Read Spellbreaker Online

Authors: Blake Charlton

Spellbreaker (22 page)

“Pillow House?” Francesca asked.

Magister Sarvna coughed, a gray sound. “The Mithuna divinity complex is the patron divinity of erotic love and there is a … temple … dedicated to her in New Village.”

“I see. Go on.”

The young physician nodded. “Unfortunately, neither my maneuvers nor the subsequent assistance of more senior physicians could slow the patient's bleeding. She passed into the next life shortly after midnight.”

“I am sorry to hear it,” Francesca said.

“An autopsy…” Magistra Ubo continued but then looked Dean Sarvna. He, however, kept his eyes on Francesca. So Magistra Ubo continued, “An autopsy revealed … pathology not consistent with any known disease of pregnancy. In fact, the findings support a divinopathophysiology.” This being physician's jargon for “a divine process that causes disease.”

“Do they now?” Francesca asked.

“Describing the findings…” Magistra Ubo struggled to find the words.

“Perhaps,” Dean Sarvna suggested, “Magistra DeVega would like to see the findings for herself?”

Francesca looked at the chubby man and discovered, much to her surprise, that she liked him. “Yes, I would. How far is your morgue?”

“Not far,” Magistra Ubo replied. “But I must say that the findings are … unusually disturbing, even to the physicians who perform autopsies daily.”

“Ah,” Francesca answered with a smile, “that is one perk of having been semi-draconic for the past thirty years. Unless a process involves a neodemon trying to introduce pathology into my own internal organs with fangs, tentacles, or more disturbing appendages, I am not going to be disturbed.”

“With all respect, my Lady Warden,” Magistra Ubo said, “in this case, you may be wrong.”

“To the morgue then,” Francesca said with a challenging smile. “The burning hells will freeze before I am wrong about this.”

So Magistra Ubo led Francesca and Dean Sarvna down a narrow stairway. The rest of Francesca's party and the dean's followed close behind. As they went, Dean Sarvna expressed his dismay that the imperial kingdoms were no longer sending their young spellwrights to Port Mercy to be trained as physicians. In fact, he reported, Empress Vivian had opened an Imperial College of Physicians in Trillinon, which even accepted magically illiterate students.

Clearly the dean was most troubled by the idea of non-spellwrights becoming physicians. Francesca, on the other hand, saw the empress's refusal to send physicians to Port Mercy as an ominous political sign of imperial ambition.

When the party reached the morgue, Magistra Ubo spoke to one of the attendants who led Francesca to a body covered with stained brown cloth. When Magistra Ubo pulled a sheet back, Francesca involuntarily stopped her breath.

Her whole body tensed as she tried to avoid losing her composure … or vomiting. It took Francesca a moment to realize her mistake. She had trained as a physician in an era when disease caused by divinity had been so rare that she had seen virtually none of it. Worse, she had never before seen divinopathophysiology after the birth of her daughter, who had endured a lifetime of pain caused by divinopathology.

Therefore, Francesca's revulsion was intensified by the revulsion and loathing she had felt a thousand times before for herself and what her own linguistic nature had done to her daughter. Here it was again: proof that similarities, and not differences, caused the strongest loathing.

There is no hatred like self-hatred.

“Well, Magistra,” she said, still unable to look away from the nightmare uterus, “the burning hells might have just gotten a bit chilly.”

 

CHAPTER EIGHTEEN

Every city is divisible by its vices; or so Leandra had concluded after a decade hunting the incarnations of malicious prayers from every district of every city in the league.

What was a banking district but a temple of greed? What were noble palaces if not monuments of vanity? Sanctimony bred in a city's sacred places; prejudice in its courts; malice in its strongholds.

Not that Leandra was a model of virtue. Not that she didn't occasionally indulge in all the above vices. Not that her life's driving force wasn't a particular flavor of sanctimonious arrogance. But at least she was mindful of her potential for hypocrisy. The average-fine-upstanding-citizens, on the other hand, found no place more sacred than his city's shrines, no place more noble than the wealthy neighborhoods. The only district in which the fine-upstandings found vice was the slum, where they saw every human failing from laziness to lust to stupidity to whatever transgression the given fine-upstandings felt they were not personally perpetrating on the world at large. That is probably why the Naukaa District—Chandralu's slum—made Lea so unreasonably angry and violent.

“Aren't we supposed to go up to the Floating City?” Holokai asked as Leandra lead her party down the Jacaranda Steps. “Don't you have to respond to that royal summons?”

“There's someone we need to talk to in the Naukaa.”

“Doesn't that place make you unreasonably angry and violent?”

“Shut up before I punch you in the face, Kai.”

“Oh, hey, yeah, that's the place.”

“Captain Holokai, what an excellent rapport you are developing with the Lady Warden,” Dhrun remarked.

“Would be a lot more excellent if I could get her to punch you in the face instead of me.”

Ignoring them, Leandra continued down the steps. She had hoped to find Baruvalman and ask him some pointed questions about why he had called her a “circle maker,” but the pitiful divinity complex was not among the miserables lining the steps.

Though faint, Leandra heard the booming voice of the Bay Market's crier. She looked toward the harbor and saw two new ships at anchor, one of them a Dralish galley. “Kai, is that
The High Queen's Lance
?”

Holokai squinted. “Always hard when I've seen the ship only from below, but … yeah, that's her.”

“You're sure.”

“Yeah. Sure.”

Leandra swore. Her mother would soon hike up to their family compound or the Floating City. Time to get off the Jacaranda Steps. “Kai, hurry down to hear the crier's news, then find us on the Naukaa's second terrace.

The shark god nodded and trotted off. The traffic going the other way was quick to step out of the way of his leimako.

Leandra led Dhrun south onto the fifth terrace road. This was part of the Lower Banyan District, populated mostly by Cloud People and their fine pavilions. Leandra walked along the paved street until she found a narrow alley between two compounds. They hurried down the alley to the terrace's edge. The path ended but some of stones in the terrace wall below protruded to make a staircase. There were no handrails and the stone steps were far apart.

Leandra carefully descended to the fourth terrace, then hurried across its street and down another protruding-stones-staircase to the third terrace. Here they entered the Naukaa, the lowest of all of Chandralu's neighborhoods, metaphorically and literally. There were no compounds here, only wobbly shacks. The walls were dirty, the roofs palm frond thatch, the streets muddy.

While leading Dhrun down to the second terrace, Leandra noticed the usual swarms of thin children playing between the shacks. Gaunt mothers watched from low doorways. On the second terrace road, they found Holokai waiting for them. “What's the news?” Leandra asked.

“A bunch of refugee boats came in from Feather Island. The village there was attacked this morning, attacked bad.”

Leandra grunted. “Like we need anything else to go wrong. Who attacked the village?” She started southward along the road.

“Sounds like a lava neodemon,” Holokai said, falling in step behind her. “But there are other rumors.”

“Let me guess,” she interrupted. “The rumors mostly accuse the Cult of the Undivided Society of attacking the village, or of worshiping the demons of the Ancient Continent, or of somehow inciting the War of Disjunction?”

“Well, yeah, those rumors and the one about the Floating Island wandering into the bay.”

“Lovely,” Leandra grumbled. “More dirt in muddy waters.”

Dhrun said, “An attack on Feather Island, same time there are attacks on city deities. Connected?”

“Likely so. We just have to figure out how.” Leandra touched her forehead. Through her godspell, she felt that most of her hour-from-now selves were filled with a particular type of frustration that only her father could inspire. Her mood darkened further. Apparently, Nicodemus would soon return to Chandralu.

The party continued along the street. Now in addition to the wobbly shacks and gaunt children, there were a few winehouses with women lolling about on second-story patios and sneering men standing around the doorways.

Leandra looked about the district and muttered, “Skinny mothers, skinny fathers, skinny whores and pimps and children. This stupid world. Dhrun, what's the only difference between that building”—she nodded to a whorehouse—“and a bank?”

“When you pay the bank to screw you, you don't enjoy it.”

She frowned back at Dhrun. “I told you that one already?”

Dhrun only bowed his head, but Holokai laughed and said, “Sunny mood you're in today, Lea.”

“Any sunnier and we should shade our eyes,” Dhrun added with a conspiratorial smile.

“Don't you two start grinning at each other.”

“I thought you wanted us to get along,” Holokai complained.

“I want you to not tear each other's throats out, not get along.”

The two divinities looked at each other. Holokai shrugged and Dhrun smiled.

Leandra exhaled in exasperation. Here the second terrace curved left toward the bay. Several terraces above them to their right towered the massive structure of the Sea Temple. The many spires crowning its temple-mountain were a cool gray against the vivid blue sky.

They crossed a small stone footbridge, a small civic stream running quickly below. A sudden whiff of feces made Leandra's nose crinkle.

From the temple at the city's top, water from the volcano's crater bubbled clean and clear. A system of channels divided the flow and ran it down and through the city, providing running water to all. As a result wealthy Chandralu was cleaner than any other city in the world. But in the city's lowest and poorest terraces, the civic streams often ran dark with sewage.

In Lorn there was a colorful, if also disgusting, saying that “Shit rolls downhill,” which Leandra took to mean that generally all bad things were sent down from the powerful to the weak. However, in beautiful Chandralu, shit ran downhill literally.

So did cholera.

The most powerful deity in the Naukaa was Eka, whose sole requisite was the curing of cholera. A recent outbreak of the horrible disease—which caused diarrhea severe enough to kill by dehydration—had inspired so many fervent prayers that Eka's incarnation had gained an intense luminosity. At night, her aura could be seen winking fireflylike as she walked among Naukaa's shacks.

As Leandra led the two divinities over the footbridge, she frowned at the stream and wondered if the disease was coursing through the water. Then she glanced up at the dark volcano and thought about the Floating City, the massive amount of political, textual, and divine power concentrated there. So much power at the heights, so little down here.

At the end of the terrace stood a winehouse larger and sturdier than its neighbors. The second-story patios were empty save for two monkeys perched on the railing, one grooming the other.

“You two,” she said to Dhrun and Holokai, “if someone tries to free me from the burden of existence, do the favor to them first. Otherwise don't do or say anything unless I tell you to.”

Inside she found a dark room filled with benches and low tables. It hadn't changed much. Three men sat near the window, studying some paper spread between them. Leandra had heard a family of Cloud People had recently bought the place. Likely these were the new owners.

They wore the loose longvests and pants of the Cloud Culture and kept their hair plaited. Two were young men, thick black hair, wiry of build. The third had more silver than black in his hair but a broad chest and thick arms. A curved knife was tucked into his belt. “We don't start serving until—” he started to say before looking up.

“Thaddeus” was all Leandra said in response.

“Maybe he doesn't want to see you,” the old man said. As the younger men turned, light glinted from knives at their belts as well.

“If I don't see him, a paddle serrated with sharks teeth will be wielded in anger, and a four-armed god of wrestling will practice his time-honored craft of removing limbs from their sockets.” Leandra paused. “He wants to see me.”

The two younger men flicked their eyes at silver hair, who studied her a moment before agreeing, “I think he wants to see you too.” He nodded to a doorway covered with a ratty curtain. “Up the stairs, second door on your right. I doubt he's awake or that you can wake him.”

“Typical,” Leandra snorted while climbing the steps. “Same winehouse, same room. Typical.” When she reached Thad's door, Leandra didn't bother to knock but nodded to Dhrun. With a four-handed shove, Dhrun broke the door into splinters and twisted metal.

Leandra was about to step through when she groaned and raised a hand to her forehead.

“What is it?” Holokai asked with apprehension.

“I just had the distinct impression that in an hour, I'll likely go from being frustrated with my father to feeling very grateful for him.”

“What does that mean?” Dhrun asked.

“I haven't a clue. Never mind. Let's go.” She stepped inside and found Thaddeus's small room almost unchanged. The walls were lined with bookshelves and scroll racks. In the far corner, beneath the window and a tattered mosquito net, lay a middle-aged man sprawled on a sleeping pallet.

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