Read Slaves of the Mastery Online

Authors: William Nicholson

Tags: #Children's Books, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy & Magic, #Children's eBooks, #Science Fiction; Fantasy & Scary Stories, #Sword & Sorcery

Slaves of the Mastery (15 page)

He was so deeply immersed in one of the early Manth chronicles that he never heard the approaching footsteps.

‘What do you think you’re doing?’

The question was barked at him in a huge and terrible voice. The owner of the voice, however, was a very small man wearing a hat with a very broad brim.

Hanno jumped to his feet.

‘Just a short rest –’

‘Give, give!’

The little man held out an imperious hand. Hanno gave him the book, cursing himself, terrified that Pinto would come to harm because of his lack of vigilance. The warehouse manager came bustling
up.

‘Professor Fortz! I had no idea!’

‘Of course you had no idea. You’re a witless buffoon. When did you last have an idea?’ To Hanno he said accusingly, ‘This book is written in old Manth.
Nobody can read old Manth.’

‘I can,’ said Hanno.

‘Is that so?’ The little professor looked at him with interest. He swung round to the warehouse manager. ‘You don’t need him, do you? You do nothing whatsoever here, so
it doesn’t take two to do it.’

‘Well, Professor, I do find –’

‘Don’t. Just do as you’re told, there’s a good fellow.’ He turned back to examine Hanno. ‘I take it you’re a Manth yourself.’

‘Yes, I am.’

‘Interesting people. Interesting history. All over now, of course. Aramanth burned, was it?’

‘Yes,’ said Hanno.

‘Don’t glare at me, my good sir. I didn’t burn it. Well, we won’t waste your talents here. The Mastery knows how to use people. Good day to you.’

He turned and made his way out, moving at considerable speed for one with such short legs. The warehouse manager hurried after him.

‘Professor! What am I to do with him?’

‘Nothing,’ came the booming reply. ‘I’ll send for him in due course. Just go on doing nothing, my good fellow, as per usual.’

At the end of the day, the monkey cages were unlocked and the people inside let out. A new batch of slaves was lined up to take their place, complete with rugs to keep them
warm through the night. Hanno and Ira Hath were there to see Pinto released, and Bowman too. All up and down the roadway people were hugging and kissing, as their loved ones were given safely back
to them; while others looked on with quieter sadness, as their loved ones climbed up into the cages, and saw the iron gates locked after them.

Pinto let her mother hold her tight in her arms and kiss her, but she didn’t cry. The long hours in the cage had had their effect.

‘These are wicked people,’ was all she would say.

‘They are, my darling, they are.’

It was the turn of Mrs Chirish to spend the night in the cage. Mumpo was there to help her in.

‘I’ll come for you in the morning, auntie.’

‘You’re a good boy, Mumpy.’

‘All you have to do is lie down and sleep.’

‘I don’t like to be any trouble,’ said Mrs Chirish looking round, ‘only I am on the large side, and there doesn’t seem to be enough room.’

‘Yes, there is, auntie. You squeeze yourself up against the bars here.’

‘Oh, yes. That’s all right, then. Good night, Mumpy. Friends in dreams.’

‘Good night, auntie.’

As they walked back up the road, Pinto asked Mumpo what Mrs Chirish had meant when she said ‘Friends in dreams’.

‘When I was young I was always sad, because I had no friends. So every night when auntie tucked me up she said, never mind, you’ll make friends in your dreams.’

‘Oh, Mumpo. Did you?’

‘Sometimes.’

‘But you’ve got us now, haven’t you?’

‘Oh yes, I’m all right now.’ Then he remembered. ‘Except for Kess.’

‘We’ll find her,’ said Bowman. ‘Or she’ll find us.’

Back at the marshalling yards they found the clerks with their ledgers, and learned that they had been allocated new living quarters. They were to sleep from now on in specially-built two-storey
slave barracks, dispersed all over the countryside on the fringes of villages. The Hath family were led off, together with many others, to Slave Barracks Seventeen, a mile or so down the hillside,
nearer to the lake.

The long building was partitioned into many smaller rooms, each reached by an open passage at the front. They were plain rooms, with no curtains on the windows or rugs on the floor, but they
offered privacy of a kind, and best of all, beds. The beds were wooden frames strung with rope, the mattresses coarse bags stuffed with straw, but to the weary slaves this was luxury. The beds
stood close together, eight to a room. At the foot of each was a slave number. For a while there was a great to-ing and fro-ing as people searched for their places, checking their wrist numbers as
they went. The Hath family had all been placed together, along with Mumpo, Scooch, Creoth, and the absent Mrs Chirish. Bowman, who was to work through the night, ate an early supper and went to lie
down on his bed. There was still an hour to go before dark.

Creoth appeared later than the rest, as dusk was falling, glowing with happiness. He joined the others for supper in the big communal kitchen on the ground floor, and told all who would listen,
in between mouthfuls of soup, about his day on the farm.

‘Cows!’ he exclaimed. ‘Excellent fellows! Beard of my ancestors, what a day!’

It turned out he had learned how to milk a cow.

‘It’s a knack, you see. You don’t squeeze, or pull. Oh, no! You close your fingers one after the other, like this.’

He wiggled his fingers to demonstrate. Everyone laughed, and he laughed with them.

‘You can laugh,’ he cried, ‘but you should try it! Not as easy as I make it look.’

Creoth was not the only one who had enjoyed his first day of slave labour. Miko Mimilith was full of the wonders of the materials he had found at the dressmaker’s.

‘I’ve never seen such finely woven silk. Like air, I promise you. No, finer than air. Like thought!’

Dr Batch, a teacher in Aramanth, had been assigned to a class in one of the schools set up for the slave children.

‘I must confess I’ve been given all that I need. And as for discipline – well, no problems there, believe me. I will say this for our masters, they have created a climate of
respect for authority, and I can’t altogether disapprove.’

Mumpo revealed that he had been accepted into the manaxa school. Pinto was horrified.

‘You can’t! You mustn’t! They’ll kill you. I don’t want you to die.’

‘I won’t die.’

She followed him when he went outside to stretch his legs.

‘You’ll be stabbed to death. You mustn’t do it. We need you.’

She clung to his arm as she pleaded with him. ‘Say you won’t.’

‘I want to do it,’ he replied. ‘So I’m doing it.’

‘Plee-ease, Mumpo.’

‘Leave me alone.’

‘I won’t let you go till you promise me you won’t do it.’

‘Leave me alone!’

He tried to shake her off, but she clung tight. The dim sense that Pinto was right only made him crosser.

‘Get off me, you skinny little rat!’

He gave a vigorous jerk of his arm, and Pinto was thrown to the ground. She bruised her shoulder in falling, and started to cry. The sight of her crouched on the ground crying made Mumpo more
angry still.

‘Why are you always hanging round me?’ He shouted at her, to make the hurt be her own fault. ‘I don’t want you. Leave me alone.’

Pinto crept away. Later her mother found her curled up in a corner, her eyes red from crying, but she wouldn’t say why.

Jessel Greeth, who was quartered in a different building, called on Hanno Hath before nightfall. He was well aware that most of the Manth people had found their first day more bearable than they
had expected.

‘What do you say now, Hanno? Still calling for rebellion?’

‘It’s not going to be easy,’ said Hanno.

‘Indeed not. Not easy, and maybe, not wise.’

‘I think we should put aside a little food each day. Anything that can be stored. That way we’ll be able to feed ourselves on the journey.’

‘The journey, eh? You’ve got to get away first. How do you do that?’

‘I don’t know.’

‘Well, before you go stirring everyone up, just listen to this. I’ve been given a job in the Department of Supply. I helped organise the meal you had this evening. They must have
seen that I have a natural talent for management. Anyway, my boss, the fellow who oversees the supplies for the whole sector, is a slave! He showed me his brand number!’

Hanno looked back on Greeth’s beaming face without understanding.

‘Don’t you see? They promote slaves! There are slaves in positions of authority! We could do well here.’

‘But Jessel,’ said Hanno, wrinkling his brows. ‘These are the people who murdered our families and burned our home.’

‘Well, yes, yes, there’s that, I realise that, of course. But what’s the point of looking back, eh? Here we are, so let’s look forward.’

‘The point is, whatever’s good about this country is built on force and cruelty. It’s poisoned at the heart.’

Greeth looked uncomfortable for a moment. Then he shrugged, and said,

‘Nothing’s perfect. We live in the real world. Our duty is to make the best of it. And ask yourself, what is the alternative? A journey to nowhere?’

So saying, satisfied that he had won the argument, he went over to shake Dr Batch’s hand, and share experiences of their first day.

Hanno Hath confided his worries to his wife.

‘I don’t know how to make them listen to me.’

‘They hear you,’ she said. ‘The time will come soon enough when they’ll believe you.’

‘How soon?’

‘Before winter comes.’

 
10
A visitor in the night

W
hen night fell, Bowman’s work began. With a lantern in one hand and a staff in the other, he was sent out into the pastures by the lake
shore to watch over a herd of cows and their calves. His job was to scare away any wolves that might come sniffing round the herd, looking to steal a calf.

A hut had been provided for the cowherd, a small windowless shelter against rain or cold, and here Bowman took up his post. He sat on the earth floor, with the door open before him to pasture
and lake, and watched the cows moving placidly past, tearing softly at the grass. As the sounds of voices in nearby villages faded into quietness, he turned his mind to Kestrel, and listened for
her in the night. Once or twice he thought he felt her, but so faintly and so far off that he couldn’t be sure. The moon rose in the sky, a half-moon, its light shining faintly down on the
palace on the lake. One by one the lights in the beautiful buildings were going out.

He had no way of measuring the passing of time, and so time itself seemed to come to a stop. The stars turned, and the moon crossed the sky, but these were cycles that were outside time; or so
Bowman felt. The night grew cold. He had been given a long sheepskin cape, which he drew ever closer about him. The cows settled down to sleep. A wind sprang up, and ruffled the waters of the lake.
The palace across the water was in darkness now. All was quiet.

Then he heard a sound: the soft swish of grass, and a low tuneful humming. Someone was approaching. He took hold of his staff, and stepped out of the hut, wondering what sort of person could be
out at this time of night. The humming sounded more clearly now. Out of the darkness, slowly entering the reach of the lantern-light, there came an ugly one-eyed man.

He was evidently making for the hut. He held his arms folded across his chest, the hands inside the loose sleeves of his robe. The robe was a plain garment of undyed wool, not nearly thick
enough for warmth on this chill night. His feet were bare. Bowman wondered as he approached who he was and what he could want. Perhaps a poor man hoping to share the shelter of the hut. Perhaps one
of the lone witless creatures to be met with on remote roads, who live and die like animals. Except the tune he was humming was no random noise: it made a pattern of sound that, once you caught it,
was quite pleasant. Behind him, no more than a shadow in the lantern’s light, loped a grey cat.

The stranger reached him at last. He stopped humming, and looked at Bowman without speaking, and Bowman looked at him. He had a melancholy face, and one of his eyes was a milky colour, and
didn’t move. He examined Bowman closely with the other eye, as if to satisfy himself about something.

‘Are you the child of the prophet?’ he said.

‘Am I –?’ Bowman was greatly surprised. ‘Which prophet?’

‘Is there more than one?’

He shuffled his way into the hut, and sat down on the floor. Then looking up at Bowman, he patted the ground beside him.

‘Sit.’

Bowman sat.

The stranger began to hum again. It seemed to be a deliberate humming, that it would be rude to interrupt, so Bowman sat quietly and waited for him to stop. After some time, he brought his
wordless song to an end, and stretching out his fingers, worked them together.

‘Ah, that’s better,’ he said. ‘I get pain in my hands, especially on a damp night. But I’m all right now.’

‘Is that why you were humming?’

‘Yes. That was the song for relieving pain in the extremities. Really I should accept the pain, and put it to use. After all, pain is just another form of energy. But we all fall short of
perfection.’

He looked out over the lake towards the dark city.

‘That would be the High Domain.’

‘Yes.’

‘Have you been there? Have you seen it?’

‘No.’

‘They say it’s quite something. Beauty. Learning. The human spirit in flower.’

Bowman stared at the city-palace with anger.

‘All I know is they kill people and they make slaves.’

‘Yes, well, that too.’

The grey cat suddenly appeared, jumping out of the darkness onto the stranger’s lap. Bowman stared.

‘You have a cat?’

‘I wouldn’t say I
have
a cat. He travels with me.’

Mist looked up at Bowman with dislike. To Dogface, he said in their silent form of communication,

‘Who is this halfwit?’

‘He’s someone we need. I have to make sure he knows what to do.’

‘What?’ said Bowman. Dogface had spoken aloud.

‘Sorry. I was talking to the cat.’

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