<h2 id="c18"><span class="h2line1">17</span> <br/><span class="h2line2">CHARALKIS: THE DEPTH AND RISE</span></h2>
<p>It would be maybe on the fourth day out (for time had little
meaning on that wide blue field) when Rodvard remarked how at
the evening meal Captain Betzensteg took more than usual wine,
glowering sullenly at his plate while he jabbed a piece of bread
into gravies as though they had done him a harm. The last mouthful
vanished, he sucked fingers undaintily and without looking
up, said; “Set out the fired-wine.”</p>
<p>Rodvard felt a cold sweat of peril. The silver bear leaped from
his fingers, and it was his fortune that he caught it before it
reached the floor. The captain sat with eyes down, not appearing
to notice. Bottle clacked on table; the one-eyed man poured himself
a deep draught, and at the sound of the door opening, said;
“Stay.”</p>
<p>Rodvard turned. Both the captain’s hands were on the table,
gripping the winecup and he was staring into it as though it were
a miniature of his beloved. “Come here.”</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_346">346</div>
<p>(Fear: but what could one do or say?) Rodvard glided to his
post in serving-position behind the chair. For a long breathless
moment no sound but the steady pace of someone on the deck
above, muted slap of waves and clatter of ship’s gear. Then the
head came up, Rodvard saw how the rich lips were working (and
in that single eye read not only the horrible lust he had expected,
but that which gave him something akin to pity, a ghastly agony
of spirit, a question that read; “Shall I never be free?”) Captain
Betzensteg lifted the cup in his two hands and tossed off the contents
at a gulp, gagged, gave a growl of “Arrgh!” and, reaching
up his left hand, ran it pattingly over Rodvard’s buttocks.</p>
<p>“No,” said the young man under his breath, pulling away. The
captain jerked to his feet, violently oversetting his chair, and with
distorted face, drove his fist against the table. “Idiot!” he cried.
“Do you not know your benefit?” and reaching to his purse, tossed
clanking against the bottle a handful of coins. Rodvard shrunk
away, and giving a kind of mewing cry as the one-eyed creature
leaped, tried for the door. His foot caught something, he took
three desperate lunges, gripped the handle as the huge fist caught
the side of his head and spilled him through onto the deck, senseless.</p>
<h3>II</h3>
<p>When next he knew, there was a sour smell of wine, it was dark
and dripping sounded. He could not think through the curtain of
headache; the scampering was undoubtedly rat, but why? Where
was added to why with slowly gathering memory—still on the ship
certainly, since the bare boards on which he lay heaved with a
slow and even beat.</p>
<p>The right side of his neck was sore, and the opposite soreness
was on his head. He thought: ah, for why am I so punished? and
heaved himself upon an elbow to find a pannikin of water by his
side, which he drank greedily. It was dark, a kind of velvet twilight;
yet not so dark that he failed to make out that he lay prisoned
in a narrow passage between tall casks that rose on either
hand, groaning in their lashings. The quantity of light must mean
day was outside, and he had lain a long time. Now he came afoot
and wondered whether he should seek the deck, but decided contrary,
since someone for some reason had brought him here, and
there might be perils abroad. Sleep? Ah, no. He sat down to think
out his situation, but could make no sense of any part, therefore
abandoned the effort, and with a tinge of regret over his lost books,
let his mind run along the line of Iren Dostal’s sweet rhymes until
tears reached his eyes.</p>
<p>This could not occupy him forever, either; a profound and
trembling ennui came on him, so his fingers made small motions
tracing out an imaginary design. A long time; a step sounded,
coming down from somewhere and then along among the casks.
Krotz. He said:</p>
<p>“You must be careful. Oh, do not make a noise. He would hurt
me if he knew I helped you. Here.”</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_347">347</div>
<p>In the gloom something was thrust against Rodvard’s hand
which, by the touch, he knew for a dish of congealing food. “What
is it?” he asked. “I was struck and lost remembrance.”</p>
<p>“You truly do not know? I thought it was feigned when you
failed to speak as he said you were to be thrown overside, and he
took the young Kjermanash—.” A shout sounded flatly from above.
“Oh, I could hurt him. I must go.” The last words went dim as
Krotz disappeared among the tall columns of casks and Rodvard
was left to his meditations. The food was a stew of lamb, and it
tasted like candle-grease.</p>
<p>Dark had come before the lad did again, with a meal even
worse than its foregoer; trembling and unwilling to talk. Rodvard
found himself fingering round the great casks from one curve to
another, counting the planks in them and thinking whether there
might not be some mathematical relation in the figures he counted.
A futile thing to do, he told himself, wishing he had Dr. Remigorius’
philosophy, who often spoke of how a man should be complete
in himself, since each one lives in a self-built cell of pellucid
glass and may touch another only with, not through, that veil. Ah,
bah! It is not true (he thought); I have been touched sharply
enough by this very Remigorius, but for whom I’d not be in such
a coil, with Lalette and Damaris, ideals thrown down, and on a
mad voyage to nowhere. . . . There was something wrong with
this, on which he could not put the finger—so now he fell to counting
the planks again, or try to make a poem, ending the effort with
an inward twitter, as though mice were running under his skin, as
he waited, not with patience, for the next arrival of Krotz with his
purloined food.</p>
<p>The lad was faithful, but always looking over his shoulder;
trembling so that it was nearly impossible to get two consecutive
words from him, by which it came about that there was no plan
for Rodvard’s escape when the word was that Charalkis Head had
come in sight. The ship would lie that night in the harbor of Mancherei’s
brick-built capital, and what counsel now? Shifting his
feet like a dancer, Krotz said he thought Rodvard might easily
slip past the deck-guard into the water; but this scheme split on
the fact that he lacked the skill of swimming. All was still undecided
that night; a sharp sword of apprehension pricked his fitful sleep,
nor were matters amended when he was fully roused by hammerings
over the doors of his prison.</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_348">348</div>
<p>Kjermanash voices sounded their customary cackle. A shaft of
light struck down, so brilliant that Rodvard’s dark-hooded eyes
could scarcely bear it, and he shrank back along the cask-alley,
hands over face. It was not the best means of hiding; down swung
one of the Kjermanash to fix the tackle for lifting out the cargo,
gave a whoop and pounced, being presently joined by other sailors.
There was much laughter and excited talk in their own language;
they patted Rodvard and tweaked the long-grown hair on
his face, then urged him up the ladder deckward, with “Key-yip!
Kee-yup!” and a sheath-knife that banged him in the crotch
from behind as he climbed, blinking.</p>
<p>At the top he stumbled out on a deck where the mate stood,
wrinkling eyes against the sun. “Puke-face, by the Service! I
thought you had been fish-farts long ago. Ohé, captain! Here’s
your cheating mechanician!”</p>
<p>Now Rodvard noticed that Captain Betzensteg was a few paces
beyond, talking to a man in a decent grey jacket and a red-peaked
hat, but wearing no badge of status. The one-eyed monster turned,
and his full lips twisted. “Put him in the lazarette with chains,
since he’s so slippery. Well have the trial at sea.”</p>
<p>The single eye looked on Rodvard (and it said one thing only—“Death.”)</p>
<p>The young man staggered; he cried desperately: “I appeal.”</p>
<p>“A captain’s judge on his own ship. I reject your appeal. Take
him away.”</p>
<p>Said the man in grey; “A moment, Ser Captain. This is not good
law for the dominion of Mancherei, in whose authority you now
stand. We have one judge that stands above every mortal protestation,
that is, the God of love, whose law was set forward by
our Prophet.”</p>
<p>The captain snarled, black and sour; “This is my ship. I order
you to leave it.”</p>
<p>The man in the grey jacket had a thin, ascetic face. One eyebrow
jagged upward; “This is our port. I order you to leave it
without discharging a single item of your cargo.”</p>
<p>“You dare not. Our Queen—”</p>
<p>“Has no rule in Mancherei. That was tried out at the time of
the Tritulaccan war. Young ser, what is the ground of your appeal
to our law?”</p>
<p>(The Blue Star was cold as cold on Rodvard’s heart, but there
seemed a bright shimmer like a haze in the eyes that met his, and
not a thought could he make out through it.) He said; “Because
the captain of this ship would be both jury and accuser.”</p>
<p>“He lies,” growled Betzensteg. “My underofficer is the accuser,
for that this man refused to repair a drop-gear.”</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_349">349</div>
<p>“That is a question of fact, to be decided by a court which can
gain nothing from the decision,” said the man in grey, calmly. He
swung to Rodvard. “Young man, do you place yourself in the
justice of Mancherei, to accept the rule and decision of its authority?”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes,” cried Rodvard (willing to do anything to escape the
terror of that baneful optic).</p>
<p>The man in grey produced a small paper scroll and touched
Rodvard lightly on the arm. “Then I do declare you under the
law of the Prophet of Mancherei; and you, Ser Captain, will interfere
at your gravest peril. Young man, take your place in my boat.”</p>
<h3>III</h3>
<p>Rodvard was motioned to the bow of the craft, from which
floated a banner with a device much resembling a dove, but it was
in the false heraldry of grey on white, and hard to make out.
Spray was salt on his face; as they reached a stone dock a ladder
was lowered down, and he would have waited for the grey man,
but the latter motioned him imperiously to go up first.</p>
<p>The pierside street hummed with an activity that to Rodvard
seemed far more purposeful than that of languid Netznegon, with
horses and drays, porters bearing packages, men on horseback
or in little two-wheeled caleches, pausing to talk to each other
under the striped shadows thrown across the wharfs by a forest of
tall masts. Their clothes were different. From a tavern came a
sound of song, though it was early in the morning. (It seemed
to Rodvard that most of the people were more cheerful than those
of his homeland; and he thought it might be that the Prophet’s
rule had something to do with it.)</p>
<p>“This way,” said one of the barge-rowers, and touched him on
the arm. He was guided across the dock and up to a pillared door
where persons hurried in and out. “What is your name?” asked the
grey man, pausing on the step; made an annotation, then said to
the rower guide; “Take him to the Hawkhead Tavern and see that
he has breakfast. Here is your warrant. I will send archers for the
complaining mate, but I do not think the court will hear the case
before the tenth glass of the afternoon.”</p>
<p>“I am a prisoner?” asked Rodvard.</p>
<p>The other’s face showed no break. “No; but you will find it
hard to run far. Be warned; if you are not condemned unheard,
no more are you released because the accuser overrode his right.
The doctrine of our Prophet gives every grace, but not until every
debt is paid and the learner finds by what it was he has been deceived.”</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_350">350</div>
<p>He made a perfunctory salutation and turned on his heel.
Rodvard went with the rower, a burly man in a shirt with no jacket
over it, asking as he strode along; “What was it he meant by saying
I’d find it hard to run far?”</p>
<p>The face composed in wrinkles of astonishment. “Why, he’s an
Initiate! You’d no more than think on an evasion when the guards
would be at your heels.”</p>
<p>Rodvard looked at him in counter-surprise (and a shiver ran
through him at the thought that these people of the Prophet might
somehow have learned to read minds without the intervention of
any Blue Star, a thing he had heard before only as a rumor).
“What!” he said to change the subject. “I see no badges of status
anywhere. Is it true that you have none in Mancherei?”</p>
<p>The man made a face. “No status in the dominion—at least that
is what the learners and diaconals say in their services.” He looked
across his shoulder. “They’ll give you status enough, though, if
you hold to their diet of greens and fish. Bah. Here we are.”</p>
<p>The breakfast was not fish, but an excellent casserole of
chicken, served by a red-faced maid, who slapped the rower when
he reached for her knee. He laughed like a waterfall and ordered
black ale. Rodvard hardly heard him, eating away with appetite
in a little world of himself alone (hope mingling with danger at
the back of his mind), so that it was a surprise when the rower
nudged him and stood.</p>
<p>“The reckoning’s made for you, Bogolan,” he said. “Come the
meridian, you’ve only to ask for bread and cheese and beer. Go
out, wander, see our city; but do not fail to return by the tenth
glass; and take notice, your Dossolan coin will buy nothing in
shops here, it is a crime to take such monies.”</p>
<p>He swaggered out. The last words recalled Rodvard to his
penniless condition, and he looked along himself uncomfortably,
seeing for the first time how the black servant’s costume he had
from Mathurin was all streaked, dirty and odorous, with a tear at
the breast where the badge had been wrenched off. There was no
desire to present himself to the world in such an appearance. He
shrank back behind the table into the angle made by panelling
and the tall settee to think and wait out his time, watching the
room around him. On the floor of the place, the press of breakfasters
was relaxing; maids were deliberate over clattering dishes,
calling to one another in strong, harsh voices. He could not catch
the eye of any to use his Blue Star in reading her thought, which
might have been a pastime; and his own affairs were in such suspense
and turmoil that thinking seemed little use. After a while
the shame of merely crouching there overcame that of his garb,
so he got up and went outside.</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_351">351</div>
<p>The town was in full tide, and noisy. There was no clear vista
in any direction, the streets lacking Netznegon city’s long boulevards,
angling and winding instead. The buildings were set well
apart from each other. Rodvard feared being lost among the intricacies
of these avenues, therefore formed the design of keeping
buildings on his right hand and so going around a square, crossing
no streets, which must ultimately bring him safely to his
starting-place.</p>
<p>The district was one of houses of commerce, mingled with tall,
blank-faced tenements. A droll fact: there were no children in
sight. In the shop-windows were many articles of clothing, so
beautifully made they might have been worn by lords and princesses.
He did not see many other goods, save in one window that
displayed a quantity of clerks’ materials, rolls of parchment, quills
and books, nearly all finely arabesqued or gilded—which set him
to wondering about what manner of clerks worked with such tools.</p>
<p>The inn swung round its circle to present him its door again.
It was not yet the meridian, therefore he crossed the street and
made another circuit, this time reaching a street where there were
many warehouses with carts unloading. Round the turn from this
was a house of religion, with the two pillars surmounted by an
arch, as in Dossola, but the arch was altered by being marked with
the device of a pair of clasped hands, carved in wood. A man came
out; like the one who had rescued Rodvard from the ship, he was
dressed in grey. The look of his face and cant of his head were
so like the other’s that Rodvard almost spoke to him before discovering
he was heavier built. The grey clothing must be a kind
of uniform or costume.</p>
<p>A wall bordered the grounds of this building, with a cobbled
alley, which had a trickle down its middle. Rodvard followed it,
pausing to look at wind-torn placards which lay one over the other,
proclaiming now a festival for a byegone date, the departure of
a ship for Tritulacca, a notice against the perusal of the latest book
by Prince Pavinius, or a fair for the sale of goods made by certain
persons called the Myonessae, a new word to Rodvard. The alley
at length carried him to face the inn again. He wished for a book
to beguile the time, but that being a vain desire, went in to seek
his former place. Not until he sat down did he see that the nook
opposite him was occupied.</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_352">352</div>
<p>It was a little man, hunched in a long cloak, so old that his
nose hooked over his chin, making him look like a bird. Before
him was a mug of pale beer; he was deep in thought and did not
look up as Rodvard sat down, but after a moment or two sipped,
smacked his lips and said; “Work, work, work, that’s all they
think of.”</p>
<p>Said Rodvard (glad of any company); “It does not do to work
too heavily.”</p>
<p>The gaffer still did not elevate his eyes. “I can remember, I
can, how it used to be in the Grand Governor’s time, before he
called himself Prophet, when on holy days we did not labor. And
we going out on the streets to watch processions pass from Service
with the colors and silks, but now they only sneak off to the
churches as though they were ashamed of it, then work, work,
work.”</p>
<p>He drank more of his beer. Rodvard was somewhat touched by
his speech, for though he was hardly one to defend Amorosians
to each other, it was just these processions in silks while so many
were without bread that bore hard on Dossola. He said; “Ser, it
would seem to me that no man would worry for working, if he
could have his reward.”</p>
<p>The old man lifted his eyes from his mug (Rodvard catching
behind them a feeling of indifference to any reward but calm)
and said; “Silence for juniors, speech for seniors.”</p>
<p>One of the maids approached; Rodvard asked for his bread
and cheese and beer, and drew from her a smile so generous that
he looked sharp (and saw that she would welcome an advance,
but the thought at the back of her mind was money). The ancient
shivered down into his cloak again, not speaking till she was gone.</p>
<p>Then he said; “Reward, eh? What use is your reward and finding
money to spend when it buys nothing but gaudy clothes and
a skinfull of liquor, no credit or position at all? Answer me that.
I tell you I would not be unhappy if we went back to the old
Queen’s rule, and that’s the truth, even if they send me to instruction
for it.”</p>
<p>“Ser, may I pose you a question?” asked Rodvard.</p>
<p>“Questions show proper respect and willingness to be taught.
Ask it.”</p>
<p>The food came. Rodvard nibbled at his cheese and asked; “Ser,
Is it not better and freer to live here where there is no status?”</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_353">353</div>
<p>“No status, no,” said the old man, gloomily. “And there’s the
pain, right there. In the old days a man was reasonable secure
where he stood, he could look up to those above and share their
glory, and we had real musicians and dancing troupes as many as
a hundred, who made it an art, so that the souls of those who
watched them were advanced. Where are they now? All gone off
to Dossola; and now all anyone here can do is work, work, work,
grub, grub, grub. It is the same in everything. I can recall how
joyous I was when I was a young man in the days of the Grand
Governor before the last, and received my first commission, which
was to carve a portrait bust for Count Belodon, who was secretary
financial. A bust of his mistress it was, and I made it no higher
than this, out of walrus ivory from Kjermanash, as fine a thing as
I ever did. But now all they want is dadoes for doorways. No art
in that.”</p>
<p>“Yet it would seem to me,” said Rodvard, “that you have some
security of life here, so that no man need go hungry if he will
labor.”</p>
<p>“No spirit in it. Will go on, men working like ants till one day
they are gone and another ant falls into their place. No spirit in
it; nothing done for the joy of creation, so they must have laws to
make men work.”</p>
<p>He went silent, staring into his beer, nor could Rodvard draw
more words from him. Presently a young lad with long, fair hair
came peering down the line of booths until he reached this one,
when he said that the old man, whom he addressed as grandfather,
must follow him at once to the shop, where he was wanted
for carving the face of a clock.</p>
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