‘To fetch the salt stored there from the sartlar.’
Their eyes met. Both had grim memories of the place. He thought of asking Krow why he still chose to serve the Master, but decided against it. That might provoke a confession Carnelian was in no position to handle well.
He took his leave, then walked back through the Darkcloud towards the Marula-guarded bridge. Krow’s mention of the sartlar had plunged him back into his render nightmare.
A smell like burning hair grew stronger as Carnelian approached the hearth. Poppy was standing with her back to him. When he had come close enough, he saw she was looking down into the graves Fern had dug. Women so red they seemed freshly peeled nestled among the snake roots of the mother tree. Fern was gently scooping earth over Koney as if he was washing her. Carnelian felt he was intruding on private intimacy. A thin current of smoke was curling up from a curve of horn charring in some embers: hornblack for the corpses of the men. He returned to watching Fern. He had to prepare him for the coming of the vassal tribes. ‘The Master’s levies are coming here on their way north.’
‘North?’ Poppy said.
Her expression of bafflement confused him, until he realized with shock he had not told them of the invasion. It was so deeply branded in his mind, he had assumed everyone knew. He explained to Poppy the meaning of the smoke columns they had seen as they rode towards the Koppie from the Upper Reach.
Poppy gaped. ‘Dragons, coming here?’
Carnelian wanted to confess to her this was the reason he had spared Osidian’s life, but his eyes were drawn to Fern, who was stroking earth over Koney’s face. She sank from sight like the pygmy in the render. Carnelian’s confusion became distress.
‘Why?’ Poppy said.
‘Aurum,’ said Carnelian, still trying to resolve his feelings.
He felt stupid gazing at Poppy’s incomprehension. He could not remember the name the Plainsmen gave him. He shaped the Master’s cypher with his hand. ‘Hookfork.’
Blood drained from Poppy’s face. ‘Hookfork?’
It had a cruel sound when she said it. She was seeing something in her mind. ‘I grew up fearing him.’ Her sight returned. She saw Carnelian. ‘Long ago it was he who came with fire to make us slaves. A ravener in a man’s shape.’
Grimly, Carnelian considered that. ‘As are all the Standing Dead, but still, he’s just a man like me.’
Poppy looked incredulous.
‘Really. I knew him. He’s an old man.’
‘A kindly one, no doubt,’ said Fern, whom grief seemed to have made old too. ‘Is this all you came to say?’
Carnelian hesitated.
Fern frowned.
‘The Master means to display the Tribe as a lesson to the others.’
With a trembling hand, Fern returned to scooping earth, cold fury in his eyes.
When the charred horn had cooled enough, Fern began crumbling it into a bowl, then ground it with a mortar. As Carnelian watched him, he listened to the rumble of aquar moving along the Homing. It seemed that the procession of riders would never end.
Earlier, leaving Fern burying his women, Carnelian had climbed to the Crag summit and watched Osidian’s vassals arriving from the south and east. Marula at the Outditch bridges had dammed their flood until they had been forced to spill into the ferngardens. At Osidian’s command, the Marula had retired with him to the Poisoned Field and the Plainsmen had flowed into the Grove. Seeing how numerous was Osidian’s host, Carnelian had begun to believe it possible Aurum could be defeated. He had also reached another, grimmer conclusion: if all had joined the Ochre in revolt, Osidian and his Marula would have been overwhelmed.
Carnelian had returned to Akaisha’s mother tree fearing Fern’s reaction to this further desecration, all those strangers staring up into the hearths of his tribe, gawping at his people hanging like meat, but Fern had just continued labouring on the rituals, apparently oblivious.
He was now adding fat to the bowl to make a black paste. Carnelian watched him carry the bowl to where the males of their hearth were laid out naked on blankets. Carefully, Fern began to daub his brother Ravan black; the colour of the Skyfather’s rain-filled sky. This scene made Carnelian recall another, seemingly so long ago it might have been merely the memory of a dream, when Fern’s father and uncle had been laid out similarly. From the moment Fern had set eyes upon Carnelian, his kin had begun to die. None now were left.
Carnelian gazed down the slope and caught glimpses of the riders and aquar rumbling by. Turning back, he edged closer to Fern. The desire to help him was an ache in his chest, but he dare not break his trance, not until Osidian and his host were gone.
Fern did not pause when he was done; he leaned his shoulder into his brother’s corpse, working it onto his back. He rose, unsteady under the bloated burden, then staggered off to the rootstair and began climbing it towards the Crag.
‘He goes to expose him,’ Poppy whispered and Carnelian gave a nod. Itching to help, his hands squeezed each other. Hard as it had been to watch Fern work, it was worse being left there with no distraction but the swing of corpses hanging from the other mother trees. Carnelian crouched over the bowl of hornblack. Its acrid smell was a clean relief from the miasma of decay that clung to the whole hillside.
‘I’ll be back…’ Poppy said, then was off after Fern.
Carnelian gazed at the hornblack, trying to work out how Fern might react if he were to return to find him blackening the dead. He looked towards the mother tree and thought how much he now loathed her shade with its aura of death. A patter of feet made him turn to see Poppy running towards him. The look on her face made him run to meet her. She grabbed hold of him, tears smearing the dirt on her face. ‘He can’t do it…’
‘Can’t do what?’
But she was shaking her head, too distressed to make sense. They rushed up to the clearing under the Ancestor House. Carnelian saw Ravan’s corpse draped over the lower steps. Seeing Fern prostrate, his shoulders shuddering, Carnelian ran up to him, reached out, but could not bring himself to touch him, to comfort him. ‘I’ll take his legs, you take his arms.’
Fern fumbled under Ravan’s head, lifting it so that Carnelian could not help looking upon the bloated face, twisted in its death grimace. Black tears had formed in the corners of the sunken eyes. They struggled up the steps. So close, the stench was overpowering. Sick with horror and grief, he longed to reach out to Fern, but he did not know how.
DRAGONS
The terror from a weapon diminishes in proportion with its use.
They tended the dead one hearth at a time. Akaisha’s was first, then those that lay in the eastern, upwind part of the Grove, so that at least they might sleep free of the waft of putrefaction. Days merging one into another, they worked their way round the hearths that lined the Blooding and towards the Southing.
At each hearth, Fern cut down the women first, laying them out for Poppy to ochre as best she could. Carnelian dug graves among the roots. The men were next. They made hornblack overnight. While Poppy applied this, Carnelian and Fern would carry the corpse she had already blackened up to the Crag. Dead, the men were heavier than they had been living. They seemed huge waterskins that they had to wrestle with as they released foul gas or dribbled slime down their arms and chests and legs. Though lighter burdens, the boys were heavier on the heart. When the funerary trestles were piled high, they laid the corpses on naked rock. The place became submerged beneath the frenzied wings of scavengers. At first the dead were picked clean, but with so much carrion, only the choicest morsels were consumed. The summit became a brown mesh of bones and tendons, frayed-lipped smiles, skin turned to curling leather by the sun.