'Not willing to risk the valuable parts to a sword blade?' I grinned. 'Why not, Herakleio? Too slow after last night?'
He glared. 'I know nothing about using a sword, or dancing with men.'
'That's right-you prefer to dance with women. So I've heard.' I indicated the door. 'Put some pants on, then, if it makes you feel better.'
He swatted tangled hair out of his eyes. 'Going back to bed would make me feel better.'
'Undoubtedly, after all that you drank-and smoked?-last night. But you've mastered that already. Now it's time to master something else.'
'A sword?' Asked with contempt.
'Among other things.' I picked up a soiled tunic from a bench beside the door. 'This ought to be enough.'
He caught it as I flung it, curled his lip at me.
'Be a good little heir,' I suggested. 'Do as the metri wants.'
It was reminder enough that another potential heir was in the metri's household. He shook out the tunic and tugged it on over his head. With grand scorn, he said, 'Can I take a piss first?'
'You'd better,' I suggested, 'or otherwise you'll have soiled yourself before the morning is over.'
Then I told him where to meet me and left him to his nightjar.
The house itself was built upon a lumpy pile of rumpled, porous, windblasted stone. It wasn't much of a rise-except for the cliff face, none of the crescent-shaped island was sharply cut or dramatically taller than the rest-but it was somewhat higher than the land surrounding it. Akritara was encircled by outgrowth pockets of stone-tiled courtyards and terraces delineated by low, slick-blocked walls painted white. Imagine a series of spreading puddles joining up here and there with one interlocking series of rooms plopped down in the middle, on different half-levels interconnected by sloping stone staircases, and you have an idea. Despite the hand-smoothed, rounded exterior corners of the rooms, the house was in no way strictly curved, in no way cleanly defined by a square room here, a square room there. It was a whole bunch of rooms clumped and mortared together, somehow forming a whole.
Having grown up in the hyorts of the Salset, individual roundish tents set in a series of ranked circles around the headman's larger hyort, I decided Akritara wasn't all that different than a tribal village. But it was made of stone because, I'd been told, there was no wood on the island except what was brought in from other lands, and none of the domed, arched rooflines followed the rules of precedence or symmetry.
But one low-walled, stone-tiled terrace on the side of the house was larger than the rest, and overlooked the part of the island that led to the city, and then to the rim of the caldera. It was here I went, here I groomed the tiles free of larger pebbles, grit, of shrubbery deadfall blown inside the wall. Barefoot, I walked the stone, feeling with the soles of my feet how the tiles were fit together, how the mortar joined them into permanence. I walked the terrace slowly, carefully, letting my feet come to know the place. I searched the surface with eyes as well, and fingertips. Some of the tiles were chipped at the corners, pitted by time and water. Hairline cracks ran through many of the squares, formed larger seams in others. But it was good stone well fit together. There were no significantly loose tiles, no broken or shattered pieces, nothing that could cause a foot to catch and falter, to betray the balance.
In Alimat, shodo-trained, we learned to dance on all surfaces. The Punja, the deep desert, was composed mostly of sand, but the South was also made of other blood and bone. The shodo had samplings of these other surfaces brought in from the borders of the South, and circles were made of each. Sand, pebbles, gravel, hard-pan, cracked and sunbaked mudflats, the crumbly border soil, the shell-seasoned sand of the coast near Haziz, hand- smoothed slabs of mud brick slick in the coating of water poured across it to simulate rain. On all these surfaces, in all these circles, we learned to stand, to wait, to move, to dance –long before a sword was ever put into our hands.
There was a faint tracery of windblown powdered grit across the tiles. I would ask Simonides about having the surface washed daily, to strip the face of the tiles of obstruction that could cause a bootsole, sandal, or callused foot to slide, but for now there was nothing to do for it but bear it. And we wouldn't be moving all that much. Not at first.
When Herakleio came at last, he found me walking the wall. It was perhaps knee-high, two handspans wide. I followed its curving spine surrounding the terrace, from the corner of one room to the corner of another, and all the distance between.
Bemused, he watched me. His posture was impatient, stiff, all hard bone and angles. There was no grace in him as he stood there, no interior balance. There is harmony in the body required by the dance. For the moment he had none.
He had, I was certain, gotten his height early. I suspected his hands and feet had seemed larger than life; he tripped over things, dropped things. Elbows were knocked against lintels, thighs scored by table corners, shins mottled by bruises. He'd outgrown that at last and now was in control of hands and feet, comfortable in the way his bones fit together, the angles of the joints, the smooth flow of tendon and sinew beneath the brown skin, the distribution of his weight. But there is spirit in bones and flesh that has nothing to do with how a man is made, only in how he thinks.
I walked the wall. Heel to toe and back again, then stood sideways across it and marked my way by instep one pace at a time. Eventually he grew bored, irritable, not even remotely curious.
As he opened his mouth to speak I stepped down off the wall. 'Hop up, Herakleio.'
'Up,' he echoed in disbelief. Then, condescendingly, 'I think not. I can conceive of better ways to waste my time.'
I jerked a thumb. 'Up.'
'I am no longer a child, pretender, to play at such things.'
'Well, the metri seems to think you are.' I shrugged. 'Indulge her by indulging me.'
A parade of emotions flowed across his face. Resentment, realization, annoyance, impatience. But he moved. He stepped up onto the wall in one easy movement, muscles flexing smoothly beneath the flesh of his thighs below the hem of his tunic, and stood there.
'Well?' he inquired with elaborate contempt.
I pushed him off.
He didn't fall. Didn't wobble. Didn't flail with arms. Overbalanced, he simply stepped off. Now the wall lay between us.
'What-?' he began hotly.
'Get back up,' I said, gesturing. 'This time, stay up there.'
He glared at me. 'You're only going to try to knock me off again.'
'Yes,' I agreed. 'And you're going to try not to be knocked off.'
'This is a waste of time!'
'I thought so, at first.' I shrugged. 'I learned.'
'Learned?'
'Many things,' I told him. 'Among them how to fall… and how not to fall.'
'But this is-'
I stepped across the low wall, placed the flat of my hand against his spine, and shoved.
Herakleio, as expected, as intended, took one long pace in an attempt to reclaim his balance, smashed his toes into the wall, and saved himself from a nasty fall only by jerking a leg up and over, planting the foot. He barked his shin on the way, straddled the wall with a rather ungainly posture once he'd caught himself, but didn't fall.
'There,' I said. 'Not so hard, is it?'
He had three choices. He could pull one leg up and over on the far side of the wall, moving away from me; he could pull the other leg up and over, moving toward me; or he could stay exactly where he was, one leg on either side of the wall.
Herakleio stayed put.
'Good,' I commented. 'Keep both feet on the ground whenever possible.'
He was furious. He told me so using clipped, hissing words in a language I assumed was Skandic.
'Hop up,' I said. 'Walk the wall, Herak. Imagine you'll die if you step down on either side.' I paused. 'That is, if you have any imagination.'