head… Otherwise, nothing to vary the running alongside the sleds to spare the laboring teams, nothing to vary the occasional ride to rest, the sled's runners whispering, sliding through snow behind the pleasant tinkling of decorations on the caribou's harness… Patience, usually running with them, sometimes Walked-in-air – but low, beneath the horizon's line of sight, and watchful of sudden crevasses falling away beneath her… Once, as she trotted beside him, Baj heard her murmuring to her son, as if the child might hear her over a wilderness of ice and snow.
They traveled through various weathers. As if to a rhythm Lord Winter might be beating out, there came brutal cold in brilliant sunshine days, when the snow plain flashed and sparkled unbearably bright, so even the eye-masks were insufficient. Then, Baj and the others – the tribesmen, too – ran sometimes with eyes shut, depending on the sounds of the rest to stay close, and not stray out and away over the blazing prairie to wander alone and blind in searing light.
There were those days, and – almost alternately – days of blizzard, not quite as cold, but battering by howling wind and driven snow that flayed exposed skin, so Baj imagined the Wolf-General, head thrown back, howling as her condemned were flayed on Headquarters Street.
It came to him, as they ran and sledded, that the affairs of Sun-risers or Moonrisers would always seem of less importance, since Lady Weather had administered her lessons of the Wall, and the glacier's plain of snow. They were all only climbers, only travelers-by, whether Sunriser Kings or Khans, Moonriser Generals or Boston Talents. Even dear Nancy – and himself – were only come… to go, while the cold-struck earth, seeming so mighty a traveler, rolled on through even colder, grander emptiness, that noticed it not at all.
… As the days passed, then a second WT week, the drinking of snow melted in canteen or water-skin tucked against the belly, the chewing of seal blubber and strips of caribou slow-roasted over dung-fires – became the only way, and thoughts of other drink, other food, other weather, only foolishness. The climbing weariness was long gone, and Baj and the others ran as the Shrikes ran, and rested rarely.
Sometimes, in the evenings, he and Nancy fenced lightly – cautious for their steel's fragility in such cold – and both practiced hurling javelins from atlatles, providing amusement for the Shrikes, who stood out beyond the sleds as targets for them, considering that safer than bystanding.
'I see no reason,' Dolphus-Shrike said, watching them one evening as their javelins gadded hissing off to left or right, '- I really see no reason why we Shrikes should not rule the world.'
… Days later, in a clouded gray dawn following a snowstorm more severe than usual, the Shrikes rose only to squat in circles – as if around ghost fires – chewing the inevitable seal-blubber. Waiting, not traveling.
Baj and the others stood together, also chewing.
'Well,' Patience said, '- who's going to ask, to be certain?'
They'd learned that the tribesmen, like all primitives – and, of course, many of those not primitive – counted power in momentary increments, so that to
Baj sighed, and went to ask.
'Why have we stopped?'
The Shrikes at that circle seemed surprised.
The Shrike named Paul looked up at him. 'We stopped, because we're here.'
'Here…'
The Shrike pointed with his thumb. 'Boston – nine WT miles that way.'
'Ah…' Baj thought of avoiding the next question, which would cost him respect for at least the day – then remembered he'd been a prince, and asked it. 'How do you know?' There was certainly no sign of habitation… no buildings to be seen anywhere in that direction.
Satisfied smiles around the circle at that. 'We smell it,' Paul-Shrike said. 'The city breathes, farts, as a man breathes and farts. It smells on the wind.'
Baj found that closeness oddly shocking to hear – snow travel, and for nearly three weeks, did not lend itself to arrivals. Even less, to this arrival.
He went back to the others with the news. 'I thought so,' Patience said, and Richard nodded. They had all thought so – from wind-carried odor apparently – except of course for Errol, who neither knew nor cared.
Nancy took Baj gently by the nose. 'Sunrisers are poor smellers.'
'The Shrikes knew.'
'The Shrikes are savages,' she said, and leaned up to kiss the nose she'd pinched.
'But no houses… no structures at all.'
'Boston, Baj,' Patience said, 'is in the ice, and of the ice.'
'Yes, I knew it was, but…
'Baj…' Golden eyes, that saw into him as the Shrikes' javelins had entered the bear. 'Baj – when we go into the city, I will kill the women for you. Richard and I, and Patience and the Shrikes will kill them. You stand guard for us against the Constables coming.'
'Yes,' Richard said, his breath smoking in morning cold.
'No. I'll do what must be done.'
'And be changed,' Patience said, '- from Who-was-a prince?'
'Or not,' Baj said. 'How many innocents died under the yataghans of my First-father's
Breezes, that had brought the odors of the city to the camp, slowly began to strengthen as the night's storm wind – reversing its track – now began to sweep back from a dark horizon. Small swirls of snow were spinning across the glacier's frozen prairie.
The Shrikes, having considered, had risen as one to travel through blowing snow. A semicircular route, a day- long curve at first to the north… then, by night, around east to settle at last where blizzards had driven their burdens into great snow-dunes, only three Warm-time miles from Boston's north gate.
Baj, trotting beside laboring caribou, had time enough to think of other things than necessary murders… He imagined one-eyed Howell Voss, certainly now the King – a man in his fifties, thoughtful, merciless – and with a Queen his equal. Many spoiling heads, all those friends of New England, of the Coopers, would be grinning from Island's battlements. That King, that Queen, and the old ferret, Lauder, would have hunted them down.
A lesson, as well, to the whole Rule – Middle-Kingdom, North Map-Mexico, Map-Texas, and the Western Coast. What Small-Sam Monroe had achieved, would stand.
And the Prince Bajazet? The adopted brother hunted and likely lost in the east's savage wilderness – at most a minor legend, and soon forgotten.
There was… a comfort in the knowledge of it. A freedom the then Prince Bajazet had never known, even in brothel brawls along the river. What he'd been, had vanished as if swept away on the Mississippi's current. What he became, would be of his own carpentry.
Commencing, of course, with the slaughter of innocents. The hostage womens' blood, girls' blood, would run along the rapier's blade to obscure its legend,
Under a setting moon, after the last day and night of traveling from the Wall, they reached the snow-dunes – the only major rises Baj had seen in more than two weeks on the plain – and the Shrikes prepared to shelter in them.
First, they loosed their caribou herd – and all the teams but three pairs – scattered them to wander back into freezing emptiness. Then they killed the last – cut their throats as they stood in harness, so the animals, spattering blood blackened by moonlight, slowly knelt in place as if praying to whatever Beast-Jesus cared for them.
Baj and the others then joined the labor of butchering out – Baj realizing as they did, that the Shrikes,