XI

A WITNESS


1

hough the day had dawned well for Suzanna, with her miraculous escape from Hobart, it had rapidly deteriorated. She’d felt oddly cocooned by night; with the dawn came nameless anxieties.

And some she could name. First off, the fact that she’d lost her guide. She had only the roughest idea of the direction in which the Firmament lay, so elected to make her way towards the Gyre, which was plainly visible at all times, and make what enquiries she could along the route.

Her second source of concern: the many signs that events in the Fugue were rapidly taking a turn for the worse. A great pall of smoke hung over the valley, and though there’d been rain in the night, fires still burned in many places. She came upon several battle sites as she went. In one place a fire-gutted car was perched in a tree like a steel bird, blown there presumably, or levitated. She couldn’t know what forces had clashed the previous night, nor what weapons had been used, but the struggle had clearly been horrendous. Shadwell had divided the people of this once tranquil land with his prophetic talk – setting brother against brother. Those conflicts were traditionally the bloodiest. It should have come as no surprise then, to see bodies left where they’d fallen, for foxes and birds to pick at, denied the simple courtesy of burial.

If there was any sliver of comfort to be drawn from these scenes it was that Shadwell’s invasion had not gone undefied. The destruction of Capra’s House had been a massive miscalculation on his part. What chance he’d had of taking the Fugue with words alone had been squandered in that one tyrannical gesture. He could not now hope to win these territories by stealth and seduction. It was armed suppression or nothing.

Having seen for herself what damage the Seerkind’s raptures were capable of, she nurtured some faint hope that any such suppression might be subverted. But what damage – perhaps irreversible – would be done to the Fugue while its inhabitants’ freedom was being won? These woods and meadows weren’t meant to host atrocities; their innocence of such horrors was a part of their power to enchant.

It was at such a spot – once untainted, now all too familiar with death – that she encountered the first living person in her travels that day. It was one of those mysterious snatches of architecture of which the Fugue could boast several; in this case a dozen pillars ranged around a shallow pool. On top of one of the pillars sat a stringy middle-aged man in a shabby coat – a large pair of binoculars around his neck – who looked up from the notebook in which he was scribbling as she approached.

‘Looking for someone?’ he enquired.

‘No.’

‘They’re all dead anyway,’ he said dispassionately. ‘See?’ The pavement around the pool was splashed with blood. Those that had shed it lay face up at the bottom of the water, their wounds white.

‘Your handiwork?’ she asked him.

‘Me? Good God no. I’m just a witness. And what army are you with?’

‘I’m with nobody,’ she said. ‘I’m on my own.’

This he wrote down.

‘I don’t necessarily believe you,’ he said, as he wrote. ‘But a good witness sets down what he sees and hears, even if he doubts it.’

‘What have you seen?’ she asked him.

‘Confusion,’ he said. ‘People everywhere, and nobody sure who was who. And blood-letting the like of which I never thought to see here.’ He peered at her. ‘You’re not Seerkind,’ he said.

‘No.’

‘Just wandered in by chance, did you?’

‘Something like that.’

‘Well I’d wander back out again if I were you. Nobody’s safe. A lot of folks have packed their bags and gone into the Kingdom rather than be slaughtered.’

‘So who’s left fighting?’

‘Wild men. I know I shouldn’t venture an opinion but that’s the way it looks to me. Barbarians, raging around.’

Even as he spoke she heard shouting a little way off. With their breakfast done, the wild men were at work already.

‘What can you see from up there?’ she asked him.

‘A lot of ruins,’ he said. ‘And occasional glimpses of the factions.’ He put his binoculars to his eyes and made a sweep of the terrain, pausing here and there as he caught sight of some interesting detail. ‘There’s been a battalion out of Nonesuch in the last hour,’ he said, ‘looking much the worse for wear. There’s rebels over towards the Steps, and another band to the North-West of here. The Prophet left the Firmament a little while ago – I can’t say exactly when, my watch was stolen – and there’s several squads of his evangelists preceding him, to clear the way.’

‘The way where?’

‘To the Gyre, of course.’

‘The Gyre?’

‘My guess is that was the Prophet’s target from the outset.’

‘He’s not a Prophet,’ said Suzanna. ‘He’s called Shadwell.’

‘Shadwell?’

‘Go on, write that down. He’s a Cuckoo, and a salesman.’

‘You know this for certain?’ the man said. Tell me all.’

‘No time,’ Suzanna replied, much to his aggravation. ‘I’ve got to get to him.’

‘Oh. So he’s a friend.’

‘Far from it,’ she said, her eyes straying back to the bodies in the pool.

‘You’ll never get near his throat, if that’s what you’re hoping,’ the man told her. ‘He’s guarded day and night.’

‘I’ll find a way,’ she said. ‘You don’t know what he’s capable of.’

‘If he’s a Cuckoo and he tries stepping into the Gyre, that’ll be the end of us, that I do know. Still, it’ll give me a last chapter, eh?’

‘And who’ll be left to read it?’

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