Authors: K. J. Parker
âTomorrow,' Halder said, âwe'll go and take a look at your wood.'
That actually meant something to Poldarn: the memory burst out, like steam off the mountainside. He remembered quite clearly that on the day he'd been born, in accordance with the proper procedure, Halder and the middle-barn crew had planted out a stand of white ash down where the river curved round the side of the hill that marked the end of the combe. The idea was that when the time came for Poldarn to build his own house, those trees would be exactly ready. Although he hadn't been that far away from the farm buildings since he'd been back, he could picture the plantation perfectly clearly in his mind. He could see Halder, thirty years younger, strolling along beside him, pointing out which sapling would one day be his roof-tree, which were to be the joists, the door timbers, the great and lesser sills, the girts and the braces. At the time Poldarn remembered feeling a great surge of comfort and safety that came from knowing that everything was laid out ready for him, through every step of his life â there'd be no doubt or uncertainty, all he had to do was go forward, and everything he'd ever need would be waiting for him, ready in its appointed place, where he could reach out for it without even having to stretch.
âGood,' he replied. âI'd like that.'
âYou remember the time we went there when you were a kid.' It wasn't a question.
âI was thinking about it just now,' Poldarn replied. âI don't suppose it looks anything like that now, though.'
âPretty much the same,' Halder said, âexcept the trees are bigger. Oh, and we lost one of the middle girts in a storm about fifteen years ago, but I know where there's a beech that'll drop in there just sweet.'
Poldarn nodded. âThat's good,' he said. âNow I'm trying to remember where the house is going to go. I'm sure we went there that day.'
Halder actually smiled. âThat's right,' he said. âTwenty paces south-east from the roof-tree, there's a rap of level ground with a good clay footing. First time I came here, it was touch and go whether I built my house there or here, but I chose here, because the other site â yours â is a bit more sheltered and closer to the water; and there's a fine little pool under some rocks for your washing-hole. Actual fact, I had Raffen and Sitrych clear the weeds out, winter before last.'
Sitrych, Poldarn thought, which one is Sitrych? Then he remembered; of course, the short, square man two down on Grandfather's left. At that moment, Sitrych was conscientiously chewing on a crisp, hard pear, his eyes fixed on a space about two feet over Poldarn's head.
âI can't picture it,' Poldarn admitted, âbut once we're there I expect it'll come back to me.'
His cup was empty, and there was that boy with the jug again. He put his hand over the cup. The boy stared at him, stood awkwardly for a moment, and then moved on down the line.
âYou weren't at the forge today.' Not a question, or a reproach, or an accusation; just a statement of fact.
âNo,' Poldarn said. âI was helping Eyvind get in that gravel.'
Halder frowned, just slightly. âI think you should make sure you put your time in there,' he said. âThere's still a lot you've got to learn.'
Poldarn looked up. âSeems a bit pointless, really,' he replied. âAfter all, we've already got a smith, best on the island by all accounts. I can't see where there's any need for me to get under his feet when he's busy.'
Halder's glare was like a slap round the face. âI think midmorning'd be a good time to go down to the wood,' he said. âThat way you can put in a good morning at the forge and be back when Asburn's ready to start again in the afternoon.'
Well, Poldarn thought, I tried; I failed, but nobody knifed me. So, no harm done, at any rate. âThat seems sensible,' he said. âVery good cheese, this.'
âThat's the last of the eight-weeks,' Halder said. âThe six-weeks'll be ready tomorrow.'
Well, yes, Poldarn said to himself, it would be, wouldn't it? âHope it's as good as this,' he said. Halder looked at him as if he'd said something that didn't make sense.
That night, when the tables had been put away and the fire was burning low, Poldarn made a conscious effort and called up the memory of that childhood walk among the trees. Mainly it was because he couldn't sleep â with the exception of Halder and Rannwey, who had the private room at the far end of the house, everybody slept on the floor of the hall, wrapped in blankets like a nest of silk-moths, and he found this hard to get used to â and recalling his childhood made a change from counting sheep. Partly it was conscientious reconnaissance in advance of tomorrow's expedition, in case there was something there he needed to be prepared for. To a certain extent, though, it was little more than self-referential tourism, a leisurely visit to the garden spot of his past, with a packed lunch and a parasol. In this respect, he was as limited as a citizen of Boc Bohec, whose choice of pleasant walks was limited to two rather crowded public parks; Poldarn had very few genuine memories to wander through, and several of them weren't places where he'd choose to spend time if he could help it.
Probably overtired, he told himself, which is why I can't get to sleep. He propped himself up on one elbow and looked round at the neat rows of sleepers, dim shapes in the flickering red glow of the fire, like a mass cremation. It stood to reason that these people (
his
people, must get used to thinking of them as that) should all roost together, all fall asleep together (because when the mind falls asleep, the parts of the body have no choice but to sleep too). Poldarn knew for a certainty that he was the only person awake in the whole house. In a way, it was a good feeling; for the first time in days, he could really be on his own, instead of being alone in the middle of a crowd.
But leaning on his elbow gave him cramp, so he lay down again and closed his eyes, summoning the memory like a nobleman calling for his jester. For some reason, though, the walk in the plantation wasn't available â someone else was dreaming it, or it was sulking and didn't want to come out. Instead, he remembered another walk with his grandfather, a month or so before or after the trip to the woodâ
âAre we there yet?' he heard himself say.
He knew where he was; it was the reverse of the view from the porch, because they were standing on the lower slopes of the mountain, looking down at their valley. Behind them, the constant hiss and gurgle of the hot springs were almost loud enough to drown out Grandfather's voice. A dozen or so yards to his right, a solitary crow was tearing at the ribcage of a long-dead lamb.
It was his birthday.
âNot quite.'
âHow much further?'
âNot far.'
âWhen will we get there?'
âLater.'
Grandfather was looking at the view; he seemed to like it a lot. Presumably he enjoyed looking at the farm from different angles, which was fair enough. Ciartan liked the view too, but now he'd seen it and he was getting cold and fidgety, and it wasn't as if anything about it was going to change. âCan we go on now, please?'
Grandfather sighed. âYes, all right.' He dipped his head sideways, to say
this way
.
They were above the last scruffy patches of grass and heather now, in the belt of black rock and clinker that separated the marginal grazing of the lower slopes from the snowcap. It was foul stuff to walk on, particularly with short legs; every time you put your foot down it went over sideways on the chunks of black stuff, and you could feel the sharp edges right through the soles of your boots. Nothing at all lived up here, not even crows.
Ciartan was bored.
Grandfather sensed that; he was good at guessing people's moods. âAll right,' he said, âlet's see how much you know. Let's see: do you know the name of this mountain?'
That was a silly question. âThe mountain,' Ciartan replied. But Grandfather shook his head.
âAll mountains are called The Mountain by somebody or other,' he said. âNo, this one's got a proper name, just as the farm's called Haldersness and the valley's called Raffenriverdale. Do you know what the mountain's proper name is?'
Ciartan shook his head.
âThought not,' Grandfather replied.
âTell me,' Ciartan said. âPlease,' he added, remembering his manners.
Grandfather stopped, either for effect or because the gradient was a bit too much for his bad knee. âThis mountain,' he announced, âis called Polden's Forge.'
âOh,' Ciartan said. âWhy's it called that?'
Grandfather shook his head. âIt's a long story,' he said. âI don't suppose you want to hear it.'
âYes, I do,' Ciartan replied eagerly. âPlease.'
âWell.' Grandfather dug the point of his short spear into a soft crack between two lumps of rock and leaned hard on the butt end. âMany years ago, our people didn't live here. In fact, nobody even knew this country was here. We all lived far away across the sea, in what they used to call the Empire.'
âI know all about that,' Ciartan interrupted. âThat's where the men go raiding every year, to bring back the metal and stuff.'
Grandfather nodded. âThat's right,' he said. âNow, the Empire's a very big place â bigger than our island, which is East Island, and almost as big as East Island and West Island put together. That's how big it is.'
Ciartan closed his eyes for a moment, visualising the enormous extent of the Empire. That was an impossible task, so instead he thought of the biggest thing he could think of, which at that moment happened to be the long barn. âAll right,' he said, âgo on.'
âGo on, what?'
âPlease.'
âIn the south of the Empire,' Grandfather said, wiping condensation out of his moustache with his left hand, âis a country called Morevish, which is where our people used to live. That was over two hundred years ago, by the way; for what it's worth, Morevish isn't even part of the Empire now, it broke away a long time ago.'
Ciartan frowned. âBroke away?'
âRebelled. The people decided they didn't want to belong to the Empire any more, so they chased out the Empire's soldiers and became a free nation.'
âOh, I see,' Ciartan replied, dismissing the image that had formed in his mind of a huge crack appearing in the ground, and the whole country slowly breaking away and drifting off into the sea.
âAt the time our people still lived there, though,' Grandfather went on, âMorevish was still a province of the Empire, and the Imperial governors â that's the men who ran the country â were very harsh and cruel to our people. Every year they sent soldiers to steal a third of our corn, lambs and calves, and anybody who wouldn't give them what they wanted was dragged away and had his hands cut off, or even his head.'
Ciartan shuddered at the horror of such an idea. âThat's awful,' he said. âSo why didn't our people chase out the soldiers then, instead of later?'
Grandfather shrugged. âBack then, the Empire was still strong,' he said. âLater on, they got weak, because they were always quarrelling among themselves, and when that happened the people of Morevish were able to get rid of them. But we're getting ahead of the story.'
âSorry,' Ciartan said. âPlease go on.'
A single solitary buzzard was wheeling in the air below them. It felt strange to be higher up than a bird.
âAt the time I'm talking about,' Grandfather said carefully, âtwo hundred years ago or more, our people still believed in gods. We don't do that any more, of course, just as you stopped believing in trolls and goblins when you were six. It's part of growing up.'
Ciartan nodded; though, to tell the truth, he still hadn't made up his mind about trolls. On the one hand, it didn't make sense to have people who turned to stone if they went out in the sun. On the other hand, he was almost sure he'd seen one once in the distance, on a bright moonlit night, when he and Grandfather had been out with the long-net.
âThey used to believe in lots of gods,' Grandfather was saying, âbut their favourite god, the one they believed in the most, was a god called Polden. Now, the way with gods is that each of them's supposed to be in charge of something â like Grandma's in charge of the jam cupboard and the linen chest, or I'm in charge of the smithy. Polden was in charge of lots of things all at the same time, which was why our people believed in him so much. Polden was in charge of everything that had to do with fire; from keeping the house warm and cooking the dinner to making nails and horseshoes in the forge, right across to the fire that burns down houses when people fight each other. That made him different from the other gods; because, you see, all the other gods were either good or bad, depending on whether they were in charge of a good thing, like farming or making something, or a bad thing, like fighting. But Polden was both good and bad, all at the same time â because, you see, fire can be useful or it can be dangerous, and even when it's useful it's still dangerous, because if you're not careful when you're cooking the dinner you can set light to the chimney and set the thatch on fire, and the house'll burn down.'
Ciartan nodded sagely; he could understand that. In fact, this Polden sounded rather like himself, because he always tried to be good but somehow he kept managing to do bad things, or so the grown-ups told him.
âAnyway,' Grandfather went on, as the buzzard dwindled out of sight in the distance, âlots of people from other parts of the Empire got to hear about Polden and started believing in him too; and this annoyed the men who ruled the Empire, because they believed in a whole different lot of gods; and that just made them treat our people even more cruelly than they'd done before. In the end,' Grandfather said, his eyes still fixed on the distant prospect of the farm, âour people tried to fight the Empire's soldiers, but they lost; and the Emperorâ'