Gene Wolfe - New Sun 2 - The Claw of the Conciliator

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Gene Wolfe
The Claw of the Conciliator
Chapter 1
THE VILLAGE OF SALTUS
Morwenna's face floated in the single beam of light, lovely and framed in hair dark as my cloak;
blood from her neck pattered to the stones. Her lips moved without speech. Instead I saw framed within
them (as though I were the Increate, peeping through his rent in Eternity to behold the World of Time) the
farm, Stachys her husband tossing in agony upon his bed, little Chad at the pond, bathing his fevered
face.
Outside, Eusebia, Morwenna's accuser, howled like a witch. I tried to reach the bars to tell her to
be quiet, and at once became lost in the darkness of the cell. When I found light at last, it was the green
road stretching from the shadow of the Piteous Gate. Blood gushed from Dorcas's cheek, and though so
many screamed and shouted, I could hear it pattering to the ground. Such a mighty structure was the
Wall that it divided the world as the mere line between their covers does two books; before us now
stood such a wood as might have been growing since the founding of Urth, trees as high as cliffs,
wrapped in pure green. Between them lay the road, grown up in fresh grass, and on it were the bodies of
men and women. A burning cariole tainted the clean air with smoke.
Five riders sat destriers whose hooked tushes were encrusted with lazulite. The men wore helmets
and capes of indanthrene blue and carried lances whose heads ran with blue fire; their faces were more
akin than the faces of brothers. On these riders, the tide of travelers broke as a wave on a rock, some
turning left, some right. Dorcas was torn from my arms, and I drew Terminus Est to cut down those
between us and found I was about to strike Master Malrubius, who stood calmly, my dog Triskele at his
side, in the midst of the tumult. Seeing him so, I knew I dreamed, and from that knew, even while I slept,
that the visions I had had of him before had not been dreams.
I threw the blankets aside. The chiming of the carillon in the Bell Tower was in my ears. It was time
to rise, time to run to the kitchen pulling on my clothes, time to stir a pot for Brother Cook and steal a
sausage—a sausage bursting, savory, and nearly burned—from the grill. Time to wash, time to serve the
journeymen, time to chant lessons to myself before Master Palaemon's examination.
I woke in the apprentices' dormitory, but everything was in the wrong place: a blank wall where the
round port should have been, a square window that should have been a bulkhead. The row of hard,
narrow cots was gone, and the ceiling too low.
Then I was awake. Country smells—much like the pleasant odors of flower and tree that used to
float across the ruined curtain wall from the necropolis, but mixed now with the hot reek of a
stable—drifted through the window. The bells began again, ringing in some campanile not far away,
calling the few who retained their faith to beseech the coming of the New Sun, though it was very early
still, the old sun had hardly dropped Urth's veil from his face, and save for the bells the village lay silent.
As Jonas had discovered the night before, our water-ewer held wine. I used some to rinse my
mouth, and its astringency made it better than water; but I still wanted water to splash on my face and
smooth my hair. Before sleeping I had folded my cloak, with the Claw at the center, to use for a pillow. I
spread it now, and remembering how Agia had once tried to slip her hand into the sabretache on my belt,
thrust the Claw into my boot-top.
Jonas still slept. In my experience, people asleep look younger than they do awake, but Jonas
seemed older—or perhaps only ancient; he had the face, with straight nose and straight forehead, that I
have often noted in old pictures. I buried the smoldering fire in its own ashes and left without waking him.
By the time I had finished refreshing myself from the bucket of the inn-yard well, the street before the inn
was no longer silent, but alive with hooves that splashed through the puddles left by the previous night's
rain, and the clacking of scimitar horns. Each animal was taller than a man, black or piebald, rolling-eyed
and half blinded by the coarse hair that fell across its face.
Morwenna's father, I remembered, had been a drover; it was possible this herd was his, though it
seemed unlikely. I waited until the last lumbering beast had passed and watched the men ride by. There
were three, dusty and common-looking, flourishing iron-tipped goads longer than themselves; and with
them, their hard, watchful, low-bred dogs.
Inside the inn once more, I ordered breakfast and got bread warm from the oven, newly churned
butter, pickled duck's eggs, and peppered chocolate beaten to a froth. (This last a sure sign, though I did
not know it then, that I was among people who drew their customs from the north.) Our hairless gnome
of a host, who had no doubt seen me in conversation with the alcalde the night before, hovered over my
table wiping his nose on his sleeve, inquiring about the quality of each dish as it was served—though they
were all, in truth, very good—promising better food at supper, and condemning the cook, who was his
wife. He called me sieur, not because he thought as they sometimes had in Nessus that I was an exultant
incognito, but because a torturer here, as the efficient arm of the law, was a great person. Like most
peons, he could conceive of no more than one social class higher than his own.
"The bed, it was comfortable? Plenty of quilts? We will bring more." My mouth was full, but I
nodded.
"Then we shall. Will three be enough? You and the other sieur, are you comfortable together?"
I was about to say that I would prefer separate rooms (I thought Jonas no thief, but I was afraid the
Claw might be too much of a temptation for any man, and I was unused, moreover, to sleeping double)
when it occurred to me that he might have difficulty paying for a private accommodation.
"You will be there today, sieur? When they break through the wall? A mason could take down the
ashlars, but Barnoch's been heard moving inside and may have strength left. Perhaps he's found a
weapon. Why, he could bite the masons' fingers, if nothing else!"
"Not in an official capacity. I may watch if I can."
"Everyone's coming." The bald man rubbed his hands, which slithered together as if they had been
oiled. "There's to be a fair, you know. The alcalde announced it. He's got a good head for business, our
alcalde has. You take the average man—he'd see you here in my parlor and never think of a thing. Or at
least, no more than to have you put an end to Morwenna. Not ours! He sees things. He sees the
possibilities of them. You might say that in the wink of an eye the whole fair sprang up out of his head,
colored tents and ribbons, roast meat and spun sugar, all together. Today? Why today we'll open the
sealed house and pull Barnoch out like a badger. That will warm them up, that will draw them for leagues
around. Then we'll watch you do for Morwenna and that country fellow. Tomorrow you'll begin on
Barnoch—hot irons you start with usually, don't you? And everybody will want to be there. The day
after, finish him off and fold the tents. It doesn't do to let them hang about too long after they've spent
their money, or they begin to beg and fight and so on. All well planned, all well thought out! There's an
alcalde for you!"
I went out again after breakfast and watched the alcalde's enchanted thoughts take shape. Country
folk were stumping into the village with fruits and animals and bolts of home-woven cloth to sell; among
them were a few autochthons carrying fur pelts and strings of black and green birds killed with the
cerbotana. Now I wished I still had the mantle Agia's brother had sold me, for my fuligin cloak drew
some odd looks. I was about to step inside once more when I heard the quickstep of marching feet, a
sound familiar to me from the drilling of the garrison in the Citadel, but which I had not heard since I had
left it. The cattle I had watched earlier that morning had been going down to the river, there to be herded
into barges for the remainder of their trip to the abattoirs of Nessus. These soldiers were coming the
other way, up from the water. Whether that was because their officers felt the march would toughen
them, or because the boats that had brought them were needed elsewhere, or because they were
destined for some area remote from Gyoll, I had no way of knowing. I heard the shouted order to sing as
they came into the thickening crowd, and almost together with it the thwacks of the vingtners' rods and
the howls of the unfortunates who had been hit.
The men were kelau, each armed with a sling with a two-cubit handle and each carrying a painted
leather pouch of incendiary bullets. Few looked older than I and most seemed younger, but their gilded
brigandines and the rich belts and scabbards of their long daggers proclaimed them members of an elite
corps of the erentarii. Their song was not of battle or women as most soldiers' songs are, but a true
slingers' song. Insofar as I heard it that day, it ran thus:
"When I was a lad, my mother said,
'You dry your tears and go to bed;
I know my son will travel far,
Born beneath a shooting star.'"
"In after years, my father said,
As he pulled my hair and knocked my head,
'They mustn't whimper at a scar,
Who're born beneath a shooting star.'"
"A mage I met, and the mage he said,
'I see for you a future red,
Fire and riot, raid and war,
O born beneath a shooting star.'"
"A shepherd I met, and the shepherd said,
'We sheep must go where we are led,
To Dawn-Gate where the angels are,
Following the shooting star.'"
And so on, verse after verse, some cryptic (as it seemed to me), some merely comic, some clearly
assembled purely for the sake of the rhymes, which were repeated again and again.
"A fine sight, aren't they?" It was the innkeeper, his bald head at my shoulder. "Southerners—notice
how many have yellow hair and dotted hides? They're used to cold down there, and they'll need to be in
the mountains. Still, the singing almost makes you want to join 'em. How many, would you say?"
The baggage mules were just coming into view, laden with rations and prodded forward with the
points of swords. "Two thousand. Perhaps twenty-five hundred."
"Thank you, sieur. I like to keep track of them. You wouldn't believe how many I've seen coming up
our road here. But precious few going back. Well, that's what war is, I believe. I always try to tell myself
they're still there—I mean, wherever it was they went—but you know and I know there's a lot that have
gone to stay. Still, the singing makes a man want to go with 'em."
I asked if he had news of the war.
"Oh, yes, sieur. I've followed it for years and years now, though the battles they fight never seem to
make much difference, if you understand me. It never seems to get much closer to us, or much farther off
either. What I've always supposed was that our Autarch and theirs appoints a spot to fight in, and when
it's over they both go home. My wife, fool that she is, don't believe there's a real war at all."
The crowd had closed behind the last mule driver, and it thickened with every word that passed
between us. Bustling men set up stalls and pavilions, narrowing the street and making the press of people
greater still; bristling masks on tall poles seemed to have sprouted from the ground like trees.
"Where does your wife think the soldiers are going, then?" I asked the innkeeper.
"Looking for Vodalus, that's what she says. As if the Autarch—whose hands run with gold and
whose enemies kiss his heel—would send his whole army to fetch a bandit!"
I scarcely heard a word beyond Vodalus.
Whatever I possess I would give to become one of you, who complain every day of memories
fading. My own do not. They remain always, and always as vivid as at their first impression, so that once
summoned they carry me off spellbound. I think I turned from the innkeeper and wandered into the
crowd of pushing rustics and chattering vendors, but I saw neither them nor him. Instead I felt the
bone-strewn paths of the necropolis under my feet, and saw through the drifting river fog the slender
figure of Vodalus as he gave his pistol to his mistress and drew his sword. Now (it is a sad thing to have
become a man) I was struck by the extravagance of the gesture. He who had professed in a hundred
clandestine placards to be fighting for the old ways, for the ancient high civilization Urth has now lost, has
discarded the effectual weapon of that civilization.
If my memories of the past remain intact, perhaps it is only because the past exists only in memory.
Vodalus, who wished as I did to summon it again, yet remained a creature of the present. That we are
capable only of being what we are remains our unforgivable sin.
No doubt if I had been one of you whose memories fade, I would have rejected him on that
morning as I elbowed my way through the crowd, and so in some fashion would have escaped this death
in life that grips me even as I write these words. Or perhaps I would not have escaped at all. Yes, more
likely not. And in any case, the old, recalled emotions were too strong. I was trapped in admiration for
what I had once admired, as a fly in amber remains the captive of some long-vanished pine.
Chapter 2
THE MAN IN THE DARK
The bandit's house had differed in no way from the common houses of the village. It was of broken
mine-stone, single storied, with a flattish, solid-looking roof of slabs of the same material. The door and
the only window I could see from the street had been closed with rough masonry. A hundred or so
fair-goers stood before the house now, talking and pointing; but there was no sound from within, and no
smoke issuing from the chimney.
"Is this commonly done hereabouts?" I asked Jonas.
"It's traditional. You've heard the saying, 'A legend, a lie, and a likelihood make a tradition'?"
"It seems to me it would be easy enough to get out. He could break through a window or the wall
itself by night, or dig a passage. Of course, if he expected something like this—and if it's common and he
was really engaged in spying for Vodalus, there's no reason he shouldn't—he could have supplied himself
with tools as well as a quantity of food and drink."
Jonas shook his head. "Before they close the openings, they go through the house and take
everything they can find in the way of food and tools and lights, besides whatever else may be of value."
A resonant voice said, "Having good sense, as we flatter ourselves, we do indeed." It was the
alcalde, who had come up behind us without either of us noticing his presence in the crowd. We wished
him a good day, and he returned the courtesy. He was a solid, square-built man whose open face was
marred by something too clever about the eyes. "I thought I recognized you, Master Severian, bright
clothes or no. Are these new? They look it. If they don't give satisfaction, speak out to me about it. We
try to keep the traders honest that come to our fairs. It's only good business. If he doesn't make them
right for you, whoever he is, we'll duck him in the river, you may be sure. One or two ducked a year
keep the rest from feeling too comfortable."
He paused to step back and examine me more carefully, nodding to himself as though greatly
impressed. "They become you. I must say, you've a fine figure. A handsome face too, save perhaps for a
bit too much pallor, which our hot northern weather will soon make right. Anyway, they become you and
look to wear well. If you're asked where you had them, you might say Saltus Fair. Such talk does no
harm."
I promised I would, though I was far more concerned about the safety of Terminus Est, which I had
left hidden in our room at the inn, than about my own appearance or the durability of the lay clothes I had
bought from a slopman. "You and your assistant have come to see us draw out the miscreant, I suppose?
We'll be at him as soon as Mesmin and Sebald bring the post. A battering ram is what we called it when
we passed the word of what was intended, but I'm afraid the truth is that it's nothing more than a tree
trunk, and not a big one either—otherwise the village would have had to free too many men to handle it.
Yet it should do the work. I don't suppose you've heard of the case we had here eighteen years gone?"
Jonas and I shook our heads.
The alcalde threw out his chest, as politicians do whenever they see an opportunity to speak for
more than a couple of sentences. "I recall it well enough, though I wasn't more than a stripling. A woman.
I've forgotten her name, but we called her Mother Pyrexia. The stones were put up on her, just like what
you see here, for it's largely the same ones doing it, and they did it in the same way. But it was the other
end of summer, just at apple-picking time, and that I recall very well because of the people drinking new
cider in the crowd, and myself with a fresh apple to eat while I watched."
"Next year when the corn was up, someone wanted to buy the house. Property becomes the
property of the town, you know. That's how we finance the work, the ones that do it take what they can
find for their share, and the town takes the house and ground."
"To shorten a lengthy tale, we cut a ram and broke through the door in fine fashion, thinking to
sweep up the old woman's bones and turn the place over to the new owner." The alcalde paused and
laughed, throwing back his head. There was something ghostly in that laughter, possibly only because it
blended with the noise of the crowd, and so seemed silent.
I asked, "Wasn't she dead?"
"It depends on what you mean by that. I'll say this—a woman sealed in the dark long enough can
become something very strange, just like the strange things you find in rotten wood, back among the big
trees. We're miners, mostly, here in Saltus, and used to things found underground, but we took to our
heels and came back with torches. It didn't like the light, or the fire either."
Jonas touched me on the shoulder and pointed to a swirl in the crowd. A group of
purposeful-looking men were shouldering their way down the street. None had helmets or body armor,
but several carried narrow-headed piletes, and the rest had brass-bound staves. I was strongly reminded
of the volunteer guards who had admitted Drotte, Roche, Eata, and me to the necropolis so long ago.
Behind these armed men were four who carried the tree trunk the alcalde had mentioned, a rough log
about two spans across and six cubits long.
A collective indrawn breath greeted them; it was followed by louder talk and some good-natured
cheering. The alcalde left us to take charge, directing the men with staves to clear a space about the door
of the sealed house and using his authority, when Jonas and I pushed forward to get a better view, to
make the crowd give way for us.
I had supposed that when all the breakers-in were in position they would proceed without
ceremony. In that, I had reckoned without the alcalde. At the last possible moment he mounted the
doorstep of the sealed house, and waving his hat for silence, addressed the crowd.
"Welcome visitors and fellow villagers! In the time it takes to draw breath thrice, you will see us
smash this barrier and drag out the bandit Barnoch. Whether he be dead, or, as we have good reason to
believe—for he hasn't been in there that long—alive. You know what he has done. He has collaborated
with the traitor Vodalus's cultellarii, informing them of the arrivals and departures of those who might
become their victims! All of you are thinking now, and rightly!, that such a vile crime deserves no mercy.
Yes, I say! Yes, we all say! Hundreds and maybe thousands lie in unmarked graves because of this
Barnoch. Hundreds and maybe thousands have met a fate far worse!"
"Yet for a moment, before these stones come down, I ask you to reflect. Vodalus has lost a spy. He
will be seeking another. On some still night not long, I think, from now, a stranger will come to one of
you. It is certain he will have much talk—"
"Like you!" someone shouted, to general laughter.
"Better talk than mine—I'm only a rough miner, as many of you know. Much smooth, persuasive
talk, I ought to have said, and possibly some money. Before you nod your head at him, I want you to
remember this house of Barnoch's the way it looks now, with those ashlars where the door should be.
Think about your own house with no doors and no windows, but with you inside it."
"Then think about what you're going to see done to Barnoch when we take him out. Because I'm
telling you—you strangers particularly—what you're about to see here is only the beginning of what you'll
be seeing at our fair in Saltus! For the events of the next few days we have employed one of the finest
professionals from Nessus! You will see at least two persons executed here in the formal style, with the
head struck off at a single blow. One's a woman, so we'll be using the chair! That's something a lot of
people who boast of their sophistication and the cosmopolitan tincture of their educations have never
seen. And you will see this man," pausing, the alcalde struck the sunlit door-stones with the flat of his
hand, "this Barnoch, led to Death by an expert guide! It may be that he has made some sort of small hole
in the wall by now. Frequently they do, and if so he may be able to hear me."
He lifted his voice to a shout. "If you can, Barnoch, cut your throat now! Because if you don't,
you're going to wish you had starved long ago!" For a moment there was silence. I was in agony at the
thought that I should soon have to practice the Art on a follower of Vodalus's. The alcalde raised his right
arm over his head, then brought it down in an emphatic gesture. "All right, lads, at it with a will!"
The four who had brought the ram counted one, two, three to themselves as if by prearrangement
and ran at the walled-up door, losing some of their impetuosity when the two in front mounted the step.
The ram struck the stones with a loud thump, but with no other result.
"All right, lads," the alcalde repeated. "Let's try it again. Show them the kind of men Saltus breeds."
The four charged a second time. At this attempt, those in front handled the step more skillfully; the
stones plugging the doorway seemed to shudder under the impact, and a fine dust issued from the mortar.
A volunteer from the crowd, a burly, black-bearded fellow, joined the original ramsmen, and all five
charged; the thump of the ram was not noticeably louder, but it was accompanied by a cracking like the
breaking of bones. "One more," the alcalde said.
He was right. The next blow sent the stone it struck into the house, leaving a hole the size of a man's
head. After that, the ramsmen no longer bothered with a running start; they knocked the remaining stones
out by swinging the ram with their arms until the aperture was large enough for a man to step through.
Someone I had not noticed previously had brought torches, and a boy ran to a neighboring house to
kindle them at the kitchen fire. The men with piletes and staves took them from him. Showing more
courage than I would have credited to those clever eyes, the alcalde drew a short truncheon from under
his shirt and entered first. We spectators crowded after the armed men, and because Jonas and I had
been in the forefront of the onlookers, we reached the opening almost at once.
The air was foul, far worse than I had anticipated. Broken furniture lay on every side, as though
Barnoch had locked his chests and cupboards when the sealers came, and they had smashed them to get
at his household goods. On a crippled table, I saw the guttered wax of a candle that had burned to the
wood. The people behind me were pushing to go in farther; and I, as I discovered somewhat to my
surprise, was pushing back.
There was a commotion at the rear of the house—hurried and confused footsteps—a shout—then a
high, inhuman scream.
"They've got him!" someone behind me called, and I heard the news being passed to those outside.
A fattish man who might have been a smallholder came running out of the dark, a torch in one hand
and a stave in the other. "Out of the way! Get back, all of you! They're bringing him out!"
I do not know what I expected to see . . . Perhaps a filthy creature with matted hair. What came
instead was a ghost. Barnoch had been tall; he was tall still, but stooped and very thin, with skin so pale it
seemed to glow as decayed wood does. He was hairless, bald, and beardless; I learned that afternoon
from his guards that he had formed the habit of plucking his hairs out. Worst of all were his eyes
protuberant, seemingly blind, and dark as the black abscess of his mouth. I turned away from him as he
spoke, but I knew the voice was his. "I will be free," it said. "Vodalus! Vodalus will come!"
How I wished then that I had never been imprisoned myself, for his voice brought back to me all
those airless days when I waited in the oubliette beneath our Matachin Tower. I too had dreamed of
rescue by Vodalus, of a revolution that would sweep away the animal stench and degeneracy of the
present age and restore the high and gleaming culture that was once Urth's.
And I had been saved not by Vodalus and his shadowy army, but by the advocacy of Master
Palaemon—and no doubt of Drotte and Roche and a few other friends—who had persuaded the
brothers that it would be too dangerous to kill me and too disgraceful to bring me before a tribunal.
Barnoch would not be saved at all. I, who should have been his comrade, would brand him, break
him on the wheel, and at last sever his head. I tried to tell myself that he had acted, perhaps, only to get
money; but as I did so some metal object, no doubt the steel head of a pilete, struck stone, and I seemed
to hear the ringing of the coin Vodalus had given me, the ringing as I dropped it into the space beneath
the floor-stone of the ruined mausoleum.
Sometimes when all our attention is thus focused on memory, our eyes, unguided by ourselves, will
distinguish from a mass of detail some single object, presenting it with a clarity never achieved by
concentration. So it was with me. Out of all the struggling tide of faces beyond the doorway, I saw one,
upturned, illuminated by the sun. It was Agia's.
Chapter 3
THE SHOWMAN'S TENT
The instant was frozen as though we two, and all those about us, stood in a painting. Agia's uptilted
face, my own wide eyes; so we remained amid the cloud of country folk with their bright clothes and
bundles. Then I moved, and she was gone. I would have run to her if I could; but I could only push my
way through the onlookers, taking perhaps a hundred poundings of my heart to reach the spot where she
had stood.
By then she had vanished utterly, and the crowd was swirling and changing like the water under the
bow of a boat. Barnoch had been led forth, screaming at the sun. I took a miner by the shoulder and
shouted a question to him, but he had paid no attention to the young woman beside him and had no
notion of where she might have gone. I followed the throng who followed the prisoner until I was sure she
was not among them, then, knowing nothing better to do, began to search the fair, peering into tents and
booths, and making inquiries of the farmwives who had come to sell their fragrant cardamom-bread, and
of the hot-meat vendors. All this, as I write it, slowly convoluting a thread of the vermilion ink of the
House Absolute, sounds calm and even methodical. Nothing could be further from the truth. I was
gasping and sweating as I did these things, shouting questions to which I hardly stayed for an answer.
Like a face seen in dream, Agia's floated before my imagination: wide, flat cheeks and softly rounded
chin, freckled, sun-browned skin and long, laughing, mocking eyes. Why she had come, I could not
imagine; I only knew she had, and that my glimpse of her had reawakened the anguish of my memory of
her scream.
"Have you seen a woman so tall, with chestnut hair?" I repeated it again and again, like the duelist
who had called out "Cadroe of Seventeen Stones," until the phrase was as meaningless as the song of the
cicada.
"Yes. Every country maid who comes here."
"Do you know her name?"
"A woman? Certainly I can get you a woman."
"Where did you lose her?"
"Don't worry, you'll soon find her again. The fair's not big enough for anybody to stay lost long.
Didn't the two of you arrange a place to meet? Have some of my tea—you look so tired."
I fumbled for a coin.
"You don't have to pay, I sell enough as it is. Well, if you insist. It's only an aes. Here."
The old woman rummaged in her apron pocket and produced a flood of little coins, then splashed
the tea, hissing-hot, from her kettle into an earthenware cup and offered me a straw of some dimly silver
metal. I waved it away.
"It's clean. I rinse everything after each customer."
"I'm not used to them."
"Watch the rim then—it'll be hot. Have you looked by the judging? There'll be a lot of people there."
"Where the cattle are? Yes." The tea was maté, spicy and a trifle bitter.
"Does she know you're looking for her?"
"I don't think so. Even if she saw me, she wouldn't have recognized me. I . . . am not dressed as I
usually am."
The old woman snorted and pushed a straggling lock of gray hair back under her kerchief. "At
Saltus Fair? Of course not! Everybody wears his best to a fair, and any girl with sense would know that.
How about down by the water where they've got the prisoner chained?"
I shook my head. "She seems to have disappeared."
"But you haven't given up. I can tell from the way you look at the people going past instead of me.
Well, good for you. You'll find her yet, though they do say all manner of strange things have been
happening round and about of late. They caught a green man, do you know that? Got him right over there
where you see the tent. Green men know everything, people say, if you can but make them talk. Then
there's the cathedral. I suppose you've heard about that?"
"The cathedral?"
"I've heard tell it wasn't what city folk call a real one—I know you're from the city by the way you
drink your tea—but it's the only cathedral most of us around Saltus ever saw, and pretty too, with all the
hanging lamps and the windows in the sides made of colored silk. Myself, I don't believe—or rather, I
think that if the Pancreator don't care nothing for me, I won't care nothing for him, and why should I?
Still, it's a shame what they did, if they did what's told against them. Set fire to it, you know."
"Are you talking about the Cathedral of the Pelerines?"
The old woman nodded sagely. "There, you said it yourself. You're making the same mistake they
did. It wasn't the Cathedral of the Pelerines, it was the Cathedral of the Claw. Which is to say, it wasn't
theirs to burn."
To myself I muttered, "They rekindled the fire."
"I beg pardon." The old woman cocked an ear. "I didn't hear that."
"I said they burned it. They must have set fire to the straw floor."
"That's what I heard too. They just stood back and watched it burn. It went up to the Infinite
Meadows of the New Sun, you know."
A man on the opposite side of the alleyway began to pound a drum. When he paused I said, "I
know that certain persons have claimed to have seen it rise into the air."
"Oh, it rose all right. When my grandson-in-law heard about it, he was fairly struck flat for half a
day. Then he pasted up a kind of hat out of paper and held it over my stove, and it went up, and then he
thought it was nothing that the cathedral rose, no miracle at all. That shows what it is to be a fool—it
never came to him that the reason things were made so was so the cathedral would rise just like it did.
He can't see the Hand in nature."
"He didn't see it himself?" I asked. "The cathedral, I mean."
She failed to understand. "Oh, he's seen it when they've been through here, at least a dozen times."
The chant of the man with the drum, similar to that I had once heard Dr. Talos use, but more
hoarsely delivered and bereft of the doctor's malicious intelligence, cut through our talk. "Knows
everything! Knows everybody! Green as a gooseberry! See for yourself!"
(The insistent voice of the drum: BOOM! BOOM! BOOM!)
"Do you think the green man would know where Agia is?"
The old woman smiled. "So that's her name, is it? Now I'll know, if anybody should mention her. He
might. You've money, why not try him?"
Why not indeed, I thought.
"Brought from the jun-gles of the North! Never eats! A-kin to the bush-es and the grass-es!"
BOOM! BOOM! "The fu-ture and the re-mote past are one to him!" When he saw me approaching the
door of his tent, the drummer stopped his clamor. "Only an aes to see him. Two to speak with him. Three
to be alone with him."
"Alone for how long?" I asked as I selected three copper aes.
A wry grin crossed the drummer's face. "For as long as you wish." I handed him his money and
摘要:

[Version3.0—by???][Version4.0—proofreadandformattedbybraven]GeneWolfeTheClawoftheConciliatorChapter1THEVILLAGEOFSALTUSMorwenna'sfacefloatedinthesinglebeamoflight,lovelyandframedinhairdarkasmycloak;bloodfromherneckpatteredtothestones.Herlipsmovedwithoutspeech.InsteadIsawframedwithinthem(asthoughIwere...

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