The Urth of the New Sun
by Gene Wolfe
Awake! for Morning in the Bowl of Night
Has flung the Stone that puts the Stars to Flight:
And Lo! the Hunter of the East has caught
The Sultan's Turret in a Noose of Light.
FITZGERALD
Chapter I
The Mainmast
HAVING CAST one manuscript into the seas of time, I
now begin again. Surely it is absurd; but I am notI will
not beso absurd myself as to suppose that this will ever
find a reader, even in me. Let me describe then, to no one
and nothing, just who I am and what it is that I have done
to Urth.
My true name is Severian. By my friends, of whom there
were never very many, I was called Severian the Lame. By
my soldiers, of whom I once commanded a great many,
though never enough, Severian the Great. By my foes, who
bred like flies, and like flies were spawned from the corpses
that strewed my battlefields, Severian the Torturer. I was
the last Autarch of our Commonwealth, and as such the
only legitimate ruler of this world when we called it Urth.
But what a disease this writing business is! A few years
ago (if time retains any meaning), I wrote in my cabin on
the ship of Tzadkiel, re-creating from memory the book I
had composed in a clerestory of the House Absolute. Sat
driving my pen like any clerk, recopying a text I could
without difficulty bring to mind, and feeling that I performed
the final meaningful actor rather, the final meaningless
actof my life.
So I wrote and slept, and rose to write again, ink flying
across my paper, relived at last the moment at which I
entered poor Valeria's tower and heard it and all the rest
speak to me, felt the proud burden of manhood dropped
upon my shoulders, and knew I was a youth no more. That
was ten years past, I thought. Ten years had gone by when I
wrote of it in the House Absolute. Now the time is perhaps
a century or more. Who can say?
I had brought aboard a narrow coffer of lead with a
close-fitting lid. My manuscript filled it, as I knew it would.
I closed the lid and locked it, adjusted my pistol to its
lowest setting, and fused lid and coffer into a single mass
with the beam.
To go on deck, one passes through strange gangways,
often filled by an echoing voice that, though it cannot be
distinctly heard, can always be understood. When one
reaches a hatch, one must put on a cloak of air, an invisible
atmosphere of one's own held by what appears to be no
more than a shining necklace of linked cylinders. There is
a hood of air for the head, gloves of air for the hands (these
grow thin, however, when one grasps something, and the
cold seeps in), boots of air, and so forth.
These ships that sail between the suns are not like the
ships of Urth. In place of deck and hull, there is deck after
deck, so that one goes over the railing of one and finds
oneself walking on the next. The decks are of wood, which
resists the deadly cold as metal will not; but metal and
stone underlie them.
Masts sprout from every deck, a hundred times taller
than the Flag Keep of the Citadel. Every part appears
straight, yet when one looks along their length, which is
like looking down some weary road that runs beyond the
horizon, one sees that it bends ever so slightly, bowing to
the wind from the suns.
There are masts beyond counting; every mast carries a
thousand spars, and every spar spreads a sail of fuligin and
silver. These fill the sky, so that if a man on deck desires to
see the distant suns' blaze of citron, white, violet, and rose,
he must labor to catch a glimpse of them between the sails,
just as he might labor to glimpse them among the clouds of
an autumn night.
As I was told by the steward, it sometimes happens that
a sailor aloft will lose his hold. When that occurs on Urth,
the unfortunate man generally strikes the deck and dies.
Here there is no such risk. Though the ship is so mighty,
and filled with such treasures, and though we are so much
nearer her center than those who walk upon Urth are to the
center of Urth, yet her attraction is but slight. The careless
sailor drifts among the shrouds and sails like thistledown,
most injured by the derision of his workmates, whose
voices, however, he cannot hear. (For the void hushes
every voice except to the speaker himself, unless two come
so near that their investitures of air become a single
atmosphere.) And I have heard it said that if it were not
thus, the roaring of the suns would deafen the universe.
Of all this I knew little when I went on deck. I had been
told that I would have to wear a necklace, and that the
hatches were so constructed that the inner must be shut
before the outer can be openedbut hardly more. Imagine
my surprise, then, when I stepped out, the leaden coffer
beneath my arm.
Above me rose the black masts and their silver sails, tier
upon tier, until it seemed they must push aside the very
stars. The rigging might have been cobweb, were the spider
as large as the shipand the ship was larger than many an
isle that boasts a hall and an armiger in it who thinks
himself almost a monarch. The deck itself was extensive as
a plain; merely to set foot on it required all my courage.
When I sat writing in my cabin, I had scarcely been
aware that my weight had been reduced by seven-eighths.
Now I seemed to myself like a ghost, or rather a man of
paper, a fit husband for the paper women I had colored and
paraded as a child. The force of the wind from the suns is
less than the lightest zephyr of Urth; yet slight though it
was, I felt it and feared I might be blown away. I seemed
almost to float above the deck rather than to walk on it;
and I know that it is so, because the power of the necklace
kept outsoles of air between the planks and the soles of my
boots.
I looked around for some sailor who might advise me of
the best way to climb, thinking that the decks would hold
many, as the decks of our ships did on Urth. There was no
one; to keep their cloaks of air from growing foul, all hands
remain below save when they are needed aloft, which is but
seldom. Knowing no better, I called aloud. There was, of
course, no answer.
A mast stood a few chains off, but as soon as I saw it I
knew I had no hope of climbing it; it was thicker through
than any tree that ever graced our forests, and as smooth as
metal. I began to walk, fearing a hundred things that would
never harm me and utterly ignorant of the real risks I ran.
The great decks are flat, so that a sailor on one part can
signal to his mate some distance away; if they were curved,
with surfaces everywhere equally distant from the hunger
of the ship, separated hands would be concealed from each
other's sight, as ships were hidden from one another under
the horizons of Urth. But because they are flat, they seem
always to slant, unless one stands at the center. Thus I felt,
light though I was, that I climbed a ghostly hill.
Climb it I did for the space of many breaths, perhaps for
half a watch. The silence seemed to crush my spirit, a hush
more palpable than the ship. I heard the faint taps of my
own uneven footfalls on the planks and occasionally a
stirring or humming from beneath my feet. Other than
these faint sounds, there was nothing. Ever since I sat
under Master Malrubius's instruction as a child, I have
known that the space between the suns is far from empty;
many hundreds and perhaps many thousands of voyages
are made there. As I learned later, there are other things
toothe undine I twice encountered had told me that she
sometimes swam the void, and the winged being I had
glimpsed in Father Inire's book flew there.
Now I learned what I had never really known before:
that all these ships and great beings are only a single
handful of seed scattered over a desert, which remains
when the sowing is done as empty as ever. I would have
turned and limped back to my cabin, if I had not realized
that when I reached it my pride would force me out again.
At last I approached the faint descending gossamers of
the rigging, cables that sometimes caught the starlight,
sometimes vanished in the darkness or against the towering
bank of silver that was the top-hamper of the deck
beyond. Small though they appeared, each cable was
thicker than the great column's of our cathedral.
I had worn a cloak of wool as well as my cloak of air; now
I knotted the hem about my waist, making a sort of bag or
pack into which I put the coffer. Gathering all my strength
into my good leg, I leaped.
Because I felt my whole being but a tissue of feathers, I
had supposed I would rise slowly, floating upward as I had
been told sailors floated in the rigging. It was not so. I
leaped as swiftly and perhaps more swiftly than anyone
here on Ushas, but I did not slow, as such a leaper begins to
slow almost at once. The first speed of my leap endured
unabatedup and up I shot, and the feeling was wonderful
and terrifying.
Soon the terror grew because I could not hold myself as I
wished; my feet lifted of their own accord until I leaped
half sidewise, and at last spun through the emptiness like a
sword tossed aloft in the moment of victory.
A shining cable flashed by, just outside my reach. I heard
a strangled cry, and only afterward realized it had come
from my own throat. A second cable shone ahead. Whether
I willed it or not, I rushed at it as I might have rushed upon
an enemy, caught it, and held it, though the effort nearly
wrenched my arms out of their sockets, and the leaden
cofferwhich shot past my headalmost strangled me
with my own cloak. Clamping my legs around the icy cable,
I managed to catch my breath.
Many abuattes roamed the gardens of the House Absolute,
and because the lower servants (ditchers, porters, and
the like) occasionally trapped them for the pot, they were
wary of men. I often watched and envied them as they ran
up some trunk without fallingand, indeed, seemingly
without knowledge of the aching hunger of Urth at all.
Now I had myself become such an animal. The faintest tug
from the ship told me that downward lay toward the
spreading deck, but it was less than the memory of a
memory: once, perhaps, I had fallen, somehow. I recalled
recollecting that fall.
But the cable was a sort of pampas trail; to go up it was
as easy as to go down, and both were easy indeed. Its many
strands provided me with a thousand holds, and I scrambled
up like a long-haunched little beast, a hare bounding
along a log.
Soon the cable reached a spar, the yard holding the lower
main topsail. I sprang from it to another, slimmer, cable;
and from it to a third. When I mounted to the spar that
held it, I found I was mounting no longer; the whisper of
down was silent, and the grayish-brown hull of the ship
simply drifted, somewhere near the limit of my vision.
Beyond my head, bank after bank of silver sails rose still,
apparently as endless as before I had mounted into the
rigging. To right and left, the masts of other decks diverged
like the tines of a birding arrowor rather, like row upon
row of such arrows, for there were still more masts behind
those nearest me, masts separated by tens of leagues at
least. Like the fingers of the Increate they pointed to the
ends of the universe, their topmost starsails no more than
flecks of gleaming tinsel lost among the glittering stars.
From such a place I might have cast the coffer (as I had
thought to do) into the waste, to be found, perhaps, by
someone of another race, if the Increate willed it.
Two things restrained me, the first less a thought than a
memory, the memory of my first resolve, made when I
wrote and all speculations about the ships of the Hierodules
were new to me, to wait until our vessel had
penetrated the fabric of time. I had already entrusted the
initial manuscript of my account to Master Ultan's library,
where it would endure no longer than our Urth herself.
This copy I had (at first) intended for another creation;
so that even if I failed the great trial that lay before me, I
would have succeeded in sending a part of our worldno
matter how trifling a partbeyond the pales of the universe.
Now I looked at the stars, at suns so remote that their
circling planets were invisible, though some might be
larger than Serenus; and at whole swirls of stars so remote
that their teeming billions appeared to be a single star. And
I marveled to recall that all this had seemed too small for
my ambition, and wondered whether it had grown (though
the mystes declare it no longer grows) or I had.
The second was not truly of thought either, perhaps;
only instinct and an overmastering desire: I wanted to
mount to the top. To defend my resolution, I might say that
I knew no such opportunity might come again, that it
scarcely accorded with my office to settle for less than
common seamen achieved whenever their duties demanded it, and so on.
All these would be rationalizationsthe thing itself was
glorious. For years I had known joy in nothing but victories,
and now I felt myself a boy again. When I had wished
to climb the Great Keep, it had never occurred to me that
the Great Keep itself might wish to climb the sky; I knew
better now. But this ship at least was climbing beyond the
sky, and I wanted to climb with her.
The higher I mounted, the easier and the more dangerous
my climb became. No fraction of weight remained to
me. Again and again I leaped, caught some sheet or
halyard, scrambled until I had my feet on it, and leaped
once more.
After a dozen such ascents, it struck me that there was
no reason to stop until I reached the highest point on the
mastthat one jump would take me there, if only I did
not prevent it. Then I rose like a Midsummer's Eve rocket;
I could readily have imagined that I whistled as they did or
trailed a plume of red and blue sparks.
Sails and cables flew past in an infinite procession. Once
I seemed to see, suspended (as it appeared) in the space
between two sails, an indistinct golden shape veined with
crimson; insofar as I considered it at all, I supposed it to be
an instrument positioned where it might be near the
starsor possibly only an object carelessly left on deck
until some minor change in course had permitted it to float
away.
And still I shot upward.
The maintop came into view. I reached for a halyard.
They were hardly thicker than my finger now, though every
sail would have covered ten score of meadows.
I had misjudged, and the halyard was just beyond my
grasp. Another flashed by.
And anotherthree cubits out of reach at least.
I tried to twist like a swimmer but could do no more
than lift my knee. The shining cables of the rigging had
been widely separated even far below, where there were for
this single mast more than a hundred. None now remained
but the startop shroud. My fingers brushed it but could not
grasp it.
Chapter II
The Fifth Sailor
THE END of my life had come, and I knew it. Aboard
the Samru, they had trailed a long rope from the stern as
an aid to any sailor who might fall overboard. Whether our
ship towed such a line, I did not know; but even if it did, it
would have done me no good. My difficulty (my tragedy, I
am tempted to write) was not that I had fallen from the rail
and drifted aft of the rudder, but that I had risen above the
entire forest of masts. And thus I continued to riseor
rather, to leave the ship, for I might as easily have been
falling head downwardwith the speed of my initial leap.
Below me, or at least in the direction of my feet, the ship
seemed a dwindling continent of silver, her black masts
and spars as slender as the horns of crickets. Around me,
the stars burned unchecked, blazing with splendor never
seen on Urth. For a moment, not because my wits were
working but because they were not, I looked for her; she
would be green, I thought, like green Lune, but tipped with
white where the ice-fields closed upon our chilled lands. I
could not find her, nor even the crimson-shot orange disk
of the old sun.
Then I realized I had been looking in the wrong place. If
Urth was visible at all, Urth would be astern. I looked
there and saw, not our Urth, but a growing, spinning,
swirling vortex of fuligin, the color that is darker than
black. It was like some vast eddy or whirlpool of emptiness;
but circling it was a circle of colored light, as though a
billion billion stars were dancing.
Then I knew the miracle had passed without my notice,
had passed as I copied out some stodgy sentence about
Master Gurloes or the Ascian War. We had penetrated the
fabric of time, and the fuligin vortex marked the end of the
universe.
Or its beginning. If its beginning, then that shimmering
ring of stars was the scattering of the young suns, and the
only truly magical ring this universe would ever know.
Hailing them, I shouted for joy, though no one heard my
voice but the Increate and me.
I drew my cloak to me and pulled the leaden coffer from
it; and I held the coffer above my head in both my hands;
and I cast it, cheering as I cast it, out of my unseen cloak of
air, out of the purlieu of the ship, out of the universe that
the coffer and I had known, and into the new creation as
final offering from the old.
At once my destiny seized me and flung me back. Not
straight downward toward the part of the deck I had left,
which might well have killed me, but down and forward, so
that I saw the mastheads racing by me. I craned my neck to
see the next; it was the last. Had I been an ell or two to the
right, I might have been brained by the very tip of the
mast. Instead I flashed between its final extension and the
starsail yard, with the buntlines far out of reach. I had
outraced the ship.
Enormously distant and at a different angle altogether,
another of the uncountable masts appeared. Sails sprouted
from it like the leaves on a tree; and they were not the now
familiar rectangular sails, but triangular ones. For a time, it
seemed I would outrace this mast too, and then that I
would strike it. Frantically, I clutched at the flying jib stay.
Around it I swung like a flag in a changing wind. I clung
to its stinging cold for a moment, panting, then threw
myself down the length of the bowspritfor this final mast
was the bowsprit, of coursewith all the strength of my
arms. I think that if I had crashed into the bow, I would not
have cared; I wanted nothing more, and nothing else, than
to touch the hull, anywhere and in any way.
I struck a staysail instead, and went sliding along its
immense silver surface. Surface indeed it was, and seemed
all surface, with less of body than a whisper, almost itself a
thing of light. It turned me, spun me, and sent me rolling
and tumbling like a wind-tossed leaf down to the deck.
Or rather, down to some deck, for I have never been
certain that the deck to which I returned was that which I
had left. I sprawled there trying to catch my breath, my
lame leg an agony; held, but almost not held, by the ship's
attraction.
My frantic panting never stopped or even slowed; and
after a hundred such gasps, I realized my cloak of air was
incapable of supporting my life much longer. I struggled to
rise. Half-suffocated though I was, it was almost too
easyI nearly threw myself aloft again. A hatch was only a
chain away. I staggered to it, flung it wide with the last of
my strength, and shut it behind me. The inner door
seemed to open almost of itself.
At once my air freshened, as though some noble young
breeze had penetrated a fetid cell. To hasten the process, I
took off my necklace as I stepped out into the gangway,
then stood for a time breathing the cool, clean air, scarcely
conscious of where I wassave for the blessed knowledge
that I was inside the ship again, and not wandering wrack
beyond her sails.
The gangway was narrow and bright, painfully lit by blue
lights that crept slowly along its walls and ceiling, winking
and seemingly peering into the gangway without being any
part of it.
Nothing escapes my memory unless I am unconscious or
nearly so; I recalled every passage between my cabin and
the hatch that had let me out onto the deck, and this was
none of them. Most of them had been furnished like the
drawing rooms of chateaus, with pictures and polished
floors. The brown wood of the deck had given way here to a
green carpeting like grass that lifted minute teeth to grip
the soles of my boots, so that I felt as though the little
blue-green blades were blades indeed.
Thus I was faced with a decision, and one I did not
relish. The hatch was behind me. I could go out again and
search from deck to deck for my own part of the ship. Or I
could proceed along this broad passage and search from
inside. This alternative carried the immense disadvantage
that I might easily become lost in the interior. Yet would
that be worse than being lost among the rigging, as I had
been? Or in the endless space between the suns, as I had
nearly been?
I stood there vacillating until I heard the sound of
voices. It reminded me that my cloak was still, ridiculously,
knotted about my waist. I untied it, and had just
finished doing so when the people whose voices I had
heard came into view.
All were armed, but there all similarity ended. One
seemed an ordinary enough man, such as might have been
seen any day around the docks of Nessus; one of a race I
had never encountered in all my journeyings, tall as an
exultant and having skin not of the pinkish brown we are
pleased to call white, but truly white, as white as foam, and
crowned by hair that was white as well. The third was a
woman, only just shorter than I and thicker of limb than
any woman I had ever seen. Behind these three, seeming
almost to drive them before him, was a figure that might
have been that of a massive man in armor complete.
They would have passed me without a word if I had
allowed it, I think, but I stepped into the middle of the
corridor, forced them to halt, and explained my predicament.
"I have reported it," the armored figure told me. "Someone
will come for you, or I shall be sent with you.
Meanwhile you must come with me."
"Where are you going?" I asked, but he turned away as I
spoke, gesturing to the two men.
"Come on," the woman said, and kissed me. It was not a
long kiss, but there seemed to be a rough passion in it. She
took my arm in a grip that seemed as strong as a man's.
The ordinary sailor (who in fact did not look ordinary at
all, having a cheerful and rather handsome face and the
yellow hair of a southerner) said, "You'll have to come, or
they won't know where to look for youif they look at all.
It probably won't be too bad." He spoke over his shoulder
as he walked, and the woman and I followed him.
The white-haired man said, "Perhaps you can help me."
I supposed that he had recognized me; and feeling in
need of as many allies as I might enlist, I told him I would
if I could.
"For the love of Danaides, be quiet," the woman said to
him. And then to me, "Do you have a weapon?"
I showed her my pistol.
"You'll have to be careful with that in here. Can you turn
it down?"
"I already have."
She and the rest bore calivers, arms much like fusils, but
with somewhat shorter though thicker stocks and more
slender barrels. There was a long dagger at her belt; both
the men had bolos, short, heavy, broad-bladed jungle
knives.
"I'm Purn," the blond man told me.
"Severian."
He held out his hand, and I took ita sailor's hand,
large, rough, and muscular.
"She's Gunnie"
"Burgundofara," the woman said.
"We call her Gunnie. And he's Idas." He gestured
toward the white-haired man.
The man in armor was looking down the corridor in
back of us, but he snapped, "Be still!" I had never seen
anyone who could turn his head so far. "What's his
name?" I whispered to Purn.
Gunnie answered instead. "Sidero." Of the three, she
seemed least in awe of him.
"Where is he taking us?"
Sidero loped past us and threw open a door. "Here. This
is a good place. Our confidence is high. Separate widely. I
will be in the center. Do no harm unless attacked. Signal
vocally."
"In the name of the Increate," I asked, "what are we
supposed to be doing?"
"Searching out apports," Gunnie muttered. "You don't
have to pay too much attention to Sidero. Shoot if they
look dangerous."
While she spoke, she had been steering me toward the
open door. Now Idas said, "Don't worry, there probably
won't be any," and stepped so close behind us that I
stepped through it almost automatically.
It was pitch dark, but I was immediately conscious that I
no longer stood on solid flooring but on some sort of open
and shaky grillwork, and that I was entering a place much
larger than a common room.
Gunnie's hair brushed my shoulder as she peered past
me into the blackness, bringing with it the mingled smells
of perfume and sweat. "Turn on the lights, Sidero. We can't
see a thing in here."
Lights blazed with a yellower hue than that of the
corridor we had just left, a jaundiced radiance that seemed
to suck the color from everything. We stood, the four of us
crowded together in a compact mass, upon a floor of black
bars no thicker than a man's smallest finger. There was no
rail, and the space before us and below us (for the ceiling
just above us must have supported the deck) would have
held our Matachin Tower.
What it now held was an immense jumble of cargo:
boxes, bails, barrels, and crates of all kinds; machinery and
parts of machines; sacks, many of shimmering, translucent
film; stacks of lumber.
"There!" Sidero snapped. He pointed to a spidery ladder
descending the wall.
"You go first," I said.
There was no rushing toward mewe were not a span
apartand thus no time for me to draw my pistol. He
seized me with a strength I found amazing, forced me
back a step, and pushed me violently. For an instant I
teetered at the edge of the platform, clawing air; then I
fell.
Doubtless I would have broken my neck on Urth. On the
ship, I might almost be said to have floated down. Yet the
slowness of my fall did nothing to allay the terror I felt in
falling. I saw ceiling and platform revolve above me. I was
conscious that I would land on my back, with spine and
skull bearing the shock, and yet I could not turn myself. I
clutched for some support, and my imagination fervently,
feverishly conjured up the flying jib stay. The four faces
looking down at meSidero's armored visor, Idas's chalk-white
cheeks, Purn's grin, Gunnie's beautiful, brutal
featuresseemed masks from a nightmare. And surely no
waking unfortunate flung from the top of the Bell Tower
had so long in which to contemplate his own destruction.
I struck with a jolt that knocked out my breath. For a
hundred heartbeats or more I lay gasping, just as I had
panted for air when I had at last regained the interior of the
ship. Slowly I realized that though I had suffered a fall
indeed, it had been no worse than I might have suffered in
falling from my bed to the carpet in some evil dream of
Typhon. Sitting up, I found no broken bones.
Bundles of papers had been my carpet, and I thought
Sidero must have known they were there and that I would
not be hurt. Then I saw beside me a crazily tilted mechanism,
spiky with shafts and levers.
I got to my feet. Far above, the platform was empty, the
door that led to the corridor closed. I looked for the
spidery ladder, but all except the uppermost rungs were
obscured by the mechanism. I edged around that, impeded
by the unevenly stacked bundles (they had been tied with
sisal, and some of the cords had broken, so that I slipped
and slid over documents as I might have over snow), but
greatly aided by the lightness of my body.
Because I was looking down to find my footing, I did not
see the thing before me until I was actually peering into its
blind face.
Chapter III
The Cabin
MY HAND went to my pistolI had it out and leveled
almost before I knew it. The shaggy creature seemed no
different from the stooped figure of the salamander that
had once nearly burned me alive in Thrax. I expected it to
rear erect and reveal the blazing heart within.
It did not, and until too late I did not fire. For a moment
we waited motionless; then it fled, bouncing and scrambling
across the boxes and barrels like an awkward puppy
in pursuit of the lively ball that was itself. With that vile
instinct every man has to kill whatever may fear him, I
fired. The beampotentially deadly still, though I had
reduced it to its lowest strength to seal the leaden coffersplit
the air and set a solid-looking ingot to clanging like
a gong. But the creature, whatever it was, was a dozen ells
away at least, and in another moment it had disappeared
behind a statue swathed in protective wrappings.
Someone shouted, and I thought I recognized Gunnie's
husky contralto. There was a sound like a singing arrow,
then a yell from another throat.
The shaggy creature came bounding back, but this time,
having regained my senses, I did not shoot. Purn appeared
and fired his caliver, swinging it like a fowling piece.
Instead of the bolt I expected, it shot forth a cord,
something flexible and swiff that looked black in the
strange light and flew with the singing I had heard a
moment before.
This black cord struck the shaggy creature and wrapped
it with a loop or two, but seemed to produce no other
result. Purn gave a shout and leaped like a grasshopper. It
had not occurred to me before that in this vast place I
could leap myself just as I had on deck, but I imitated him
now (mostly because I did not wish to lose contact with
Sidero before I had revenged myself) and nearly dashed
out my brains against the ceiling.
While I was in the air, however, I had a magnificent view
of the hold beneath me. There was the shaggy creature,
which might have been fallow under Urth's sun, streaked
with black yet still skipping with frantic energy; even as I
saw him, Sidero's caliver blotched him more. There was
Purn nearly upon him, and Idas and Gunnie, the latter
firing even as she ran in great leaps, from high place to high
place across the jumbled cargo.
I dropped near them, climbed unsteadily atop the tilted
breach of a mountain carronade, and hardly saw the
shaggy creature scrambling toward me until it had
bounced almost into my arms. I say "almost" because I did
not actually grasp it, and certainly it did not grasp me.
Nevertheless, we remained togetherthe black cords adhered
to my clothing as well as to the flat strips (neither fur
nor feathers) of the shaggy creature.
A moment after we had tumbled from the carronade, I
discovered another property of the cords: stretched, they
contracted again to a length less than the first, and with
great force. Struggling to free myself, I found myself more
tightly bound than ever, a circumstance that Gunnie and
Purn found highly amusing.
Sidero crisscrossed the shaggy creature with fresh cords,
then told Gunnie to release me, which she did by cutting
me free with her dagger.
"Thank you," I said.
"It happens all the time," she said. "I got stuck onto a
basket like that once. Don't worry about it."
Led by Sidero, Purn and Idas were already carrying the
creature away. I stood up. "I'm afraid I'm no longer
accustomed to being laughed at."
"One time you were? You don't look it."
"As an apprentice. Everyone laughed at the younger
apprentices, especially the older ones."
Gunnie shrugged. "Half the things a person does are
funny, if you come to think of it. Like sleeping with your
mouth open. If you're quartermaster, nobody laughs. But
if you're not, your best friend will slip a dust ball into it.
Don't try to pull those off."
The black cords had clung to the nap of my velvet shirt,
and I had been plucking at them. "I should carry a knife,"
I said.
"You mean you don't?" She looked at me commiseratingly,
her eyes as large, as dark, and as soft as any cow's.
"But everybody ought to have a knife."
"I used to wear a sword," I said. "After a while I gave it
up, except for ceremonies. When I left my cabin, I thought
my pistol would be more than adequate."
"For fighting. But how much do you have to do, a man
who looks like you do?" She took a backward step and
pretended to evaluate my appearance. "I don't think many
people would give you trouble."
The truth was that in her thick-soled sea boots she stood
as tall as I did. In any place where men and women bore
weight, she would have been as heavy too; there was real
muscle on her bones, with a good deal of fat over it.
I laughed and admitted that a knife would have been
useful when Sidero threw me off the platform.
"Oh, no," she told me. "A knife wouldn't have scratched
him." She grinned. "That's what the whoremaster said
when the sailor came." I laughed, and she linked her arm
through mine. "Anyway, a knife's not mainly for fighting.
It's for working, one way or another. How're you going to
splice rope without a knife, or open ration boxes? You keep
your eyes open as we go along. No telling what you'll find
in one of these cargo bays."
"We're going in the wrong direction," I said.
"I know another way, and if we went out the way we
came in, you'd never find anything. It's too short."
"What happens if Sidero turns out the lights?"
"He won't. Once you wake them up they stay bright until
there's nobody to watch. Ah, I see something. Look there."
I looked, suddenly certain she had noticed a knife during
our hunt for the shaggy creature and was merely pretending
to have found it now. Only a bone hilt was visible.
"Go ahead. Nobody'll mind if you take it."
"That wasn't what I was thinking about," I told her.
It was a hunting knife, with a narrowed point and a
heavy saw-backed blade about two spans long. Just the
thing, I thought, for rough work.
"Get the sheath too. You can't carry it in your hand all
day."
That was of plain black leather, but it included a pocket
that had once held some small tool and recalled the
whetstone pocket on the manskin sheath of Terminus Est. I
was beginning to like the knife already, and I liked it more
when I saw that.
"Put it on your belt."
I did as I was told, positioning it on the left where it
balanced the weight of my pistol. "I would have expected
better stowage on a big vessel like this."
Gunnie shrugged. "This isn't really cargo. Just odds and
ends. Do you know how the ship's built?"
"I haven't the least idea."
She laughed at that. "Neither does anyone else, I suppose.
We have ideas we pass along to each other, but
eventually we usually find out they're wrong. Partly wrong,
anyway."
"I would have thought you'd know your ship."
"She's too big, and there are too many places where they
never take us, and we can't find for ourselves, or get into.
But she's got seven sides; that's so she'll carry more sail,
you follow me?"
"I understand."
"Some of the decksthree, I thinkhave deep bays.
That's where the main cargo is. They leave the other four
with wedge-shaped spaces. Some's used for odds and ends,
like this bay. Some's cabins and crew's quarters and what
not. But speaking of quarters, we'd better get back."
She had led me to another ladder, another platform. I
said, "I imagined somehow that we would go through a
secret panel, or perhaps only find that as we walked these
odds and ends, as you call them, became a garden."
Gunnie shook her head, then grinned. "I see you've seen
a bit of her already. You're a poet too, aren't you? And a
good liar, I bet."
"I was the Autarch of Urth; that required a little lying, if
you like. We called it diplomacy."
"Well, let me tell you that this is a working ship; it's just
that she wasn't built by people like you and me. Autarchdoes
that mean you run the whole Urth?"
"No, I ran only a small part of it, although I was the
legitimate head of the whole of it. And I've known ever
since I began my journey that if I succeed, I won't come
back as Autarch. You seem singularly unimpressed."
"There are so many worlds," she told me. Quite suddenly
she crouched and leaped, rising into the air like a large
blue bird. Even though I had made such leaps myself, it
was strange to see a woman do it. Her ascent carried her a
cubit or less above the platform, and she might honestly
have been said to have floated down upon it.
Without thinking, I had supposed the crew's quarters
would be a narrow room like the forecastle of the Samru.
There was a warren of big cabins instead, many levels
opening onto walkways around a common airshaft. Gunnie
said she had to return to her duty, and suggested I look
for an empty cabin.
It was on my tongue to remind her I had a cabin already,
which I had left only a watch before; but something
stopped me. I nodded and asked her what location was
bestby which I meant, as she understood, which would
be nearest hers. She indicated it to me, and we parted.
On Urth the older locks are charmed by words. My
stateroom had a speaking lock, and though the hatches had
needed no words at all and the door Sidero had flung open
had required none, the olive doors of these crew compartments
were equipped with locks of the same kind. The first
two I approached informed me that the cabins they
guarded were occupied. They must have been old mechaisms
indeed; I noticed that their personalities had begun
to differentiate.
The third invited me to enter, saying, "What a nice
cabin!"
I asked how long it had been since the nice cabin had
been inhabited.
"I don't know, master. Many voyages."
"Don't call me master," I told it. "I haven't decided to
take your cabin yet."
There was no reply. No doubt such locks are of severely
limited intelligence; otherwise they might be bribed, and
they would surely go mad soon. After a moment the door
swung open. I stepped inside.
It was not a nice cabin compared with the stateroom I
had left. There were two narrow bunks, an armoire, and a
chest; sanitary facilities in a corner. Dust covered everything
to such a thickness that I could readily imagine it
being blown from the ventilating grill in gray clouds,
through the clouds would be seen only by a man who had
some means of compressing time as the ship compressed
it; if a man lived as a tree does, perhaps, for which each
year is a day; or like Gyoll, running through the valley of
Nessus for whole ages of the world.
While thinking of such things, which took me much
longer to meditate upon than it has taken me just now to
write about them, I had found a red rag in the armoire,
moistened it at the laver, and begun to wipe away the dust.
When I saw that I had already cleaned the top of the chest
and the steel frame of one bunk, I knew that I had decided
to stay, however unconsciously. I would locate my stateroom
again, of course, and more often than not I would
sleep there.
But I would have this cabin as well. When I grew bored, I
would join the crew and thus learn more about the
operation of the ship than I ever would as a passenger.
There was Gunnie too. I have had women enough in my
arms to have no conceit about the numberone soon
comes to realize that union cripples love when it does not
enhance itand poor Valeria was often in my thoughts;
yet I hungered for Gunnie's affection. As Autarch I had few
friends save for Father Inire, and Valeria was the only
woman. Some quality in Gunnie's smile recalled my happy
childhood with Thea (how I miss her still!) and the long
trip to Thrax with Dorcas. It had been a journey I had
counted mere exile at the time, so that each day I had
hurried forward. Now I knew that in many ways it had
been the summer of my life.
I rinsed the rag again, conscious that I had done so often,
though I could not have told how often; when I looked
about for another dusty surface to wipe, I found that I had
wiped them all.
The mattress was not so easily dealt with, but it had to
be cleaned in some fashionit was as filthy as everything
else had been, and we would surely want to lie upon it
occasionally. I carried it onto the walkway overhanging the
airshaft and beat it until it yielded no more dust.
When I had finished and was rolling it up to take back
into the cabin, the wind from the airshaft brought a wild
cry.
Chapter IV
The Citizens of the Sails
IT CAME from below. I peered over the twig-thin
railing and as I peered heard it again, filled with anguish
and a loneliness that echoed and re-echoed among the
metal catwalks, the metal tiers of metal cabins.
Hearing it, it seemed to me for a moment that it was my
own cry, that something I had held deep inside me since
that still-dark morning when I had walked the beach with
the aquastor Master Malrubius and watched the aquastor
Triskele dissolve in shimmering dust had freed itself and
separated itself from me, and that it was below, howling in
the faint, lost light.
I was tempted to leap over the rail, for then I did not
know the depth of that shaft. As it was, I flung the mattress
through the doorway of my new cabin and descended the
narrow winding stair by jumping from one flight to the
next.
From above, the abyss of the shaft had seemed opaque,
the strange radiance of yellow lamps beating upon it
without effect. I had supposed that this opacity would
vanish when I reached the lower levelsbut it solidified
instead, until I was reminded of Baldanders's chamber of
cloud, though it was really not so thick as that. The
swirling air grew warmer too, and perhaps the mist that
shrouded everything was only the result of warm, moist air
from the bowels of the ship mixing with the cooler atmoshere
of the upper levels. I was soon sweating in my velvet
shirt.
Here the doors of many cabins stood ajar, but the cabins
themselves were dark. Once, or so it seemed to me, the
ship must have had a more numerous crew, or perhaps had
been used to transport prisoners (the cabins would have
done well as cells, if the locks were differently instructed)
or soldiers.
The cry came again, and with it a noise like the ringing
of a hammer on an anvil, though it held a note that told me
it rang from no forge, but from a mouth of flesh. Heard by
night, in a fastness of the mountains, they would have been
more terrible than the howling of a dire-wolf, I think. What
sadness, dread, and loneliness, what fear and agony were
there!
I paused for breath and looked around me. Beasts, so it
seemed, were confined in the cabins farther down. Or
perhaps madmen, as we of the torturers had confined
pain-crazed clients on the third level of the oubliette. Who
could say that every door was shut? Might not some of
these creatures be unconfined, kept from the upper levels
by mere chance or their fear of man? I drew my pistol and
made sure it was at its lowest setting and that it had a full
charge.
My initial glimpse of the vivarium below confirmed my
worst fears. Filmy trees waved at the edge of a glacier, a
waterfall tumbled and sang, a dune lifted its sterile yellow
crest, and two score creatures prowled among them. I
watched them for a dozen breaths before I began to suspect
that they were confined nonetheless, and for fifty more
before I felt sure of it. But each had its own plot of ground,
small or large, and they could no more mingle than could
the beasts in the Bear Tower. What a strange group they
made! If every swamp and forest on Urth were combed for
oddities, I do not believe such a collection could be
assembled. Some gibbered, some stared, most lay comatose.
I holstered my pistol and called, "Who howled?"
That was only a joke made to myself, yet a response
camea whimper from the rear of the vivarium; I
threaded my way through the beasts, following a narrow
nearly invisible track made, as I soon afterward
learned, by the sailors sent to feed them.
It was the shaggy creature I had helped catch in the cargo
bay, and I beheld him with a certain warmth of recognition.
I had been so much alone since the pinnace had
carried me from the gardens of the House Absolute to this
ship that to meet even so queer a being as he was seemed
the second time almost a reunion with an old acquaintance.
Then too, I was interested in the creature himself, since I
had assisted in his capture. When we had pursued him, he
had appeared almost spherical; now I saw that he was in
fact one of those short-limbed, short-bodied animals that
generally live in burrowssomething like a pika, in other
words. There was a round head atop a neck so short that
one had to take it on faith; a round body too, of which the
head seemed a mere continuation; four short legs, each
ending in four long, blunt claws and one short one; a
covering of flattened, brownish-gray hairs. Two bright
black eyes that stared at me.
"Poor thing," I said. "How did you ever get into that
hold?"
He came to the limit of the invisible barrier that
enclosed him, moving much more slowly now that he was
no longer frightened.
"Poor thing," I said again.
He reared upon his hind legs as pikas sometimes do,
forelegs nearly crossed over his white belly. Strands of
black cord still streaked the white fur. They reminded me
that the same cords had stuck to my shirt. I plucked at
what remained of them and found them weak now, some
crumbling under my fingers. The cords on the shaggy
creature seemed to be falling away as well.
He whimpered softly; instinctively, I reached out to
comfort him as I would have an anxious dog, then drew my
hand away, fearful he might bite or claw me.
A moment later, I cursed myself for a coward. He had
harmed no one in the hold, and when I had wrestled with
him, there had been no indication that he was trying to do
more than escape. I thrust a forefinger into the barrier
(which proved no barrier to me) and scratched the side of
his tiny mouth. He turned his head just as a dog would
have, and I felt small ears beneath the fur.
Behind me, someone said, "Cute, ain't it?" and I turned
to look. It was Purn, the grinning sailor.
I answered, "He seems harmless enough."
"Most are." Purn hesitated. "Only most die and drift
off. We only see a few of 'em, that's what they say."
"Gunnie calls them apports," I remarked, "and I've
been thinking about that. The sails bring them, don't
they?"
Purn nodded absently and stretched a finger of his own
through the barrier to tickle the shaggy creature.
"Adjacent sails must be like two large mirrors. They're
curved, so somewherein fact, in various placesthey
must be parallel, and the starlight shines on them."
Purn nodded again. "That's what makes the ship go, as
the skipper said when they asked about the wench."
"I once knew a man called Hethor who summoned
deadly things to serve him. And I was told by one called
VodalusVodalus was not to be trusted, I'll admitthat
Hethor used mirrors to bring them. I've a friend who
works mirror spells too, though his are not evil. Hethor
had been a hand on a ship like this."
That captured Purn's attention. He withdrew his finger
and turned to face me. "You know her name?" he asked.
"The name of his ship? No, I don't think he ever
mentioned it. Wait... He said he'd been on several.
'Long I signed on the silver-sailed ships, the hundred-masted
whose masts reached out to touch the stars."'
"Ah." Purn nodded. "Some say there's only one. That's
something I wonder about, sometimes."
"Surely there must be many. Even when I was a boy,
people told me of them, the ships of the cacogens putting
into the Port of Lune."
"Where's that?"
"Lune? It's the moon of my world, the moon of Urth."
"That was small stuff, then," Purn told me. "Tenders
and launches and so forth. Nobody never said there wasn't
a lot of little stuff shuttling around between the various
worlds of the various suns. Only this ship here and the
other ones like it, allowing that there's more than the one,
they don't come in so close, generally. They can do it all
right, but it's a tricky business. Then too, there's a good bit
of rock whizzing around, close in to a sun, usually."
The white-haired Idas appeared carrying a collection of
tools. "Hello!" he called, and I waved to him.
"I ought to get busy," Purn muttered. "Me and that one
are supposed to be taking care of 'em. I was just looking
around to be sure they were all right when I saw you, uh,
uh..."
"Severian," I said. "I was the Autarchthe rulerof
the Commonwealth; now I'm the surrogate of Urth, and its
ambassador. Do you come from Urth, Purn?"
"Don't think I've ever been, but maybe I have." He
looked thoughtful. "Big white moon?"
"No, it's green. You were on Verthandi, perhaps; I've
read that its moons are pale gray"
Purn shrugged. "I don't know."
Idas had come up to us by then, and he said, "It must be
wonderful." I had no notion of what he meant. Purn
moved away, looking at the beasts.
As if we were two conspirators Idas whispered, "Don't
worry about him. He's afraid I'll report him for not
working."
"Aren't you afraid I'll report you?" I asked. There was
something about Idas that irritated me, though perhaps it
was only his seeming weakness.
"Oh, do you know Sidero?"
"Who I know is my own affair, I believe."
"I don't think you know anyone," he said. And then, as
if he had committed a merely social blunder, "But maybe
you do. Or I could introduce you. I will, if you want me to."
"I do," I told him. "Introduce me to Sidero at the first
opportunity. I demand to be returned to my stateroom."
Idas nodded. "I will. Perhaps you wouldn't mind if I
came there to talk with you sometime? YouI hope you'll
excuse me for saying thisyou know nothing about ships,
and I know nothing about such places as, ah..."
"Urth?"
"Nothing of worlds. I've seen a few pictures, but other
than that, all I know are these." He gestured vaguely
toward the beasts. "And they are bad, always bad. But
perhaps there are good things on the worlds too, that never
live long enough to find their way to the decks."
"Surely they're not all evil."
"Oh, yes," he said. "Oh, yes they are. And I, who have to
clean up after them, and feed them, and adjust the atmosphere
for them if they need it, would rather kill them all;
but Sidero and Zelezo would beat me if I did."
"I wouldn't be surprised if they killed you," I told him. I
had no desire to see such a fascinating collection wiped out
by this petty man's spite. "Which would be just, I think.
You look as though you belong among them yourself."
"Oh, no," he said seriously. "It's you and Purn and the
rest who do. I was born here on the ship."
Something in his manner told me he was trying to draw
me into conversation and would gladly quarrel with me if
only it would keep me talking. For my part, I had no desire
to talk at all, much less quarrel. I felt tired enough to drop,
and I was ravenously hungry. I said, "If I belong in this
collection of exotic brutes, it's up to you to see I'm fed.
Where is the galley?"
Idas hesitated for a moment, quite plainly debating
some sort of exchange of informationhe would direct
me if I would first answer seven questions about Urth, or
something of that sort. Then he realized I was ready to
knock him down if he said anything of the kind, and he
told me, though sullenly enough, how to get there.
One of the advantages of such a memory as mine, which
stores everything and forgets nothing, is that it is as good
as paper at such times. (Indeed, that may be its only
advantage.) On this occasion, however, it did me no more
good than it had when I had tried to follow the directions
of that lochage of the peltasts whom I met upon the bridge
of Gyoll. No doubt Idas had assumed I knew more of the
ship than I did, and that I would not count doors and look
for turnings with exactness.
Soon I realized I had gone wrong. Three corridors
branched where there should have been only two, and a
promised stair did not appear. I retraced my path, found
the point at which (as I believed) I had become lost, and
began again. Almost at once, I found myself treading a
broad, straight passageway such as Idas had told me led to
the galley. I assumed then that my wanderings had sent me
wide of part of the prescribed route, and I strode along in
high spirits.
By the standards of the ship, it was a wide and windy
place indeed. No doubt it was one that received its
atmosphere directly from the devices that circulated and
purified it, for it smelled as a breeze from the south does on
a rainy day in spring. The floor was neither of the strange
grass I had seen before nor of the grillwork I had already
come to hate, but polished wood deeply entombed in clear
varnish. The walls, which had been of a dark and deathly
gray in the crew's quarters, were white here, and once or
twice I passed padded seats that stood with their backs
toward the walls.
The passageway turned and turned again, and I felt that
it was rising ever so slightly, though the weight I lifted with
my steps was so slight I could not be certain. There were
pictures on the walls, and some of these pictures movedonce
a picture of our ship as it might have been limned
by someone far distant; I could not help but stop to look,
and I shuddered to think how near I had come to seeing it so.
Another turnbut one that proved not to be a turn,
only the termination of the passageway in a circle of doors.
I chose one at random and stepped into a narrow gangway
so dark, after the white passage, that I could hardly see
more than the lights overhead.
A few moments later, I realized that I had passed a
hatch, the first I had seen since reentering the ship; still not
wholly free from the fear that had gripped me when I saw
that terrible and beautiful picture, I took out my necklace
as I strode along and made certain it had not been
damaged.
The gangway turned twice and divided, then twisted like
a serpent.
A door swung open as I passed, releasing the aroma of
roast meat. A voice, the thin and mechanical voice of the
lock, said, "Welcome back, master."
I looked through the doorway and saw my own cabin.
Not, of course, the cabin I had taken in the crew's quarters,
but the stateroom I had left to launch the leaden coffer into
the great light of the new universe aborning only a watch or
two before.
Chapter V
The Hero and the Hierodules
THE STEWARD had brought my meal and, finding me
not in my stateroom, had left it on the table. The meat was
still warm under its bell; I ate it ravenously, and with it
new bread and salt butter, celeriac and salsify, and red
wine. Afterward I undressed, washed myself, and slept.
He woke me, shaking me by my shoulder. It was odd, but
when Ithe Autarch of Urthhad boarded the ship, I
had scarcely noticed him, though he brought my meals and
willingly saw to various little wants; no doubt it was that
very willingness which had unjustly wiped him from my
attention. Now that I myself had been a member of the
crew, it was as though he had turned to show another face.
It looked down at me now, blunt-featured yet intelligent,
the eyes bright with suppressed excitement. "Someone
wishes to see you, Autarch," he murmured.
I sat up. "Someone you felt you should wake me for?"
"Yes, Autarch."
"The captain, perhaps." Was I to be censured for going
on deck? The necklace had been provided for emergency
use, but it seemed unlikely.
"No, Autarch. Our captain's seen you, I'm sure. Three
Hierodules, Autarch."
"Yes?" I fenced for time. "Is that the captain's voice I
hear sometimes in the corridors? When did he see me? I
don't recall seeing him."
"I've no idea, Autarch. But our captain's seen you, I'm
sure. Often, probably. Our captain sees people."
"Indeed." I was pulling on a clean shirt as I digested the
hint that there was a secret ship within this ship, just as the
Secret House was within the House Absolute. "It must
interfere with his other work."
"I don't believe it does, Autarch. They're waiting outsidecould
you hurry?"
I dressed more slowly after that, of course. To draw the
belt from my dusty trousers, I had to remove my pistol and
the knife that Gunnie had found for me. The steward told
me I would not need them; so I wore them, feeling
absurdly as though I were going to inspect a reconstituted
formation of demilances. The knife was nearly long
enough to be called a sword.
It had not occurred to me that the three might be
Ossipago, Barbatus, and Famulimus. As far as I knew, I
had left them far behind on Urth, and they had most
certainly not been in the pinnace with me, though of
course they possessed their own craft. Now here they were,
disguised (and badly) as human beings, just as they had
been at our first encounter in Baldanders's castle.
Ossipago bowed as stiffly as ever, Barbatus and Famulimus
as gracefully. I returned their greetings as well I
could and suggested that if they wished to speak to me,
they were welcome in my stateroom, apologizing in advance
for its disorder.
"We cannot come inside," Famulimus told me. "However
much we would. The room to which we bring you is not
too far away." Her voice, as always, was like the speaking
of a lark.
Barbatus added, "Cabins like yours are not as safe as we
might wish," in his masculine baritone.
"Then I will go wherever you lead me," I said. "Do you
know, it's truly cheering to see you three again. Yours are
faces from home, even if they are false faces."
"You know us, I see," Barbatus said as we started down
the corridor. "But the faces beneath these are too horrible
for you, I fear."
The corridor was too narrow for us to go four abreast; he
and I walked side by side, Famulimus and Ossipago side by
side behind us. It has taken me a long time to lose the
despair that seized me at that moment. "This is the first
time?" I asked. "You have not met me before?"
Famulimus trilled, "Though we do not know you, yet
you know us, Severian. I saw how pleased you looked,
when first you came into our sight. Often we have met, and
we are friends."
"But we will not meet again," I said. "It's the first time
for you, who will travel backward through time when you
leave me. And so it's the last time for me. When we first
met, you said, 'Welcome! There is no greater joy for us
than greeting you, Severian,' and you were saddened at our
parting. I remember it very wellI remember everything
very well, as you had better know at oncehow you
leaned over the rail of your ship to wave to me as I stood
upon the roof of Baldanders's tower in the rain."
"Only Ossipago here has memory like yours," Famulimus
whispered. "But I shall not forget."
"So it's my turn to say welcome now, and mine to be sad
because we're parting. I've known you three for more than
ten years, and I know that the hideous faces beneath those
masks are only masks themselvesFamulimus took hers
off the first time we met, though I did not understand then
that it was because she had done so often before. I know
that Ossipago is a machine, although he is not so agile as
Sidero, who I am beginning to believe must be a machine
too."
"That name means iron," Ossipago said, speaking for
the first time. "Though I do not know him."
"And yours means bone-grower. You took care of Barbatus
and Famulimus when they were small, saw to it that
they were fed and so on, and you've remained with them
ever since. That's what Famulimus told me once."
Barbatus said, "We are come," and opened the door for me.
In childhood, one imagines that any door unopened may
open upon a wonder, a place different from all the places
one knows. That is because in childhood it has so often
proved to be so; the child, knowing nothing of any place
except his own, is astonished and delighted by novel sights
that an adult would readily have anticipated. When I was
only a boy, the doorway of a certain mausoleum had been a
portal of wonder to me; and when I had crossed its
threshold, I was not disappointed. On this ship I was a
child again, knowing no more of the world around me than
a child does.
The chamber into which Barbatus ushered me was as
marvelous to Severian the manto the Autarch Severian,
who had Thecla's life, and the old Autarch's, and a
hundred more to draw uponas the mausoleum had been
to the child. I am tempted to write that it appeared to be
underwater, but it did not. Rather we seemed immersed in
some fluid that was not water, but was to some other world
what water was to Urth; or perhaps that we were underwater
indeed, but water so cold it would have been frozen in
any lake of the Commonwealth.
All this was merely am effect of the light, I believeof
the freezing wind that wandered, nearly stagnating,
through the chamber, and of the colors, tintings of green
shaded with blue and black: viridian, berylline, and aquamarine,
with tarnished gold and yellowed ivory here and
there shining sullenly.
The furnishings were not of furniture as we understand
it. Mottled slabs of seeming stone that yielded to my touch
leaned crookedly against two walls and were scattered
across the floor. Tattered streamers hung suspended from
the ceiling and, because they were so light and the attraction
of our ship hardly felt, seemed in need of no suspension. So
far as I could judge, the air was as dry here as in the corridor;
yet the ghost of an icy spray beat against my face.
"Is this strange place your stateroom?" I asked Barbatus.
He nodded as he removed his masks, revealing a face
that was at once handsome, inhuman, and familiar. "We
have seen the chambers your kind makes. They are as
disturbing to us as this must be to you, and since there are
three of us"
"Two," Ossipago said. "It does not matter to me."
"I'm not offended, I'm delighted! It's the greatest of
privileges for me to see how you live when you live as you
wish."
Famulimus's falsely human face was gone, revealing
some huge-eyed horror with needle teeth; she pulled that
away as well, and I saw (for one last time, as I then
believed) the beauty of a goddess not born of woman.
"How fast we learn, Barbatus, that these poor folk we'll
meet, who hardly know what we know best, know courtesy
as guests."