17
Sis edisserum Tutin term, loosely meaning 'please explain', this is an order from a superior (usually the Emperor) to appear before him and a panel of peers forthwith to offer reasons, excuses, evidence, testimony and whatever else might be required to elucidate upon whatever demands clarity. A sis edisserum is usually seen as a portent of Imperial ire, a sign that the person or people so summoned are in it deep and must work hard to restore Clementine's confidence. A sis edisserum is a 'black mark' against your name, and very troublesome to remove.
Rossamund awoke with the worst ache of head and body that he had ever known and his bladder fit to burst. He hurt like the aftermath of the most severe concussion he had ever received in harundo practice. For a time he could not remember much of yesterday, though a lurking apprehension warned him the memory would be unwelcome. With the sight of his salumanticum discarded on the floor and the bed chest blocking the door recollection struck. A gudgeon… a gudgeon in the forgotten cellars of the manse, right in the marrow of the headquarters of the lamplighters! A monster loose in Winstermill!
He dragged back the chest and opened the door to find Threnody there, leaning on the wall as if she had been waiting.
'You missed the most extraordinary pudding at mains last night,' she said dryly. Evidently she had elected to speak to him again.
'Aye…' Rossamund knew by 'extraordinary' she did not mean 'good.' Threnody had always hated the food served to the prentices, and the new culinaire was achieving new acmes of inedibility.
'You might be a poor conversationalist,' she continued as they went to morning forming, completely heedless of the thick bandage about his head, 'but at least you're interesting. Between Arabis having the others ignore me, and Plod mooning and staring all through the awful meal, it was a very long evening.' She peered at him. 'Where's your hat?' But by then Grindrod was shouting attention and all talk ceased.
In files out on the Cypress Walk it was obvious the manse was in a state of agitation, with the house-watch marching regular patrols about the Mead and the feuterers letting the dogs out on leads to sniff at every crevice and cranny. Under a louring sky the atmosphere of the fortress was tense and watchful.
'Do not be distracted by all this hustle ye see today, lads,' Grindrod advised tersely. 'There was an unwelcome guest in our cellars last night, but the rotted clenchpoop is done in now.' He looked meaningfully at Rossamund. 'Just attend to yer duties with yer regular vigor.'
At breakfast the other prentices stared openly at Rossamund's bandaged head.
'How's it, Lately?' asked Smellgrove as Rossamund sat down with his fellows of Q Hesiod Gaeta. 'Is the bee's buzz true?'
'What buzz?'
'That you came to hand strokes with a gudgeon last night,' said Wheede, pointing to Rossamund's bound noggin.
'Ah, aye, it nearly ruined itself trying to destroy me.'
'Pullets and cockerels!' said several boys on either side.
Insisting others shift to make room, Threnody sat next to him. 'Have any of you others fought one before?' she asked knowingly.
Universal shakes of the head.
'Because I can tell you,' she boasted, 'that a full-formed lamplighter would struggle to win against one, let alone a half-done lamp boy.'
'I have heard it that wits can't do much to them either.' This was Arabis, listening at the far end of the bench.
Threnody lifted her chin and pretended she had not heard him.
'Tell us, Rosey,' asked Pillow, 'how did you do the thing in?'
'I burned the basket's head out with loomblaze!' Rossamund said, with more passion than he intended. 'It went smashing down through the stair into the pits deep underneath.'
There was an approving mutter of amazement.The looks of awe turned Rossamund's way were simultaneously intoxicating and hard to bear. He ducked his head to hide his confused delight, but one incredulous snort from Threnody and his small, uncommon joy was obliterated in an instant.
After breakfast Grindrod did not say any more about Rossamund's yesternight excursions. However, he did seem to address Rossamund with a touch more dignity as he sent him to Doctor Crispus for further examination. 'Ye may take yer time, Prentice Bookchild: well-earned wounds need proper treating.' 'Cuts and sutures, my boy, you certainly have a bump and a gash upon your scalp to show for some kind of scuffle,' the physician declared as he cleaned the nasty contusion on Rossamund's hairline and rebandaged it.
'Swill tried to recommend callic for me last night,' Rossamund said pointedly.
Crispus wagged his head in disapproval. 'Fumbling butchering novice,' he said, clucking his tongue. 'Even a first-year tyro would know callic is not for concussions. By your current alertness I can assume he did not succeed in his fuddle-brained prescription?'
'No he did not, Doctor. I know enough of the chemistry to have not taken any even if he had.'
'My apologies, Rossamund. He certainly is not who I would have here,' Crispus complained. 'But the young quackeen is only nominally under my authority; rather he answers to the Master-of-Clerks himself. Very unsatisfactory, and a clear nuisance when he comes a-quacking in my trim infirmary.' He clucked his tongue again. 'A mere articled man strutting about as if he is a senior surgeon.'
'He certainly reads some strange books for a surgeon,' said Rossamund.
'Does he, indeed?' Crispus blinked owlishly.
'Aye, sir.' Rossamund squinted at the ceiling in recollection. 'Dark books, from what my old Master Craumpalin told me.'
'Where did you see these, child?' the physician pressed.
'In Swill's apartment, way up in the manse's attics. Mother Snooks sent me up the kitchen furtigrade, delivering a pig's head to him.'
'The kitchen furtigrade?' Crispus looked utterly amazed. 'I did not know one existed, though Winstermill is old enough to have a thousand such obscure places. You certainly have had a tour of the slypes, haven't you?'
'And the attic apartment?'
'Oh, that place is just his personal library, a place of private reflection. 'Do not disturb' and all that. I've never begrudged him this: a professional man must have his sanctuary for study-I have one of my own. In our profession there are some strange tomes-some better had we never read them, of course. And as for the pig's head-well, a surgeon must practice his sutures, I suppose.'
Rossamund was unconvinced.
Sebastipole entered the infirmary and, after asking of Rossamund's health, went on to request a personal word.
The dressing of the wound complete, Crispus left them and attended to other patients.
'Did you find anything in the tunnels, Mister Sebastipole?' Rossamund asked eagerly but in a low voice.
'There was no gudgeon corpse,' the leer answered.
Rossamund's soul sank.
'And all that was left of the stair was splinters and wood-dust,' Sebastipole went on.
Rossamund's dismay deepened. His desperate struggle must have wrenched the ancient furtigrade too