With these battling hopes and fears in mind, the old man had kept watch for hours, that night; and, although both he and his companion had sensed a human presence, lurking in the forest around and above the ever- expanding grounds of his burgeoning garden, they never saw or found any true sign of visitors; but then, he knew that no one, not even a foreign-born master of scientific arts such as himself, would be able to uncover any trail left by Bane foragers. In the end, catching sight of them (or of evidence that they had been nearby) had not mattered, for the essentially principled nature that the old man had always suspected the Bane of possessing had been demonstrated: a party of foragers had paid an unexpected call on those of the old man’s acolytes to whom the packet had been addressed late one night, within the walls of Broken. In return, the foragers received a hoped for but not wholly expected reward; and a small band of the acolytes immediately began to scheme to meet their former master at the spot along the upper Cat’s Paw that he named to them.
The old man’s companion had carried him there; and, after that first meeting, several more had taken place, each of which saw the acolytes bring more and more of their former master’s books, scrolls, plant cuttings, and instruments to the edge of the Wood, until nearly his entire collection had made the journey. Then, each time, he climbed back onto
There was but one worry involved in the transfer of so much equipment and so many precious goods from the city: each time the acolytes made their trips, fewer and fewer of them appeared, revealing that their ranks were being thinned, not by cowardice, but by imprisonments — and discreet (rather than publicly announced ritual) executions. The God-King Saylal (once the young prince that the old man had tutored from boyhood through youth) had raised up his new Grand Layzin and Merchant Lord; and this young, powerful pair, as the old man knew from his own ordeal, were more than capable of first suspecting and then discovering what the acolytes were up to. Through the use of torture, carried out in the secret dungeons of the Merchants’ Hall, the truth — horrifying for the Layzin and the new Lord Baster-kin to hear — of the old man’s survival and, far worse, of his companionship with the warrior queen, had been heard. Each time an acolyte was broken, he or she revealed some new detail of the story; but, thankfully, when only one meeting with the old man remained to take place, none save Visimar knew where and when it would occur; and even Visimar could not reveal what he did not know, that is, where the old man’s and the warrior queen’s cave was. Such was the Merchant Lord’s wrath, however, that he demanded (with the Layzin’s less vicious support) some greater punishment than quiet death for Visimar; and, when even that last and most faithful of his acolytes failed to appear at the appointed hour and place along the Cat’s Paw, the old man suspected that some typically horrifying Kafran ritual had taken place; yet he dared hope — because the extent of Visimar’s knowledge was, if not as great as his own, nonetheless considerable — that his most brilliant acolyte had somehow survived what he rightly suspected would be the
The sacrifice of his acolytes had only made the old man more certain that he must set aside his deep sadness at the loss of the students, friends, and the ultimately scornful lover he had left behind in Broken, and make certain that his new work in the Wood would be remarkable: worthy enough, at the very least, to vindicate the loss that had made it possible, to say nothing of the dangers that his new companion undertook every day. With so many modern tools now at his disposal — pieces of delicate equipment, books by the masters he most admired, and seeds of those exotic plants that he had been the first man to bring west from the far eastern mountains of Bactria, and from India beyond†—his work proceeded at a pace so increased as to be startling.
After building a proper stone and mortar fireplace within the cave, one that was capable, during winter months, of performing threefold service (as cookstove, forge, and furnace, the last of which could throw enough heat to operate an adjoining kiln), Davon Wood’s most illustrious exile proceeded, with all the energy afforded by the more powerful palliative medications that he could now concoct, to fabricate still more implements of comfort. First, a simple system of spindle, hand-driven wheel, and loom, with which he wove fleece that had been harvested from wild Davon sheep‡ (which often herded near the cave on their way to the sweet grass in the valleys below) and produced simple woolen cloth, to be used first for the creation of new, warmer garments, and soon sleeping sacks that he filled with the downy feathers of the warrior queen’s winged kills. After the loom, he set about building a proper forge outside the cave entrance, one in which he could not only fashion more complex tools and instruments, but create rudimentary glass and blow it into the shapes necessary both for his scientific experiments and for domestic use.
He could also now continue his investigations into
And yet, as he slowly wakes on this particular morning, and observes the especially bright beams of spring sunlight that reach through the open cave door (she having long ago departed on her morning hunt), and as he finds, too, that his half-legs are not quite so painful as is usually the case upon waking, the old man realizes that it is difficult to fix his thoughts on these momentous concerns. He looks toward the fireplace, which still sends small wisps of smoke up from the white ashes that cover the few bits of wood not yet burned, and turns his mind toward the quiet, one might almost say contented, contemplation of all that he has been able to achieve; and he wonders, for a moment, if any of the past masters that he admires could have done as much, in a similar predicament, even with the aid of so formidable (if academically unschooled) an ally. This thought leads him to look beyond the fire, to the shelf that he long ago chiseled out of a deeper part the cave’s stone wall to accommodate his most precious books:‡ his volumes, not only of the original giants, Hippocrates, Aristotle, and Plato, but of the Egyptian Plotinus, who had furthered Plato’s work concerning the soul, and so helped to order the old man’s instinctive insights into the minds and spirits of beasts; of the Byzantine emperor Maurice, who had assembled (and largely authored) the
Truly, the old man muses, there is now life, love, and scholarship in his life in Davon Wood, a life achieved through enormous effort and sacrifice: particularly on the part of his acolytes, of course, but also through his own determined defiance of all difficulties, and, of course, through the extraordinary partnership of his companion. Yet now — as he struggles to pull himself up, and notes that the full chorus of songbirds has returned to Davon Wood — he wonders if his life is not something other than merely remarkable; if it is not something that he, as a man of science, once argued was a useless term that described a nonexistent set of phenomena, a term that sprang from man’s still-vast ignorance: he wonders if it is not a
He does not wonder for long. Perhaps encouraged by her example — her early rising to tend to her share of their pragmatic needs — he, having dragged himself upright with his arms, looks habitually to the desiccated tree stump that serves him for a bedside table, noting that the several moderate doses of the same opium and