Garudas swooped by, engaged in city patrols, whilst cats looked up
from walls in response to their fast-moving shadows.
One of these bird-sentries landed on the top of the inner wall of
the city, and faced the dawn. The weather made the ambience, was
the ambience, because the city forever changed its mood according
to the skies. These days, there was little but grey.
The sentry was attached to Villjamur. He admired the citizens who
were its fabric, from the slang-talking gangs to the young lovers
who kissed under abandoned archways. All around were the signals of
the underworld, discreet and urgent conversations in the dark. It
was the only place he knew of where he might feel a nostalgia for
the present.
His precise vision detected another execution taking place on the
outer wall. Didn’t remember any being scheduled today.
‘Anything you wish to say before we release the arrows?’ a voice
echoed between the stone ramparts.
The garuda looked on with dull satisfaction from his higher
battlement. He ruffled his feathers, shivered as the wind built up
momentum over the fortifications, a chill quietly penetrating the
furthest reaches of the city, a token of invading winter.
The prisoner, some distance away, wore nothing more than a rippling
brown gown. He looked from left to right at the archers positioned
either side of him on the outermost wall, their bows still lowered
to one side. Down at the city-side base of the wall in its shadow,
people marched circles in the freezing mud, staring upwards.
A thin, pale man in green and brown uniform, the officer giving the
orders, stood further along the crest of the wall, as the prisoner
opened his mouth cautiously to answer him.
He merely said, ‘Is there any use?’
A girl screamed from the crowds gathered below, but no one bothered
to look down at her except the officer, who said, ‘A crime of the
heart, this one, eh?’
‘Aren’t they all?’ the prisoner replied. ‘That is, of the heart and
not the mind?’
A harsh rain, the occasional gust of something colder, and the mood
turned bellicose.
‘You tell me,’ the soldier growled, apparently irritated with this
immediate change in weather. Some sharp, rapid commands.
As the girl continued her wails and pleas from the base of the
wall, the two archers nocked their arrows, brought their bows to
docking point, then fired.
The prisoner’s skull cracked under the impact, blood spat onto the
throng underneath, and he buckled forwards, tumbling over the city
wall, two arrows in his head. Two lengths of rope caught him
halfway down.
A primitive display, a warning to everyone: Don’t mess with the
Empire. State rule is absolute.
It was followed by a scream that seemed to shatter the blanket of
rain.
The banshee had now announced the death.
With the execution over, the garuda extended his wings, reaching
several armspans to either side, cracked his spine to stretch
himself, crouched. With an immense thrust, he pushed himself high
into the air, flicking rain off his quills.
He banked skywards.
Villjamur was a granite fortress. Its main access was through three
consecutive gates, and there the garuda retained the advantage over
any invading armies. In the centre of the city, high up and pressed
against the rock-face, beyond a lattice work of bridges and spires,
was Balmacara, the vast Imperial residence, a cathedral-like
construct of dark basalt and slick-glistening mica. In this weather
the city seemed unreal.
The refugee encampments pitched off the Sanctuary Road were largely
quiet, a few dogs roaming between makeshift tents. The Sanctuary
Road was a dark scar finishing at Villjamur itself. Further out to
one side, the terrain changed to vague grassland, but well-trodden
verges along the road suggested how the refugees never stopped
hassling passing travellers as they sought to break away from their
penurious existence. Heather died back in places, extending in a
dark pastel smear to the other, before fading into the distance.
There was beauty there if you knew where to look.
The garuda noticed few people about at this time. No traders yet,
and only one traveller, wrapped in fur, on the road leading into
the city.
Back across the city.
Lanterns were being lit by citizens who perhaps had expected a
brighter day. Glows of orange crept through the dreary morning,
defining the shapes of elaborate windows, wide octagons, narrow
arches. It had been a winter of bistros with steamed-up windows, of
tundra flowers trailing down from hanging baskets, of constant
plumes of smoke from chimneys, one where concealed gardens were
dying, starved of sunlight, and where the statues adorning
once-flamboyant balconies were now suffocating under lichen.
The guard-bird finally settled on a high wall by a disused
courtyard. The ambient sound of the water on stone forced an
abstract disconnection from the place that made him wonder if he
had flown back in time. He turned his attention to the man hunched
in furs, the one he had noticed moments earlier. A stranger,
trudging though the second gate leading into the city.
The garuda watched him, unmoving, his eyes perfectly still.
* * *
There were three things that Randur Estevu hoped would mark him as
someone different here in Villjamur. He didn’t always necessarily
get drunk when alcohol was at hand, not like those back home. Also
he listened with great concentration, or gave the illusion at
least, whenever a woman spoke to him. And finally he was one of the
best - if not the best - dancers he knew of, and that meant
something coming from the island of Folke. There everyone learned
to dance as soon as they could walk - some before that, being
expected to crawl with rhythm even as babies.
Provincial charm would only add to this allure of the stranger, a
little accent perhaps, enough for the girls to take an interest in
what he had to say. A tall man, he’d remained slender, to the
eternal envy of fat gossiping women back home. Altogether, he rated
his chances well, as he advanced upon the last of the three gates
under the dawn rain, armed with only his few necessary belongings,
a pocketful of forged family histories, and a thousand witty
retorts.
Randur already knew his folklore and history, had learned further
during his journey. You had to be prepared for an important city
like this, because Villjamur was the residence of the Emperor Jamur
Johynn, and this island called Jokull was the Empire’s homeland.
Once known as Vilhallan it had been a collection of small farming
settlements scattered around the original cave systems, now hidden
behind the current architecture. Most of the city’s current
population were in fact direct descendants of those early dwellers.
Eleven thousand years ago. Before even the clan wars began. The
community thrived on myth. With such a history, a wealth of
cultures and creatures, the city was said to possess an emergent
property.
Randur had been travelling for weeks. Somewhere on the way, on a
superficial level, he’d become someone else. His mother was back in
Ule, on the island of Folke. A stern yet strangely faithful woman,
she’d raised him on her own in spite of the collapse of their
wealth, which had happened when he was too young to know about it.
He remembered hearing her coughing upstairs, in a musty room, the
stench of death all too premature. Every time he entered it, he
never knew what to expect.
She’d found him a ‘job’ in Villjamur. It came through the influence
of one of his shady uncles who was well connected on Y’iren and
Folke as a trading dignitary, though he’d never shared his wealth
with them. The man had always commented on Kapp’s good looks as if
this was a hindrance in life. Then that same uncle informed Kapp’s
mother that a man the same age and appearance as the lad had
disappeared only the previous week. His name was Randur Estevu, and
it was known that he was headed for employment in the Emperor’s
house. He had even been a rival of Kapp’s at dance tournaments and
in Yuralris bladework during the island’s festivals. The young man
had made enemies all right, boasting all too often that he had
sanctuary guaranteed in Villjamur before the Freeze came.
‘You lot’ll turn to ice, fuckers,’ the lad had said at the time,
‘while I got me safe digs at the warmest place in the Empire. Can’t
say more, though, because I wouldn’t want you lot getting in on my
connections.’
They’d found his body, or what was left of it, stuffed inside a
crate on a decaying boat that hadn’t left the harbour at Geu Docks
for as long as anyone could remember. No one was even shocked the
boy was dead. They were more interested in the old boat itself, as
it seemed to fulfil some maritime prophecy someone had mentioned
the week before.
Kapp then became Randur Estevu. Fled south with fake identification
to the Sanctuary City. He was told by his mother to seek his
fortune there, where the family line might have a chance to survive
the arrival of the ice. He had no idea what the real Randur Estevu
was to be doing in Villjamur, as the stolen papers didn’t explain.
Besides, Randur, as he would now be known, had his own schemes.
He fingered the coin in his pocket, the one the cultist had handed
him all those years ago, in the darkness, on that night of
blood.
Garudas loomed above on the battlements beside the final gate
leading into the city. They stood with folded arms. Half vulture,
half man: wings, beaks, talons on a human form. Cloaks and minimal
armour. White faces that seemed to glow in this grey light. During
his few days in a Folke station of the Regiment - which he joined
on a poetic whim, and primarily to impress this girl who was all
longing glances and unlikely promises - the men talked much about
the skills of the garuda. It seemed only a talented archer stood a
chance of deleting one from the skies. Soldiers had checked his
papers at the first and second gates. At the third they searched
his bags, confiscated his weapons, and questioned him with an
alarming intensity.
‘Sele of Jamur,’ Randur said. ‘So, then, what news here in the
Sanctuary City?’
One of the guards replied, ‘Well, the mood ain’t good, to be
honest. People ain’t happy. See a lot of miserable faces, both
outside and in. Can understand it out there, like,’ he indicated
the closed gates behind which huddled the refugees. ‘But in there
they’ve got faces like slapped arses, the lot of ’em. They’re the
ones who’re safe, too, miserable sods.’
‘Perhaps no one likes being trapped, even if it is for their own
good,’ Randur speculated.
‘Hey, they’re free to fuck off any time,’ the guard grumbled. ‘Nah,
it’ll bring more than just ice, this weather.’
After this final search, Randur continued through, and at last he
found himself standing inside the Sanctuary City.
Whoever built Villjamur, or at least whoever designed its intricate
shapes and eerily precise structures, could surely not have been a
human. Garish buildings were coated with painted pebbles, whilst
other oddities possessed coloured glass in the stonework so they
glistened like fractured gems. Randur stared around in awe, not
quite sure which way to go first. Possibilities grew exponentially.
The chilling rain transformed into drizzle then began to stop. Fish
was cooking in some far alleyway. Nearby, two signs said
‘firewood’. From the windows of one of the terraced houses, a
couple of women started hanging out sheets. Two young men talked in
some local hand-language, their sentences needing a gesture and a
glance for completion. Ahead of him, roads branched on two sides,
each leading uphill in a gradual arc, while pterodettes raced up
the cliff faces looming in the distance. Kids were sliding on
patches of ice in horizontal freefall. A couple walked by, the
blonde woman much younger than the man, and he judged them
‘respectable’ by the quality of their clothing. Randur was tempted
to make eye contact with the woman, and perhaps tease a reaction
out of her. It seemed to matter, stealing a smile from that man’s
life. Not just yet, though. He had only just arrived. He had a
cultist to find.
* * *
In a top-floor bedroom, in one of the expensive balconied houses
gracing the higher levels of Villjamur, a woman with a scarred face
relaxed on top of a man who was still panting from his sexual
exertions.
They kissed. Tongues slid across each other - only briefly, as it
didn’t quite feel right, and she wasn’t sure which of them was
causing that reaction. She pulled away, then clutched his chest,
began playing with the grey hairs. His face was small, his features
delicate, and his hands were rough, but at least they were touching
her. Neither of them had ruined the sexual act with words,
something she at least was grateful for. Meanwhile he continued to
run his hands along her sides, rubbing her hip bones gently with
his thumb, as if he had a fetish for the firm ridges of her
body.
She pushed herself forward till her long red hair fell across his
face. She then waited for him to brush it aside, and slowly, she
could see the inevitable disappointment appear in his eyes, just as
she had learned to notice it regularly over the last few years. At
first his eyes remained fixed on hers. Then she saw his pupils
clearly register the terrible blemish on the side of her exposed
face. This one’s reaction isn’t so bad, she reflected. He had been
a little drunk when they met, and his vision easily blurred. She
had remained disappointed, though, in his overall ability to
maintain his erection.
It always seemed to end up the same when she sought her own
pleasure - something very different from when she was merely doing
it for the money. Her job made it hard for her to meet normal men,
certainly stopped her having a decent relationship. Her visible
disfigurement didn’t help either, that blistering down the right
side of her face.
But this was her night off, and she had wanted a fling to make her
feel better. She so much wanted to feel close to someone, had
wanted that for so long.
In her younger days, she had known the world was cruel, how people
judged you by first appearances. How that childlike prejudice
against the unnatural could continue into adulthood as people
merely found a way of better hiding their revulsions.
She pushed herself off him slowly, and then reached for her
dressing gown. Walking over to the window, she looked out across
the spires and bridges of Villjamur as if she was now trying to put
the greatest possible distance between the two of them. In the
opposite corner of the room, covered canvases of various sizes were
stacked against the wall. She could still smell the chemicals from
the painting she had begun yesterday evening.
‘Wow,’ he said at last. ‘By Bohr, you’re amazing.’
She now gazed at the bruised skies hanging over the city, the last
of the rain driving lightly across its architecture. Lifting the
window sash, she could hear a cart being drawn across the cobbles,
could smell the scent of larix trees from the forest to the north.
She looked up and down Cartanu Gata and the Gata Sentimental,
alongside the art gallery - a place where she doubted her own
paintings would ever hang. People merged with shadows, as if they
became one. Directly under her window, a man stumbled in and out of
her vision, his sword scraping against the wall. For some reason
she couldn’t understand, each of these qualities of the city merely
heightened her sense of loneliness.
‘Your body . . . I mean, you move so well,’ he was saying, still
praising her performance like they often did when it was clear they
had little in common.
She eventually spoke. ‘Tundra.’
‘Sorry?’
‘In the tavern, last night - the lines you used to get me back
here. I suppose politicians are good with words. You said my body
is like the tundra. You said I had perfect, smooth white skin, like
drifts of snow. You even said that my breasts are as dramatic as
the crests of snow banks. You admired my breasts and my smooth
skin. You said I was like ice incarnate. Yes, you fed me lines as
awful as that. But what about my face?’
She immediately ran her hand along her terrible scar.
‘I said you’re a very attractive woman.’
‘Horses can be attractive, councillor. She glanced back at him.
‘But what’s my face like?’
‘Your face is lovely, Tuya.’
‘Lovely?’
‘Yes.’
He lifted his head up to take a better look at her as she dropped
her gown to the floor. She knew what his reactions would be as the
dreary light seemed to gather momentum on her bare skin. She
reached over to a tabletop, picked up a roll-up of arum weed, but
she waited until certain he was no longer looking at her before she
lit it. The intense smell of its smoke wafted across the room,
drifted out the window.
Still in vague shadow to his visions, she walked over to the bed,
offered him the weed. He involuntarily grabbed her wrist, rubbed it
gently between his fingers and thumb. His gaze was weak-willed and
pathetic.
‘You’re beautiful,’ he said. ‘Delicious.’
‘Prove it, Councillor Ghuda,’ she said, climbing on his smile,
watching him submit.
The roll-up fell to the floor, exploding ashes across the
tiles.
* * *
Later, when he had fallen asleep again, she thought about their
conversation just before he drifted off.
He talked a lot, which was unusual for a man after sex. She
reflected deeply on what he had said, about the details that he had
gone into.
He had shocked her.
A man in his important position should surely refrain from talking
so much, but he was probably still rather drunk. They had been
drinking vodka for much of the dawn. He didn’t leave her until the
sun was higher in the vermilion sky, the city fully awake, and her
breath sour from alcohol. When he did, there was no fond goodbye,
no intimate gesture. He had simply slipped on his Council robes and
walked out the door.
But it wasn’t his casual exit that caused her upset, it was the
words he had spoken before he slept, those simple statements he had
maybe or maybe not meant seriously.
Already his words were haunting her.
* * *
Afterwards, as he did frequently, Councillor Ghuda imagined his own
cuckolding.
Four years ago it had started, four years since he realized, that
he couldn’t invest all his emotions in one person, in his wife. He
had caught her, Beula, in bed with her lips at work on a soldier
from the Dragoons, and the image pursued him - his personal
poltergeist - constantly undermining him. His sense of value in the
world hung in the air like an unanswered question, and as a man he
was unmade.
Sleeping with prostitutes helped his state of mind.
It was a fantasy, at first, an escape - then something more, a need
for tenderness and cheap thrills with another woman. When he lost
himself in the bad lines and the awkward over-stylized gestures, he
managed to scramble something of an identity together. After the
act, the women he paid for would watch him absent-mindedly whilst
wiping themselves down with a towel to remove any traces of him
from their body. These women would not love him, and the words they
spoke were not their own, but Tuya, the woman from last night,
seemed almost genuinely affectionate, as if in Villjamur, a city of
introverts, two introverts could find a sense of belonging - if
only for a night.
Ghuda looked up as the skies cleared, red sunlight now skidding off
the wet cobbles, and the streets appeared to rust. He stepped from
the shelter of the doorway into the relative brightness of the
morning. He needed to get to the Council Spire to start the day’s
work.
Whether it was a symptom of his guilt, he didn’t know, but he felt
certain he was being watched. He never requested a guard to escort
him anywhere, in fact usually slipped away before one might
appear.
There was much to deal with for the day ahead. Primarily he had to
deal with the increasing refugee problems: the labourers from
elsewhere that were flocking to Villjamur to survive the coming ice
age.
People were heading to the various irens to trade and shop,
overseen by soldiers from the Regiment of Foot, who patrolled along
the streets in pairs. It was a trenchant policy of safety he’d
personally initiated to ease the citizens’ concern in these anxious
times. You didn’t want general panic to set in, even though the
public fear of crime was more intense than its current levels
actually warranted.
Up the winding roads and passageways, he continued.
On the way he encountered an elderly man sitting on a stool with a
sign beside him that said ‘Scribe - Discretion Guaranteed’. With
one palm resting flat on the small table to one side, he sipped a
steaming drink with a contented look on his face. There were quite
a few of these men around the city, writing love letters or death
threats on behalf of those who couldn’t write themselves, including
those whose fingers had been broken by the Inquisition. Ghuda
speculated on what he might write to Tuya, the redhead he had just
spent the night with. What would he say to her? That he would like
to fuck her some more because she was so good at it? That was
hardly the basis of an ongoing relationship.
The incline had become a strain on Ghuda’s legs, so for a while he
rested on a pile of logs heaped outside one of the terraced houses.
Again, he had the uneasy sensation that someone was watching him.
He looked around at the quiet streets, then up at the bridges.
Perhaps someone was looking down at him.
He rose to go and heard footsteps behind him, running into the
distance.
A short cut led through to an iren, a trading area located in a
courtyard of stone. As he stepped through a high and narrow
alleyway, seemingly endless, his heart began to beat a little
faster.
He quickened his pace.
He burst out onto the busy iren . . .
Then he felt as if his chest had exploded and its contents were
spilling onto the cobbles. Except it hadn’t, he was still in one
piece, he was still alive, but he gaped down at the wound as it
expanded, at his shredded robes exposing his flesh to the cold,
damp air.
A truculent pain shot through him, and he screamed, trying to look
behind him, but through welling eyes saw only a silhouette heading
back, bizarrely upwards, into the darkness. He stumbled forwards,
his hands clutching for wet stones, then began to spit blood on the
ground. People were now crowding around him, watching wide-eyed,
pointing. Sensing his life fluid filling the cracks between
cobbles, the blood beetles came and began to smother him, till his
screams could be heard amplified between the high walls of the
courtyard. One even scurried into his mouth, scraping eagerly at
his gums and tongue. He bit down so he wouldn’t choke, split its
shell in two, and spat it out, but he could still taste its
ichors.
Councillor Ghuda was violently febrile.
* * *
Standing outside a bistro with a rumbling stomach and a small pie
raised in one hand, Randur watched the unsteady figure shamble
towards him. People scrambled in fear, men holding their women
protectively, as glossy beetles began to pullulate around the
victim’s gaping wound.
Randur stepped aside into an alley by a gallery, too stunned now to
take a first bite of the pie. A small child screamed and turned to
run, while the dying man - eyes wide and aghast, and coughing blood
- stumbled on into the same small passageway. He stared straight at
Randur, hunching to his knees just paces away from him. He
continued to howl as the insects ripped at his flesh, tossing it
into the air in a fine pink mist. He fell forwards, and was
silent.
Within moments, a banshee appeared into the passageway, as if she
had been following the incident all this time. Cocooned in a shawl,
her face was gaunt and striking against the untidy strands of
jet-black hair. With a distant look in her eyes, she sucked in a
deep breath, then began her keen, her mouth opening impossibly
wide.
The sated blood beetles having scurried out of the passageway, a
gathering crowd soon cast a shadow over the body. Randur having
lost his appetite, handed the pie to an urchin in filthy rags.
‘Welcome to Villjamur,’ Randur muttered.