Empire of Bones

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Authors: Liz Williams

Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Science Fiction, #Adventure, #India, #Human-Alien Encounters

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EMPIRE OF BONES

A Bantam Spectra Book / April 2002

SPECTRA and the portrayal of a boxed "s" are trademarks of Bantam Books, a division of Random House, Inc.

Copyright © 2002 by Liz Williams. Cover art copyright © 2002 by Mark Harrison.

No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.

For information address: Bantam Books.

If you purchased this book without a cover you should be aware that this book is stolen property. It was reported as "unsold and destroyed" to the publisher and neither the author nor the publisher has received any payment for this "stripped book."

ISBN 0-553-58377-8
Published simultaneously in the United States and Canada
Bantam Books are published by Bantam Books, a division of Random House, Inc. Its trademark, consisting of the words "Bantam Books" and the portrayal of a rooster, is Registered in U.S. Patent and Trademark

Office and in other countries. Marca Registrada. Bantam Books, 1540

Broadway, New York, New York 10036.

PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

With thanks…

…Especially to Ashok and Bithika Banker and family, for welcoming us to Mumbai and being so generous with both time and information (and for getting us to Varanasi)

… as ever, to Anne Groell and Shawna McCarthy for all their hard work, encouragement and help

… to everyone in the Montpellier Writing Group and Neville

Barnes

…to David Pringle, for accepting the original story for

Interzone

… to my parents and to Charles

… to everyone at the Shanti Guesthouse in Varanasi

… and lastly to Sappho the cat, whose continual interruptions have saved me from RSI Open your eyes again and look at Shiva Up there on the altar. Look closely. In his upper right hand… he holds the drum that calls the world into existence, and in his upper left hand he car-ries the destroying fire. Life and Death, order and disintegration, impartially. But now look at Shiva's other pair of hands…

It signifies: 'Don't be afraid; it's All Right.' But how can anyone in his senses fail to be afraid? How can anyone pretend that evil and suffering are all right, when it's so obvious that they're all wrong?

From Aldous Huxley's
Island
(1962)

PROLOGUE

rvhaikurriye/ Kasasatran system

"They're all starting to die," IrEthiverris whispered, ^ wringing long, jointed hands.

"Who's dying? What are you talking about?" Sirrubennin EsMoyshekhal asked wearily. Why did emergencies always seem to happen in the middle of the 1 night? He frowned at the wavering image of his friend, gleaming behind a veil of communication mesh. IrEthiverris' fingers wove together in agitation.

His mouth moved but no words came forth. Sirru raised his voice, hoping he wouldn't wake the whole house.

"Verris, I can barely hear you. I think your transmission is breaking up. Now
who
is dying?"

"All of them!" IrEthiverris cried. His quills prickled up from his scalp, rattling like spine-leaves in a breeze.

He looked wildly about him; Sirru wondered what his friend might be seeing, there on distant Arakrahali.

There was a shimmer of alien sunlight behind IrEthiverris' image. "The natives!"

"Well, there are bound to be a few problems at first, aren't there?" Sirru said, his heart sinking. "Not every planet is easy to colonize—it's usual for there to be
some
resistance, until people realize that we've got their best interests at heart. Things will settle down. Are the locals rioting, or what?"

"No! I think it's the communications network. It's killing them."

"I don't understand. You've got a
'thaith
administrator, haven't you? Isn't she any help?"

The transmission wobbled, sending tremors through IrEthiverris' already shaky image. Fragments of words came through.

"…
'thaith
administrator is doing her utmost to…none of my messages even reaching Rasasatra—using an illegal chan-nel… Can you please find out what's
going on
?"

"I'll do my best," Sirru said. "Listen, I'll need some way of contacting you. Can you—" But IrEthiverris'

image crackled, and was gone. Sirru gave the communication matrix a shake, then turned it off and on again, but even that did not work. IrEthiverris' transmission had been swallowed by the immen-sity between the worlds.

Sirru walked out onto the balcony and stood staring out across the city of Khaikurriye. The vast multiple curves of the caste-domes stretched as far as the horizon, gleaming in the soft red moonlight. Rising behind them were the peaks of the mountain-parks. The air was summer-warm and fragrant with pollen, but clouds were massing over the coast. There was a snap of lightning as the weather systems harnessed the monsoon; there would be rain before morning. Sirru was sud-denly glad that he was here at home and not on some primi-tive alien world, surrounded by unforeseen horrors. His quills rose and shivered, despite the warmth of the night.

But what could be going so badly wrong on Arakrahali? Worlds were colonized all the time by the various castes under whose aegis they fell. That was the whole purpose of irRas so-ciety, the drive which impelled them as a people. From an-cient times they had seeded worlds; kept a distant but kindly eye upon them as they evolved, then stepped in when the time was right to shape the inhabitants to proper specifications and bring them into the fold of the irRas' huge biological empire. Granted, Sirru thought, this was not always a simple matter. Colonies occasionally had to be terminated if their populations had degenerated past a certain point, but that was part of the natural order, just as gardens needed to be pruned and weeded before the plants within them could reach fruition. Did not the oldest texts describe the galaxy itself as just an-other garden? And were not the irRas the only intelligent form of life in all that sea of stars? As such, they surely had a responsibility to generate new phenotypes, and to bring all people beneath their benevolent rule.

Moreover, Arakrahali had seemed such a quiet little world, with an industrious population that had bypassed the excesses indulged in by some cultures. The planet had not had a war for generations and the system of land ownership entailed that no one was starving. Arakrahali, IrEthiverris had confidently declared at the beginning of his colonial appointment, would be like a stroll in the park.

Yet now it was all going wrong. Sirru shivered. Verris had been a friend all his life—they'd practically come out of the same tank together—and Sirru knew how competent and conscientious the man was.

He'd never seen IrEthiverris pan-icking. In the morning, he would try and find out what was going on.

Nothing could be done about it now, but Sirru was too worried to sleep. He made his way down into the gardens, pushing his way through the dense and fragrant growth of pillar-vine and
inchin
, until he reached the irrigation pools. There he sat, in the quiet summer darkness, waiting for the storm to break.

THE CONJUROR'S DAUGHTER

i

Varanasi/ India/ 2o30

/ «y«/ to
be a goddess. Not that that's much use to me right *'tnow
, Jaya thought as she stood angrily in the hospital corridor. Catching a glimpse of herself in a laminated dis-play cabinet, she had to stifle a smile at the notion of deity. They'd issued her with a shapeless nylon gown; she g looked small and bent and old, somehow out of place in this gleaming new ward. She gripped the edge of the cabinet to steady herself.

"Mrs. Nihalani," Erica Fraser said, with barely concealed impatience. "This is the fourth time this week!

Whatever are we going to do with you?"

"I want to leave." Jaya tried to sound calm, but her gnarled hand shook as it clasped the edges of the cabinet. She could feel her body trembling. "I'm not a prisoner here." That was true enough; this was nothing like jail in Delhi, nothing like Tihar. "Well, I'm afraid you can't. You're in no condition to go wandering off. And where would you go? When we found you, you were living on a waste dump. You're crippled with rheumatoid arthritis. Mrs. Nihalani, we're only trying to help."

"I know that," Jaya said, through clenched teeth. "And I'm grateful, but—" It was a lie. She knew she should have felt a little more thankful, but Fraser was so patronizing. Every day, Jaya was reminded in one way or another of how fortunate she had been that the UN medical team had chanced across her crumpled body and brought her here to this shining new hospital wing. She was safe now, the doctor told her. Here, she would be cared for, perhaps even healed. Inside a little bubble of the West, sealed off from the unspeakable chaos of her country, which Jaya called Bharat, and the doctor called India. She was very lucky, Fraser told her each morning. It was start-ing to sound like a threat.

"And what about other people?" Fraser demanded now. "'This part of the world's seen a dozen new diseases in the last ten years alone, and I'm damned if I'm going to release an-other one into an overpopulated area."

There was nothing she could say to that, Jaya thought. How could she tell the doctor that she knew her illness wasn't contagious, presented no threat to anyone but herself?
And how do you know that
?

Fraser would ask. Jaya would have to reply:
Why, because the voice in my head tells me so
. But if she said that, any chance she'd have of getting out of here would be gone. She felt her hands clench into fists, the joints stiffened and painful.

"I don't understand why you want to leave," Fraser said plaintively. Jaya could almost hear the unspoken thought:
Why are these people so ungrateful
? "You told me that you've spent the last few years scavenging for medical waste on the dumps, ever since you were widowed. What kind of a life is that?"

The life of a jackal, hunting the edge of sickness, where life wears thin
. The voice echoed in her head, a little wonderingly, as though the notion was new to it. For the thousandth time, f aya asked the voice:
What are you
? But there was no reply.

"Mrs. Nihalani!" Fraser said, sharply. "You're looking very tired. I think we'd better get you back to bed, hadn't we?" She took Jaya firmly by the arm. For a crazy moment, Jaya won-dered what the reaction would be if she turned to the doctor and told her:
Sorry, can't stay. I've got a voice in my head and a
revolution to run
.

Well, that would really put the cat among the pigeons, to use Fraser's favorite phrase. The truth was one luxury Jaya couldn't afford. How could she tell the doctor who she really was? There had been a time, after all, when a photo of her face adorned every wall from Mumbai to Calcutta. It was a miracle that she hadn't been recognized already; she supposed she had the unwelcome transformations of the illness to thank for that. If Fraser realized that she was harboring a terrorist, Jaya's life would be over. The government wouldn't imprison her this time. They would send the butcher-prince after her. She would rather the sickness took her.

But then she felt her knees beginning to tremble, a reaction she always had if she stood still for too long.

Scowling with frustration, she let the doctor lead her back to bed.

"Tranquilizers," Fraser said, holding out die little capsules. The look on her face brooked no argument. "I think we've had quite enough excitement for one day, don't you?"

She stood over Jaya, watching like a hawk. Jaya mumbled her thanks and reached shakily toward the water jug. The doctor's gaze flickered for an instant, and that was all the time Jaya needed to palm the pills and slip them under the pillow. She swallowed, and Fraser looked pleased.

"There. Now, no more nonsense. I'll be back later, to run a few more tests. You have a nice sleep."

Jaya's hand curled around the tranquilizers, and she closed her eyes with relief at the small victory. She had almost ten pills now, carefully collected in a fold of the mattress. The doctor might think diat Westerners knew it all, but Fraser was no match for a conjuror's daughter. She looked down at her withered hand. The knuckles had swollen, but at least it kept the old ring on her finger: a band of cheap bronze, with a garnet set crookedly in it—the last and only legacy of her mother. Her hands were those of an old woman, a grand-mother. When she looked at them, it was hard to believe she was only twenty-eight years old.

Jaya lay back on the pillows and closed her eyes. She would wait until she felt a little stronger, and then she'd make an-other bid for freedom. Until then, there was nothing she could do but lie still, and remember.

JAYA, seven years old, crouched in the dust, watching as magi-cal ash poured from her father's fingertips. Faces jostled above her head, blotting out the bleached heat of the sky. The air smelled of incense and the fragrant bitterness of the ash as it drifted down into the bowls held out by the eager villagers. Jaya glanced up, noting how many of the faces were filled with won-der at this latest miracle, and how many were not. There were a few skeptical expressions toward the back of the crowd, mainly young men, grinning with knowing disbelief. She heard a whis-per: "
It's up his sleeve. You can see it,
loo't"
Jaya held her breath, but the villagers glanced round angrily at the whisperer.

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