Jane
by Marc Laidlaw
The first we knew of the travelers was the tinkling of our falcon's silver bell.
She landed on our Father's glove, and he leant his whiskered cheek against her
beak. When he raised his head there was a look in his eyes I had not seen
before.
He sighed and put his hand on my head and said, —Jane, go tell your mother we
have visitors.
I walked across the wet grass to the house, and I heard him whispering to the
bird as he clipped the leash to the silver varvels in her leather jesses. He
climbed the porch and set her on her perch, and sat beside her in his rocking
chair, oiling his glove and watching the bamboo thicket through the afternoon,
while I stayed inside and played with little Anna to keep her out of mother's
way.
The sun was at five fists when the travelers appeared. They stood at the edge of
the clearing, staring at the house as if they feared it, until our Father rose
and crossed the grass to greet them.
Two men and a woman. Although I studied them so closely that our Father had to
shoo me away, I never thought to ask their names nor anything else about them. I
only listened to the questions our Father asked, and to the answers they gave,
and in so doing I learned as many new things about our Father as I learned about
the visitors. I learned he had once lived in the city, which surprised me
greatly since he had never told us he knew its evils from experience. I learned
he had once been a traveler himself, with intimate knowledge of the roads he
forbade us approach. I learned he spoke languages I'd never heard him speak
until that night, when the three travelers stayed and shared our supper.
I remember steaming crocks of stew; mother's dense loaves of dark bread with
cracked corn toasted into it; falcon-caught squab and squirrel, and wild pig my
brothers had brought back from that day's hunt. I remember the glow of the
lantern light in the travelers' eyes and the loudness of their voices as they
drank our Father's wine and then his brandy late into the night.
Somehow Anna and I were forgotten, we girls allowed to stay up and listen, as if
this were a special lesson. We knew it was rare. Even our brothers, old as they
were, had never seen visitors before. Sometimes while hunting they heard the
sound of travelers on the far-off road, but our Father always hushed them and
made them retreat in utter silence so as to betray nothing of our presence. It
was for the same reason they hunted with crossbows and never a gun. And although
our Father had once been a fine shot, he now relied completely on his falcon.
The travelers admired his falcon greatly and asked many questions as she perched
near the table with the family. They remarked on the intricate designs on her
polished silver bell and varvels, and I warmed with pride, for it was my task to
keep the little cuff rings untarnished, although the designs etched in them
meant little to me, being letters in a language I could not read. The lady
traveler said the falcon was the bird of royals, to which my father replied,
—Birds do not distinguish one type of man from another but will accept any
master who treats them with dignity.
To prove his point, he took his huge glove and slipped it on my brother Ash's
hand, and the falcon flew to Ash and landed on the glove.
And the woman said, —But the son of a royal is still a royal.
Then I noticed one of the men staring very hard at the glove, and the emblem
stitched upon it, which always fascinated me though I knew not what it meant. It
was a hook like a question mark with a barbed arrow for a tip and a slanted line
cut through it, as if the question had been struck out.
I had seen the emblem all my life, but it had never meant a thing to me until I
saw the travelers looking at it with such wonder. Our Father must have seen them
looking as well, for he sent Ash to take the falcon to her mews and then began
to question how they had happened upon us.
They had lost the road, they said, in a night of rain. They should have stopped
and made camp but had hoped to find an inn.
—What night was this? our Father asked, for it had been dry several nights now;
but the travelers could not say how long they had wandered. They asked if we
knew the way back to the road, and father nodded.
—My sons and I will see you there safely in the morning, he said.
This surprised me greatly, for our Father had commanded us to keep well clear of
the road, my brothers most of all. I think he feared they would use it to
escape, but in truth they were more scared of what lay at the ends of that road
than of our Father.
At this time, Anna began to grow upset beneath her hood, which normally kept her
so calm; and my mother bade me take her to bed. This made me angry, as I hated
to miss any of the rare evening; but when the lady traveler made a comment about
Anna being too old for such devices and said that the world no longer looked
kindly on the practice, I rose and took Anna's hand and led her away so that the
woman would not see how much she had offended me, for my own hood had not been
off for long at all.
Sometime later I found myself in my own bed, with Anna's arms around me and
voices coming from the next room where the firelight still flickered. I loosened
Anna's arms and went to see who spoke. The table had been cleared. I saw my
parents standing over the sleeping forms of the travelers, wrapped in their
bedrolls by the low-banked fire.
Our Father must have heard me, for he turned and gave me a look of grave concern
and tenderness such as I had rarely seen on his hard, hard face. Then my mother
followed his gaze and saw me watching. She crossed the room and turned me gently
back toward my bed, but not before I saw that in our Father's hands, its head
full of warm orange light, he held an ax.
—Back to bed, Jane, she told me.
The sight of the ax meant less than the look of tender love. Nor did I fully
wake to the sharp sounds that came soon after, while my mother stroked my hair
and told me that our Father loved us more than anything and had taken every step
to see we lived in safety, and would do whatever he must to make sure no one
ever threatened that, or us.
We were his sweet, sweet angels.
That night I dreamt I was an angel, flying in the clear night air, and around my
neck I wore a tinkling silver bell, and around my ankles leather cuffs with
silver rings that bore my name. And in the morning, the travelers were gone. We
found mother washing the floor and cleaning up after having fed them early and
sent them on their way. She scrubbed the house so thoroughly that soon there was
no sign they had ever passed through, and for once she did not insist that Anna
and I share the chores but bid us go amuse ourselves outside. We went as far as
the bamboo thicket, I leading Anna by the hand as she could not be unhooded
until our Father's return, since the hooding was always and only at his
discretion. I thought to look for the departed travelers' tracks. Then Anna said
she heard something, and I stopped and listened with her. From far off we heard
sounds that continued through much of the morning, rising and falling but never
going any farther, never coming any closer until some time past noon when we
heard our Father and brothers crashing through the jungle from a direction I had
never associated with the road. We had been listening to them all along.
—We took the long way round, my brother Olin said. The river was in flood and
forced a detour.
—Yes, our Father said. But we saw them off all right in the end.
Olin and father chuckled, but Ash looked angry and threw aside the machete he
carried for cutting through undergrowth. He stormed off, with our Father
glowering after him. We were all used to his moods.
Our Father scooped up Anna and unhooded her, to cover her rosy cheeks with
kisses; and Olin took my hand; and we turned to see mother waiting on the porch,
smiling as we crossed the grass. It was the kind of moment I had always known.
It was as if the visitors had never come. But everything had changed without my
knowing it.
For the next few weeks, our Father forbade Olin and Ash to hunt, although with
winter coming on, this made no sense to me. Already there were fewer birds, the
great migrations having passed; and the prey available to our Father's falcon
was scarce. Ash began to stomp about, and although he never spoke against our
Father, his anger became a thing you could almost touch, though it would burn
your fingers.
Our Father finally eased his restrictions when mother wept about the state of
the larder. There were signs that winter would come early and harsh and outstay
its welcome by many weeks. I was there at the edge of the clearing when he sent
my brothers out with express instructions to hunt until the sun was at five
fists and no lower. I was there when the sun sank to five and then four fists.
It was almost night when Olin finally stumbled from the jungle in tears. He had
argued with Ash, and they had fought; Ash had struck him in the temple with a
broken branch and fled while he was down. Olin had followed as far as he dared.
And our Father said, —How far was that? Through sobs Olin said he had seen Ash
step onto the road and set off in the direction of the city.
That night, after hours of sorting through belongings and packing them into old
canvas knapsacks from the shed, we left the house. Anna and I did not ask where
we were going, or when we might return, but father put on his glove and fetched
his falcon from her mews, and I knew we were going far and would be gone for a
long time. Anna was hooded against the fearful shapes of the night, and it fell
to me to take her hand; and I remembered when I had been much younger myself and
how it felt to be led along through darkness, trusting completely in the hand
that guided me; and the smell of the hood; and I almost wished for that same
security now. But I was a girlchild no longer; I had left the years of hooding
behind when our Father felt I was too old for it, so the sheltering blindness
was Anna's luxury and not mine. I tried to be a good guide, in spite of needing
guidance myself. At first I thought we were heading to the road, in search of
Ash, but Olin said no, the road was in the opposite direction. Sunrise proved
him right. We were somewhere in the jungle I had never been, following a track
the wild pigs and small deer must have made. Our Father knew it well enough to
have guided us in the dark. My mother moved carefully, without complaining,
though I knew her joints were swollen and always troubled her. When Anna began
to complain, Olin picked her up and carried her, even though his pack was heavy.
From that point on, I walked in front with our Father, holding his free right
hand.
When I looked up at our Father, I saw the hardness there, and the worry; but in
catching his eye, I also saw the love that drove him, and I felt such love in
return that I never thought to question where we went, or why.
We rested as often as we dared. Our Father was mindful of Anna and me and
solicitous of my mother's pains. You never would have thought he'd had any
infirmities himself; he strode along as powerfully as my brother. When we
stopped to make camp at the end of the day, he built us a shelter against the
night rain; then he sent up his falcon, and before long we heard her bell and
she descended with a bright-plumed bird that we roasted over a small fire. Our
Father joked that he should teach her to catch bats, and then we should be well
fed. But he put out the fire as soon as we were done, and I heard him whispering
to my mother that we dared not make another. The falcon took stand in a branch
above our camp, where I could hear her wings rustling in the dark from time to
time. Among all the noises of the jungle I found comfort in that sound.
The morning of the second day, we woke and marched, and that day was like a
dreary dream. Anna could be carried, but I could not, and I wished that like our
falcon I could fly aloft to take the weight off my blistered feet. Yet I tried
not to complain, especially after looking upon my mother, who said not a word
although you could see in her face that she thought of nothing but Ash.
The third day dawned in horror. We woke to screaming and woeful calls, which
came from somewhere we could not imagine. Our Father needed not caution us to
silence, for none of us would have made a sound against the awful cries. They
seemed to fill the jungle, echoing from every shadow. And as the sun rose and
filled the dark places with light, the sound grew stronger, moving now this way,
now that, as if buffeted by the wind.
We crept through the woods, away, always away from our homestead, but the
screaming trailed us. My mother wept silently, and Olin's face was pale and our
Father's grim beyond belief. He must have known immediately what the rest of us
did not, for it was hours before mother said, —It's Ash! And he nodded only
once.
We did not sleep that night. Nor did Ash by the sound of it, for the sourceless,
ceaseless wailing roamed the dark, ragged and full of pain. On this night there
was no rain, and the clouds kept back as if agreed the moon should shine on us
remorselessly. We cowered in a clearing and tried to rest, and as I looked up at
the moon I tried to make my peace with it and prayed it would keep watch over us
somehow. I did not know what other power to pray to.
Then across the face of the moon, something drifted like a skeletal kite; but
only the bars of the kite, with the sail itself all twisted and in tatters. And
then I woke, thinking it was a dream, but did not wake, for it was not a dream.
The kite drifted untethered, under its own power, and the thing that writhed
upon it began to scream and beg for death and mercy. It cried out in my
brother's voice:
—Father! Mother! Anna! Olin!
—Jane! it called, for I was always his favorite. Jane!
We all lay still as it passed above. Something fell from it and splattered on my
face like a raindrop, a tear, or more likely blood. I only stirred to check that
Anna's hood was fastened so she would not be too frightened, and then not a one
of us moved. I saw that our Father had put his hand over mother's mouth so that
she would not make a sound and betray us. And though at first she wept and
moaned, in time she grew quiet.
For hours it hung there. I could study every bared sinew in the moonlight. I
could see how his skin had been peeled away, the muscles severed from tendons
and separated strand by strand from one another. But I could not see how he
lived, let alone cried out with such ferocity.
Near morning, as the moon sank, the wind rose and the clouds regathered, and a
high breeze caught hold of the kite and moved it on. Both sight and sound of Ash
faded away. Our Father took such a deep, shuddering breath that I could almost
believe he had not breathed in hours. Then he said only, —They will pay for this
in kind. The sky above the city will be full of kites!
Our Father took his hand away from mother's mouth, then looked down and kissed
her eyelids closed, and I saw how she had managed to lie so still through that
terrible night as her firstborn hung flayed and screaming above her. Our
Father's hand had been firm inside his heavy glove; and though she must have
wailed and wept, we remained undiscovered; and when I saw the blood and how the
thick leather of the palm had been torn by teeth, I recalled her words when I
woke in the night and saw the ax. I found new comfort in them now.
We had come to rocky country, where the land rose in shelves of tumbled stone.
It was deep in one of these crevices that we laid our mother, covered in the
brittle yellow leaves of bamboo, with rocks chinked in around her like a
loose-fit wall. Olin would not speak, but he worked alongside our Father while I
held Anna and watched. Olin carried Anna the rest of the day, and she did
nothing but weep inside her hood, but my eyes were dry.
In the afternoon, we heard Ash again. This time our Father's face grew dark, and
he leant to his falcon and whispered something fierce that roused her. Then he
cast her off.
We climbed farther then descended into a shallow valley, which was comforting
for the shadows it held. I walked behind Anna and Olin and sometimes lifted her
hood just enough to tickle her lips with a blade of grass, reminding her to
smile. I felt the valley contained a magic that had cut us off from all
unpleasantness, for all afternoon it was quiet. But then we heard something I
had hoped we'd left behind: Ash's screaming and pleading. The cries came on
closer and faster than ever. Olin cried out and took off running with Anna,
crashing deep into the jungle without looking back. But I clung to our Father's
hand, and he never trembled but stared at the broken sky through the trees as
the sound grew louder and louder. Then down through the leaves came his falcon,
with the sound of Ash's torment circling round her, and I understood nothing—for
how could a bird scream like a boy? She circled our Father's head and dropped a
ragged, bloody scrap from her talons to his hands. Then she settled on his
wrist.
He held out his right hand so I could see the quarry. It was fleshy and clear,
like yellowed glass with milky green shapes inside. It was veined and buzzing
with botflies. And it screamed and screamed with my brother's voice until our
Father set it on a granite slab and crushed it under his heel.
We looked for Anna and Olin through the rest of the day and long after dark, not
daring to call for them. Finally, our Father pulled me into a cave among the
stones, very much like that in which we had left mother. He devised a perch for
his bird inside the mouth of the cave, though I knew it pained him that she had
no room to spread her wings, for several times I woke to hear him apologizing so
deeply that he wept.
I woke to see distant light, jagged and raw, and heard the sound of voices,
these not screaming but calling out with urgency, very brisk and efficient.
Father crouched in the mouth of the cave, whispering to his falcon where she
perched on his glove. Then he cast her off, and she was gone, with only the
faintest sound of a bell. I wondered that he had not removed her bell, but I
think the screams of Ash must have deafened him to many sounds. Then, still
wearing his glove, father took my hand and tugged me quietly to the threshold,
and as we looked over the broken stones we saw greenish fog creeping through the
valley below. All sort of animals had struggled from their burrows to die there
in the morning mist: marmots and rabbits and lizards, some still thrashing. A
wind had begun to thin the shallow cloud, but it also pushed traces of the acrid
mist uphill, and we hurried to climb faster than it could seep. His falcon
charted our path from above, but although I sometimes saw her shadow or caught a
silvery tinkling of her bell, she never came down to us again. And I wondered
what my father could have told her to keep her away.
As we topped the crest and came down the other side of the ridge, we saw a
farther valley where traces of the mist still lingered. And this time, among the
small furry bodies, were two larger ones we knew on sight, flushed from their
desperate burrow. It needed no closer inspection to know that Olin lay there,
and many yards away lay Anna, just out of reach of our Father's sheltering hand.
I thought of how it must have been for Anna, wandering blindly without a guide,
never thinking to lift the hood without father's permission. That was the first
moment I saw the hood as a hateful thing and knew it was only by chance that my
childhood had not ended the same way; and I wondered if without it she might
have escaped.
We kept to the ridge until we heard voices coming up from the valley to one side
where a stream ran. Soon after that, I saw others moving far off among the
bamboo staves, and the hue and flow of their garments reminded me of the three
travelers, but there were many more of them.
To avoid being seen we went down from the ridge and sought a more choked
passage, where sometimes we went on all fours and sometimes had to wriggle like
snakes. From time to time our Father had to pull me over shelves of rock I could
not climb myself; he had taken to using his gloved hand to help me, so I could
not feel his fingers through it but only the thick, tough leather. It broke my
heart, for it seemed he could not bear to touch me without the glove; as if he
were already preparing to be apart. I felt almost relieved we were alone now,
because my mother would have had no heart for this, and my sister not enough
strength. Only I did miss Olin though.
In the afternoon, we stepped onto a spur of rock like a stone finger pointing
straight out from the mountainside; and I saw more of the world in that one
instant than I had seen in my whole life. The land fell away below us, sheer
above a rocky slope that thickened into jungle down below. The jungle gave way
to a wide plain, burned and bare and grey with the look of recent devastation.
Beyond the plain, in a smoky haze, were unnatural shapes that could only be
buildings, although the thing they most reminded me of was mountains. The stony
finger pointed right at this place. When I asked my father if that was the city,
he took his eyes away from it and said, —Yes, Jane.
And then he said, —I never showed you this. And I hadn't meant to show any of
you, although your mother knew, for we fled from there together. She carried Ash
in her belly, while I brought nothing with me but my falcon.
I looked closer at the city, and in its jumbled center I saw something that
puzzled me for seeming so familiar. It was a tall spire, the tallest of them.
And at the very tip of that spire was a curved shape that looked like a crook or
a question mark, though it ended in a barbed tip; and across it was a slash that
seemed to cut through all the haze of distance so that I turned and stared at
the emblem on our Father's glove and saw they were the same.
—I have done all I can to keep you safe, our Father said. Almost all.
—Come to me, Jane. Do you understand what we must do? Come to me.
He stood at the edge of the rock and held out his gloved hand as he had all
these days. His face was no longer hard, no longer the face of our Father. I
could not see him in it anywhere. Yet I stepped up beside him, for I heard
voices coming up among the rocks. I heard footsteps and scrabbling and harsh,
panting breaths.
I hardly sensed his fingers through the thick leather; his hand felt
insubstantial inside the heavy glove. Looking out at the city, I thought the air
above it was full of dark vibrant motes, and I remembered what he'd said about a
sky full of kites. I was not sure if they were present and real or a vision
vouchsafed of the future. I only knew they depended on my eyes to see them, for
my father's eyes were lost and empty now, no matter what they had been the day
before. It was as if he had pulled a hood over his own head and now expected me
to guide him.
—Ah, Jane, he said.
And then we took a step together. But his was one step forward, and mine was one
step back. I held fast to the glove when his hand went out of it. Then I knelt
on the tip of the stone finger and watched him fall until green swallowed him.
Voices gathered in the air behind me and grew still. I heard footsteps settle at
the edge of the rock. They came no closer.
A shadow brushed over me, and I heard my falcon's bell. I slipped my hand into
the glove and she settled on my wrist in a flurry.
I leant to put my cheek against her feathers, for she deserved my respect more
than any of them. More even than he had.
When I had made them wait long enough, I left off whispering. I slowly turned to
put the city at my back. In the slant evening light, I made sure they saw my
face, and I held up the glove so they could all see the emblem upon it.
At the sight of that, they stared. Then they knelt and bowed their heads, and
some lay face-down flat upon the rock.
—I am Jane, was all I said, and all I had to say.
The End
© 2005 Marc Laidlaw and SCIFI.COM