The pessimist in
me was sure I would not be able to pull it off. If nothing else,
the earthquake Swan mentioned would in some way have sealed the
chamber of unholy books off from the rest of the world. If the
chamber was not sealed off, then I would trip the only booby trap
that Goblin had overlooked. If Goblin had not overlooked any booby
traps, then the pickax would not be a protective key, it would be a
trigger igniting the thousand secret sorceries protecting the
books.
“Sleepy, do you know you talk to yourself when
you’re worried about stuff?”
“What?”
“You’re crawling along there muttering about all the
bad things that’re going to happen. You keep on and
you’re going to convince me.”
That was twice. I had to get that under control. I did not use
to do that.
The place where the Books of the Dead were hidden had not
changed visibly. The pessimist in me worked hard to find a
dangerous difference, though.
Swan finally asked, “Are you going to study on it till we
pass out from hunger? Or are you going to go ahead and do
something?”
“I always was a better planner than a doer, Willow.”
I sucked in a peck of frigid air, took the pickax out of my
waistband, intoned, “O Lord of Heaven and Earth, let there be
no password that has to go with this.”
“Right behind you, boss,” Swan said, making a joke
as he nudged me forward. “Don’t be shy now.”
Of course not. That would belittle Goblin’s sacrifice and
memory.
I realized that my breathing had turned to rapid, shallow
panting as I reached the point where Master Santaraksita had
achieved flight. I held the pick in front of me with both hands,
muscles protesting its weight, squeezing it so tight I feared I
would leave my fingerprints etched upon it permanently.
A tingling began in my hands. It crept up my arms as I eased
forward. My skin crawled and I developed severe goose bumps. I
said, “You’d better hold onto me, Willow.” In
case I needed yanking back. “In case you need the connection
to the pick.” The shield was not rejecting me. Not yet.
Swan rested his hands on my shoulders an instant before the
tingling reached my body. I began to shiver. Suddenly I had the
chills and shakes of an autumn sickness.
“Woo!” Swan said. “This feels
weird.”
“It gets weirder,” I promised. “I’ve got
one of those agues where the chill goes all the way to the
marrow.”
“Uh . . . yeah. I’m getting
there, too. Toss in some joint aches, too. Come on. Let’s get
that fire started and warm ourselves.”
Would fire be enough?
Once we moved forward another ten feet, the miseries stopped
getting worse. The tingling on the outside faded. I told Swan,
“I think it’s safe to let go now.”
“You should have seen your hair. It started dancing around
when we were halfway through. It lasted only a couple of steps but
it was a sight.”
“I’ll bet.” My hair was a sight anyway,
usually. I did not offer it nearly enough attention and I had not
had it trimmed in months. “Got anything to start a fire
with?”
“You don’t? You didn’t prepare for this? You
knew it had to be done and you didn’t bring—”
“All right, we’ll use mine. I just don’t
have much tinder left. Didn’t want to use mine up when I
could use yours.”
“Thanks a lot. You’re getting as bad as those two
nasty old men.” Chagrined, he recalled that one of the nasty
old men he meant had just completed his tenure with the
Company.
“I learned from the best. Listen. I’ve been thinking
about this. Even if we are past all the traps, the books themselves
might be dangerous. Considering the way the brains of wizards work,
it’s probably not a smart thing to peek inside at the pages.
One look at the writings and you’re likely to spend the rest
of your life standing there reading—even if you don’t
recognize a word—out loud. I recall reading about a spell that
worked that way, once.”
“So what do we do?”
“You notice that all three books are open? We’ll
have to come at them from underneath and tip the covers shut. So
that they end up face-down. Even then we might want to handle them
with our eyes shut when we go burn them. I’ve read about
grimoires that had rakshasas bound into their covers.”
Although nothing as exciting as that ever turned up in the library
where I had worked.
“A talking book that can read itself to me. That’s
what I need.”
“I thought Soulcatcher made you learn how to read when you
were the king of the Greys.”
“She did. That don’t mean I want to read. Reading is
bloody hard work.”
“I thought managing a brewery was hard work. You never
shied away from that.” Being shorter, I took the job of
sneaking up on the three lecterns. I used extreme caution. They
might have been great actors but I was soon convinced that they
could not see me coming.
“I like making beer. I don’t like
reading.”
He should have been the one getting ready to burn books, then. I
was suffering a crisis of conscience as troublesome as any of my
crises of faith. I loved books. I believed in books. As a rule I
did not believe in destroying books because their contents were
disagreeable. But these books contained the dark, secret patterns
for bringing on the end of the world. The end of many worlds,
actually, for if the Year of the Skulls successfully sacrificed my
world, others connected to the glittering plain must follow.
This was not a crisis that needed immediate resolution. I had my
answers worked out already, which was why I was on hands and knees
under the lecterns while suffering verbal abuse from an infidel who
had no use for my god or for the Deceivers’ merciless
Destroyer. I tipped the covers of the books shut while wondering if
there was still some way the Children of Night could get to me.
“The covers appear to be blank,” Swan said.
“You’re looking at the backs of the books. I’m
closing them so they’re face-down. Remember?”
“Hold it.” He held up a finger, cocked an ear.
“Echoes.”
“Uhm. Somebody’s out there.”
I listened harder. “Singing again. I wish they
wouldn’t sing. Nobody in the band but Sahra can carry a tune
in a bucket with a lid on it. You can come on up here now. I think
it’s safe.”
“You think?”
“I’m still alive.”
“I don’t know if that’s necessarily a
recommendation. You’re too sour and bitter for the monsters
to eat. I, on the other hand—”
“You, on the other hand, are plain lucky that my god
forbids me to reveal that the only thing interested in eating you
would be the kind of beetle that flourishes on a diet of livestock
by-product. Right there looks like a good place to start a
fire.”
Swan was up beside me now. “There” was some kind of
large brazier-looking thing that still had a few charcoal remnants
in it. It was made of hammered brass in a style common to most of
the cultures of this end of the world.
“You want me to tear a few pages out for
tinder?”
“No, I don’t want you to tear pages out.
Weren’t you listening when I told you the books might make
you want to read them?”
“I was listening. Sometimes I don’t hear very well,
though.”
“Like most of the human race.” I was prepared. In
minutes I had a small fire burning. I lifted one of the books
carefully, making sure it faced away from Swan and me. I fanned its
pages out slightly and set it down in the flames, spine upward. I
burned the last volume first. Just in case.
Something might interfere. I wanted the first volume destroyed
to be one the Daughter of Night had not yet seen. The first book,
which she had copied parts of several times and might have
partially memorized, I would burn last.
The book caught fire eventually but did not burn well. It
produced a nasty-smelling dark smoke that filled the cavern and
forced Swan and me to get down on our stomachs on the icy
floor.
The underground wind did carry some of the smoke away. The rest
was no longer overwhelming when I consigned the second book to the
flames.
While waiting to add the final book to the fire, I brooded about
why Kina was doing nothing to resist this blow to her hopes for
resurrection. I could only pray that Goblin’s sacrifice had
hurt her so badly she could not look outside herself yet. I could
only pray that I was not a victim of some grand deceit. Maybe these
books were decoys. Maybe I was doing exactly what Kina had planned
for me to do.
There were doubts. Always.
“You’re muttering to yourself again.”
“Uhn.” I possessed not so much as the faintest hope
that Goblin’s death had put Kina out of the misery of the
world permanently.
“This feels so nice,” I said. “I could go to
sleep right here.” And I did so, promptly.
Good old Willow’s sense of duty, or self-preservation, or
something, kept him going. He got the last Book of the Dead into
the fire for me before he, too, settled down for a nap.
The pessimist in
me was sure I would not be able to pull it off. If nothing else,
the earthquake Swan mentioned would in some way have sealed the
chamber of unholy books off from the rest of the world. If the
chamber was not sealed off, then I would trip the only booby trap
that Goblin had overlooked. If Goblin had not overlooked any booby
traps, then the pickax would not be a protective key, it would be a
trigger igniting the thousand secret sorceries protecting the
books.
“Sleepy, do you know you talk to yourself when
you’re worried about stuff?”
“What?”
“You’re crawling along there muttering about all the
bad things that’re going to happen. You keep on and
you’re going to convince me.”
That was twice. I had to get that under control. I did not use
to do that.
The place where the Books of the Dead were hidden had not
changed visibly. The pessimist in me worked hard to find a
dangerous difference, though.
Swan finally asked, “Are you going to study on it till we
pass out from hunger? Or are you going to go ahead and do
something?”
“I always was a better planner than a doer, Willow.”
I sucked in a peck of frigid air, took the pickax out of my
waistband, intoned, “O Lord of Heaven and Earth, let there be
no password that has to go with this.”
“Right behind you, boss,” Swan said, making a joke
as he nudged me forward. “Don’t be shy now.”
Of course not. That would belittle Goblin’s sacrifice and
memory.
I realized that my breathing had turned to rapid, shallow
panting as I reached the point where Master Santaraksita had
achieved flight. I held the pick in front of me with both hands,
muscles protesting its weight, squeezing it so tight I feared I
would leave my fingerprints etched upon it permanently.
A tingling began in my hands. It crept up my arms as I eased
forward. My skin crawled and I developed severe goose bumps. I
said, “You’d better hold onto me, Willow.” In
case I needed yanking back. “In case you need the connection
to the pick.” The shield was not rejecting me. Not yet.
Swan rested his hands on my shoulders an instant before the
tingling reached my body. I began to shiver. Suddenly I had the
chills and shakes of an autumn sickness.
“Woo!” Swan said. “This feels
weird.”
“It gets weirder,” I promised. “I’ve got
one of those agues where the chill goes all the way to the
marrow.”
“Uh . . . yeah. I’m getting
there, too. Toss in some joint aches, too. Come on. Let’s get
that fire started and warm ourselves.”
Would fire be enough?
Once we moved forward another ten feet, the miseries stopped
getting worse. The tingling on the outside faded. I told Swan,
“I think it’s safe to let go now.”
“You should have seen your hair. It started dancing around
when we were halfway through. It lasted only a couple of steps but
it was a sight.”
“I’ll bet.” My hair was a sight anyway,
usually. I did not offer it nearly enough attention and I had not
had it trimmed in months. “Got anything to start a fire
with?”
“You don’t? You didn’t prepare for this? You
knew it had to be done and you didn’t bring—”
“All right, we’ll use mine. I just don’t
have much tinder left. Didn’t want to use mine up when I
could use yours.”
“Thanks a lot. You’re getting as bad as those two
nasty old men.” Chagrined, he recalled that one of the nasty
old men he meant had just completed his tenure with the
Company.
“I learned from the best. Listen. I’ve been thinking
about this. Even if we are past all the traps, the books themselves
might be dangerous. Considering the way the brains of wizards work,
it’s probably not a smart thing to peek inside at the pages.
One look at the writings and you’re likely to spend the rest
of your life standing there reading—even if you don’t
recognize a word—out loud. I recall reading about a spell that
worked that way, once.”
“So what do we do?”
“You notice that all three books are open? We’ll
have to come at them from underneath and tip the covers shut. So
that they end up face-down. Even then we might want to handle them
with our eyes shut when we go burn them. I’ve read about
grimoires that had rakshasas bound into their covers.”
Although nothing as exciting as that ever turned up in the library
where I had worked.
“A talking book that can read itself to me. That’s
what I need.”
“I thought Soulcatcher made you learn how to read when you
were the king of the Greys.”
“She did. That don’t mean I want to read. Reading is
bloody hard work.”
“I thought managing a brewery was hard work. You never
shied away from that.” Being shorter, I took the job of
sneaking up on the three lecterns. I used extreme caution. They
might have been great actors but I was soon convinced that they
could not see me coming.
“I like making beer. I don’t like
reading.”
He should have been the one getting ready to burn books, then. I
was suffering a crisis of conscience as troublesome as any of my
crises of faith. I loved books. I believed in books. As a rule I
did not believe in destroying books because their contents were
disagreeable. But these books contained the dark, secret patterns
for bringing on the end of the world. The end of many worlds,
actually, for if the Year of the Skulls successfully sacrificed my
world, others connected to the glittering plain must follow.
This was not a crisis that needed immediate resolution. I had my
answers worked out already, which was why I was on hands and knees
under the lecterns while suffering verbal abuse from an infidel who
had no use for my god or for the Deceivers’ merciless
Destroyer. I tipped the covers of the books shut while wondering if
there was still some way the Children of Night could get to me.
“The covers appear to be blank,” Swan said.
“You’re looking at the backs of the books. I’m
closing them so they’re face-down. Remember?”
“Hold it.” He held up a finger, cocked an ear.
“Echoes.”
“Uhm. Somebody’s out there.”
I listened harder. “Singing again. I wish they
wouldn’t sing. Nobody in the band but Sahra can carry a tune
in a bucket with a lid on it. You can come on up here now. I think
it’s safe.”
“You think?”
“I’m still alive.”
“I don’t know if that’s necessarily a
recommendation. You’re too sour and bitter for the monsters
to eat. I, on the other hand—”
“You, on the other hand, are plain lucky that my god
forbids me to reveal that the only thing interested in eating you
would be the kind of beetle that flourishes on a diet of livestock
by-product. Right there looks like a good place to start a
fire.”
Swan was up beside me now. “There” was some kind of
large brazier-looking thing that still had a few charcoal remnants
in it. It was made of hammered brass in a style common to most of
the cultures of this end of the world.
“You want me to tear a few pages out for
tinder?”
“No, I don’t want you to tear pages out.
Weren’t you listening when I told you the books might make
you want to read them?”
“I was listening. Sometimes I don’t hear very well,
though.”
“Like most of the human race.” I was prepared. In
minutes I had a small fire burning. I lifted one of the books
carefully, making sure it faced away from Swan and me. I fanned its
pages out slightly and set it down in the flames, spine upward. I
burned the last volume first. Just in case.
Something might interfere. I wanted the first volume destroyed
to be one the Daughter of Night had not yet seen. The first book,
which she had copied parts of several times and might have
partially memorized, I would burn last.
The book caught fire eventually but did not burn well. It
produced a nasty-smelling dark smoke that filled the cavern and
forced Swan and me to get down on our stomachs on the icy
floor.
The underground wind did carry some of the smoke away. The rest
was no longer overwhelming when I consigned the second book to the
flames.
While waiting to add the final book to the fire, I brooded about
why Kina was doing nothing to resist this blow to her hopes for
resurrection. I could only pray that Goblin’s sacrifice had
hurt her so badly she could not look outside herself yet. I could
only pray that I was not a victim of some grand deceit. Maybe these
books were decoys. Maybe I was doing exactly what Kina had planned
for me to do.
There were doubts. Always.
“You’re muttering to yourself again.”
“Uhn.” I possessed not so much as the faintest hope
that Goblin’s death had put Kina out of the misery of the
world permanently.
“This feels so nice,” I said. “I could go to
sleep right here.” And I did so, promptly.
Good old Willow’s sense of duty, or self-preservation, or
something, kept him going. He got the last Book of the Dead into
the fire for me before he, too, settled down for a nap.