Kage Baker - The Anvil of the World

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THE ANVIL OF THE WORLD
Kage Baker
A TOM DOHERTY ASSOCIATES BOOK NEW YORK
This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in this novel are either fictitious or are used fictitiously.
THE ANVIL OF THE WORLD
Copyright © 2003 by Kage Baker
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book, or portions thereof, in any form.
A Tor Book
Published by Tom Doherty Associates, LLC
175 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY 10010
www.tor.com
Tor® is a registered trademark of Tom Doherty Associates, LLC.
ISBN 0-765-34907-8 EAN 975-0765-34907-1
First edition: August 2003
First mass market edition: December 2004
Printed in the United States of America
To LINN PRENTIS
Without whom my first novel would have been thrown off
the front porch into Pismo Creek, to the edification of none
but a transient population of mallards.
TROON, the golden city, sat within high walls on a plain a thousand miles wide. The
plain was golden with barley.
The granaries of Troon were immense, towering over the city like giants, taller even
than its endlessly revolving windmills. Dust sifted down into its streets and filled its air
in the Month of the Red Moon and in every other month, for that matter, but most
especially in that month, when the harvest was brought in from the plain in long lines of
creaking carts, raising more dust, which lay like a fine powder of gold on every dome
and spire and harvester's hut. All the people of Troon suffered from chronic
emphysema. Priding itself as it did, however, on being the world's breadbasket, Troon
put up with the emphysema. Wheezing was considered refined, and the social event of
the year was the Festival of Respiratory Masks.
On the fifth day of the Month of Chaff Storms, as a cold wind scoured the walls of
Troon with stubble and husks, a man in a fish mask sat at a table in the Civic Ballroom
and wished he were anywhere else.
He belonged to that race called the Children of the Sun, and, like others of his kind, he
had skin and hair the color of a sunrise. They were an energetic, sanguine, and
mechanically minded people, tracing their lineage back to a liaison between a smith god
and a fire goddess somewhere in the deeps of time. They were consequently given to
sins of an ecological nature (the slag heaps from their smelters were mountainous), and
they were also quarrelsome (their blood feuds were legendary).
It was a particularly nasty blood feud that had sent the man in the fish mask fleeing to
distant Troon, and he now sat alone at a table, watching the masked dancers as he
glumly sipped beer through a long straw. It wasn't his kind of party, but his cousin (to
whom he had fled) insisted he attend. The masked ball was held on the final night of a
week of breathless celebration, and everyone of distinction in Troon society was there.
"Er—Smith?"
The man in the mask turned his head, peering through the domed lenses of his fish
eyes. The name Smith was an alias, only the latest of many the man had used. He got
awkwardly to his feet as he saw his cousin approaching. His cousin's costume was fine
and elaborate, robes of red-gold brocade and a fire efrit mask. No less elaborate was the
costume of the lady his cousin had in tow: butterfly wings of green and purple foil and a
butterfly mask of the same material.
"This, madam, is Smith. My caravan master," explained his cousin. "A most
experienced veteran of transport. A man in whose expert hands you may trust the rarest
of commodities."
This was not exactly true. Smith had never led a caravan in his life, but his cousin's
freight and passenger service had lost its former master to a vendetta on the day of
Smith's sudden arrival in Troon, so Smith was learning the business.
"How nice to meet you," said the woman in the mask, and shot out a black and
curling tongue. Smith started, but the tongue was merely a feature of the mask, for it was
hollow, and she poked it now into a tall glass of punch.
"Honor on your house, lady," Smith murmured.
His cousin coughed, and said, "Smith, this is Lady Seven Butterflies of Seven
Butterflies Studio. You will be privileged to transport her celebrated creations!"
"I'm delighted," said Smith, bowing. "Rely on me, lady."
But Lady Seven Butterflies had lost interest in him and fluttered off to the punch
bowl. His cousin leaned close and grabbed him by the shoulder. They bumped
papier-mâché faces as he hissed, "Very important client! Almost ready to sign a contract
granting us exclusive transport rights! Used to go with Stone and Son until they broke
goods in transit. Vital we catch the ball, cousin!"
Smith nodded sagely. "Right. What are we shipping for her?"
"One gross of glass butterflies, what else?" said his cousin impatiently, and turned to
pursue the lady. Smith sat down again. It was a good thing his new job would require
him to be on the open road a lot. He didn't think people in Troon got enough oxygen.
He watched the dancers awhile in their stately pavanes, watched the symmetrical
patterns their trailing brocades left in the rich layer of floor dust, and brooded on the
sequence of events that had brought him here, beginning with an innocent walk to the
corner for an order of fried eel.
That he had reached that time in life when really good fried eel was at least as
interesting as romance made his subsequent misadventure all the more unexpected. Nor
was he especially attractive. Even the girl's brothers had to admit there must have been a
mistake on somebody's part, though they weren't about to retract their vow to see
Smith's head on a pike, since without benefit of hot-blooded youth or personal beauty,
he had nevertheless sent three of their kinsmen to the morgue.
He sighed now, swirling his beer and noting in disgust the fine sediment of dirt at the
bottom of the glass. He thought of waving for a waiter, but his cousin came bustling up
again with somebody new in tow.
"...with complete confidence, my lord. The man is a seasoned veteran of the roads.
Er—Smith! I have the great honor of commending to your care the very noble Lord
Ermenwyr of the House Kingfisher."
"Honor to your house, lord," said Smith, rising to his feet though he'd never heard of
the House Kingfisher.
Lord Ermenwyr was doubled over in a coughing fit. When he straightened up,
dabbing at his lips with an embroidered handkerchief, Smith beheld a slender young
man. A pomaded and spangled beard was visible below his half mask, which was that
of a unicorn's head. He had extended the unicorn theme to an elaborate codpiece, from
which a silver horn spiraled up suggestively. The eyes behind the mask had the glitter
of fever.
"Hello," he croaked. "So you're the fellow taking me to Salesh-by-the-Sea? I hope
you've had some training as a psychopomp too. I expect to die en route."
"His lordship is pleased to be humorous," said Smith's cousin, wringing his hands.
"His lord father has paid a great deal for his passage to the health resort at Salesh, and I
have written to assure him in the strongest terms that Lord Ermenwyr will arrive there
safely."
"Really?" said Lord Ermenwyr. "Watch this, then." He reached out with the toe of his
boot and drew a bull's-eye in the dust. Stepping back several paces, he hawked and spat
in a neat arc, hitting the center of the target with a gob of blood.
"You see?" he said brightly, as Smith and his cousin stared. "Utterly moribund. Don't
worry, though; I've got embalming spices in my luggage, and Daddy won't mind my
early demise much, whatever he may have written."
Smith's cousin closed his mouth, then said hastily, "It's simply the inconvenience of
our local weather, my lord. I myself coughed up a little blood not an hour ago. It passes
with the first winter rains!"
"I'll be in Hell or Salesh by the time they start, I devoutly hope," snarled the young
man. He turned a gimlet eye on Smith. "Well, caravan master, I suppose we're starting at
some ungodly hour in the morning? If I'm still moaning on my painful couch at
cockcrow, you'll leave without me, no doubt?"
"The caravan departs from the central staging area by the West Gate an hour before
dawn, my lord," said Smith's cousin helpfully.
"Fine," said Lord Ermenwyr, and turned unsteadily on his heel. "I'm going to go get
laid while I'm still among the living, then." He staggered off into the crowd, hitching up
his spangled tights, and Smith looked at his cousin.
"Does he have anything catching?" he demanded.
"No! No! Delicate lungs, that's all," chattered his cousin. "I believe his lord father's apt
phrase was—" From the depths of his brocade he drew out a heavy, folded parchment to
which was affixed a ponderous seal of black wax. "Here we are. 'Hothouse lily.' In any
case the young lord will be traveling with a private nurse and ample store of physic, so
your sole concern will be conveying him in one piece to Salesh-by-the-Sea."
"And what if he dies?" asked Smith.
His cousin shivered and, looking quickly at the letter as though it might overhear
him, folded it again and thrust it out of sight. "That would be very unfortunate indeed.
His lord father is a powerful man, cousin. He's paid a great deal for this passage."
Smith sighed.
"The lad'll be in a palanquin the whole way," added his cousin, as though that
answered everything. "You'll have him there in no time. A routine trip. Your first of
many, I'm certain, to the continued honor and glory of our house. Ah! You'll excuse
me—I must go speak to..." He turned and fled into the crowd, in pursuit of some other
bedizened customer.
Smith sat down, and took another sip of his beer before he remembered the mud at
the bottom of the glass.
The gonging of the cistern clock in Smith's apartment warren woke him, and he was
up and pulling on his coat in very little time. He paused before arming himself,
considering his stock of hand weapons. He settled for a pair of boot knives and a
machete; nothing more would be needed, surely, for a routine trip to the coast.
He was, accordingly, surprised when his cousin met him at the West Gate in the
predawn gloom with a pair of pistol-bows and a bolt bandoleer.
"You've used these before?" his cousin asked, draping the bandoleer over Smith's
shoulder and buckling it in place.
"Yes, but—you said—"
"Yes, I know, it's all routine, easiest road there is, but just consider this as insurance.
Eh? And it makes a man look dangerous and competent, and that's what the passengers
want to see in a caravan master," explained his cousin. "There you are! The picture of
menace. Now, here's the cargo and passenger manifest." He thrust an open scroll at
Smith. Smith took it and read, as his cousin ran off to shriek orders at the porters, who
were loading what looked like immense violet eggs into one of the transport carts.
There was, indeed, a gross of glass butterflies, being shipped from Seven Butterflies
studio to the Lady Katmile of Silver Anvil House in Port Ward'b. To Be Handled With
Exquisite Care.
There were twenty sacks of superfine cake flour from Old Troon Mills, destined for a
bakery in Lesser Salesh. There were thirty boxes of mineral pigments from the strip
mines in Outer Troon, to be delivered to Starfire Studio in Salesh Hills. No eggs, though,
violet or otherwise.
The passengers were listed as Lytan and Demara Smith and Family, custom jewelry
designers, of Salesh Hills; Parradan Smith, courier, of Mount Flame City; Lord
Ermenwyr of the House Kingfisher, and Servant. All Children of the Sun.
Also listed was one Ronrishim Flowering Reed, herbalist, of Salesh-by-the-Sea. From
his name he was probably a Yendri, one of the forest people who occasionally fought
guerrilla wars with the Children of the Sun over what they felt was excessive logging.
Smith looked out at the boarding area and spotted the Yendri, taller than the other
passengers, wearing fewer clothes, and standing a little apart with an aloof expression.
The Yendri people had skin that ranged in color from a gently olive complexion to
outright damn green, and were willowy and graceful and everything you'd expect in a
forest-dwelling race. They were thought by the Children of the Sun to be arrogant,
uncivilized, untrustworthy, and sexually insatiable (when not perversely effeminate).
They said exactly the same things about the Children of the Sun.
The other passengers were equally easy to identify. The Smiths were clearly the
young couple huddled with a screaming baby, waving a sugar stick and stuffed toy at
him while their other little ones ran back and forth merrily and got in the way of the
sweating porters. Parradan Smith must be the well-dressed man leaning against a news
kiosk, reading a broadside sheet. Lord Ermenwyr, who had evidently not died in the
night, sat a little apart from the others on one of many expensive-looking trunks piled
beside a curtained palanquin.
He had changed his unicorn costume for a black tailcoat and top boots, and combed
the spangles out of his beard and mustache. It failed to make him look less like the
pasty-faced boy he was, though his features were even and handsome. His eyes were
unnervingly sharp, fixed on the screaming infant with perfectly astonishing
malevolence. He glanced up, spotted Smith, and leaped to his feet.
"You! Caravan Master. Is that damned brat going to squall the whole trip? Is it?" he
demanded, folding his arms as Smith approached him.
"I don't think so," said Smith, staring down at Lord Ermenwyr's eyes. His pupils were
like pinpoints, perhaps because of whatever drug the lordling was smoking in the long
jade tube he presently had clenched between his teeth. It produced trailing purple
clouds, vaguely sweet-scented. "Should you really be—"
"Smoking? It's my medication, damn you! If that child isn't silenced at once, I'll not be
answerable for the consequences. I'm a sick man—"
"Master, you're raving again," said a silken voice from behind the curtains of the
palanquin. "Stop that at once."
"—And if I'm harried to an early grave, or should I say an earlier grave, well then,
Caravan Master, you'll pay for it in ways you can't even begin to—"
"Nursie warned you," said the voice, and an arm flashed between the curtains and
caught Lord Ermenwyr around the knees. He vanished backward into the depths of the
palanquin with a yelp, and there were sounds of a violent struggle as the palanquin
rocked on its base. Smith stepped quickly away.
"Er—Smith!" cried his cousin. "I'd like you to meet your subordinates."
Smith turned to see a crowd of caravaneers who clearly disliked being described as
his subordinates. They gave him a unanimous resentful stare as he approached.
"May I present the esteemed keymen? Keyman Crucible, Keyman Smith, Keyman
Bellows, Keyman Pinion, Keyman Smith."
They were, as all keymen, compact fellows with tremendously developed arms and
muscle-bulging legs, and so alike they might have been quintuplets.
"Nice meeting you," said Smith. They grunted at him.
"This is your runner." His cousin placed his hands on the shoulders of a very young,
very skinny girl. She wore the red uniform and carried the brass trumpet of her
profession, but she was far from the curvaceous gymnast Smith fantasized about when
he fantasized about runners. She glowered up at Smith's cousin.
"Take your hands off me or you'll hear from my mother house," she said. Smith's
cousin withdrew his hands as though she were a live coal.
"Young Burnbright hasn't earned her full certification, yet, but she's hoping to do so in
our service," he said delicately. "If all goes well, that is. And here, Smith, is our culinary
artist! May I present the two-time winner of the Troon Municipal Bakeoff? Mrs. Smith."
Mrs. Smith was large and not particularly young, though she had a certain majesty of
bearing. She looked sourly on Smith.
"Do you do fried eel?" Smith asked hopefully.
"Perhaps," she said. "If I'm properly motivated. If I have the proper pans." She spat out
the last word with bewildering venom, turning her glare on Smith's cousin.
He wrung his hands. "Now, dear Mrs. Smith—I'm sure you'll manage without the
extra utensils, this one time. It was necessary."
"Leaving half my kitchen behind for those bloody things?" Mrs. Smith demanded,
pointing at the carts laden with giant eggs. "They take up three times the room of an
ordinary shipment! What was wrong with regular crates, I'd like to know?"
"In addition to her other talents, Lady Seven Butterflies is a genius at innovative
packing and insulation," said Smith's cousin earnestly. "She had the inspiration from
Nature itself, you see. What, after all, is the perfect protective shape devised by Nature?
The egg, of course—"
"Balls," said Mrs. Smith.
"—with its ovoid shape, elegantly simple yet strong, a holistic solution providing
plenty of insulating space for the most fragile creations—"
"How am I going to feed my boys, let alone serve up the gourmet experience for
passengers so grandiloquently advertised on your handbills, you imbecile man?"
shouted Mrs. Smith.
"We'll work something out," said Smith, stepping between them. "Look, I'm traveling
pretty light. Maybe we can take some of your pans in the lead cart?"
Mrs. Smith considered him, one eyebrow raised. "An intelligent suggestion," she said,
mollified, as Pinion and Crucible seized up a vast crate marked KITCHEN and hurried
with it to Smith's cart. "We may get on, young Smith."
"Of course you will," said Smith's cousin, and fled.
It was nearly light. Those whose duty it was came yawning and shivering to the West
Gate, bending to the spokes of the great windlass. The gate rose slowly in its grooves,
and a cold wind swept in off the plain and sent spirals of dust into the pink air. A
trumpeter mounted the turret by the gate and announced by his blast that another day of
commerce had begun, for better or worse, and Burnbright answered with a fanfare to let
the passengers know that it was time to board.
The keymen mounted to their posts and began cranking the mighty assemblage of
gears and springs in each lead cart. The passengers took their seats, with the Smiths'
baby still crying dismally, as the last of the luggage was loaded by the porters. There
was a moment of dithering with Lord Ermenwyr's palanquin until it was lifted and
lashed in place atop his trunks. Purple fumes escaped between the fluttering curtains, so
it was evident he was still alive in there, if preserving a sullen silence.
Mrs. Smith mounted to a seat beside Crucible, pulled a pair of dust goggles over her
eyes, and with unhurried majesty drew out a smoking tube and packed it with a
particularly pungent blend of amberleaf. She held a clever little device of flicking flint
and steel to its tip, shielding it from the wind as she attempted to ignite the amberleaf.
Burnbright sprinted to the front of the line, backing out through the gate and calling
directions to the porters as they wrestled the wheels of the lead cart into the grooves in
the red road, worn deep by time and utility. Smith's cousin clasped his hands and
prayed, as he always did at this point; and Smith, realizing belatedly that he was
supposed to be in the lead cart beside Pinion, ran for it and vaulted into his seat, or
attempted to, because the crate marked KITCHEN occupied that space.
Pinion just looked at him, poised over the tight-wound coil. Smith, determined to
show he was game, climbed up and perched awkwardly atop the crate. He looked
forward at Burnbright and waved.
She lifted her trumpet and blew the staccato call for departure. Then she turned and
ran forward, swift as flight; for behind her the keymen threw the release pins, and the
caravan lurched rumbling out through the gate, late as usual, a dozen linked carts
impelled by gear-and-spring engines, following the grooved stone, bearing their
disparate cargo.
Mrs. Smith got her tube going at last and leaned back, holding it elegantly between
the first two fingers of her left hand, blowing a plume of smoke like a banner. In the cart
behind her, the Yendri coughed and waved fumes away, cursing. The rising sun struck
flame on the flare of Burnbright's trumpet.
They were off.
"This is pretty easy," remarked Smith after the first hour of travel. Troon was a distant
clutch of towers behind them. Before them and to all sides spread the wide yellow
fields, unrelieved but for the occasional bump of a distant harvest village. The red road
stretched ahead, two grooved lanes running west to the infinite horizon, two parallels
running east, and Burnbright had slowed to an easy mile-devouring lope a few hundred
yards in front.
"You think it's easy, do you?" said Pinion, giving the key a gentle pump to bring the
next spring into play. Once the initial winding had got them going, the keymen
maintained forward momentum by steadily cranking.
"Well, yes," said Smith. "Look at it! Flat as a board. No place for a bandit to hide as far
as the eye can see. Nobody's at war, so we don't have to worry about any armies
sweeping down on us. Nothing to do but chug along, eh?"
"Unless a dust storm comes up," Pinion told him. "Which they tend to do, now the
harvest's in. I've seen some cyclones in my day, I can tell you. Even the regular
prevailing wind'll fill the channels in the road with dust, and if the little girl up there
doesn't spot it in time, we might all rattle off the road into a field, or hit a block at top
speed and strip all our gears—that's lovely fun."
"Oh," said Smith. "Does that happen often?"
"Often enough," said Pinion, pumping the key again.
"At least it doesn't sound like I'll need these," said Smith, looking down at his
pistolbows.
"Probably not," conceded Pinion. "Until we reach the Greenlands."
"What's in the Greenlands?"
Pinion was silent a moment.
"You're a city boy, aren't you?" he said at last.
"I have been," said Smith, shifting on top of the kitchen crate. "Come on, what's in the
Greenlands? Besides a lot of Yendri," he added, glancing back at their sole Yendri
passenger, who had wrapped a scarf about his nose and mouth and sat ignoring the
others.
"To begin with, that's where you've got your real bandits," Pinion said. "And not your
run-along-by-the-side-of-the-road-and-yip-threateningly bandits either, I'm talking about
your bury-the-road-in-a-landslide-and-dig-out-the-loot bandits. See? And then there's
greenies like that one," he went on, jerking a thumb in the direction of the Yendri. "They
may say they're for nonviolence, but they're liable to pile rocks and branches and all
kinds of crap on the road if they're miffed about us cutting down one of their damn
groves to build a way station or something."
"Huh." Smith looked back at the Yendri uneasily.
"Of course, they're not the worst," added Pinion.
"I guess they wouldn't be."
"There's beasts, of course."
"They're everywhere, though."
"Not like in the Greenlands. And even they're nothing to the demons."
"All right," said Smith, "you're trying to scare me, aren't you? Is this some kind of
initiation?"
"No," said Pinion in a surly voice, though in fact he had been trying to scare Smith.
"Just setting you straight on a few things, Caravan Master. I'd hate to see you so full of
self-confidence you get us all killed your first day on the job."
"Thanks a lot," said Smith. The caravan went rumbling on, the featureless fields flew
by, and after a moment Smith looked down at Pinion again.
"I did hear a story about the Greenlands, now that I come to think about it," he said.
"In a bar in Chadravac Beach, about six months ago. Something about a demon-lord.
He's supposed to be called the Master of the Mountain?"
Pinion blanched, but did not change expression. He shook his head, pedaling away
stolidly.
"Don't know anything about that," he said firmly, and fell silent.
All that day they traveled across the yellow land. With no companion but the sun,
they came at evening to the way station, marked out by a ring of white stones.
It was a wide circular area by the side of the road, with grooves for carts running off
and grooves for running back on. There was a tiny stone hut surmounted by a
windwheel pump, enclosing a basin where a trickle of water flowed, drawn up from
deep beneath the plain. The moment they had rolled off the road and into the circle, the
Yendri was out of his cart and staggering for the pump house. He monopolized it for the
next quarter hour, to the great annoyance of the other passengers, who lined up behind
the hut and made ethnically insulting remarks as they waited.
At least the diversion kept most of them occupied as Smith oversaw making camp for
the night. He didn't really have much to do; the keymen, long practiced in this art, had
quickly trundled the carts in a snaked circle and set to erecting tent accommodations
inside it. Burnbright and Mrs. Smith were busily setting up the kitchen pavilion, and
politely implied that he'd only get in their way if he lent a hand there.
Smith noticed that Lord Ermenwyr was not among the carpers at the water pump, and
he wondered whether he ought not to see if the lordling had died after all. As he
摘要:

THEANVILOFTHEWORLD  KageBaker   ATOMDOHERTYASSOCIATESBOOKNEWYORK    Thisisaworkoffiction.Allthecharactersandeventsportrayedinthisnovelareeitherfictitiousorareusedfictitiously.THEANVILOFTHEWORLDCopyright©2003byKageBakerAllrightsreserved,includingtherighttoreproducethisbook,orportionsthereof,inanyform...

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