
Ian Irvine
Vengeance
PART ONE
CHAPTER 1
‘Matriarch Ady, can I check the Solaces for you?’ said Wil, staring at the locked basalt door behind her. ‘Can I, please?’
Ady frowned at the quivering, cross-eyed youth, then laid her scribing tool beside the partly engraved sheet of spelter and flexed her aching fingers. ‘The Solaces are for the matriarchs’ eyes only. Go and polish the clangours.’
Wil, who was neither handsome nor clever, knew that Ady only kept him around because he worked hard. And because, years ago, he had revealed a gift for
Though Wil was so lowly that he might never earn a tattoo, he desperately wanted to be special, to matter. But he had another reason for wanting to look at the Solaces, one he dared not mention to anyone. A later
‘You can see your face in the clangours,’ he said, inflating his hollow chest. ‘I’ve also fed the fireflies and cleaned out the effluxor sump. Please can I check the Solaces?’
Ady studied her swollen knuckles, but did not reply.
‘Why are the secret books called Solaces, anyway?’ said Wil.
‘Because they comfort us in our bitter exile.’
‘I heard they order the matriarchs about like naughty children.’
Ady slapped him, though not as hard as he deserved. ‘How dare you question the Solaces, idiot youth?’
Being used to blows, Wil merely rubbed his pockmarked cheek. ‘If you’d just let me peek …’
‘We only check for new pages once a month.’
‘But it’s been a month, look,
‘I dare say I’ll get around to it.’
‘How can you bear to wait?’ he said, jumping up and down.
‘At my age, the only thing that excites me is soaking my aching feet. Besides, it’s three years since the last new page appeared.’
‘The next page could come today. It might be there already.’
Though Wil’s eyes made reading a struggle, he loved books with a passion that shook his bones. The mere shapes of the letters sent him into ecstasies, but, ah! What stories the letters made. He had no words to express how he felt about the stories.
Wil did not own any book, not even the meanest little volume, and he longed to, desperately. Books were truth. Their stories were the world. And the Solaces were perfect books — the very soul of Cython, the matriarchs said. He ached to read one so badly that his whole body trembled and the breath clotted in his throat.
‘I don’t think any more pages are coming, lad.’ Ady pressed her finger-tips against the blue triangle tattooed on her brow. ‘I doubt the thirteenth book will ever be finished.’
‘Then it can’t hurt if I look, can it?’ he cried, sensing victory.
‘I–I suppose not.’
Ady rose painfully, selected three chymical phials from a rack and shook them. In the first, watery fluid took on a subtle jade glow. The contents of the second thickened and bubbled like black porridge and the third crystallised to a network of needles that radiated pinpricks of sulphur-yellow light.
A spiral on the basalt door was dotted with phial-sized holes. Ady inserted the light keys into the day’s pattern and waited for it to recognise the colours. The lock sighed; the door opened into the Chamber of the Solaces.
‘Touch nothing,’ she said to the gaping youth, and returned to her engraving.
Unlike every other part of Cython, this chamber was uncarved, unpainted stone. It was a small, cubic room, unfurnished save for a white quartzite table with a closed book on its far end and, on the wall to Wil’s right, a four-shelf bookcase etched out of solid rock. The third and fourth shelves were empty.
Tears formed as he gazed upon the mysterious books he had only ever glimpsed through the doorway. After much practice he could now read a page or two of a storybook before the pain in his eyes became blinding, but only the secret books could take him where he wanted to go — to a world and a life not walled-in in every direction.
‘Who is the Scribe, Ady?’
Wil worshipped the unknown Scribe for the elegance of his calligraphy and his mastery of book making, but most of all for the stories he had given Cython. They were the purest truth of all.
He often asked that question but Ady never answered. Maybe she didn’t know, and it worried him, because Wil feared the Scribe was in danger. If I could save him, he thought, I’d be the greatest hero of all.
He smiled at that. Wil knew he was utterly insignificant.
The top shelf contained five ancient Solaces, all with worn brown covers, and each bore the main title,
On the second shelf stood the thick volumes entitled
He covered his eyes for a moment. Nine books. Why were there
His heart bruised itself on his breastbone as he counted them again. Five books, plus nine. Could
Then what was the book on the table?
A
The first new book in three hundred and twelve years?
Magery was anathema to his people and Wil had never asked how the pages came to write themselves, nor how each new book could appear in a locked room in Cython, deep underground. Since magery had been forbidden to all save their long-lost kings, the self-writing pages were proof of instruction from a higher power. The Solaces were Cython’s comfort in their agonising exile, the only evidence that they still mattered.
We are not alone.