Beneath Ceaseless Skies #196 Page 2
Gwyn rubbed his blisters together and closed his eyes. Waited for the whipcord pain to ease.
“I found something,” Mercher told him. “In the house. You should see it, Gwyn.”
It was curiosity that finally brought him to his feet. He took Mercher’s hand in his own and said: “Show me.”
The belly of the cottage was worse than it looked from the outside, and Gwyn stumbled among broken stone and wood as Mercher led him under the leaning lintel of a cellar door. They scrambled through the space that was left, the smell of must and damp and rot turning into something richer. The stairs were chiselled down into living land itself, and the room at the bottom was softened by sunlight that sought its way inside with the water through a high gap in the wall.
Rising up out of the ankle-deep pool at the bottom were blossoms of dead stone. Grey and fragile, drained of all but the faintest echoes of their former colours like flowers pressed too long in an old book. But their shapes endured still: tapering stalagmites as delicate as sapling trees, and globular nodes that looked as though they had bubbled up out of a wound.
The barest thread of a long-buried secret brushed against Gwyn’s thoughts. “This is a stone garden,” he said. “Nothing remembers for as long as stone. Or as deep. And when they are given proper care they can be coaxed to offer up just the thinnest sliver of what they’ve seen and heard. Or of what we have seen and heard. To remember the act of remembering.”
Mercher inclined his head and rested his hand at his waist. Just above where the pommel of his sword should be. “What should we do with it?”
Gwyn crouched down and ran his fingers through the dozen bead-like pebbles that had clustered in a hollow where the stream pooled deep and brackish. The stones were cracked through, the colour and texture of water just begun to freeze. In the gloaming they almost glowed with their own light, colours shifting underneath the surface like ribbons in the winter sky.
Stone seeds.
He fumbled them into his palm, dropped them carefully into the pouch on his belt, and stood.
“Help me clear some of this mess out of the way,” he said, a slow conviction settling into every part of his body. “We have some time before it’s dark.”
* * *
Wisp o’ the Marsh
Other names: desire-destroys-me; the want unmet; wispstone.
So many fragments. So deep that he can dive down into them and forget how to breathe the present.
That first fumble in the hay barn and the scent of ripened grass is thick enough to drown in—mixing into the peculiar excitement of adolescence that’s almost an anxiety.
Don’t let me mess this up. Goddess, please, don’t let him stop.
The smoke and venom of his first love. The one that he does not choose himself. The one that chooses him, and that he cannot escape. The pain is like a borehole in raw flesh, threatening to pull him in.
I would have shared every year and caught breath of my life with you. Now all of it is poison.
Afterwards he thinks he cannot love anything again. That his world has wintered into longing, where the only beauty is in the austere slow death that lives ice and wasteland. Sitting in the darkness of his prison cell, the pain threatens to consume him from inside. Liquefy his whole being like a pupa trapped inside a chrysalis.
I will not let you die in here, Mercher tells him, one firm hand on his shoulder. Start walking.
The heat of Mercher’s body wending tight into his own. Breathing the same air that he himself is breathing as they suffocate one another to stay warm. Their footsteps in the unbroken snow marking the path of their flight behind. The want does not come then. It does not come until much later.
And then? The hesitant tremor in Mercher’s fingertips like an ice dam afraid that it might burst. And the snow-melt patience of waiting, watching him unwound. So many years when want was a clenched fist. Could that ever be undone?
Only in the deepest, silent moments. The tipping points that balance upon the apex of the heart.
I’m tired now, and old. I have to leave. Come with me.
* * *
Better to sleep out under canvas than in the ruin of the house. The moon above the moor and the deep thrum of the owl that carried on forever in the hush.
They rose with the light and worked long into the sunrise clearing a space beneath the broken roof, like the hollow an animal makes in the bracken by circling itself to sleep. Unloading the wood-burner from the wagon and coaxing it into place against the chimney breast was harder, and the tear in Gwyn’s shoulder tugged like wool caught in a wall.
Then shadows reached out for the evening, and Mercher’s destrier pawed at the low-grazed grass, wounding the ground with its impatience. Mercher packed his things in silence. Still so much of life laid out ahead of him and so little left behind, until every decision must feel like the rending of the earth. Gwyn smiled to himself and laid the wood into the open stove.
“Are you going to be all right?” Mercher asked.
“I have lived through greater wars than rebuilding dry stone wall and slating roofs, love.”
Mercher shook his head and knelt down on the bare stone next to him. “It is stupid of me to worry.”
“No. But it doesn’t help to think that something will come true just because you fear it will.”
Gwyn twisted dry grass over between his hands and worked it into a space amongst the kindling. So long since he had even had to light fires for himself.
How did I let it get this bad?
“Ride,” he told Mercher, picking through the rubble to the doorway so that he could watch him leave. “Our new queen will need your council, and your blade. I promise you, when you come back, it will not be to sleep on rubble.”
“Yes, my lord.”
Once, that name, perhaps. Not any more. And not ever again.
On the threshold, Mercher took his hand and dropped a single stone seed into his open palm. Blood red and laced with fire. “I found it when we were clearing the outlet for the stream,” he said. “Plant it for me.”
Gwyn did not have the heart to tell him what the seed was, or how much pain it contained. He just watched Mercher’s back, rod-straight in the saddle, and waited for the destrier to pick its way down the wending track into the village.
The wind poured down off of the moors behind them both, flowing downhill from where winter still clung to the earth. Gwyn thumbed the stone seed against his palm until it bit against the rawness of his blisters. Until he could imagine all of his old wounds opening to engulf it, and he would have no choice but to dig it out.
* * *
Bloodglass
Other names: heartspear; cut-me-quick; the wound unhealed.
An old pain. Or many, layered one on top of the other over all the long years of living. The sharp breathlessness of old muscle tearing, or the deep ache of young joints worked near to breaking. So many weeks, in the wet dark of the cell where his brother had left him to disappear. His first love’s blood still drying on his hands.
Pushing his meals away, and letting the dull certainty of death creep outwards from his empty stomach into every frostbitten toe and finger.
It doesn’t end. It never ends.
Goddess, let me sleep a while.
And then the siege goes on and on beyond the wake carved out by that flight from Caer Isel. Grim lines on Mercher’s brow as he sends the dead down onto the butcher’s block. Choosing between that and losing everything they have fought for. The other things that matter less: dignity, humanity, pride. For six months it feels like the sun never rises. Just cold wet moonlight and the sound of swords beyond the walls.
How long can we go on?
No one knows the answer, and none of them are certain what they will be capable of before the end.
And when it comes? No ringing bells or flying flags. Just a wound that will not stop bleeding on his brother’s thigh and a slow blight that seeps up from the southern lands that Gwyn can never capture. Crops tha
t fail year upon miserable year, until all of it is ash.
Those same hunger pangs ache back into the five-month winter of his childhood, he and his brother wasting so many futile hours digging graves into the frozen earth. By the time his uncle stops breathing, they have given up on trying. Gwyn lays his uncle’s body on the hoarfrost and they cover it with the stones that have been set aside to finish up the wall. His hands and his brother’s hands, hard and clumsy with the cold. When it is done, the cairn is ugly and imperfect. It seems a greater injury than death, to the man who taught them how to scoop the hearting stones into walls that will stand long after all of them are dead.
* * *
Gwyn started from the memory with a jolt that tugged every tendon taut. The feeling of blood on his hands and his arms. It was a long time since he had woken alone, robbed of the luxury of Mercher’s deep and steady breath to lull him back to sanity. The sky was still dark through the fractured beams. Stars sharp. The bloodstone bit into the blisters on his palm, tugging his thoughts back to memories of digging in the frost. Gwyn shivered and rose with the finches in the knot of hawthorn outside the empty door.
By the time the sun crested the lip of the horizon, a grey and lifeless rain was falling—patterning the dirty glass that still clung in the windows. A thousand silver threads, snaking to the sill. It was a day to take comfort in the smallness of life itself. When everything narrowed to the space that he was standing in.
Gwyn lit the wood in the stove and worked with what they had brought up from the village. Honey and milk, scalded over the fire. Baker’s yeast, and a coarse flour ground on millstones to the north where wheat would still grow. It warmed his fingers as he brought the dough together and worked it to compliance. The most fundamental stuff of life.
But his eyes kept finding the fat drops of rain dripping off of the few tiles left on the ruined roof. The land outside was smothered in the kind of low cloud that felt like it could lift to reveal a world changed beyond all recognition. Or the kind that harboured things that were not human but sought to be.
And Mercher was out there somewhere. Riding north towards the capital in the fog and the rain. Had he lost his way out there? Fated to wander forever among the hollow hills?
And all that I can do about it is bake bread.
The powerlessness came breathless unexpected. He tried to focus on the softness of the dough, on the rhythm of it, but it was futile. As it rose on the shelf above the stove, Gwyn sat on the rotten sill of the window and simply watched the rain fall.
If I let myself go on like this, I will lose my mind.
He put the bread into the oven and picked his way down the slick stairs into the stone garden. The stream had gorged itself on rainwater and overflowed the narrow channel that they had cleared for it. Viscous silver water that almost reached his ankles. He felt with blind fingers beneath the surface for the outlet and the debris stopping the stream from seeking down into the earth. Cleared away the grey and fragile shards of the things that had grown here before. He walked them up the stairs by the bucket-load. Took them out into the rain, and gave them to the moor. Inch by inch, he began to uncover the snaking cracks where he had dropped his seed stones into the desolation of the garden.
The smell of burning brought him back into himself and sent him stumbling for the oven. He burned his hands on the slab of black-hot bread and dropped it on the wet slate floor with frustration and disgust. He sank down to his haunches and pressed his burned hands onto the wet stone. Tomorrow, he would walk down into the village to get more flour, and he would try again.
* * *
Cavespire
Other names: the tipping-point; chrysalis; gatekeeper; the fulcrum.
That terrible feeling of waiting. Crouching in the gorse flower on the moor.
He is sixteen and hunched low with a dozen other men and women not much older. None of them know what they are doing. No one but his brother. And he is so strong. So certain. Gwyn would follow him down into the mouth of the underworld if he asked. Next to that, finding a way to murder a king seems easy.
Something must be done, Gwyn.
His first love at his side for all those grey and desperate hours, shifting amongst the thorns and complaining. Trying to persuade him to leave, to be anywhere but here, while Gwyn watches his brother’s silhouette against the low sky. Waiting for the signal. He does not know when he stopped listening to his lover, only that the resistance no longer means anything against the banked fires of his rage.
The worst comes when his brother waves from the hilltop with the yellow lining of his cloak, and Gwyn slides down on his heels to lie upon the road. His world narrows to the wet gravel underneath his cheek. The hooves and feet and wagons of the approaching guards. Praying under his breath that they don’t notice the tremor in the standing water from the shaking in his hand, or put a crossbow bolt through him before creeping forwards to investigate the dead man wearing their king’s colours.
The thought of his uncle is bound around that memory. Ghost whispering for vengeance, weighed down by a few hundred ugly and ill-fitting stones. And from there? One betrayal bleeds into another and he is fighting for his life against a dozen knights like silver ghosts in alleys of blue morning. When it is done, the cobblestones are black with blood. Bodies laid out in the spaces where his friends had been. His brother holding out the crossbow, stock first, eyes as hard as polished stones.
His brother says: you know who told them where to find us, Gwyn. He’s been trying to get you to leave us for years. You’ve never listened. Now half of our people are dead and it’s on you to make it right.
His finger wavers on the trigger, staring into the face of a first love who he had worshipped with every thread and vein in his body.
You won’t do it, Gwyn. I know you.
He closes his eyes. His heart. Closes his finger on the trigger.
And now the world is hollowed out inside. It can never be made whole.
He makes easy prey for the king’s men after that, and Caer Isel seems fitting punishment. Grey and silent-empty with its garrison of crows. He barely even notices when one king falls and another takes his place. When the-king-his-brother leaves him in the dark. Waiting for the crows to pick his eyes out of his body and render him to nothing.
A hand grasps his and pulls him to his feet. Grey steel eyes, and a feeling like coming to the surface after so long drifting in water the same colour as a sword. Mercher as solid and as real as though he’s shaped out of the stone. Everything resting on the answer to one last and desperate aching towards life.
Will you help me get out of here?
The battlements of Dinas Pair at the height of the siege, with the whole city gathered below him to hear. The rain glancing off of Mercher’s pauldrons and his gauntlet on Gwyn’s shoulder. Thousands of expectant eyes waiting for him to tell them that they aren’t all going to die. To find some hope in all this hopelessness.
And, at last, he and his brother standing in the high hall. Albany between them with her red hair and her silver tongue. She reaches out with both her hands for them. Unsheathing her knife, to seal the only sort of peace they can have the only way that they can seal it: with their own hands, in their own blood.
* * *
Gwyn had not expected the village to be easy. He had had no misconceptions about walking out of his castle and slotting neatly back into a life abandoned more than half his years ago.
He knew that everyone he met would be suspicious, and some to be angry, and they were, but worse than that were the ones that were afraid. The men and women who bowed their heads and hurried their children away, the way done in stories, when the lands and their people were ruled by fickle monsters that sat on poison thrones. The way they had done in his youth, when King Estraven’s justicars and magistrates passed through. He could not think of anything to say that did not make it worse. That did not push him further away from the lives that these people had gone on living while he planned ambushes, escapes,
and speeches.
He paid for what he needed, with coin that wouldn’t last as long as it needed to. Flour and honey. Seeds for muskmint and mint balm, knitbone and bear’s foot. A dark mood blowing through him until he noticed the moss-green beads in a tiny glass vial amongst paper packets bearing the names of herbs and flowers.
She saw him looking. The woman on the stall, who was older than a mountain and as weathered as the moor. Something in the way he stared must have made her smile and talk, and when she did, the darkness in his blood began to thin and fray.
“You have taken Tabitha’s old house up on the moor,” she said, twisting the vial of green stone seeds between a knotted finger and a thumb. “Then take this. When the songsmith calls to you, it’s wise to answer him.”
She told him that she kept a stone garden of her own somewhere. And yes, with time, perhaps she’d show him. In return he promised her whatever seeds his would yield, if he could get it to bear fruit. Goddess bless her, but she did not tell him how hard that could be. He kept his pace steady as he walked back up the track towards the cottage.
That afternoon he knelt in the turned earth between the stacked-up slates and the crumbling wall and nurtured the tiny seeds, echoes of knitbone and muskmint, into wide rows cut in the soil. In the evening he took the songsmith from his vial and rolled the stone seeds over on themselves. The rich umber of the candlelight caught on the thinnest threads of gold spidering across its surface. Like looking down on the land from high above, seeing the places where all the living things had trodden.
* * *
Mapstone
Other names: songsmith; the pathfinder; map-of-the-mountains.
The snow unbroken north of Caer Isel, and Gwyn wades through it like deep water. The wound on Mercher’s leg leaks red into the white, and the sound of hunting dogs catches in the wind blowing back towards the mountains. At any moment, red guards could come pouring into this hollow, and his brother’s men could drag him back to that grey tower. Gwyn’s mind races but will not turn to worry. So long with nothing but the dripping damp for company. The singing of a hundred thousand crows. So long since he was free beneath the winter sky.