I’m standing on my porch, smoking, when the rider appears on the hilltop.
I hear the drumming of the hoofbeats first, competing with steady patter of the autumn rain, but by the time I raise my eyes from my garden, the horseman’s backlit up on the ridge. An ugly and irregular shape suspended against the gray sky. He’s there for an instant then plunges over the rise, coming on with the kind of speed that breaks necks and cripples spines.
From personal experience, no one with good news moves that quickly. And there’s really no hope that he’s on his way to anywhere else either. My small cabin is the only building around for miles. I lean up against the porch’s battered railing and burn through the rest of my twitch in one hard, pleasureless drag, because call me prophetic, but this doesn’t look good.
The rider’s much closer before I realize my mistake. Without distance to confuse things I see that what I’d originally taken to be man and horse, is in fact boy and pony. They shrink in size and stature with each stride, dwindling as they come, and by the time the kid has reined up hard in the road outside my cabin, a part of me is all in favor for heading back inside, locking my door, and not wasting my time. I’m not quite sure why I stay on the porch but I do, flicking the tiny burning nub of twitch out into the rain, and cracking my neck loudly to the right. Waiting.
The pony’s barely stopped moving before the rider swings himself out of the worn saddle and squelches down into the muck of the road. He lands in a deep puddle, splattering both himself and the pony’s shaggy legs with mud, but he lurches into my garden without faltering. “Arbiter!” he calls, and now he’s got his right fist clenched and raised over his head, like he’s saluting or waving, fingers curled around something small and hidden in his palm.
He’s young. Barely fifteen if I have to guess, and wrapped in stinking gray wool that’s soaked and running with homespun dye. The only thing on him that’s got to be waterproof are probably his boots, but he’s tried to keep the worse of the rain from his face by winding a scarf around his nose and mouth. It isn’t helping.
“Arbiter!” he cries again, waving that upraised arm around idiotically as if I need help seeing him. His clueless flailings are upsetting the plants in my garden, mainly the sacral in their double rows between house and track. It’s probably because I haven’t fed them in a while but also because, as the boy approaches, he’s splashing mud onto their splayed white leaves. I see a tremor go through the plants in response, a whisper as they react, a soft murmur, rising to join the noise of the rain.
Settle, I tell them gently. They don’t, and as I watch, the boy stumbles and almost loses his footing on suddenly uneven garden ground, As he catches himself, looking wildly over his shoulder for what’s tripped him I repeat myself again- Settle- this time with more teeth in my tone.
I’ve raised the sacral up from seeds. Coaxed them out of the vertebrae of their deceased host, fed them through the winters, kept them safe when they were still small. That means sometimes they listen to me and, for whatever reason, they listen to me now, this second time that I tell them to stop. The plants quiet. The garden soil, which has started to stir between them, subsides and stills. And by the time the kid’s edged onto the first of the steps everything has indeed settled.
“Arbiter?” he says again, for the third time, but now it’s a question rather than my title. He tugs the soaked scarf down from around his head, revealing a face pockmarked by the deep scars of an old harvest fever. “There’s been a murder in Barrows,” he blurts after I say nothing and do nothing but continue to eye him. The more I look at him, the more he reminds me of a rabbit. A pinch-faced, half-drowned rabbit.
“Captain Fel’s asking for you to come sort things out in the village,” the words gout from him like arterial blood, unstoppable once started. “Says to give you this so you know he’s not asking idly. So you know it’s one of Pandion’s asking and so you know it’s about the Peace.”
He holds his right hand out to me and uncurls his fingers from over his palm. I catch a flash of silver in the rain. Not a coin, but a pin. A brooch. Wide-winged, spread-clawed. Recently polished to shining by some sad, sentimental, little fuck.
The silver joins the ice in my head and this was obviously a shitty roll of twitch because the burn is slow creeping and fails to thaw either from my thoughts. I shake my head a little, as if I have water in my ears that I can just tip out at the right angle, but of course it doesn’t work that way. I blink. Shift my crossed wrists on the railing and look again at the boy, really look. Dig my gaze into the old fever scars that pit his mouth and chin as if I can rip the information from him by working him open along the seams.
“He sends you here citing the Peace,” I hear myself say, “But you cry murder like this is Carnassial and some whore’s been found in the gutter.”
The kid frowns in confusion. It starts and spreads across his wet forehead, creasing his features and pulling his brows down.. He opens his mouth and says something, but the lines in his skin remind me of the cracks I made in the ice, fracturing, propagating, and for a long moment that’s all I can hear- the harsh, violent crack of ice, breaking beneath my fingers.
I come back to the last half of his sentence.
“-pra’s been killed!” he’s half-yelling.
“What?” I ask, more out of reflex than a genuine desire to know, and regret it immediately when it sets him off again.
“It’s a Capra that’s been murdered, sir. Cut up all over, throat slit, head all but hacked off. Someone in the village took a knife to her last night and left her in the fields!”
He stares at me, panting and upset, eyes still wide in his wet face like my lack of reaction is just as distressing as the news he’s brought.
“Mm,” I say.
And we look at each for a long moment. He stands there, getting wetter and wetter and more and more desperate in the rain. I can see the exact moment he starts to doubt himself-is this the right house, the right place, did I go the right way, is this even the right person?- but the less I have to hear him wail away, the happier I am so I speak before he works himself up for some clarification.
“Fel’s sure he wants me to come?”
The kid’s ensuing relief is almost palpable. “Don’t know what he wants, sir, beyond your opinion. He told me to fetch you so you can have a look at the…” ‘Body’s’ obviously too human a word for him to feel comfortable using to describe the dead Capra and I watch as he casts around for another. “Corpse,” he finishes to my raised eyebrow. “Maybe figure out who killed her and why. That falls under the Peace, doesn’t it?”
“Mmm,” I say again.
It’s been half a year since someone’s last solicited my help under the Peace and even then, it hadn’t been like this, not wrapped around the idea of justice for the dead. It’s not like I need any more proof that Fel’s a nostalgic old bastard after the pin, but I get it anyway and it’s almost funny. Was pretty sure people like Fel didn’t exist anymore.
My eyes have wandered past the uneasy messenger and on to the treetops behind him. I re-focus.. “Barrows.”
“Yes sir, Barrows. Northwest on the Chain for about seven miles, left at the old signpost and another mile down the track.” He curls his fingers back around Fel’s glittering brooch and fumbles around in his coat, wrapping the metal in a bit of wet cloth and then pocketing it close to his chest. He raises his head back my way, once it’s safely stowed. “Should I tell Fel you’re coming?”
I don’t answer immediately. I’m distracted by something at the edge of my vision, by a ripple, a flick-flash of black, here one moment then gone the next, so fast I have to check that I did actually see it, that it’s not up there in my head with the ice and the cracks. But no, it’s not.
Interesting.
I don’t even realize I’ve spoken aloud until the kid asks carefully, “What’s interesting?”
I uncross my wrists. Straighten up on the porch. And the Barrows boy moves backwards a few steps, like he needs to create distance between us even though the distance hasn’t changed. For a split second, something very un-rabbit like goes racing across his rabbit-like face, a heartbeat of calculation, like he’s measuring space, like he’s assessing how quickly we both can move. And that’s interesting too. Rabbit’s don’t assess. They just run.
I could say nothing. I don’t have to go. I don’t know this Fel, don’t give a single solitary fuck about Pandion’s sigil in silver, don’t really give a fuck about the murdered Capra either, if I’m being honest. Don’t like how this kid’s looking at me, at the way that flash of shadow caught my eye just now. This morning feels weighted somehow- heavy, like the clouds overhead- but maybe that’s just the shit roll of twitch talking because the burn was awful but the residual ash seems thick and it lingers behind my eyes.
And this rabbit’s still waiting for an answer, still there, wet and shivering in my garden blinking at me with big prey eyes. This boy’s gone ahead and broached the Peace with me, on behalf of another sure, but still the word fell from his hesitant lips and he’s hanging around waiting to see if he’s done it right, if the word is the goad that gets me moving, like that’s all it will take and look, how easy. Look. How simple.
I inhale, nice and deep and the sacral plants whisper my own word back to me. Settle. Settlesettlesettle .
Crack my neck once to the left.
“Sure,” I tell him, casually. “Sure. If that’s what he wants, run along and tell him I’m on my way.”