Read The Whirlwind in the Thorn Tree Online
Authors: S. A. Hunt
Tags: #Horror, #Fantasy, #Western, #scifi, #science-fiction
There was no one here you could reliably refer to as “whites” or “blacks” or “Asians”. That’s not to say there weren’t racial physical differences, though. Most of the people were like Walter, with olive-mocha skin, tall and thin. There were also those similar to Read, towering green brutes.
I also saw short, slender people with sloping shoulders and large triangular heads, their skin a faint two-tone gradient of sky-blue, like a fish. I even saw several women with pale brown skin that bore dark, ragged striations that reminded me of drawings I’d seen of the human nervous system.
“I thought I would catch you before you met up with the boss,” said Read in his impossibly deep voice. He was a Kingsman gunslinger too, although he didn’t carry a six-shooter. He had a fearsome-looking shotgun strapped to his back as long as a broom-handle and twice as thick.
He blocked us from going into the Vespertine and ushered us to the end of the front porch, where we could speak alone, in confidence. I felt like a child; he was at least a foot taller than myself.
“What’s going on?” asked Sawyer.
Read screwed up his mouth and glared at us from under his heavy brow. He spoke fast, an elaborate, enunciated tumble-string of words. “You think you are clever, but you are
not.”
I felt my face grow cold. “I’m not sure what you mean.”
“You say you’re from the back
end
of K-Set, but that is a hard, and mean, and lonely place,” he said, pausing for emphasis. “It does
not
make people like you. It makes people like myself. I know what I am looking at, and it is not a man accustomed to life on the frontier. You and your unusual companions are from elsewhere.”
Noreen coughed. Sawyer shook his head, waving the question off with his hands:
that’s enough, this is going nowhere.
“Look, Mr. Read—”
Read tapped on Sawyer’s chest with one beefy finger. “I don’t know...
why
the Deon is takin it so easy on you, because it is not too
difficult
to see you are not what you say you are. He is not a stupid man in the least. He must have gotten something obscured up his sleeve. He might have a...trying personality, but his
heart
is in the right place.
“Also, he is perhaps one of the smartest men I’ve ever had the fortune to introduce myself to. But as for myself, I’m the sort of individual that likes to see the truth on the street, and I don’t. Abide. Liars. Or. Obfuscators.”
“You wouldn’t believe us if we told you.”
“Try me.”
“You sure about that?” asked Sawyer.
“I’ve seen a lot in my time here in this land. I’ve, I’ve seen a woman go from one place to
another
with nothing in between...and cut through six inches of steel like it was warm butter. I’ve seen a giant as tall as this saloon step on a man and crush him like a bug. Once I saw Walter Rollins himself put a pistol bullet through a man’s head at four hundred yards. I’ve seen ghosts, phantoms, and ghouls. I’m primed to take in just about anything at this point.”
Sawyer glanced at me, and we both looked at Noreen, who shrugged.
“All right,” I said, and asked Read, “How well did you know my father Lord Eddick?”
“The scribe? Not that well, I suppose. I met him a few times before the war, but I never really got very personal with him.”
“You’re familiar with how Destin was created, aren’t you?” asked Sawyer, using his hands to detail the bisection and the two results, “How Behest was created by the Wolf and swallowed by the Dragon, and was cut in half by the Wolf to create the dual worlds Destin and Zam?”
“That is an accepted rendition of the story of Creation, yes.”
“Ross, his dad, Noreen, and I—we’re from Zam,” he said, indicating his left fist. “We were transported here by an interdimensional being called a
Silen
. Now we’re on a quest to find out who killed Eddick, and to find a way to get back to our world.”
Sawyer’s explanation actually made a sideways sort of sense to me. I think I felt my sanity slipping loose, like an ill-fitting sock. Read seemed to be processing this new information, staring right at my forehead, his nostrils flaring.
Read’s eyes twitched. He blinked, looked over my head into the middle distance, casually remarked, “Aaaawright,” and walked away into the Vespertine.
_______
The saloon was almost exactly how I pictured it would look. Rich, dim light from the grimy electric sconces on the walls cast a warm glow on a dozen round pub tables. Scores of people sat in circles, drinking and chatting and playing cards. The bar was a glossy cherrywood spotted with white mug-rings and carved graffiti, manned by a hulking bald bartender with bushy red muttonchops.
The shelves behind him held a great and varied collection of bottles in a dozen different hues, and one fat wooden keg that didn’t linger untapped for more than a couple minutes at a time. The air was heavy with the smell of fried food wafting in from the kitchen behind the bar, and I heard a growling wolverine in my guts.
I found Walter Rollins, Gosse Read, and another Kingsman sitting at a table in the corner, and went over to sit with them. They were drinking in a sullen silence, hunched over mugs of some dark beer.
“We’re here, yo,” I said, and Sawyer shot me a look.
Walter sat up sharply, his hands on his thighs, and he thrust an offering hand in my direction. “So you are. Have a seat.”
There was only one chair so I let Sawyer have it. Noreen sat on his lap and folded her arms protectively. I stood over them in an awkward silence as they brooded over their beers, waiting for someone to say something.
Eventually, Read said, “You’re looking a little peak-ed. I don’t suppose you want anything to eat?”
“Don’t have any money,” croaked Noreen.
“I didn’t ask you if you had any money,” he said. “I asked you if you wanted something to eat.”
“Sit down, bastard. You make me anxious,” said Walter.
“Yes, we’re hungry as hell,” said Sawyer, as I attempted to obey the Deon and take a seat. “What’s good here?”
I looked around for a chair but saw no nearby empty ones. I briefly debated the wisdom of carrying one from the other side of the Vespertine but decided against it.
I tried to take a knee on the floor but felt weird doing it, and stood back up. I put my butt on the back of Sawyer’s chair but it was too tall, attempted to lean my elbow casually on the table but it was too low. I finally settled for squatting next to Read with my hands on the edge of the table to steady myself.
Walter was looking at me as if I’d lost my mind. He said to Sawyer, “The cheese and spinach pie is the best thing here for your coin.”
Sawyer wrinkled his nose. “I’m not too hot on spinach. Is there anything else?”
“
Pohtir-nyhmi
,” said Read.
“What’s that?” asked Noreen.
“A large horned beast of the fields. We ride them.”
The Deon nodded, scratched his head, and said, “And they smell like dirty dead arse.”
“I have suddenly developed a taste for spinach.”
While they discussed the merits (or not) of eating livestock, I surveyed the saloon.
There were many rough-looking people here, in a variety of conditions and outfits, from many different dubious backgrounds and equally shadowy occupations. It struck me that it was an incredible experience—efficient, even—to be here, to be immersed in the culture and world of my father’s books.
Would I even have the opportunity, I wondered, to return to Earth (née Zam) and attempt to write the last book in the series? That raised the issue of what I should—or could—even write. Did I even have to make anything up? Here lay the world of Destin before me, its plots and contrivances physical, emergent, and at my beck and call. I made up my mind that, if I were going to be stuck here for a while, I should begin finding out what I could about what had transpired since the events of my dad’s latest novel, so that I could transcribe them.
I realized that this must have been how he had written the series: by coming here and seeing the events and places in the novels firsthand, by recording its history, and weaving it into a tapestry of prose. He had been a biographer.
The atmosphere loosened as we sat there having dinner, and we conversed about ourselves and each other, about our accomplishments and failures, our experiences, amusing anecdotes—tempered, of course, by judicious censorship of anything that pegged us as outsiders (outside of our clothes and accents). We’d told Read where we’d come from, and he didn’t seem too fazed by it. I was glad of that. I hoped Walter would be an equally easy sell.
I must have been getting over my initial shock at being brought here, to such an alien place, in such a startling way. It was nice to have time to rest, warm up, pack away a good hot meal, sort through the situation, and get to know each other in a place that wasn’t making me seasick. The more I learned about our friends the Kingsmen, the more I made up my mind to bring their history and adventures to life back on Earth.
I must have been a quiet, introspective dinner guest, because my mind—fully ensconced in our circumstances by now—was finally beginning to spin up to operational velocity.
By the time we were getting ready for bed in the Vespertine’s upstairs accommodations, I was positively vibrating. I lay in the simple four-poster bed staring up at the ceiling, contemplating, listening to a headboard thump against the wall in an adjacent bedroom as Sawyer administered Noreen’s medicine in the bed next to mine.
This must have been how Edward Richard Brigham/Lord Eddick Bridger felt when he first came here.
The thumping eventually subsided. My friends went to sleep, and I rolled over, hugging my musty down pillow to my face, excited about tomorrow’s prospects. It hit me, as I tried to drift off, that I was effectively taking his place. I hoped that I wouldn’t join him in the grave the same way.
The size of the thing was dismaying in and of itself, inspiring despair and dread just by existing.
The giant No-Man moved with a fluid gravity, stepping over the rampart of junk without even disturbing the crenellations, or the men standing on them. Pack’s heart leapt in shocked fear when he realized just how woefully under-prepared Harwell’s men had been, and how close he’d come to dying every time he’d perched on the wall after joining the Lord on his morning rounds.
The boy ran, not hiding or fighting, but simply away from the commotion. He hoped that he could put enough landscape between himself and the thundering monster before either the sun went down and he couldn’t see, or the thing chased him down and killed him. He pushed his way through a throng of people paralyzed by fear, and clambered up a ladder.
When he got to the top, he paused just long enough to look back at the great silhouette looming over the village, and wonder if they ate people.
—The Fiddle and the Fire, vol 2 “The Cape and the Castle”
There’s a Catch
M
AXWELL BAYARD RELAXED AS
American Airlines Flight 4276 rocketed down the runway and eased into the air. He could feel the weight of the plane’s belly take over, the wheels leaving the tarmac, the floor almost seeming to droop under his feet.
He checked his watch again, and took off his hat, combed his fingers through what was left of his hair. He held out that age-spotted hand and saw that it was trembling.
He was nervous. He’d taken thousands of air trips across the States in his career as Ed Brigham’s literary agent. Hurtling through the sky at four hundred miles an hour in a four-hundred ton metal box never bothered him before, but today he was definitely beset by unease.
It wasn’t because he was afraid Ross was going to get caught up in Ed’s shenanigans—he had enough confidence that he’d intimidated the boy out of prodding further into the circumstances of his father’s death.
Maybe he shouldn’t have illuminated the fact that Ed was killed, and hadn’t died of a heart attack as the world was led to believe, but he figured that was the price to pay for using the revelation to scare Ross. He hadn’t told Ed’s son how he had discovered the writer in a puddle of his own blood on his kitchen floor, a gaping bullet wound in his throat.