Authors: K. J. Parker
âLaboured,' the crow replied. âGo on. The second type of dream.'
âOh, right. Yes, the second kind is where I'm lying in a river bed or some other place where there's running water, and I hear the two parts of me arguing, like an old married couple: there's the new me, who's trying to run away, and the old me, who keeps on tracking me down. That's about it.'
âI see.' The crow was silent for a long while, so long that Poldarn began to wonder if he'd just imagined that it had talked to him at all. Then it laughed.
âSorry,' it added. âI was just thinking of the old song. You know:
Two crows sitting in a tall thin tree
â'
Poldarn shook his head. âThis is a tall thick tree,' he said. âAnd there's only one of you.'
âNo,' the crow said, âtwo. But it's not important. I suppose I'd better get to the point.'
âAh,' Poldarn said. âSo it
is
a dream, after all.'
The crow nodded. âActually,' it said, âyou were closer when you described it as a lecture. It's important, you see, to help you decide. Too many choices, and you won't know what to do with yourself.'
âI like having too many choices just fine,' Poldarn muttered, but the crow wasn't listening.
âNow then,' it said, âI want you to pay attention. Look down there, to your left. Can you see?'
âNo,' Poldarn said. âOh, just a moment, yes. There's people coming, on horses. Is that what you meant?'
âLook closely,' the crow said. âNow, I'm going to open up your memory just a little bit â not too far, obviously, so don't worry about things getting out and escaping. Just enough so you'll knowâ'
At which point, the man on the leading horse glanced up, looked Poldarn in the eye and smiled at him. âYou know who that is?' asked the crow.
âOf course I know him,' Poldarn replied. âThat's Feron Amathy.'
âWatch closely.'
The man rode on, out of sight. Behind him came a troop of cavalry, carrying spears and wearing mail shirts.
âAll right so far?' the crow asked. Poldarn nodded.
A moment later, Poldarn saw a column of men on foot, also armed. But they weren't regular soldiers or even irregulars like the Amathy house. They wore old farm clothes, and their only weapons were backsabres.
âAnd they are?' asked the crow.
âEasy,' Poldarn said. âMy lot. I never did find out what we call ourselves, but in these parts they're called raiders. Or savages,' he added, with a slight frown.
One of them looked up, saw Poldarn, and scowled: Eyvind. Sore loser.
âStill happy?' asked the crow.
âI guess so,' Poldarn said. âIs there any point to this?'
âBe patient. Now, who's this?'
Prince Tazencius rode under the tree. He didn't look up, though clearly he knew Poldarn was there. Embarrassed; doesn't want to be seen with the likes of me. Fine.
âNearly there,' the crow said. âNow, while we're waiting, let's see if you can tell me what the connection is. Well?'
âToo easy,' Poldarn said. âEvil. These are all bad people.'
The crow shifted an inch or so along the branch. âYes. And?'
Poldarn thought for a moment. âThey're all bad people I've been mixed up with over the years.'
âYes. And?'
Cleapho rode under the tree, lifting one hand off the reins in a gesture of dignified acknowledgement. For some reason, Boarci was walking next to him, holding the horse's bridle. Poldarn frowned. âThey're all people I've betrayed,' he said. âOr treated badly in some way.'
âYes. And?'
âAnd nothing,' Poldarn replied, slightly annoyed. âThey're bad people, and I've treated them badly. Big deal. They had it coming.'
The crow sighed. âOh dear,' it said, âand you were doing so well. Now, then. I want you to look down on your left side.'
Poldarn turned and looked down. âI know her,' he said. âThat's my wife.'
The crow laughed. âWhich one?'
âFirst,' Poldarn replied. âNo, second â no, hang on, first. Lysalis. Tazencius's daughter.'
âVery good.' Lysalis smiled up at him and did a little finger-fluttery wave. âNext.'
Next came Halder, walking, and Elja. âMy second wife,' Poldarn explained. âOnly, I have a bad feeling that she's also my daughter. Who's that boy she's with?'
âYour son,' the crow said, as the ferocious young swordsman Poldarn had killed in the woods strutted past. âLysalis's boy, Tazencius's grandson. Theme emerging?'
Poldarn laughed. âPiece of cake,' he said. âThese are good people I've treated badly; though that boy wasn't so nice, he tried to kill meâ'
âQuite,' the crow said. âHe did his best, and that's all you can ask of anybody. Pay attention.'
General Cronan rode by, and General Muno Silsny (âThat's not fair, what harm did I do him?') and Carey the fieldhand walking beside them, his hand clamped to his slashed neck; and behind them a long stream of people Poldarn didn't recognise, thousands of themâ
âA representative sample,' the crow said. âAfter all, the object of the exercise isn't just making you feel bad about yourself. Anyway, they're in reverse order, so it's the Falcata delegation at the front, then Choimera, followed by Josequinâ You get the idea.'
Poldarn frowned. âWhere's Choimera?' he asked. âI never heard of it.'
âYou're a busy man,' the crow replied. âYou have people to deal with, that sort of thing.'
âFine.' Poldarn tried to sit up, but the branch was slippery; the rain had started again. âPoint made. Point sledgehammered into the ground. I haven't just harmed those bad people but all these innocent people too. That's why I don't want to remember any of it.'
âYou just want to run away.'
âExactly. The more I hang around the places I've already been, the more damage I do, on top of everything I've done already. Going back home proved that. Any contact I have with my past leads to more bad things; it's contagious, and I reinfect myself. Which is why I want to run away â really run away this time, get as far away from all of it as I possibly can. I thought I was doing that, coming here; all I wanted to do was get a job and settle down, it's not my fault that they all came chasing after me. But there's got to be some place I can go, somewhere outside the Empire, where nobody will ever find out who I used to be.'
âFine,' said the crow. âLook down.'
None of the people passing under the tree were familiar, though some of them looked up, smiled, waved. There were even more of them than before.
âDo you understand?' asked the crow.
âYes,' Poldarn said. âSo what do you want me to do? Should I jump out of this tree and break my neck?'
âLook down,' said the crow again.
All strangers once more, and none of them acknowledged him; but the line went on out of sight in both directions.
âReally?' Poldarn said quietly. âEven if I kill myself right now?'
âOf course,' the crow said. âMy, what a big head we have, assuming we can redeem the world by an act of supreme sacrifice. Look, there you go now.'
Sure enough, Poldarn could make out his own face in the crowd, just briefly, before it passed out of sight. âOne more victim wouldn't make things much worse,' the crow said. âWouldn't make it any better, either. Really, what was your tutor thinking of? You ought to have covered all this elementary stuff in second grade.'
âMaybe we did,' Poldarn said irritably. âI really don't remember.' The branch was getting very slippery now; he was in danger of falling off. âAll right,' he said. âI'm assuming there's a point to all this, so you tell me. What have I got to do?'
Then he fell out of the tree.
Comedy, he thought, as he opened his eyes; then, Where did that come from?
He was lying in deep mud; just as well, since he'd only a moment ago fallen thirty feet. It was broad daylight. A crow got up out of the branches above him and flapped away, shrieking. Poldarn didn't need to translate; he could remember what it had been saying.
The only difference is in what they've actually done.
And that, presumably, was the answer: find out who'd done most, and deal with him. I need someone I can ask, he thought. I need to speak to Cleapho, or Copis, someone who can tell me what's going on. Assuming, of course, that they'd tell me the truth.
Assuming I can find them again, having made such a spectacularly good job of making sure that they can't find me. Assuming, even, that I can ever get out of this horrible bloody wet forest.
Big assumption.
As if he'd woken out of something bigger and more malevolent than mere sleep, he got to his feet, stretched and flexed to make sure that nothing had got broken or bent in the fall, yawned and looked around. Trees. Lots of more or less interchangeable trees. Absolutely not a clue about where the hell he was. So breathtakingly well hidden that nobody on earth knew where he was, not even Poldarn or Ciartan Torstenson.
He remembered what the colliers had said about the Tulice forests: so dense that a man could walk for days and never realise that the main road was only twenty yards away to his left. And wet, too: full of nasty boggy patches that'd swallow you up before you'd figured out you were in trouble, in which case the best you could hope for was that you'd be sucked down over your head and drown or smother immediately, rather than stay mired up to your armpits until you starved to death, or the wolves or the bears or the wild pigs ate you (browsing off your arms and face like cows nibbling at a hedge; at the time he'd assumed that the colliers were just trying to put the wind up him . . .). Wonderful place to get lost in, the Tulice forest.
Poldarn walked for an hour in one direction, until the closeness of the trees and the depth of the shadows all around him made him feel like he was buried alive; so he turned left, and carried on that way for another hour or so, until that direction became just as unbearable, or more so. Left was obviously a bad idea, so he turned right. Right was worse. The canopy of leaves overhead was as tight as the lid on a jar; he needed light in order to breathe, and the canopy was choking the light, strangling him; and every change in direction led him to taller trees, thicker leaves, darker places. (Allegory, he thought bitterly; I hate fucking allegory.) How long he'd been blundering about he had no idea, but it didn't matter anyway; didn't matter if the sun had gone down, because it couldn't get any darker than this, could it? No trace, needless to say, of human beings here, nothing to suggest that a fellow human had ever been this way before â so much for the idea that all his problems had been caused by other people. Right now, he'd be overjoyed at any hint that there were such things as other people, that he wasn't the only talking biped left in the universeâ
Something whistled in his ear, then went
chunk
. After a moment's bemused searching, he found it. It was a strange insect, with green and yellow wings and an absurdly long brown body, and it lived by boring into the bark of trees. No, it bloody well wasn't: it was an arrow. Some bastard was shooting at him.
Feeling rather foolish, because at least three seconds had passed since the arrow had hit the tree, Poldarn threw himself to the ground and crawled on his knees and elbows for the cover of a holly bush. Silly, he thought, holly not arrow-proof; but he curled up tight in a ball and waited, and no more arrows came. Even so.
Then he heard something, quite close. Grunting, snuffling; a fat man with a bad cold running uphill with a heavy weight on his back. The absurdity of it made him want to burst out laughing, because unless this neck of the woods was swarming with people and he'd just been walking blithely past them for the last five hours, it stood to reason that the grunting, snuffling fat man had to be the secret archer. Well, fine; if Gain and Copis and the most powerful man in the world were to be believed (which was by no means certain), Poldarn was a graduate of the Deymeson academy of killing people, and more than a match for a runny-nosed pork chop, even one with a bow and arrows. The noise was getting closer, so all he needed to do was stay perfectly still, and then, when Fatso came waddling past him any second now, just stick out a leg, trip him up and bang his head against a tree until he came up with directions to the nearest inn. Piece ofâ
It must already have seen him, some time before he saw it; that was what cowering in the bushes would get you, if you were so dumb that you couldn't tell the difference between a human being and a fully grown wild boar. When he lifted his gaze â purely chance that he happened to be looking in that direction at precisely that moment (rather than half a second later, when it'd have been a quarter of a second too late) â he saw a massive grey wedge with two tiny red lights halfway up the taper, growing huger and huger. His legs figured out what the thing was before his brain did, because by the time the words
wild boar
had congealed in his mind, he was already on his feet and trying to push through a thick screen of holly leaves.
The pig squealed, a silly, high-pitched angry noise like a little girl whose brother was pulling her hair. There was a little blood, black and shiny, on its shoulder. The boar flattened the holly bush about a heartbeat after Poldarn got clear of it.
Then Poldarn hit a tree.
Bloody
stupid thing to do, run flat out into a stupid great big oak tree. He scrambled back onto his feet just as the boar thrust its ridiculously thick neck out; one handspanlong tusk gashed the bark an inch below his outspread fingers as he ducked round the tree, hide-and-seek fashion. The pig blundered on, skidded to a halt in a spray of leaf mould, and swung round. (But aren't they supposed to carry on charging? Apparently not.) Superior intellience, Poldarn thought, and superior biped mobility: I'll just dance round and round this handy tree until the bugger gets bored and goes away. Annoyingly, though, he discovered that when he'd run into the tree he'd bashed his kneecap, and it didn't seem to be working properly. So much for superior mobility; that just left intelligence. In which case (the pig lowered its head and shot itself towards him like a huge squat arrow), forget itâ