A Shadow All of Light (18 page)

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Authors: Fred Chappell

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I drank off the mug and wiped my lips with the heel of my palm. My voice had returned to its normal state and I was regaining my composure. It is an unsettling business, to be struck dumb in an instant, to be incapable of speech for no fathomable reason.

“I have a glimmering,” I announced. “This method of capturing a voice recalls to me the conundrum of the twin children. Is there a treatise on the subject from olden times or is this a new-minted conceit?”

“An amalgam of both is likeliest,” Astolfo said. “You might look into Lariotti's little monograph on the geometrical diminishments of the musical tone
re
. That is all I can recall that might be of the slightest help.”

“Thank you,” I said. “I will inform Mutano that I stand ready at any time to aid him in his effort to reclaim his voice.”

“You need not trouble,” Astolfo said. “He counts you his accomplice already.”

*   *   *

I had read and mused and questioned and I began to believe I could make some progress toward a conclusion. Now it seemed probable to me that the twin children were not lacking a shadow that ought to be present, but that the shadow already was present and was only concealed. Maestro Astolfo must have suspected this to be the case when he inquired whether any part of the visible shadow was darker or more pronounced than the other portions of it. I had observed that the central part was of a darker tint and that it exhibited the same general outline, in smaller state, as the outline of the whole.

The two children possessed two shadows, only one was contained within the other. These shadows must have clung together, then fused inseparably, shortly after the birth of the twins. My task would be to cleave them, to set one apart from the other, causing two to stand where one had stood.

I began to reason upon the undertaking, pacing up and down the flagstones of the library, then going out into the chill, damp weather the storm had delivered and tramping about in the wet grasses of the courtyard. I desired that the cold air would sharpen my wits.

Some shadows are uncleavable from certain objects. If a thief take the shadow of a man on the instant of his being illuminated by a stroke of lightning, that shadow will ever seek out the presence of iron and fasten into its grain irremovably. The fashioners of ceremonial shields often elaborate these shadow-shapes into fanciful designs highly prized by their clients. Almost equally impossible is the task of cutting away the shadow of a carefree maiden standing in the shadow-dapple of a cherry tree. Yet it can be done by masters such as Astolfo.

As I pondered upon the lightning-bred shade's attraction to iron, I recalled also the device of the nested boxes which had stolen away Mutano's voice. I remembered too the shadow-stain of the statue of Prester Vonnard and how it clung to the cobbles of a plaza. A scheme came to mind then and I determined to trace it out on my own, telling Astolfo little until it came to conclusion. But since Mutano required my aid to further his design, I would entreat his aid on behalf of my own.

*   *   *

The morrow broke bright and watery, sunlight gleaming from every grass blade and leaf tip. The dawn birds were hilarious and did not lessen the volubility of their choruses till mid-morning. Mutano was in an easy temper too; he anticipated the regaining of his voice. My part in his plan was small, but it might endanger my person. I was to deliver to Castilio at his lodgings in the Haywain Inn an ugly insult and a jovial but urgent invitation to meet Mutano on the field of honor, where they would settle all insuavity between them with the clash of sabers.

This much Mutano communicated to me in one of the rapid finger dialects that he and Astolfo habitually conversed in. I had gathered enough of it to comprehend instructions and simple explanations, sometimes with the aid of ear-boxings to intensify my attention. The only real peril, so stated his thumb and third finger, was that Castilio might insert a dagger in my windpipe upon hearing my rehearsed insult—a complicated phrase involving his mother, his uncle, a goat, an ape, and a pig—without staying for the challenge to duel Mutano.

I asked him about his odd choice of weapons, for of all the choices open to him—long knives, clubs, maces, broadswords—the saber was the least advantageous; this was the blade he was least agile with. For answer he gave me one of his ear-wide, many-toothed grins.

In return, I requested his aid in a bit of simple carpentry to my design and also in transporting my devices to the house of Sativius. After momentary reflection, he agreed to fall in with me.

*   *   *

The hour in which Mutano insisted that I deliver his messages was deepest twilight. Uncommon gloomy 'twas, this tavern room of the Haywain, with its scant half dozen tallow candles disposed diversely. Besides the object of my attention and myself, the only other persons here were a raddle-haired serving maid and a baldpate dotard seated by the cold fireplace, opposing himself at a chessboard. Castilio sat on a bench, sipping at a tankard and playing idly with an ivory-handled dirk of modestly ominous proportion. I sat at a table with a glass of canary, waiting for him to grow tired of his game and sheathe the blade. Finally he thrust it back into his sleeve.

I advanced to stand before him and he looked up into my eyes with a gaze that was challenging but also incurious, the gaze of a man determined to fear nothing that fate flung in his way. When I reeled off the insult entailing his complex ancestry and his dubious amatory practices, his expression did not change at first. Then he laughed, and when I heard that soft, insidious chuckle with its flat intonation, I understood why Mutano so loathed him and why all the world gave wide berth to his presence.

“You are but a parrot sent to prattle words not your own,” he said. He looked away from my face into the far corner of the room. “Which of my foes has dispatched you here? Torpius? Scudator? Mutano? Master Thistledown?”

I handed over the document and he broke the seal. Murmuring the phrases as he read, he went through it carefully, poring over each syllable.

Now I took advantage of his distracted attention to lift the left edge of my cloak with its moleskin pocket and let drop onto the table behind me the shadow of Creeper, the coiled mass which had traveled nested in my cloak as I walked half across the expanse of Tardocco. Shadows, though they possess mass, are weightless, yet when Creeper's umbra slipped away I felt that a burden had departed my body.

Castilio laid down the challenge missive. “How is it that Mutano delivereth not this foolhardy piece of effrontery in his own person?” he asked. “Why must he send forth a hireling?”

The truth was that Mutano, even now while I engaged the thoughts of his nemesis, was in Castilio's rooms above, searching for any receptacle that might contain his purloined voice. I sought to occupy his enemy's attention as long as possible. “I am no inconsequential menial,” I replied, “but the confidential aide to Maestro Astolfo, whose name is widely known.”

“He is known as a prating, elderly thief who has narrowly escaped the gallows a score of times. I care not what title he has hung upon you, for a glance tells me you are but a furrow-slave with the mud of the turnip field still clinging to your soles—and to your spirit.”

“Mutano conceived that a challenge when delivered by a third party acquires more dignity and weight.”

He rose abruptly, and I knew his suspicions had been alerted. He suspected me of acting as a distraction. “You may tell Mutano that his challenge has been accepted in all particulars, including those of weapons choice, field of honor, and hour of combat.”

I bowed. “I will say what you have said.”

“Do so, though it may be I shall see him myself before you do.” With these words, he brushed past me and strode toward the stairs by the entrance door. I knew that he expected, perhaps hoped, to find Mutano in his rooms.

“Is that the whole of your message?” I shouted.

He did not reply but only bounded to the door at the top and flung it open and rushed into the corridor. I was pleased to see that Creeper's shadow leapt down from the table behind me and glided along up the stairs, following Castilio's heels.

The time seemed opportune for me to depart also. If Castilio found his lodging ransacked, he would speed back with naked blade and unpleasant demeanor. I laid down coin for the canary, went out into the dark, wet street, and betook me to the safety of Astolfo's manse. There I waited in the armchair, watching the dim orange pulse of dying hearth-fire embers until I dozed away.

*   *   *

His search had proved fruitless, Mutano told Astolfo with a flurry of finger-waggling. He had looked into the three small rooms of Castilio's lodging and found no place a voice might be stored away.

“No stoppered flasks or bottles?” Astolfo asked.

Mutano signed no.

“No small boxes or casques, as for jewels or coins or gilt buckles?”

None.

“Tell us, then, what you did see there? Omit nothing and try to recall all.”

Mutano named articles of apparel, various deadly blades, some toiletries, handkerchiefs, a few gold eagles and lesser coins, spurs, boots beneath the bed, a woman's scarf draped over a chair back.

“Naught else?”

Mutano shrugged and signed unenthusiastically that a large orange cat of melancholy, surly mien had watched him plundering about without so much as a tail twitch.

“This cat,” Astolfo asked, “was he not disturbed by the shadow of Creeper that you deposited in the room?”

I was surprised. I had not known that we had set two of the black one's shadows upon Castilio. The one that Mutano let free would be a secondary, since I had brought the primary shadow into the tavern room. Whatever the purpose of this secondary, the conceit of the two shadows was clever, I thought.

Mutano signaled that the orange cat had seemed to take no notice of the shadow. In fact, it had behaved, in not behaving at all, unlike any other feline he had met in his long acquaintance with the race.

“A human appurtenance, the voice of stout Mutano, has been affixed within its physiognomy,” Astolfo said. “Having stolen your voice, Castilio has managed to lodge it in this cat; I know not how. Such an addition to its nature will change the character of the beast at its foundation. For long and long, philosophers have conjectured what a cat might say were human vocality conferred upon it. Many of the graybeards averred that it would say nothing at all, lest it reveal some of the secrets of its mysterious race. It seemeth—in the instance of Castilio's cat, at least—that their suspicion proved true.”

“How then may its human voice be captured?” I asked.

“Oh, we have already prepared our voice-trap,” Astolfo said. “It is constructed along the pattern of Castilio's nested wooden boxes, only ours is an intricate horn of silver and ivory, in appearance like a twisted ear trumpet. There is no doubt that it will capture the utterance-essence of a voice and keep it safely.”

“I mean, how will Mutano take back his voice if the cat does not speak?”

They exchanged glances. Mutano seemed a trifle apprehensive.

“Risks must be run,” Astolfo said. “In the first place, Castilio's cat now possesses two voices, one of them proper to itself. If its own voice is dominant within it, then it will make only sounds ordinary to a cat. But if Mutano's voice has gained—so to speak—the upper hand, then it will speak out in his voice and that one will become prisoner of our trumpet-device.”

“But why should it speak at all, since its best advantage—or Castilio's—lies in keeping silent?”

“We will put to it the question that, when asked directly, every feline must answer by force of its inner nature.”

“What is this question?”

“We shall ask this Sunbolt if he be truly the King of the Cats. If he is King, he will rise hissing, all hackles and claws, and bound away in a flash, leaving behind a smell as of brimstone and burning roses. If he hath not been designated the royalty of its feline world, then he is constrained to respond,
‘Nay, not yet
.
'

“This is but an old tale to amuse children in the chimney corner,” I said. “I was no taller than a milking stool when first I heard it. Even the most unlearned hay-foot villager is wiser than to credit it. 'Tis moldy stuff indeed.”

Mutano's wide grin forewarned me I had overstepped the bounds of my knowledge.

“Apply your noddle,” Astolfo said. “When has it come about that the hay no longer graces your footwear? If every instance of the elder lore were false, the land would have been depopulated generations ago. Why do you doubt what I tell you?”

Since I had lately been reading in Lord Verulam's
Novum organon,
I ventured to speculate that this interrogation of cats must have been rarely put to the test; otherwise, there would be voluminous testimonial in the writings of the sages. “By making experiment we discover truth and falsity,” I said. “There must be by our time many thousands of younglings who have put that question to their dear pusses and have received for reply only uncomprehending disregard.”

“Too easy an interpretation to offer,” said Astolfo. “How many of the felines so queried have been gifted with a human voice?”

“Few,” I admitted.

“Do you not think it likely that cats communicate among themselves with recondite signs and significations?”

“Perhaps.”

“Would you be able to cipher out the language of a cat's ears and tail?”

“I could not.”

“Then you may ask, for all the remainder of your years, of every animal you meet whether it is King of the Cats and receive continual denials and never know of it because you lack the key to their language. Is this not so?”

“It may be so.”

“Let us hear no more of the foolishness of the old tales. We owe much of our new medicine to the simples of farm wives and much of our knowledge of astronomy to watchful shepherds. Since you desire to experiment, after the manner of Verulam, it shall be your duty to put the question to Castilio's cat.”

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