As they walked, Rayburton explained that Mezro was laid out in four quarters. They were currently in the heart of the residential area; a young student of the city’s healers had volunteered to take Artus in and care for his wounds. The man had been so gentle and stealthy in his ministrations that the explorer had never met him. Artus had awakened after sleeping for a day and a half with bandages on his cuts and the lumps on his head packed in cool compresses. A bowl of fresh fruit and an earthenware pitcher of water rested on the table next to the bed.
Artus and Rayburton followed the alley to the left, then the right. The buildings all looked very similar—white walls and tiled roofs, shutterless windows netted against the jungle’s biting insects. Left, then right, then right once more, but still the sounds of the main thoroughfare grew no more distinct. Neither did they become more distant.
“This is like the maze in King Azoun’s gardens,” Artus noted.
“The whole residential area is a labyrinth,” Rayburton said. “You’d never have found your way out alone.”
Artus mopped the sweat from his brow. “The mazes of Ubtao, eh?”
For the first time, Rayburton seemed impressed with the young explorer. “Precisely!” He scanned the ground around the nearest home’s back door. “Here. Look at this.”
Someone had drawn a maze in a patch of sand scattered around the stoop. The pattern started simply enough, but near one corner it grew quite complicated.
“Let’s see … the child who drew this must be, oh—” Rayburton rubbed his chin “—eight or nine, I’d say.”
“How can you tell that?”
The admiration fled Rayburton’s face. “The complexity, of course. Every child learns a simple maze that represents his life. It grows more and more complicated as the years go on. When a Tabaxi dies, he must draw the completed maze for Ubtao. That’s how they gain admittance to the afterworld.” He stepped around the swatch of sand. “If they fail the test, they come back as ghosts or ghouls or the other dark things to hunt the jungle at night. Needless to say, the Tabaxi practice all the time—in the evenings, usually, after they finish working and the children are let out of school.”
“All the children go to school?” Artus asked, a bit taken aback.
Rayburton cocked an eyebrow. “Why not? All children need to learn, don’t they?”
“Well, yes,” Artus sputtered. “It’s just that, in Cormyr, the churches charge a lot to share their knowledge, so only the rich can take advantage of it. Everyone else either becomes a craftsman’s apprentice, marries well, joins the army, or ends up a cutpurse.”
“So your parents were wealthy?” Rayburton said casually, though there was disdain hidden just below the surface of the question. “That would account for the crest on your tunic, I suppose.”
Artus hopped sideways to avoid a large, complicated maze sprawling across the alley. “The crest belongs to the man who gave me the tunic,” he said curtly. “I’m no nobleman. Far from it.”
“No need to explain yourself to me,” Rayburton noted. “I was rich. My father was a lord, as was his father and his father. Gods, we Rayburtons were around when the first elves were driven out of the Cormyrian woods to make way for human settlers.” He looked over at Artus and pursed his lips. “Right before I left Suzail for Chult, I did some detailed genealogy work for my sister. Needless to say … how to put this … my ancestors turned out to be pretty loathsome all the way around, once you got to know them. I’ve never had much respect for titled families since.”
The tension Artus had begun to feel eased at that statement. “Then you would have loved my family. My father was a well-intentioned highwayman. He was quite a good one, too, stealing from the rich and all that. He put me through school that way.
“One day he robbed a caravan belonging to the church of Oghma. He was so impressed with the loremasters, how polite and knowledgeable they seemed, that he used the money he stole from them to enroll me in their school.” The explorer frowned. “Somehow, I’ve always suspected my teachers knew that.”
“Your guilt was probably written all over your face,” Rayburton observed sagely.
At last they reached the main thoroughfare. At first it appeared to Artus to be like the Promenade in Suzail. The wide street was quickly filling with people, dark-skinned like Ibn and Inyanga back at Port Castigliar. Some pushed carts laden with tools or clothes or food. Others carried their burdens or struggled with children too small for school. The sound of wagon wheels clattering over the cobbles mixed with the chatter of men and women.
When Artus looked more carefully, though, he saw that there was an order to the movement that never showed itself on the streets of Suzail. The people filed past in happy groups, all heading for side streets into the Residential Quarter. They carried with them the tools of their trades—hammers and chisels, books and scrolls, merchants’ ledgers and beaded counting devices. They were going home after a long day’s work.
There was none of the chaos of Suzail’s bustling streets—no vendors hawking wares or teamsters driving their loaded carts through alleys busy with pedestrians. He saw no soldiers strutting through the crowd, no beggars huddled in empty doorways, no ale-soaked dandies careening down the way, singing bawdy tunes. Plowmen and scholars walked together, sharing a joke or a story of the day’s labor. The only confusion and bustle in the crowd was brought on by a group of young children running home, books and writing tablets tucked securely under their arms.
The men and women were dressed much the same, in sandals and long white robes Rayburton called tobes. A few men went stripped to the waist, the dirt on their hands proclaiming them farmers. A few women with infants went bare-chested, too, though only Artus seemed to notice them in the crowd. Most of the Tabaxi turned to get a look at the green-clad stranger with Lord Rayburton as they passed.
The bara nodded respectfully to the people who greeted him. At last he turned to Artus. “Each day, just before sundown, this street fills with Mezroans on their way home from the other quarters. It’s been this way for four thousand years.”
Keeping close to the walls, Artus and Rayburton made their way against the crowd. It was then Artus saw beyond the throng, to the vast fields that lay across the way from the white-walled houses. Neat rows of trees and bushes, vegetables and flowers, ran for miles, broken now and then by a field laying fallow. Small huts stood out against the crops in a few places. Scarecrows kept their stiff-armed vigil against birds that had stopped being frightened of them long ago. At the far end of the fields, the tall trees and tangled growth of the jungle reared up, dark and foreboding.
“This place is huge,” Artus said. “How have you kept it hidden all these years? Hundreds of expeditions have come to Chult looking for Mezro, but….”
Rayburton pointed to the line of high palms that marked the beginning of the jungle. “A wall surrounds the city. It’s a vast circle—the city, I mean—and the sorcerers here constructed the wall a little over five hundred years ago, to stop the Batiri from raiding.”
“And I went under it,” Artus said, “without ever knowing it was there.”
“Oh, you felt the effects of the wall,” Rayburton corrected, “though you didn’t know it at the time.” In response to Artus’s puzzled look, he added, “Lugg and Byrt told me you passed into an area that glowed with golden light right before you stumbled into the mined part of the library. Then it became hard to think. Wall, that light was a side effect of the wall. It’s invisible above ground, but there must be some element in the tunnel walls causing an alchemical reaction, making it visible. Do you see?”