<h2 id="c17"><span class="h2line1">16</span> <br/><span class="h2line2">THE EASTERN SEA: SYSTOLE</span></h2>
<p>The queasiness had gone from Rodvard’s stomach and the illness
from his head, but all his senses were more alive than jets of
flame. Every rut gave him agony in the jolting mule-cart, he could
not draw away from pain long enough for anger or fear. Yet
shortly the very keenness of his hurt anaesthetized all down to no
more than an aching tooth; and now the senses, oversharpened
by witchery, began to report the world around him. They were
passing two people afoot, then another cart, to none of which the
driver made salutation.</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_338">338</div>
<p>They must be out of the village, for right overhead, branches
began to go past against a sky where horses’ tails slid across tender
blue. A bird lit on one of the branches and tipped its head to
look down. It seemed to Rodvard as he gazed into the single
revealed eye that he could, with his Blue Star, read the avian
thought—of food and sex, confused, and not unlike a human’s.
This might only be another effect of the witchery, but it set him
thinking about his own confusion of mind and what the butler
Tuolén had said about Star-bearers and their women; so he considered
what species of joy or completeness was to be had from
these skirted creatures, who for a spiritless complaisance would
exact a slave’s devotion.</p>
<p>Lalette. He wondered whether her witchcraft would give her
knowledge of his infidelity of thought with the Countess Aiella,
and of deed with the maid Damaris; and if so, what penalty would
be demanded of him. Ah, no; why should penalty be due? This
was not marriage, he had taken no oath nor meant any. Give back
the Blue Star, let us pronounce a bill of farewell, and be damned
to Mathurin and his menaces, or even to Remigorius and the
cause for which all was done.</p>
<p>The mule’s feet klopped on a bridge, the clouds were thickening
toward grey above and birds chirping as they will when a storm
is toward. No, no, friend Rodvard, he answered himself; be honorable
as you hope to receive honor. Acquiescence she gave you,
aye, beneath the trees; but you half forced her then. The night in
the widow Domijaiek’s bed was no unwilling gift, but for both of
them the end of life and its beginning. A new life with Lalette
the witch, holding the sweetness of peril, not that of repose, something
beyond any connection that might have been formed with
Maritzl of Stojenrosek. Had she laid some witchery upon him to
make it so, not being herself affected? Seek her out, anywhere;
discover if that enchantment were forever.</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_339">339</div>
<p>Could such things be? Witchery was something which, like
death, he had no more than heard of from the world beyond his
world. When he was a lad in the village among the spurs of the
Shining Mountains, there was the fat old woman who had grown
so dreadfully thin, all in a week, and people saying it was witchery
on her. The priest came with his oils, but it was too late, and she
died the next day, and no one ever found the witch, if there were
one. Oh, aye, there were prosecutions of witchery in town, and
now the mule-driver’s wife, Lalette, the Blue Star, and he himself
caught into something he did not understand and which made him
afraid . . . and because he had done no more than cherish high
ideals and obey orders.</p>
<p>The pains were less, but all his muscles so immobile that they
afforded no yielding to the throw of the cart, and thus piled bruise
on bruise. A long ride; it must be after the meridian of the sun,
though even heightened perception would not tell him if this were
so, since he had lost all sense of direction in the intricacy of the
turnings. The mule’s feet and cart’s tires struck paving stones, the
movement became uneven, voices were audible and they were
entering a town, so that Rodvard began to hope of a rescue—and
with that hope, a fear of what would happen if there were no
rescue. What did the man mean to do with him? He found no
visible answer, for though it was evident that though the repulsive
spouses were minded for murders, and himself not the first to fall
into their clutches, it hardly seemed they would have fixed the
mechanician’s badge on his breast in mere anticipation of disposing
of a body.</p>
<p>Droll to think of oneself as a body—an idea he did not remember
having held before, ever. His mind achieved a wedding between
this line of thought and the earlier one, or how it was when
that urge toward the Countess Aiella had slipped out of merely
playing a part into deep desire, it was the voice of body speaking
to body. But it was not that way on the widow’s bed; that night
it was as though a flame sprang up, to which their bodies responded
last of all. Ah, Maritzl (he thought), with you also there might
have been such a union of flames, to last forever and ever, only
I did not know, I did not dare, before the Blue Star had bound
me to this other.</p>
<p>Now a certain brightening of the diffused light reflected into
the cart told him they were passing houses with snow-white walls;
by this, with the time and distance, they must be in Sedad Vix
city. Odors floated to him—salt water, fish, the spicy products of
the south, not unpleasantly blended. The docks. Was the man
going to make him a body by heaving him into the sea? To his
futile angers was added that of not being able to see the
old rascal’s eye—now the Blue Star had recovered its virtue
under the witch-wife’s ministration—but there was time for little
more of thinking, for the cart drew up with a cry to the mule, the
driver got down heavily, his feet sounding on stones and then on
plank.</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_340">340</div>
<p>He was gone briefly; Rodvard felt the covering taken from
him, and with a grunt, he was hoisted to a shoulder, stiff as a log.
A whirling view of pallid dockside houses, the masts of a tall ship
with her sails hanging in disorderly loops; he came down with a
jar that shook every bone onto what appeared to be some structure
projecting from the deck, where a red face surrounded by
whisker looked into his own. One eye in the face was only a
globule of spoiled milk; (the cold Blue Star on Rodvard’s heart
told him the good eye held both cruelty and greed).</p>
<p>“Yah,” said Redface. “The fish is cold.”</p>
<p>“I tell you now, live as an eel. Fetch a mirror.”</p>
<p>Redface reached out a dirty-nailed hand and pinched Rodvard’s
cheek, hard. “Mmmmb. A spada’s worth of life. To save
argument, I’ll give you two.”</p>
<p>“Ey, look at him, a proved mechanician with a badge and all.
I say to you, my old woman she has done with him so he’ll work
like a clock, pick, pick, never mind time nor nothing. A gold
scuderius; you should give me two.”</p>
<p>They chaffered horribly over his body, while Rodvard lay
moveless as a statue (thinking of how he was one, alas not cradled
in light and speed like the Wingèd Man to whom he had
compared Count Cleudi when Cleudi marked the resemblance
between them; not upborne by spirit like the figure of the archer-hero;
but a stiff corpse, subject of a sale, a carcass, a beef). He
heard the chink of money passing; the one-eyed man gave an order
that Rodvard was to be taken below, and someone carried him
awkwardly with many bumpings down a ladder to a tight room
smelling of dirty humans. He was tossed high onto a kind of shelf
and left alone for a long time (thinking all the while of what
the mule-driver had said about his being witched to work like a
clock, and wondering whether it were true).</p>
<p>After a while, a doze came upon him, for which there was no
emergence till the round hole in the ship’s wall had ceased to give
light. The place filled suddenly then with feet and words, many
of the latter with a Kjermanash accent, or in that language itself.
One of these persons pointed to him and there was a laugh. Rodvard
tried to turn his head, and to his surprise found it would
move a tiny arc, though by an effort that redoubled the agony
throughout the bruised mass of his body. Yet the stirring was a
joy as great as any he had ever experienced, and he lay repeating
it, as the assemblage below—garrulous as all Kjermanash—came
and went with pannikins from which floated an appetizing perfume
of stew. Rodvard found other movements beside his head, and lay
repeating them through the twinge of pain. A whistle blew, some of
the men went out and up, while the others undressed noisily, put
out the light and composed themselves for sleep on shelves like
that which bore the young man.</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_341">341</div>
<p>For him there was little sleep, and as life flowed along ankylosed
muscles, he was invaded by a sense of irrevocable disgrace,
so poignant that it drowned fear. Damaris the maid . . . he had
sold his soul for a copper there . . . not that he felt to the girl
any profound debt as to Lalette, or that such a debt were just—but
whether from the priests’ teaching at the academy, or the
words of Remigorius, he had somehow grown into a pattern of
life which, being violated, one was cast down into a sea of life
by merest impulse . . . ah, no, should it not be rather that each
event must be judged by itself? . . . and no, again—for by what
standard shall one judge? Impulse or an absolute, there is no third
choice.</p>
<p>So thinking, so seeking to find a clue to conduct (or to justify
his own, merely, Rodvard told himself in a moment of bitterness),
he lay on his comfortless couch, aware that the ship had begun to
move with uneasy tremors; and presently dawn began to flower.
At the room’s entrance a lantern showed a bearded face, into
which a whistle was thrust to blow piercingly. All the men leaped
from their shelves with a gabble like a common growl and began
dressing in the greatest haste. The bearded man shoved through
them and shook Rodvard so rudely that he was jerked from his
shelf, coming down thump on the deck, with feet that would not
hold him.</p>
<p>“Rouse out!” said the bearded man, catching him a clout across
the headbone. “You lazy scum of shore mechanicians must learn
to leap when the mate sounds.”</p>
<p>Rodvard staggered amid coarse laughter, but having no means
of protest, followed the Kjermanash, who were scrambling rapidly
up the ladder. They were in open sea; the breeze was light, the
day clear and the air fine, but even so, the slight motion gave him
a frightful qualm. His first steps were across the deck to the rail,
where he retched up all that lay on his stomach, which was very
little.</p>
<p>“You, what’s your name?” said the bearded mate.</p>
<p>“Rodvard—Berg-elin.”</p>
<p>“I call you Puke-face. Go forward to the mainmast, Puke-face,
eat your breakfast if you can, and then repair the iron fitting that
holds the drop-gear repetend. The carpenter’s cabinet under the
break of the prowhouse will give you tools.”</p>
<p>“I—I cannot use tools. I am—a clerk, not a mechanician.”</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_342">342</div>
<p>“Death and dragons! Come aft with me, you cunilingous bastard!”
The mate’s hand missed Rodvard’s neck, but caught a
clutch of jacket at the shoulder, and dragged him along the deck
to where a flight of steps went up, and the one-eyed captain stood,
an ocular under his arm. “Captain Betzensteg! This lump of excrement
says it knows nothing of mechanic.”</p>
<p>Sick though he was, Rodvard felt the Blue Star burn cold and
looked up into an eye (brimming with something more than mere
fury, something strange from which his mind turned). “Diddled,
by the Service!” said the voice, between heavy lips. “When next—ah,
throw your can of piss up here.”</p>
<p>Rodvard was jerked against the steps, striking his shin, and
stumbled up by using his hands. The one-eyed captain reached out
and ripped the badge from his breast, tearing the cloth. “Go below,
stink-pot,” said he, “and tell my boy he’s promoted to seaman.
You shall serve my table.”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir,” said Rodvard and looked around for his route, since
all the architecture of a ship was stranger to him than that of a
cathedral.</p>
<p>“Go!” said the captain, and lifted an arm as though to strike
him with the ocular, but changed his mind. “What held you from
telling your status?”</p>
<p>“Nothing,” said Rodvard, and gripped the rail of the stair-head,
for his gorge began rising within.</p>
<p>“If you puke on my deck you shall lick it up.” The captain
turned his back and shouted; “Lift the topper peak-ropes!”</p>
<p>Down the stairs again there were not so many ways to choose
from, so he took to the door to the right (hoping under his mind
that this would be an omen) along a passage and into a room,
where a sullen-faced lad of maybe eighteen was folding a cloth
from a table. “You are Captain Betzensteg’s boy?” asked Rodvard,
trying to keep from looking through the window, where the sea-edge
rocked slowly up and down. “I am to say you are promoted
seaman.”</p>
<p>The lad’s mouth popped open as though driven by a spring,
he dropped the napery and ran around the table to seize Rodvard
by both arms. “Truly? If you trick me—” For one instant pale eyes
flashed fury and the small down before first shaving trembled.
But he must have seen honesty before him (“Born for the sea and
freedom!” his thought read), and quickly thrust past to make for
the door.</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_343">343</div>
<p>“Stay,” said Rodvard, holding him by the jacket. “Will you not
show me—?” The spasm caught him and he retched, mouth full
of sour spittle.</p>
<p>The lad turned laughing, but without malice, and clapped him
on the back. “Heave hearty!” he said. “It will come better when
you come to learn the free way of the ocean; grow to love it and
care nothing for landlouts. Here are the linens.” He opened the
midmost of a set of drawers built into the wall. “The old man
takes no napkins save when there are guests aboard—a real dog
of the brine, with fish-blood in his veins, that one! I am called
Krotz; what’s your name?”</p>
<p>Rodvard’s telling, he hardly seemed to notice, but continued
his flood of instructions. “In these racks are the silvers; he uses
only the best, and be careful at dinner to set his silver bear on
the table, it was given him by the syndics at the time of the
Tritulaccan war for his seamanlike skill. The bed-bunk you must
carefully fold in at the base, but he likes the top loose, so. Wine
always with the early meals, it is here. If the weather’s fair he
sometimes takes fired-wine in the evening. If he orders it so—”</p>
<p>The lad Krotz halted, looked sidewise out of his eyes and
leaned close. “Hark, Bergelin, I am not what you would call
jealous. Have you ever—that is, when he has fired-wine, he may
desire to treat you as his lover.”</p>
<p>“I—” Rodvard recoiled, and retched again.</p>
<p>“Ah, do not be so dainty. It is something that every true seaman
must learn, and keeps us from being like the landlouts. You
do not know how it can be, and he gives you silver spadas after.
But if you will not, listen, all the better, when the old man calls
for his fired-wine, set the bottle on the table, take away the silver
bear, and call me.”</p>
<p>Said Rodvard (no little astonished, that the emotion of which
The Blue Star spoke was indeed jealousy); “No. I’ll have none of
it, ever.”</p>
<p>A smile of delight so pure that Rodvard wondered how he had
thought the lad’s look sullen. “The cook will give you breakfast.
I must go—to be a seaman.”</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_344">344</div>
<p>Captain Betzensteg ate by himself. Rodvard was glad that he
remembered the silver bear, but when he tried to hold forward
the platter of meat as he remembered seeing Mathurin do it for
Cleudi, he got things wrong, of course, and the one-eyed man
growled; “Not there, you fool. The other side.” The meat itself
was something with much grease, pork probably, which it sickened
Rodvard even to look at as the captain chewed liquidly,
pointing with his fork to a corner of the cabin and declaring he
would barber someone of his ears unless it were kept cleaner.
That night there was no call for fired-wine; Rodvard felt a surge
of gratitude for preservation as he cleared up after the meal, and
made his way forward to the crew quarters in what he now had
learned to be the peak-jowl.</p>
<p>Sickness sent him to his shelf at once, for the movement of the
ship was becoming more vivid as twilight fell, but sleep had not
yet reached him when there was a change of duty, as in the morning,
and of those who came tumbling down the ladder, Krotz was
one. He was much less the lord of the earth than earlier; no
sooner was the lad in place than all the Kjermanash were after
him unmercifully, with hoots and ribald remarks, pinching his
cheeks and his behind, till at the last the lad, crying; “Let me
alone!” flung his arms out so wildly that he caught one of the
sailors a clip on the nose and sent him staggering. The fellow
snarled like a tiger, all his rough humor dissolved in black bile,
and recovering, whipped out a tongue of steel. But Rodvard, without
knowing how or why he did so, rolled from his shelf onto the
shoulder and arm that held the knife, bearing the man to the
floor.</p>
<p>The Kjermanash fought upward; Rodvard took two or three
nasty blows on the side of the head, as he clung with both his
hands to the dagger, and knew with more interest than fear that he
must lose in the end to the overbearing strength of the man. But
just as he was giving way, a pair of hands beneath the armpits
wrenched him clear and flung him against the shelves, while a
big foot kicked the knife.</p>
<p>“What’s here?” demanded the voice of the bearded mate.
“Puke-face, you’ll have a dozen lashes for this, damme if you
don’t! You to attack a full-grade seaman!”</p>
<p>Said Rodvard, feeling of his head; “He would have knifed
Ser Krotz.”</p>
<p>“Ser!” The mate barked derision, and his head darted round
like a snake’s. “Is this veritable?”</p>
<p>All the Kjermanash began cawing together; the mate appeared
to comprehend their babble, for after a minute or two of it, he held
up his hand with; “Shut up. I see it. This is the sentence—Vetehikko,
three days’ pay stopped for knifing. As for you, Puke-face,
your punishment’s remitted, but in the future, you’ll sleep in the
lazarette to teach you your true status aboard this basket.”</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_345">345</div>
<p>He turned to the ladder, and not a word from the Kjermanash
for once, but as they glowered among themselves, young Krotz
came to throw his arms around Rodvard. “I owe you a life,” he
said, at the edge of tears.</p>
<p>Said Rodvard; “But I will pay for it.”</p>
<p>“Ah, no. I—will surely buy you free.”</p>
<p>“I did not know there was status aboard a sea-ship; you said
the life on one was free as a bird.”</p>
<p>“Why, so it is, indeed, but not for lack of status, which is the
natural order of things. Are you an Amorosian?”</p>
<p>It nearly slipped off Rodvard’s lips that he was rather of the
Sons of the New Day, but Krotz’ words showed how little he
would find such a confession acceptable, and he did not trust the
Kjermanash; and by another morning, the ship’s motion told on
him somewhat less heavily.</p>
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