Chapter 11

When planning a reunion with an old friend it is important to choose a venue with many exits. Who knows what the missing years will have wrought with the clay of memory?

Hello, Darkness , by Erasmus Young

CHAPTER 11

Arpix

Livira had dropped into Arpix’s life unexpectedly and, like a stone hitting the surface of a pool, she had disturbed the order of things. His order. Sending ripples to his farthest shores. She had been an unwelcome intrusion, a small, dark child, awkward in clothes that seemed to have been imposed upon her wildness much as she had been imposed upon his serenity.

It hadn’t taken long for Arpix to admit that, although many had praised his intelligence and even whispered of genius, this girl from the Dust with her bruised face and cut hands was of a different order. A higher shelf. Livira hadn’t so much disdained the library’s rules as wholly failed to acknowledge their existence. She had spied, stolen, trespassed, and run wild. And, in the end, Arpix had come to the conclusion that she was the breath that he hadn’t understood was required to keep him from suffocating.

All of them at that table had needed Livira, except perhaps Carlotte, who was her own brand of chaos. All of them had agreed on little concerning Livira save that you could never tell where she would lead you. It had astonished them that such a creature could have walked out of the Dust from a life spent within sight of a single well and a few acres of jarra beans and dry wheat. None of them, not Arpix, nor Meelan, nor Jella, could ever have predicted that Livira’s adventures would ultimately abandon them to a life lived within sight of a well out on the Dust and supported by a few acres of jarra beans.

A fiery death had been closing in on them from all sides. In Arpix’s nightmares, which were many and often, the library still burned, and he burned with it. In reality, they had escaped at the last moment after two assistants reached them through the flames and smoke. What had provoked the assistants to such compassion Arpix still didn’t know, but none of them had questioned it at the time. With the fire at their backs, they’d escaped the library and found themselves here, in the grip of another kind of heat, also pressing on all sides, and with the threat of a horrific but swift death replaced by that of starvation.

Arpix had expected to emerge in the Exchange, but perhaps the assistant who had used her blood to draw the portal had been tainted in some way—certainly she had been discoloured like her companion, but others had blamed that on their passage through the inferno. In any event, the portal had brought them directly to this place without the luxury of any of the Exchange’s choices. The portal had smoked away within the hour, presumably as the assistant’s blood was burned from the library floor.

“Someone’s coming.” Meelan saw it now.

Arpix’s considerable height advantage had enabled him to watch the dust trail for some moments already. It wasn’t a good sign, but on the other hand there wasn’t much they could do about it. It wasn’t as if running was an option.

“More than one?” Meelan’s habitual growl had become a rasp since living on the Dust. The dry air had put an edge on it. The sun had darkened him almost to Livira’s hue and bleached the blackness from the top layers of his hair, leaving a deep reddish tinge. The mere notion that one of the city’s richest families shared blood with the “dusters” would have given the king and Lord Algar apoplexy. Arpix was sad they would never be slapped in the face with that particular truth.

“Arpix?”

“Sorry. Just thinking.” Arpix adjusted his broad-brimmed hat. He’d woven it himself from dried bean leaves and was rather proud of it. “Yes, more than one. Three or four maybe.”

The strangers—sabbers of one kind or another—were approaching at speed from the direction of the mountains. The crimson glow that had touched on their dust cloud had faded to nothing as the sun set. Soon dusk would erase them completely.

“Should we set a light?” Jella came up beside them, precious hoe in hand.

When they’d first arrived none of them had known where they were. Or when. None of the librarians, not even Master Jost, had ever left Crath City and they had no way of knowing if the mountains to the west were “their” mountains or just... mountains. Fortunately, Salamonda had travelled in her youth and recognised, even from this angle, the peak that rose above their old home. With that information it fell to Jella, and her unsung fascination with maps, to deduce from memory that they had been deposited on a gods-forsaken plateau out in the Dust. Specifically, Arthran Plateau, the site of a ruined city of unknown age that had at several times in past millennia been excavated with varying degrees of success. Jella wasn’t sure but suspected that the city might have been named Arthran. That “might be” meant that they knew where they were with far more certainty than when they were.

“I say no to the light.” Meelan stepped into Arpix’s silence with his own opinion. “It’s not like we’ve ever had any luck with strangers.”

That was certainly true. Over the four years they’d spent in the hollows of ancient excavations wanderers had called in on them several times. Stealing hadn’t been the worst of it. Giles, one of the bookbinders, had been murdered in the night. Even the best of them had brought no food and had been an extra mouth to feed when they could hardly feed themselves. In fact, in the first year they had all nearly starved. Jella and Salamonda had fared best, and their labour had kept the rest alive, sowing a crop that came to harvest swiftly. Still, by the end of it, nourished by little but rats, Jella and Salamonda had been as slim as Meelan had been at the start, and Arpix a skeleton on the cusp of death. All of them had inhabited their clothes like strangers lost in billowing space. All except Radmelk, another of the bookbinders, who had been eaten by a horror that hid itself under the dust.

“They’re running,” Arpix said. “You don’t raise that much dust walking.” He had never expected to be an expert on dust clouds. “Coming from the mountains.”

“You don’t run unless you’re being chased.” Meelan rubbed his chin, staring at the shadowed mountains.

“And we know what’s chasing them,” Jella said. “I’ll get the fire bowl.”

By the time Jella returned with the perforated clay fire bowl and a sack of bean husks to burn in it, Jost had caught wind of the situation. She circled Jella, hound to prey, peppering the air with her objections. The lethargy that normally wrapped her fell away. Arpix had long noticed that whenever she had something to complain about Jost found new energy from somewhere. The rest of the time she had a tendency to survive on the labour of others. The authority that came with being a senior librarian had all but eroded to nothing over the years they’d spent scraping a living from the Dust, but Arpix still sometimes found himself following her orders out of habit.

“Why in the world would you want to guide more vagrants here?” Jost raised both arms along with her voice. Her robes hung in tatters, played by the breeze. The material was dust-grey, the library’s shade-coded hierarchy erased. All of Arthran’s ten inhabitants had now been given equal rank by the pervasive dirt. “You’re inviting murderers and thieves over our doorstep! Again!”

Behind Jost, one of the younger bookbinders, Sheetra, rolled her eyes, but the four older ones looked worried. Meelan’s brow had also furrowed, though perhaps for different reasons. He detested Jost and finding his opinion aligned with hers would weaken his conviction.

Arpix had never liked the leadership role that had first been thrust upon him by dint of age and height and cleverness at the trainee table. He’d accepted it because he liked sense and order, and the best way to maintain those things was from the top. But he hadn’t enjoyed it and still didn’t. Most of the time he let Jost think she was running the show. Looking out across the darkening plain though, he knew he had to win over unwilling hearts once again. He drew a deep breath and turned slowly to face them.

“I could appeal to your goodness, charity, and better nature,” he said. “And I know you have those still, despite the dry grind our lives have become. But let me put it to you a different way.

“We’ve lived here four years. We scrape and water the ground. We grow beans, eat beans, return beans to the soil, grow more beans. This is our life. We haven’t the strength to do more. We’ve seen the skeer nest. We’ve learned from our visitors that there’s nothing better for us within a five-day march, and perhaps not beyond that either. If someone were going to open a magic door for us to escape through they would surely have done it by now.”

Arpix looked at his companions’ downcast faces. Even Salamonda’s habitual good humour had evaporated. They came to him for encouragement. To hear him call their one-tenth-full cup a good start. And here he was rubbing the varnish off the truth.

“If there is any hope to be had, any hope at all, how do you think it will reach us? Because I tell you it won’t blow in on the wind or fall from the sky. It’s going to be carried here by a stranger. Maybe not one of the ones running in our direction tonight, needing our help. But maybe . And if not with them, maybe with the next. All I can tell you is that if hope is to come our way it will be in a stranger’s hands, and if we turn our backs on them, we will never know what we missed.”

Jella set the bowl on the blocks of a wall that the diggers had missed and the wind had found. “I’ll light it when they’ve had time to get a bit closer, so we know they’ll see it.”

Meelan found his voice. “Arpix is right, of course.” He leaned in close and muttered in a low voice, “You’re always right, dammit. Sorry.”

Arpix clapped a hand to his friend’s shoulder. “I’m often wrong, and you know it.”

They stood side by side, looking out into the dark, ignoring Jost’s continuing objections. Meelan and Jost had lost the most when the library had burned and they’d been exiled to the wild. Meelan, his family’s vast wealth and considerable influence; Jost, her authority and the role she’d played for a lifetime. She’d been a librarian ten times longer than Arpix, who had only recently qualified when disaster struck. But where Jost seemed undone by the fire, clinging to the remnants of her old station, Meelan had found the loss of his money and responsibility as his family’s heir to be a new kind of freedom, though the options for exercising that freedom were now very limited. He missed his family. Sometimes he called his sister’s name in the night. But the privilege and wealth had slipped from his broad shoulders very easily.

Attamast rose first, from behind them, near full and casting its faintly green light across the plain. Chenga, smaller and only half-full, crested the shoulder of a mountain an hour later, throwing its whiter light in opposition to Attamast’s. The dust cloud revealed itself once more, much closer, illuminated by the two moons, throwing one shadow towards them and a second back the way the strangers had come. Jella lit the fire bowl and the light of twin moons soon gilded its plume of smoke too while the orange glow from within shone out through the earthenware’s perforations.

“Damn, they’re fast,” Meelan said.

“They’re going to need to be.” Behind them, back where the roots of the mountain range sank beneath the plain, a wall of dust glowed in the moonlight. Scores in pursuit. Hundreds maybe. Nobody was faster than a skeer runner. Maybe on a horse a man would be faster, but even then Arpix had been told that a skeer runner could wear a horse down. Their endurance was a thing of legend. Or so Arpix had been told. Back in his old life nobody except a few academics had even heard of the skeer until rumours had started to circulate that they had been behind the canith migration, the thing from which the canith had run and that had resulted in their armies piling up against the walls of Crath.

The strangers got to within a mile of the plateau’s edge before Jella spotted the first flier. “They’re never going to make it.” She pointed.

Within a short while they could make out five fliers in tight formation, closing rapidly on their prey. Skeer fliers were less robust than skeer runners, who in turn were less robust than skeer soldiers, but even so Arpix had little doubt that a single one of the creatures could slaughter him and all his companions without effort. They were fast, armoured, all spikes and cutting edges, bigger than a man, and of course they could descend upon you at great speed from any angle. Meelan said they looked like winged spiders made of bone. It wasn’t accurate but it did them some justice.

“They might make it...” Arpix had climbed the slopes from the plain to the plateau on two occasions and it had been a real struggle. The gap between the strangers’ dust vanishing from view and their tiny figures reappearing as they crested the top of the tumbled cliffs was remarkably short. So short, in fact, that Arpix lost all confidence that the strangers were human.

“Canith?” Meelan muttered.

If it wasn’t too late to douse the fire bowl Arpix might have done so. A cold hand closed around his heart as he realised that Jost might have been right all along. He could have invited their deaths among them. But, instead of taking action, he stood rooted to the spot watching the chase unfold.

The fliers were close too. Close enough to see the hanging clusters of their legs rather than just the flashing of their wings catching the light.

“Canith!” Jella’s exclamation started as a yelp before she brought it under control. Years in the Dust had replaced her girth with a grim kind of fortitude.

There were three of them, running hard. Arpix would be stumbling after two hundred yards if he tried to run that fast, but this trio had been at it for ten miles and more. The one at the rear seemed to be hurting and the other two were holding back, not ready to abandon him.

“Come on!” Meelan shouted. “Run!”

But with little more than a hundred yards to go before the canith reached the humans, the skeer dived upon them.

The smallest of the canith seemed to sense the attack and turned, drawing a sword that stole the colours of the moonlight and burned with it. The other two stopped running, one brandishing a weapon too small to see, the other picking up a rock.

“A rock?” Arpix snorted. He hadn’t intended to speak but the contest seemed so unequal.

What followed happened too quickly for Arpix to follow the detail. It seemed that the first flier to attack the sword-wielder fell apart into pieces, as if it had hit a pane of very thick glass hard enough to shatter itself. The other two canith dived and rolled and twisted and ran. The sword-wielder appeared to slice entirely through the thickness of a flier’s body, and a heartbeat later to swing up through the lattice of skeer legs seeking to skewer her and momentarily ride the largest of the fliers before decapitating it.

In the space of thirty heartbeats the fliers were reduced to a heap of twitching limbs and scintillating wings. The larger two canith took the lead, the shorter of these two supporting the tallest, who appeared to have been injured. The sword-wielder followed, facing back the way they’d come, challenging the night.

“Damn...” Meelan shook his head in disbelief.

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