登陆注册
10791900000002

第2章 PRELUDE—HISTORY FOR THE HOUSEFLY

"But names are important!" the nursemaid protested.

"Yes," said Quillam Mye. "So is accuracy."

"What's half an hour, though? No one will know she wasn't born until after sunset. Just think, born on the day of Goodman Boniface, a child of the Sun. You could call her Aurora, or Solina, or Beamabeth. Lots of lovely names for a daughter of the Sun."

"That is true, but irrelevant. After dusk, that calendar day is sacred to Goodman Palpitattle, He Who Keeps Flies out of Jams and Butter Churns." Quillam Mye looked up from his desk and met the nursemaid's gaze. "My child is a bluebottle," he said firmly.

The nursemaid's name was Celery Dunnock. She was born on a day sacred to Cramflick, She Who Keeps the Vegetables of the Garden Crisp. Celery had every reason to feel strongly on the matter of names. Her eyes were pale, soft and moist, like skinned grapes, but at the moment they were stubborn, resolute grapes.

Quillam Mye had a most meticulous brain. His thoughts were laid out like the strands of a feather, and a single frond out of place he felt like a tear in his mind. His eyes were dark and vague, like smoked glass.

The twin grapes looked into the smoked glass and saw a mind full of nothing they could understand.

"Call it Mosca and have done with it," Mye said. Mosca was rather an old-fashioned name for a fly-born, but better than Buzzletrice or Caddis. He returned his attention to the task of writing his treatise. It was a history of the times in which he, and now his infant daughter, lived. It was entitled "The Fractured Realm: A Full and Clear Account of Our Kingdom of Rags and Tatters."

The door closed behind Celery, and Mye was dimly aware that the level of annoyance in the room had diminished. He was alone. But no, he was not alone.

From the wall a pair of eyes watched him. At the moment they were blue, but one of them already showed a peppery speckle which told Mye that one day they would be as black as his own.

The nursemaid had bound the baby in swaddling clothes as tight as an acorn in its cup, so that it could not learn to be wrigglesome. When the baby was nothing but a linen cocoon with a surprised little head peeking out, she had strapped it to a board to give it a nice straight back. The board was hung from a hook on the wall to keep it out of the way.

For the last month, for all the attention Mye had paid to it, the suspended baby might have been a picture hung upon the wall, albeit a picture whose eyes followed one around the room rather more convincingly than one might like. Now, however, it had a Name, and Names were important.

She had a name.

Mye was suddenly sorry that the girl would not have green eyes, like her dead mother. If he had thought about this for another moment, he might have regretted spending so much time among his books, writing of the fates of nations, while those green eyes were still open. However, he very sensibly caught himself in time and decided to think about something else.

But what would he do, now that his sight was weakening? He had always thought that in years to come dear Jessamine would help him with his papers.

Those wide, pepper-speckled eyes, watching from the wall ... what a pity the child was a girl, and not a boy to be schooled!

"Well, you will have to do. If you had died along with your mother, I would have taught the cat to read." Mye felt a brief qualm at the idea of turning his daughter into a freak by teaching her letters, but it could not be helped.

The baby watched as he stooped over his manuscript once more and picked up the quill. The study was so quiet and lonely, snug and sealed like a ship's cabin against the rain-blasted world. Once, while he still lived in the city of Mandelion, Mye had longed for such quiet, an escape from the distractions of horse clatter and hawker cry. His exile to the remote village of Chough had left him weary of stillness and the dismal, eternal trickle of water outside his window.

Mye laid down his quill again. He had no idea how to speak to a baby, he had no stories for children, and he was embarrassed by the fact that, just for once, he wanted—or rather needed—to talk.

"Well, I suppose if you are to be of any use to me, then I had better start putting sense into your head before foolishness can blot the page." Mye searched his pipe bowl for inspiration, and then thoughtfully fingered the dry weave of his manuscript. In it he had tried to make sense of the last thirty years of the Realm's history. It was hardly a bedtime story for a child.

But perhaps, told another way ...

"Perhaps ... we had better start with a story.

"Once, in a day that some still remember, there was a king who spent a lot of time devising beautiful gardens and thinking clever thoughts about the stars. He meant very well, and ruled very badly, and in the end they cut off his head, and melted down his crown to make coins.

"The Parliament ruled the country after that, and all the people who still thought there should be a king went into hiding, or retreated to the hills, or fled to other countries. The Parliament's leader ruled very like a king, but no one called him a 'king,' because names are important."

Mosca, the newly named Housefly, offered no comment.

"The dead king had a son, whom loyal servants rescued and carried abroad. The boy prince traveled afar and became a man prince. He spoke with other kings, some of whom promised to help him win back his throne. He learned the etiquette of court, and found out which princesses were worthy to be his queen. And then, while he was visiting a far-distant king in a land of burning sands, his camel unexpectedly bit off his nose. The prince took a fever and died the next day, through surprise as much as anything else.

"Those who thought there should be a king or queen now argued among themselves. Some thought the old king's daughter should rule, some his sister, some his cousin's son.

"Twenty years passed in this way, and the Parliament fell out with one another as well. They were too busy squabbling to notice their power being stolen away by a clever new enemy."

Mye hesitated. Like everyone else who had lived through that time, he carried his share of terrible memories, and once again he felt them stir, like the breath of a tiger against the back of his neck.

"A Bad Time came upon the Realm. For ten years ..." Mye halted, looking up into his infant daughter's face. There was still a great deal of blue in her eyes. A fancy struck him that if he spoke aloud of the tortures, the mass gibbets, the screams from the pyres, he would see inkiness flood his daughter's eyes, to leave them as black as his own.

"Perhaps I ... will wait until you are older before I talk to you about the Years of the Birdcatchers.

"But the Birdcatchers were overthrown and the Bad Time did pass. Afterward, the monarchists and the Parliamentarians resumed their struggle for power. Each group of Royalists gathered an army and prepared to snatch the throne for their monarch of choice. Parliament was frightened and prepared their own armies for war.

"And then one day, to their surprise, the leaders of the Parliament found themselves drinking tea with a group of quietly insistent men in very clean but well-used overalls who explained to them that they were not going to do anything of the sort. The Parliament were surprised, for these men were the heads of the guilds, the leaders of the watchmakers and locksmiths and stationers, and other skilled working men." Mentioning the Stationers, Mye felt a tiny sting of bitterness, but he continued, "'If you go to war,' said the guild heads, 'you will suddenly find that there are no boots or coats for your troops. You will find that there are no flints for your pistols and no shot for your muskets.'

"'No matter,' said the leaders of the Parliament. 'Our troops will be so inspired by their cause that they will fight in their shirts and their socks, and will use swords and stones if they cannot have guns.' 'Perhaps,' said the guild heads. 'But in the meantime even you will have no tea or marmalade for your breakfast tables, and no tailors to darn your robes of office when they tear.' And so the leaders of the Parliament went pale and asked for time to think about it.

"Meanwhile, on their own lands, the Royalist supporters prepared to march on the Capital. But each and every one found themselves, one day, talking to a group of quietly insistent men in very clean but well-used overalls who explained to them that they would do nothing of the sort. 'You will promise loyalty to the Parliament,' said the guild heads, 'or your cityfolk will have no flour for their bread or slate for their roofs.'

"'Our cause is so just,' said the Royalist leaders, 'that our people will hold out against a siege even if they are hungry and the snow piles up in their beds.' 'Perhaps,' said the guild heads. 'But in the meantime no one will set your wives' hair into ringlets, and your horses will be ungroomed.' And so the Royalist leaders trembled, and said they would give an answer the next day.

"The next day, the Parliament said that a monarch would be no bad thing, and set up a Committee in the Capital to look into it. One by one, the Royalist leaders came to join the Parliament, and waited to find out who was destined to take up the crown and return the nation to its remembered glory.

"That," said Quillam Mye to his daughter, "was seven years ago. Today the Realm still awaits the Committee's Decision. Shall I tell you what has happened since then? I will show you our nation. It is ..." He reached for his supper plate. "It is this cookie."

The Housefly stared at the cookie obediently, perhaps trying to imagine that the ground beneath her was crunchy and full of almonds.

"Our 'kingdom' is like this." Mye brought his fist down sharply on the cookie, fracturing it. "See? It still looks like a whole cookie, but it is cracked beyond repair. Every fragment flies a flag to a different king or queen. You see this?" He picked out a butter-browned fragment. "This chunk is the Capital and its lands. And this piece"—a piece crested with a large nut—"is Galdspar. This is Mandelion, and these bits are the counties of Amblevetch. But there is no cookie anymore. The cookie where we once lived is dying ..."

Familiar pains were throbbing behind his eyes, and he paused to let them pass. Little pale points came and went before his sight, as if a giant cat were kneading the tapestry of the world and letting its claw tips show through the cloth. He sighed, swept away the crumbs and dipped his quill to continue with his writing, then looked up at the baby one last time, as if she had said something to interrupt him.

"Well, if you are to help me with my work, you had better get used to stories without endings. True stories seldom have endings."

Quillam Mye's great treatise on "The Fractured Realm" was never given an ending. Eight years later the historian Quillam Mye was dead, and his books had been burned. Twelve years after the night she was named, his daughter could be found hiding inside a dovecote, with a goose tucked under one arm.

同类推荐
  • Secrets of the Terra-Cotta Soldier
  • Mezzanine

    Mezzanine

    In his startling, witty, and inexhaustibly inventive first novelfirst published in 1986 and now reissued as a Grove Press paperbackthe author of Vox and The Fermata uses a one-story escalator ride as the occasion for a dazzling reappraisal of everyday objects and rituals. From the humble milk carton to the act of tying one's shoes, The Mezzanine at once defamiliarizes the familiar world and endows it with loopy and euphoric poetry. Nicholson Baker's accounts of the ordinary become extraordinary through his sharp storytelling and his unconventional, conversational style. At first glance, The Mezzanine appears to be a book about nothing. In reality, it is a brilliant celebration of things, simultaneously demonstrating the value of reflection and the importance of everyday human human experiences.
  • Wives and Daughters(V) 妻子与女儿/锦绣佳人(英文版)

    Wives and Daughters(V) 妻子与女儿/锦绣佳人(英文版)

    Wives and Daughters is an emotional novel by Elizabeth Gaskell. When Mrs Gaskell died suddenly in 1866, it was not quite complete, and the last section was written by Frederick Greenwood. The heroine of the novel is Molly, an attractive and rather unworldly young woman. Her father sends her to stay with the Hamleys of Hamley Hall, a gentry family. Molly forms a close attachment with Mrs. Hamley, who embraces her almost as a daughter. Molly also befriends the younger son, Roger. Molly is aware that she would not be considered a suitable match for the sons of Squire Hamley because of her status. However, she has always preferred Roger's good sense and honourable character and soon falls in love with him. Unfortunately, Roger falls in love with other girl. Molly is heartbroken, and struggles with her sorrow and her knowledge that the girl lacks affection for Roger.
  • Wives and Daughters(III) 妻子与女儿/锦绣佳人(英文版)

    Wives and Daughters(III) 妻子与女儿/锦绣佳人(英文版)

    Wives and Daughters is an emotional novel by Elizabeth Gaskell. When Mrs Gaskell died suddenly in 1865, it was not quite complete, and the last section was written by Frederick Greenwood. The heroine of the novel is Molly, an attractive and rather unworldly young woman. Her father sends her to stay with the Hamleys of Hamley Hall, a gentry family. Molly forms a close attachment with Mrs. Hamley, who embraces her almost as a daughter. Molly also befriends the younger son, Roger. Molly is aware that she would not be considered a suitable match for the sons of Squire Hamley because of her status. However, she has always preferred Roger's good sense and honourable character and soon falls in love with him. Unfortunately, Roger falls in love with other girl. Molly is heartbroken, and struggles with her sorrow and her knowledge that the girl lacks affection for Roger.
  • Winterkill

    Winterkill

    Emmeline knows she's not supposed to explore the woods outside her settlement. The enemy that wiped out half her people lurks there, attacking at night and keeping them isolated in an unfamiliar land with merciless winters. Living with the shame of her grandmother's insubordination, Emmeline has learned to keep her head down and her quick tongue pgsk.com the settlement leader asks for her hand in marriage, it's an opportunity for Emmeline to wash the family slate clean—even if she has eyes for another. But before she's forced into an impossible decision, her dreams urge her into the woods, where she uncovers a path she can't help but follow. The trail leads to a secret that someone in the village will kill to protect. Her grandmother followed the same path and paid the price. If Emmeline isn't careful, she will be next.
热门推荐
  • 秀骨

    秀骨

    前生,苏小棉是个把前男友的婚礼当成葬礼的毒妇。重生之后,成为莫盈的她,面临三个棘手问题:没记忆;没银子;没靠山。一番周旋、万般努力只为了在新的一世里安逸稳定地生活下去,然而等她恢复了记忆、赚够了银子、找到了靠山,并且放下了阴魂不散的过去,却发现已逃不过两个人——一个,是看着铁腕无情实则外冷内热的穆三少;一个,是貌似秀雅温柔实则心深如海的白公子。
  • 霸道老公神棍妻

    霸道老公神棍妻

    当一个天师因为心灰意冷,选择同归于尽的灭杀却发现自己不但没有死,反倒是到了一个奇怪的地方,更为诡异的是自己竟然还变成了一个伪男人,心理的震撼和阴影面积简直不可估量......
  • 基金赢利精要

    基金赢利精要

    本书不同于一般的基金理财书籍,它从一个全新的角度,深入剖析了中国基金行业的发展现状和前景,带着你走进基金公司,揭示了基金公司是如何运行的?基金经理们是如何选股选时的?教你如何踏准节拍,选择多生金蛋的好“基”,真正实现投资收益最大化。同时书中还深入分析了基金投资中的一些误区,提出了规避风险的策略和技巧。总之,这是一本多方位指导基民的投资实用手册,既可以作为投资者理财的实用宝典,也可以作为基金公司教育投资者、指导与客户沟通的培训读本。
  • 小窗幽记(中华国学经典精粹)

    小窗幽记(中华国学经典精粹)

    《小窗幽记》共十二卷,是明代陈继儒所编撰的一本随文集锦。整本书看似是一种对所见所闻、所听所想的记录,而实则是对内心感悟的梳理,悟的是一种人生百态,悟的是一种世间真情,悟的也是一种人生真谛。《小窗幽记》并不是陈继儒个人所著述,而是他摘取各个文章中的经典言语,再加上自己的人生感悟所编纂的一本格言形式的随文集,成书之后不但收到当时文人的青睐,在之后的历代时光里都得到了较高的赞誉。清代陈文敬赞扬这本书说道:“端庄杂流漓,尔雅兼温文,有美斯臻,无奇不备。”而现今的文学研究者更是将这本书与王永彬的《围炉夜话》、洪应明的《菜根谭》并称中国人修身养性的三大经典。
  • 我变成了仙人掌

    我变成了仙人掌

    “你永远不知道和你网上聊天的是人还是仙人掌!”变成仙人掌的吴耀扬用根须敲打键盘,在某论坛上发帖子。众网友不屑的回复道:“如果你不是人,我去问候仙人掌!”某网友回复道:“我马上顺着网线去找你!”突然,吴耀扬面前的屏幕出现一个人头,两人四目相对……不对!一人一掌相对。
  • 区域经济发展理论与实践研究

    区域经济发展理论与实践研究

    人类社会最基本的活动是经济活动,经济活动又总是在一定的地理区域内进行的,区域经济的发展对人类社会的生存与发展是至关重要的。当今世界,面对区域一体化与经济全球化的大背景,区域经济发展面临着巨大的挑战与压力,区域间的竞争日益加剧。怎样使各区域集体发展、经济活跃、整体效益高、取得竞争优势,这是区域经济发展作为一门经济学理论要研究和解决的关键问题。
  • 清宵一梦待君温

    清宵一梦待君温

    前世,她为了心爱的人,舍去生命。不想,所谓的“爱人”早已与她同父异母的妹妹厮混在一起!她含恨而死。重生后,她一步步算计二人。正巧,洛家提出联姻,父亲疼爱妹妹,将她推出。婚后,她被宠上天;虐渣男贱女;娱乐圈混的风生水起...所有的一切都将尘埃落定时,却突然有人告诉她,一切,都是阴谋...
  • 次元交流群

    次元交流群

    高中复读生叶允偶然被拉入一个聊天室,与聊天室内的卫宫士郎,莱月昴等来自不同次元的伙伴们一同被称之为“神使系统”的群主考验着。他们经历互换身体,生死考验,随时穿梭不同位面,与各次元的人物打着交道,共同完成着群主发布的次元任务。并开启积分商城不断强化自身,改写原本属于自己的剧情!自此,叶允的校园生活已开始变得不平凡。
  • 腹黑总裁的火爆甜心

    腹黑总裁的火爆甜心

    30年前安格斯山下有一片宁静的村庄,住着具有灵性的蕲族。安稳的蕲族在混乱中四分五裂,族长祖母死亡,公主被女巫抱走,抚养长大,在她身上,藏着蕲族复兴的力量,同时也藏着安格斯宝藏的秘密。蕲族宝藏的消息广泛流传。当打开安格斯地下宫殿,杀戮才开始,而这一切似乎冥冥之中都有安排,神秘的力量牵扯着全部人。地下宫殿成为全部人的汇合点,却也是毁灭之地……
  • 早安,悠大人

    早安,悠大人

    从高高在上的玖公主沦落为容颜尽毁,人人鄙视的孤女,看着未婚夫另娶他人,受尽讥讽嘲笑,钟离玖发誓势报此仇此辱,然而脑海中永远是他立在玉兰树下抬眸那一瞬的风华。当仇恨已成本能,渐渐忽视掉的记忆也随之破土而出,只是他始终陪在她身旁,无论美丑或富贵,她恨过,怀疑过,无法释怀过,一切尘埃落定,或许才是他与她的开始。