here, the yew-man said calmly.

  “Here!”

  In this world. In this body. The Crow lives, for without him the world would die. The voice became slurred, a harsh gabble of sound, then clear again. Stone and tree miss the keepers. Other men do not speak to us. We do not know how to speak to them.

  The tree blurred before him.

  “Hold on!” Galen muttered.

  Sweating, dizzy, Raffi gripped his hands tight on the old man’s. “Where is the Crow?”

  In Tasceron. In you. In your master, if he knew it.

  “But where?”

  The answer was harsh and garbled; the sound distorted as if down tunnels and veins, deep in the earth. His hands clasped a wooden knoll. He felt sick and retched, choking.

  “Hold it!” Galen was yelling.

  “I can’t! He’s gone! He’s gone!”

  Sweating, he was hauled up, dragged out from the tree on hands and knees. He collapsed in the grass, sick, shivering uncontrollably, his head throbbing with flashes of light and pain. After a while he realized Galen was holding him. Rain had soaked them both.

  “Sorry.”

  “You did your best.”

  The keeper eased him against the tree, dragged the pack
over, and pulled the blankets out. “Get these around you. It’s aftershock. We should have a fire.”

  “Not safe.”

  “What did he say, Raffi?” Galen clutched him on both arms, as if he couldn’t bear the suspense. “Can he cure me?”

  Raffi shook his head. He looked away from the keeper’s face.

  “He remembered the Makers. He said . . . only they can give back what they’ve taken. He said the Crow is in Tasceron. And in us, if we knew it.”

  “In us?” Then Galen stopped.

  Another wave of nausea shuddered through Raffi. “What’s wrong?” he croaked.

  Galen had leaped up. He was looking down the hill, into the dark, and there was something in his look that made Raffi feel for his sense-lines.

  They were all in shreds.

  He staggered up and stood there, the blankets falling.

  “Why don’t you come up,” Galen said grimly, “and see us from a little closer.”

  A dim shape was down there just beneath them, crouching on the dark turf.

  “Come on!” Galen’s voice was murderous.

  The figure stood up, small and indistinct. Then the tiny moon, Pyra, came out. The light from it, ruby and warm, flickered over the girl.

  The Watch, Unsleeping

  11

  Once you believe, you are lost. Anything you see or hear can be twisted against you. The Order are masters of nothing but falsehood.

  Rule of the Watch

  SHE CAME A LITTLE CLOSER, then stopped.

  “Is he all right?”

  Galen glared at Raffi. “Is there anyone with her?”

  Bewildered, Raffi groped for knowledge. “Only a horse, somewhere.”

  The girl stared at him in surprise. “You can hear it?”

  He shrugged, uneasy.

  She was small, wearing dark blue and gray trousers and jerkin, her hair a shiny nut-brown cut against her cheek. She seemed remarkably unconcerned.

  As no one said anything, she went on, “My name is Carys. Carys Arrin. I’m traveling west from here. Are you sure you’re all right?”