I LOVE MEMORIES.ย They are our ballads, our personal foundation myths. But I must acknowledge that memoryย canย be cruel if left unchallenged.
Memory is often our only connection to who we used to be. Memories are fossils, the bones left by dead versions of ourselves. More potently, our minds are a hungry audience, craving only the peaks and valleys of
experience. The bland erodes, leaving behind the distinctive bits to be remembered again and again.
Painful or passionate, surreal or sublime, we cherish those little rocks of peak experience, polishing them with the ever-smoothing touch of recycled proxy living. In so doingโlike pagans praying to a sculpted mud figureโwe make of our memories the gods which judge our current lives.
I love this. Memory may not be the heart of what makes us human, but itโs at least a vital organ. Nevertheless, we must take care not to let the bliss of the present fade when compared to supposedly better days. Weโre happy,
sure, but were weย moreย happy then? If we let it, memory can make shadows of the now, as nothing can match the buttressed legends of our past.
I think about this a great deal, for it is my job to sell legends. Package them, commodify them. For a small price, Iโll let you share my memoriesโ which I solemnly promise are real, or will be as long as you agree not to cut them too deeply.
Do not let memory chase you. Take the advice of one who has dissected the beast, then rebuilt it with a more fearsome faceโwhich I then used to
charm a few extra coins out of an inebriated audience. Enjoy memories, yes, but donโt be a slave to who you wish you once had been.
Those memories arenโt alive. You are.
Personally, I donโt think I gave proper attention to just how beautiful Tressโs world was. To me, it was a backwater planet drowning in the dross of the aethers, which are more useful in other incarnationsโand far easier to harvest on the moons themselves anyway.
And yet, nowhere else in my travels have I witnessed anything like those spores. As we sailed the Crimson, I felt like a leaf floating on the blood of a fallen giant. The farther we went, the higher the Crimson Moon soaredโ dark and ominous in the day, often haloed by sunlight. A clot upon the light.
At night, it burst aflame with its own unblinking, preternatural glow. At first we were too far away to see the sporefall, but as we closed the distance, the lunagree appeared. A fountain from the sky, pouring down into the center of the sea. The verdant spores had always looked like pollen in the air, but this felt like a lava flow. Erupting from the heavens to melt away the planet.
I wasnโt in my right mind during the trip, but I could still see. And the polished bits of that land in my memory are always striking images. Surreal, spellbinding pictures of magic so dominant itย literallyย fell from the sky.
I believe Tress might have been more pleased if the viewย hadnโtย been so stunning. Sheโd have had a better chance of keeping my attention.
โWould youย pleaseย focus, Hoid?โ the girl asked.
I pointed at the distant red moon, the spores streaming down to fill the sea. โIt looks like the moon is throwing up.โ
Tress sighed.
โImagine that the sea is the toilet,โ I said, โand the moon is the face of a god, heaving onto us after a long night of getting spun around and around on a bar stool.โ
I actually composed a poem about a vomiting god. Iโll spare you, though itโs the only time Iโve had an excuse to make a really good rhyme for
โscarf.โ
Finally, after some prodding, I turned from my newfound muse and settled down on the deck near Tress. She would have preferred to work with me belowdecks, out of sight, but I had been stubborn. Iโd wanted to watch the moon barf. As one does.
โWe need to break the curse,โ she said.
โAh yes,โ I said. Then I leaned in close, speaking conspiratorially. โYou know, I have one of those.โ
โA curse?โ
โIndeed.โ
โI know, Hoid.โ
โYou do?โ
โYes. Itโs why we can talk about it. If I didnโt know, you couldnโt tell me.โ โI canโt tell you something you donโt know, but only things you already
know?โ
โYes, because of the curse.โ โOh! A curse! Iโโ
โโhave one of those. I know. I need to break yours so you can lead me to the Sorceress. Nobody knows where in the Midnight Sea she can be found.โ
I fell silent.
โHoid?โ she asked. โDo you understand?โ
โI think I understand. But, see, itโs hard.โ I leaned in closer. โI can tell youโฆโ
โYes?โ
โSomething importantโฆโ โYes?โ
โSocks with sandals,โ I whispered. โThe new fashion movement. Trust me. It will beย allย the rage.โ
She sighed with increasing exasperation.
Iโm accustomed to that reaction from people, but I prefer to beย intentionallyย irritating. Itโs against my professional ethics to frustrate people by accident. Itโs likeโฆa construction worker making a new road while
sleepwalking. The foreman would have a fit. How in the world does one make a sleepwalker take a union-mandated break? Do you wake them up?
โLook,โ Tress said, โI have this paper here, see? And Iโve written down a lot of words that I think would have to do with curses. Are there any you
canโt talk to me about? If so, that will give me a clue.โ
It was a workable idea. I would have been impressed, if I hadnโt been distracted by wondering whether anyone had made clothing out of napkins yet.
Tress handed me the list of words. I studied them, cocked my head to the side, then nodded.
โAnything?โ she asked.
โI,โ I declared, โhave apparently forgotten how to read.โ
Showing legendary patience, Tress took the list back and read the words to me. I repeated them.
โWell?โ she asked.
โI definitely have heard some of those words before,โ I said. โNow, I forgot the rules. Is this the game where I draw a picture of the word, or is it the game where I act them out?โ
She groaned and lay back on the deck, her head thumping the wood. โCould you maybe lead me to the Sorceressย withoutย getting your curse broken?โ
I fell silent. โHoid?โ
I smiled at her. Iโd blacked out one of my teeth to make it seem like it was missing, as I figured that must be quite fashionable. A number of the Dougs were sporting the look, after all.
โMaybe I could say letters to you,โ she said, โand you could think of the way to break your curse. I could ask you, โIs this letter in the word?โ Theoretically, you wonโt be able to say yes if it were.โ
This one wouldnโt have worked. It was an easy enough workaround that the Sorceress had thought of it, and had basically โprogrammedโ the curse to forbid the person from confirming words this way.
In addition, in this specific instanceโฆwellโฆ โLetters,โ I said. โSpelling words. Readingโฆโ
โRight,โ Tress said. โRight. You never answered my question, though.
Could you lead me to the Sorceress? Even without being uncursed?โ I fell silent.
A part of me was hoping sheโd notice how loud that silence was.
โWait,โ she said, sitting up. โEvery time I talk about sailing to see the Sorceress, you get quiet.โ
โDo I?โ I asked.
โThose are the only times when Iโve been around you that you havenโt had anything to sayโฆโ Her eyes widened. โHoid, you canโt talk about the Sorceress or her island, right?โ
I, notably, was unable to answer.
โHoid,โ she said, โcan you talk about the kingโs island?โ
โIโve been there once!โ I said. โHave you heard the story about the kingโs tosher? I donโt really remember it, but it has poop in it, so itย mustย be funny!โ
โTalking about visiting the kingโs island didnโt make you shut up,โ she
said, โbut talking about the Sorceressโs island didโฆโ She stood up. โI need a map.โ
And there. After only a few days of trying, sheโd discovered more about helping me than Ulaam had in our year together. That stupid shapeshifter
wasย enjoyingย this. I swear, theyโve all been getting weirder ever since Sazed released them.
Anyway, Salay was at her usual post, guiding the ship deeper into the
Crimson. She didnโt have a map of the Midnight up there, butโupon Tressโs requestโshe sent a Doug to fetch one from her quarters. It wasnโt particularly detailed; none of the maps of the Midnight Sea are. Fortunately, theย shapeย was roughly correct, since all of the seas are basically pentagons.
Tress started pointing to places on the map and asking, โHoid, Iโd like you to guide us here. Could you do that?โ
Each time, I told her some terribly interesting fact about a placeโsuch as having walked there wearing butter instead of shoes. Until she reached a
specific point.
When she asked about that one, I fell silent.
When I stop talking, people often act happy. Itโs a hazard of my profession. But this time it was different. Tress pulled the map to her chest, her eyes watering.
She knew where the Sorceressโs island was. Near the border of the Midnight Sea and the Crimson Sea, perhaps half a dayโs sail inward.
It was the first concrete piece of information sheโd found. The first real
step toward rescuing Charlie. It was a beautiful moment that was ruined as a sudden line of rainfall appeared on the horizonโthen shot straight for our
ship.