OUR EXPOSURE TO THEย oceans of space has made of our vast worlds small islands. Our genetic enhancements have strained our appreciation of time.
As you have read, once I dallied in the streets and canals of Borosevo
without regard for the cost in years. Crowded by all that noise, that color, the verve and bustle of the city and its dying people, I thought my lost time worth nothing given the centuries my blood assured. How easy it was to believe that I could stay there, stay with Cat in our crumbling tenement until time itself pulled me down like the buildings.
The man who hopes for the future delays its arrival, and the man who dreads it summons it to his door.
Augustine once said that if there are such things as the past and the future, they do not exist as such but are only the present in their own times. The past, he says, exists only in memory and the future only in expectation. Neither is real. The past and the futureโour lives and dreamsโare stories. We are all stories in the end. Only stories. And it is in the nature of stories that times present and past are present in time future, and the future present in the past. Thus all time is always present in the mind, and in the story of the mind, and perhaps in those forces that shaped the mind. The poet wrote that all time is unredeemable. That what might have been is only an
abstraction: worlds in quantum space, unrealized, which in turn define events by their exclusionย fromย events.
What if? What might have been?
I saw myself in the dusty halls of that athenaeum on Teukros and in the vaulted chambers of the seminary on Vesperad. Other Hadrians tramped the dust of other worlds, unmade, unreal. Footfalls echoed in memory down passages I did not take, toward doors I did not open.
They were nothing next to the thoughts of where I might be going.
The future might come only in its own time, but the scholiasts teach that there are many futures, and it is only the crashing of the waves of time and possibility against the interminableย nowย that makes the world. It is not the future that is present in Ever-Fleeting Time but theย futures.ย Freedomโ freedom of thought and actionโmatter and are guaranteed because the future is not. There are no prophecies, only probabilities. No Fate, only
chance. The present time is not when we are, but what we do.
Upon these and more material facts I meditated, sitting half-drunkenly upon the strand overlooking a pale turquoise sea. Night on Emesh was never truly dark, for at any given time either Binah or Armand would be visible in the
sky, shining green or pink in the dimness. That night both were present: the massive, forested Binah low on the horizon and small, jewel-bright Armand set high in the firmament to outdo the very stars. Wind whistled down the
cleft behind me, moaning through Calagahโs fluted pillars and out into the world.
The Empire. The Chantry. Anaรฏs. Gilliam. Ligeia Vas . . .ย I fidgeted with little chips of stone, gray against black volcanic sand, making lines of them.ย The Jaddians. Sir Olorin. Sir Elomas. Lords Balian and Luthor.ย They were all pieces on a board. I destroyed the line of stones.ย The Cielcin. The war.
Must everything you say sound like itโs straight out of a Eudoran
melodrama?ย Gibsonโs words rattled out of ancient history, referred from a simpler time. I stifled a laugh, tipped the wine bottle back before screwing it into the sand. Iโd walked into a melodrama, hadnโt I? Or rather, I had
expected one, created one for myself. I shook the memories away and tried to finish my drawing of Lady Kalima, but I despaired of ever properly
capturing the disdain in herย ealiย eyes. The charcoal snapped, and I swore, dropped the journal on the beach beside me, and leaned back against the rocks.
โYou all right?โ
I started and cried out, nearly knocking over my wine. โYou need to stop sneaking up on people!โ More softly, I swore to myself and closed the journal, took up the broken pencil.
Valka stood on the rise above me, balanced with each foot on a separate spar of basalt, perched like a Mandari assassin ready for the kill. Many times weโd talked like this before the incident in the tunnels, and many nights since Iโd sat alone. โYou make it sound like Iโve made a hobby of
such things.โ She had her hands shoved deep into the pockets of the red leather jacket sheโd favored since coming south, its tails flapping about her knees in the night wind.
A sickly grimace pulled at my face as I recalled her little spate of poor timing in the tunnels a week earlier. Weโd not spoken much since then; the truth was that Iโd been avoiding her. โWell, donโt . . . start.โ My grimace intensified.ย Great job, Marlowe. Real coherent.ย I tried to salvage my dignity. โHow did you know I was here? And how long have you been
standingย there?โ
โNot long. And youโre out here about every other night.โ She leaped down from the escarpment, kicking up little puffs of sand as she landed. She peered down at me past a fringe of dark hair. In the moonsโ light, the subtle red there gleamed like burnished copper, glowing like the burning
edges of a sheet of parchment. I think she worried for me, seeing the bottle half-emptied as it was. For when she next spoke, it was in the tone someone might employ when speaking with a plague-stricken family member.
โWeโve . . . spoken out here before. Several times.โ That was true. Many times since Iโd come to Calagah, Valka and Iโoften with Elomas or Ada or the squire, Karthik, in towโhad wandered the shoreline within a mile or so of the cleft.
โI know that.โ I made a face and looked down at my journal, hauling the sandy tome up into my lap. โI just . . . I was just trying to be alone is all.โ I tried to scuff the thing clean with a loose cuff. When she neither moved nor said anything, just kept looming at the edge of my vision, I let the journal drop into my lap and burst out, exasperated, โItโs only that IโIโve had a lot to think about. Would you mind?โ The sea by night was the wine-dark described by old, blind Homer, highlighted a snowy white as Valkaโs hair
was flameโs honest crimson. She did not move or stir. She didnโt leave. She might have been a stone, one of the basalt spires, but for the pressure of those golden eyes on me. Patience is a great teacher and silence a better one
โthey prize things from menโs souls without the need for knives. When the lapping of somber waves had been the only sound for too long, I blurted,
โAbout what I saw. In the cave . . . I . . .โ
โWe donโt have to talk about it,โ she said. โWe both said awful things.โ โWe both . . .โ I clenched my teeth. That was a lie. This time, at least, I
was innocent. But Gilliamโs vulture-blue eye peered at me over her
shoulder, and I stopped myself. โAs you wish.โ Looking for a way out, I said, โAnd about Anaรฏs, Iโโ
โHadrian, I donโt care.โ She seated herself beside me, and somehow that simple gesture softened the gut-wrenching edge in her words. โI donโt know what youโre so ashamed of. Youโre supposed to marry the girl. โTis good that you kissed her, better than most of you palatineย inmaneย can hope for.โ
I stiffened at the insult.ย Inhuman.ย It stunned me, made me feel rather how I expect a grandfather might if called an ignorant child. โBetter
than . . . ?โย I donโt know what youโre so ashamed of.ย How could I explain that? I turned my face away, pawed for the bottle beside me, wishing I
could vanish up inside it like some djinni and forget the entire world.
โWell, like your parents.โ Iโd forgotten I had told her about them. She drew her knees up to her chin, heels digging furrows in the flinty sand.
โCold. You know what I mean. This is good. Better. Sheโs a good kid.โ To hear a countโs daughter referred to thusly was a novelty, and I smiled. โYou could do a lot worse, you know? She likes you.โ She punched my arm,
strangely playful. โSheโs gorgeous, too.โ
An incoherent noise escaped me, and I said, โI donโt want to marry her.โ I seized a fistful of the little stones Iโd been toying with and hurled them at the sea. They thudded into the muck near the water. It felt good to say
aloud. โI donโt want to be stuck on this planet. I killed a man, Valka,ย and they will try to kill me before long. The Chantry, I meanโthe grand prior. This place . . . Youโre the only reason I . . .โ I broke off, embarrassed.
No words. I stopped and justย lookedย at the sea, at the play of rosy moonlight on the black waters, the stars winking in the heavens, waves pushed by wind and pulled by Binah and Armand. The beauty of it kindled at the base of me, enough to momentarily crowd out the screaming chaos. How fragile it was, that quiet. The lapping waves, the distant scree of some night bird. Away and beyond but near at hand, the lights of orbital ships and satellites scratched a silent procession against the unfixed stars. โI wasnโt
supposed to be here, Valka. It wasnโt supposed to be this way.โ I tugged the planted wine bottle free, uncorked it.
Valka snatched it from me before I could drink and took a long pull herself. โI wanted to be a pilot, you know.โ
โWhat?โ I grabbed the bottle back. โYouโre serious?โ
โCompletely. I wanted to buy a ship, trade up and down the Wisp.
Maybe carry passengers.โ โWhat happened?โ
โMy father died,โ she said, her gaze fixed on some point in the sea or sky that I could not name. I bent my head, murmured an apology. โโTis all right. You did not know.โ She did not sound at all rattled, though she hugged her knees more tightly to her.
โHow did he die?โ
Valka turned to look at me. โHe was killed. Doing this.โ She took
another swallow, then glared at the bottle with hooded eyes. โThis is not so good a bottle as the last.โ
โElomas hoards the good stuff for himself.โ As I spoke I began
sharpening my broken pencil on the scalpel I carried in my leather drawing kit. Valka looked briefly alarmed, as if fearing I might cut myself, but my hands were steady. โSorry. I wasnโt expecting company.โ My hands stilled in my lap, still clutching their tools. โYour father was a xenologist too?โ
โWhy do you sharpen your pencils with a knife?โ
โIโm sorry?โ I looked round at her, confused. She repeated her question, waved a hand at the utensils in mine. โOh.โ I held the pencil up for inspection, admiring the black point, so sharp. โIt puts a better point on.โ
Crispin had asked me the same question once.
I could feel her staring at me, not amused. โThatโs absurd. They make pencil sharpeners, you know.โ Hadnโt Crispin said the same thing?
All I could do was shrug, gesturing with the scalpel. โItโs not really about that. Itโs . . . The tools we use help adjust our thinking.โ
โHow do you mean?โ
โWhen I donโt feel well, I draw.โ I opened the book, flipping through a couple of the earlier pagesโpages far from the drawings I had made of Valka herself, each dark and minutely detailed, heavily shadowed.
โSometimes Iโll sit and stare at a page forever, but I donโt see anything. When that happens, I try to figure out whatโs gone wrong. Why I canโt do it.โ I put the scalpel down on the drawing kit beside me. โI take time to
sharpen the pencil again, even if it doesnโt need it. Itโs good to practice the motions. It focuses my mind, helps itโmeโwork better.โ In all this rambling, she had not once made a sound or interrupted to mock me, so I
added, โOf course, there are some times when the art comes effortlessly.โ I
smiled up at her, keeping a hand flat on the journal for fear it would spill open, as in some torpid comedy, to reveal Valkaโs portrait.
She tapped her front teeth against the rim of the bottle, as she nodded. Suddenly conscious of the silliness of the gesture, she put the bottle down in the sand between us. Valkaโs eyes did not break contact with the wine-dark sea. โHe was. A xenologist. My father, I mean. He ran afoul of your Inquisition while on a dig at Ozymandias.โ
โTheyโre not my Inquisition.โ
We were both quiet then for a long time, the sea and the faint calling of birds again the only sounds. The wind moaned from the cleft behind us, ragged and lonely and alone. At last I asked, โDo you hate me, Valka?โ
โYou do enough of that yourself.โ And she favored me with a small
smile that bled through the pall that lay on me like ink through cloth. โYou donโt need my help.โ
A sort of madness seized me, bubbling up from somewhere lower than my throat, and I started laughing, low and quietly. A hiccup cut it off, and I had to clamp my jaws shut and hold my breath to keep the condition from worsening. โYou have me there.โ
โYouโre not who I thought you were,โ the woman said, words bright-edged as her hair in the moonsโ light. I looked at her, she at me. Her smile widened.
I felt my own smile grow to match, felt the quiet laughter of a moment
ago threaten to return. โWho did you think I was?โ She didnโt have to say it. I knew.
Valka looked at me a long time, those golden eyes bright in the gloom with a light all their own. โYou can guess, Iโm sure.โ
I could. She thought I was Crispin. Thought I was a butcher, a thug. She thought I enjoyed the violence of our world, a wolf among wolves, and though the Empire was a wilderness of wolves, I did not think that I was one of them. There must have been something of that thought on my face, for she said, โYouโre not, though. You wear your Imperial mantle like it
chafes you.โ โIt does.โ
โWhy?โ she asked. โWhy are you unhappy? This place . . . They want to give you everything. You have everything. Youโre a palatine, and they want to make you consort to a girl who rules a planet. Do you know how insane that is? Anaรฏs Mataro ruling a planet? Or anyone, for that matter.โ
We both laughed a little, her at the Imperium, me at Anaรฏs. When that was done I looked away, fiddling again with the chips of stone in the sand
beside me. โWhat makes you think that what I have here is so worthwhile?โ โYour privilege, you mean? Would you rather you were one of your
peasants?โ
โI was a peasant for years,โ I said harshly, glaring at her. โI lived in storm drains, Valka. I lost my . . . my friend to the bloody Gray Rot. I almost died in Colosso more times than I can count. Iโve been through
things you canโt imagine. Donโt preach to me about privilege. I know what I am. I didnโt choose it, but donโt think I havenโt suffered for it. And staying here would be no privilege.โ I couldnโt keep looking at her, not just then.
Not with what I was about to say. โBut Gilliam . . . Gilliam was my fault. I will atone for that and beg your forgiveness. I acted wrongly. But if you think that a forced marriage to Anaรฏs Mataro isnโt a prison for me just because she is gorgeousโyour word, not mineโthen you donโt know what a prison is.โ
To my everlasting surprise, she said nothing, covered her silence with a drink of wine.
An expression so very like pain pulled on the muscles beneath her pale
skin. After a moment I said lamely, โI wanted to be a pilot too. Switch and I and some of the othersโthe myrmidons, I meanโwe were going to buy a
ship, maybe start merchanting. Maybe mercenary work, traveling from
Colosso to Colosso.โ I picked up one of the stone chips and hurled it at the sea. It didnโt quite make it there. โI was going to be like Simeon the Red.
Travel the stars, meet xenobites . . . rescue princesses, I donโt know.โ
โYou have a very romantic view of the universe,โ she said. She meant it as an insult, but I refused to take it as such.
โI would like to,โ I said. โIโm just sorry the universe doesnโt share that aspiration.โ
I could feel those unnatural eyes on the side of my skull, but I didnโt look her way. โAre you always this dramatic?โ
โAsk anyone who knows me.โ
Valka snorted and passed the nearly empty wine bottle back to me. โFor what itโs worth, Iโm sorry too.โ
Another problem with Augustineโs common-sense vision of time: it
assumes a sort of causal relationship between past and present, between present and future. True, perhaps, in the physical sense, but in the narrative? No. Stories are not subject to Time, Ever-Fleeting. They transcend time.
They are eternal. In Classical English, the word โpresentโ means both
โnowโ and โgift.โย How the ancients survived such confusion I will never know, but there is beauty in such vagaries. Each moment, as it passes, is precious and so is separate from the moments that follow or precede it.
The truth? The truth is that I cannot remember if we shared that bottle on the last night at Calagah or if there was some other conversation our final night that I can no longer remember. It does not matter. In memory we rose from the shore and made the walk back to the cleft just as the sky turned to flame and thunder.
A great flash filled the heavens, red and white, channeling deep shadows across the craggy landscape. Smaller flashes followed, blue as daylight. I
stood transfixed, staring up at the fading light as fire streaked the heavens.ย Somethingย cast its flame against the clouds, turning the night to a mummerโs parody of sunset, the colors all wrong even for Emeshโs bloody giant sun. There was pink in that light, and blueโthe colors of plasmaโ falling like lightning across the sky.
I had no time to remember elementary physics. Indeed I had forgotten sense in my shock and awe.
Sound followed shortly after the light, and the shock of it knocked me from my feet. It was like being one of those prophets from antique mythology, brought to my kneesโto my faceโby the bellowing voice of God. Like thunder, but more than thunder. Like someone had broken the
sky. I clapped my hands over my ears, felt myself groan, but I did not hear it, for nothing could be heard beneath the awful crashing. The light was fading, and the sound with it, leaving a tinnitic ringing in my ears undercut by a dull, chthonic rumble, as if another planet were grating itself against the skin of the world.
โGet up!โ someone shouted. Something tugged at my arm and shoulders, helped me rise. Valka. It was Valka. Technicians came pelting from their plastic homes, some panicking, others milling, staring uncomprehending at the sky.
Near at hand, someone shouted, โA meteor?โ โImpossible!โ another voice declared.
โA ship!โ screamed a third. โOne of ours?โ
โCielcin!โ I lost track of the speakers, of the faceless members of this
Attic chorus crying that the army was at the gates. โItโs the Cielcin!โ Fear is a strange thing, irrational, but incredible in the way it achieves truth faster than reason.
My ears still rang, and my eyes ached from the fireball. The sky above was scored with streaks of light, the stars lost in the confusion, finer points shimmering in the vaulted airs of heaven, white against the Dark. From the ground it was beautiful, well and truly beautiful, an angry red tower of flame and smoke falling as a sword upon the world. Without needing to be
told, I knew our chorus was correct, knew that a ship was falling, smitten by ships more distant still. I knew those fine points of light in heaven were the drive-glows of lighter wings, tiny ships holding no more than two men each deployed to cover and blockade Emeshi airspace.
And I knew. Knew with the bitter certainty of fear. The Cielcin had come.
The words came easily to me then. โBel!โ I shouted at the nearest technician. โRun to Elomas and tell him to wave Springdeepโweโre going to need fliers. Soldiers.โ So small a thing, and yet when I recall that day I remember that as a proud and vital moment, the moment when I could have caved and fallen to the ground but stood fast and straight and acted.
The technician, a feminine man with high cheekbones and a pale offworld complexion, stammered and looked confused. โWhat?โ
Beneath our feet all the world shook, punctuated by a crash of unholy thunder loud as the dying of suns. Valka staggered against me, but I caught her, steadied us on the uneven ground. โThe hell . . .โ I looked west to
where the column of flame had descended, a slash in the sky that now touched the horizon. Streaks of orange light yet fell from the heavens, tongues of flame tracing where the fiery remains of the ship had just fallen from the sky and crashed into the stonelands. โBel, go! Find the old man!โ I turned to Valka. โWe need to round everyone up, get them onto the beach,
away from here.โ โAway?โ
โYou can spot the camp from miles offโitโs a target!โ The sky in the west choked on smoke, lit from beneath by still-burning flame.
Remembering the crash, I was bothered by the blue bursts of light cutting through the chaos. Attitude jets? Yes, they must have been. Ye Gods, they
had steered this way. Of course they had. Theyโd aimed for the one
continent on all Emesh. They were banking on walking out of here. I tried to remember details, but the chaos had burned them all away. โIt could be one of our ships. Shot down.โ
Valka stood off to one side. She hadnโt moved for a good ten seconds. โShot down, maybe, but โtwas not human.โ How she could tell through the smoke and noise I could not say. โI think youโre right. We need to get
everyone out of here.โ