
students' quarters, rented out to as many aspiring young scholars as could fit in a room.
The taverns that dotted every corner were probably the oldest structures that retained
their purpose. Across the troubled maelstrom of time, people always need a beer.
The tavern known as the Blackbird's Nest was awash in the dark-robed scholars who
gave it its name. Its ceiling was low and black-beamed, its ancient walls as deep as a
man's arm from hand to elbow, its windows sunk in alcoves. The feet of untold
generations of drinkers and debaters had worn troughs into the stone of its floor; their
shoulders had polished the stone walls black and smooth. Basil had been coming there
since he was a young student, fresh off the farm--not as many years ago as he liked to
think. He'd met Elton and Cassius there, accomplished scholars of two years' standing.
They had advised him on University ways, from simple matters like letting your hair
grow long to avoid looking like a country bumpkin and always giving way to a
magis-ter on the street to the intricacies of getting credit in a tavern and the maximum
number of lectures he might attend without paying the magister a fee. And they'd
invited him along with them to meet the brilliant young Doctor of Metaphysics, Leonard
Rugg, known for his generosity with the punchbowl and his stimulating debates on
everything from women to the meaning of the stars.
For all four men, the meeting had been a momentous one. The three young scholars had
found a shrewd mentor; Rugg had found three kindred spirits. He was not surprised
when each of them had resisted the world's call for educated men to stock its law courts
and schoolrooms, its nobles' secretarial staffs and charitable institutions. Elton, Cassius,
and finally St Cloud remained at University, become Fellows and then Doctors of their
chosen subjects, and had been licensed to lecture by the Governors. The four of them had
become a familiar sight: Basil St Cloud of History, sturdy and pale, with perennially
stubbled cheeks and black, unruly hair; Thomas Elton of Astronomy, stocky and
cheerful; Lucas Cassius of Mathematics, lean and saturnine; and Leonard Rugg of
Metaphysics, not nearly as old as he pretended to be, his skin pink, his forehead high, his
thinning reddish hair standing out from his scalp like new-shorn fleece.
"Time marches on," Rugg was saying testily to Cassius, "but the boy with the brandy is
slower than a tart with a noble client. And didn't you say young St Cloud and Elton were
coming ?"
"On their way," the mathematician answered. "Remember, patience is the virtue of the
truly wise."
Rugg snorted. "Nonsense. Patience gets you nothing but a cold bed. Who's been filling
your head with platitudes, eh? Your old mother?"
"Placid," Cassius said smugly, "in his Of Manners and Morals. I remember you lecturing
on it, Leonard. You were, of course, much more eloquent at the time."
"Don't you quote Placid to me, you damned cabbage-counter. Always thought Placid
was a damned fool," Rugg said, "when he wasn't being a genius. Ah, here's the brandy!"