drawbridge.
In this grim fortress was the mint which had just that season begun producing the gladiate coins which the ruling regime had decreed were to become the currency of the realm. Drake, with some reservations, traded a little gold for this odd-shaped money, which he found good for the purchase of food and lodgings.
Drake and Zanya stayed for some days in a little village which was growing up in the shadow of the High Castle. But rest failed to improve Zanya's condition. Instead, her symptoms worsened, and she complained that there were lumps in her mouth.'Lumps?' said Drake, with dread in his voice.
He remembered. A room on Stokos. The body. Grinning red. Blood. So much blood.
'Yes, lumps,' said Zanya. 'Have a look and . . . and tell me what colour those lumps might be.'
'I'll not do that,' said Drake, 'unless you promise you will never cut your throat.''Why should I do that?' asked Zanya.Drake made no answer.They both knew why.'Come on,' said Zanya. 'Be a man! Look! And tell!'
Drake looked, as best he could, peering into the dark, wet, saliva-gleaming cave of her mouth, where an unruly tongue and a jiggling uvula seemed to be doing their best to frustrate his examination. As far as he could tell – which, admittedly, was not far at all – there were blue lumps all the way down her throat.Sky-blue lumps.He felt sick.'It's the blue leprosy, isn't it?' said Zanya.
Drake made no answer, but his face told all. They held each other close. They wept. For both knew the score.
Blue lepers died a terrible death. First came outbreaks of blue sores. Then, in time, great septic ulcers. Then, after about a year, a black rot which turned the eyes to jelly. Then, eventually, gangrene, bringing death in the second year. And Drake thought:
He had known for years that he might be contaminated with blue leprosy. After all, his sister had become infected with it. Yet he had taken no precautions to keep Zanya safe. . .'We need help,' said Drake, at last.'There is no help for this,' said Zanya.
Drake knew as much. The wizard Miphon had, years ago, brought knowledge of the disease to Stokos. Blue leprosy was incurable. It led to a certain death.'We have to try,' said Drake.
And almost launched into a disquisition on the Experimental Method. He halted himself just in time, and went in search of a healer. But the best he could find was a drunken surgeon who tended to the garrison in the High Castle.'My wife has a sickness,' said Drake.'What kind of sickness?''Oh, a fever, which comes and goes.''Has she blue sores?' asked the surgeon.
Drake hesitated. Then decided he must give an honest answer, for that was the only way to win any cure which might be available.'Aye,' he said, 'blue sores in her mouth and elsewhere.'
Whereupon the surgeon had both Drake and Zanya arrested, and walled up in a cell, leaving only a single hole big enough for food and water to be passed through.'How do we get out of here?' said Zanya.T don't think we do,' answered Drake.
But, fortunately, the surgeon reported his actions to Captain Occam, who held the High Castle for the Triple Kings. Occam promptly had the wall broken down, and had the captives taken to his private quarters.
'The wizard Miphon has spread the truth about this disease,' said Occam.
'What truth does Miphon tell about the blue leprosy?' said Drake.
'First, that it is not leprosy but a pox,' said Occam. 'He has given it a new name. We now call it blue star fever. Yet still the surgeon fears it, as he fears plague and other things. But Lord Miphon says those with blue star fever are not to be feared, for the disease spreads only if one lies with the sick as a man lies with a woman.''What has Miphon said of a cure?' said Zanya.
'That there is none,' answered Occam, frankly. 'But he is wise, therefore thinks not that he knows all. He always searches for new wisdom. I have not spoken with him since spring. Who knows? His wisdom may by now encompass a cure for blue star fever.'
Occam advised Drake to take Zanya to Lorford, in Estar, to see Miphon, who was usually to be found at Lorford.
'But say nothing of disease to anyone on the way,' said Occam. 'Or you may never reach Lorford alive.'
'I passed through Lorford once before,' said Drake, 'and heard no mention of blue leprosy then. It seems the thing has spread, aye, and that people fear it more.'
'The whole world,' said Occam, 'has been thrown into flux by war and invasion. Thousands travel down roads which once saw but a handful of strangers a season. When thousands suffer and starve, women sell their flesh to eat – as do some men. Thus we have new fears, and new diseases. Cultures clash, and-
'Yes, yes,' said Drake, who, as an accomplished orator himself, knew the start of a long speech when he heard it. 'I get the message.'
'Then don't forget it!' said Occam. 'Keep your mouth shut! And make your journey swift, for your woman will weaken by the day.'
So Drake hired a donkey cart and a guide, and off they went. Swamps lay between Trest and Estar, but these were crossed easily enough by a corduroy road, built when Collosnon armies once invaded Argan, and now kept in repair by work gangs financed by the state.
Thus Drake and Zanya crossed into Estar and proceeded to Lorford, a town on the banks of the Hollern River, which here flowed west toward the Central Ocean. Both Drake and Zanya remembered the place, for, after escaping from Penvash years ago, they had stopped here briefly before proceeding down the Salt Road to Runcorn.
But all had changed since their last visit, when a mighty castle had dominated Melross Hill. The castle had since been smashed by war or magic; only a shattered wreckage of splintered stone and undying wizard-fire remained.
In Lorford, Drake sought an inn where Zanya could rest. He found one, soon enough. The innkeeper, who must have been a refugee from the Harvest Plains, was speaking with some cronies in Churl, but when Drake and Zanya entered he switched to Galish.
'I want a big room,' said Drake. 'A quiet room, where my wife can rest.''Is she sick?' said the innkeeper.
The suspicion in the man's voice gave Drake all the warning he needed.
'She's with child,' he said, telling an easy lie. 'So a little poorly at times. Needs tenderness, aye.''That's all right then. As long as she's got no illness.'
'Nay, man. She never has a day's fever in her life, for she was born tough, aye, fathered by a mule and all.''By a mule? How so? Through what evil?'
'Man,' said Drake, irritated, 'I meant but to joke a little.'
'Yes, well. The fewer jokes the better. These are troubled times.'
In the room, Drake made Zanya comfortable. He saw, to his dismay, that a tiny blue spot had appeared at one corner of her mouth. He said nothing to her about it, but kissed her goodbye. Easy enough to kiss her now, yes. But what about later? When her body was filthy with bloated sores? When her eyes melted to pits of corruption? When her body decayed towards gangrene?'Don't cry, dearest treasure snake,' said Zanya.
But Drake could not help himself. And, while he had intended to leave immediately, it was in fact a long time before he pulled himself together and went to see the innkeeper.'Where do your kings hold court?' asked Drake. 'Why ask you?'
'Man,' said Drake, 'because my sword wishes to be of service to kings.'
'Then go to the west gate, for the western gatehouse is palace, gaol, fort, arsenal, treasury and citadel, all rolled into one.'
The western gatehouse proved to be a stout building of logs, plankwork and bamboo. It was four storeys high, and was as square as it was tall. Drake went swaggering up to the entrance, as bold as a rat boarding a battleship, and demanded an immediate audience with Lord Miphon.
'Why,' said the guards, 'he's in Looming Forest, after herbs and such. As for Lord Blackwood, he's in the forest also, settling a disputed timber claim. But you'll find Lord Hearst on the riverbank just an arrowshot south of here.''Doing what?''Why, administering justice, that's what.'
So Drake went that arrowshot south, and found a crowd of people by the riverbank, where Morgan Hearst was administering justice. Drake stood back to watch. Hearst was speaking in Galish. Did the Rovac warrior know the local Estral? Perhaps. But doubtless Lorford was peopled mostly by refugees, with Galish the only tongue they held in common.
'All right, all right,' shouted Hearst, 'that's adoptions done with. Now how many of you want to get divorced?