Liz Williams - The Age of Ice.pdf

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The Age Of Ice by Liz Williams
Liz Williams is a science fiction and fantasy writer living in Glastonbury, England, where she is
director of a witchcraft supply shop. She is currently published by Bantam Spectra (US) and
Tor Macmillan (UK), appears regularly in Realms of Fantasy, Asimov's, and other magazines,
and is the secretary of the Milford SF Writers' Workshop. Some of the author's most recent
books are Banner of Souls, Nine Layers of Sky, The Poison Master, and her short story
collection The Banquet of the Lords of Night, which was published by Night Shade Books. Her
forthcoming novels include The Snake Agent, The Demon and the City, and Precious Dragon.
Her latest science fiction story is set so far in the future that it seems to show the truth of
Arthur C. Clarke's famous maxim that "Any sufficiently advanced technology is
indistinguishable from magic."
* * * *
I was in a tea-house in Caud, head bent over the little antiscribe, when the flayed warrior first appeared.
Everyone stared at her for a moment, tea glasses suspended halfway to gaping mouths, eyes wide, and
then it was as though time began again. The shocked glances slid away, conversation resumed about
normal subjects: the depth of last night's snow, the day's horoscopes, the prospect of war. I stared at the
data unscrolling across the screen of the ‘scribe and tried to pretend that nothing was happening.
That wasn't easy. I was alone in Caud, knowing no one, trying to be unobtrusive. The tea-house was
close to one of the main gates of the city and was thus filled with travelers, mostly from the Martian north,
but some from the more southerly parts of the Crater Plain. I saw no one who looked as though they
might be from Winterstrike. I had taken pains to disguise myself: bleaching my hair to the paleness of
Caud, lightening my skin a shade or so with pigmentation pills. I had also been careful to come
anonymously to the city, traveling in a rented vehicle across the Crater Plain at night, hiring a room in a
slum tenement and staying away from any haunt-locks and blacklight devices that might scan my soul
engrams and reveal me for what I was: Hestia Memar, a woman of Winterstrike, an enemy.
But now the warrior was here, sitting down in the empty seat opposite mine.
She moved stiffly beneath the confines of her rust-red armor: I could see the interplay of muscles,
stripped of the covering of skin. The flesh looked old and dry, as though the warrior had spent a long
time out in the cold. The armor that she wore was antique, covered with symbols that I did not recognize.
I thought that she must be from the very long ago: the Rune Memory Wars, perhaps, or the Age of
Children, thousands of years before our own Age of Ice. Her eyes were the wan green of winter ice,
staring at me from the ruin of her face. Her mouth moved, but no sound emerged. I knew better than to
speak to her. I turned away. People were shooting covert glances at me, no doubt wondering why I had
been singled out. The attention drawn to me by this red, raw ghost was the last thing I wanted.
I rose, abruptly, and went through the door without looking back. At the end of the street, I risked a
glance over my shoulder, fearing that the thing had followed me, but the only folk to be seen were a few
hooded figures hurrying home before curfew. Hastening around the corner, I jumped onto a crowded
rider that was heading in the direction of my slum. I resolved not to return to the tea-house: it was too
great a risk.
Thus far, I had been successful in staying out of sight. My days were spent in the ruin of the great library
of Caud, hunting through what was left of the archives. I was not the only looter, sidling through the
fire-blackened racks under the shattered shell of the roof, but we left one another alone and the
Matriarchy of Caud had bigger problems to deal with. Their scissor-women did not come to the ruins.
Even so, I was as careful as possible, heading out in the dead hours of the afternoon and returning well
before twilight and the fall of curfew.
 
My thoughts dwelt on the warrior as the rider trundled along. I did not know who she was, what she
might represent, nor why she had chosen to manifest herself to me. I tried to tell myself that it was an
unfortunate coincidence, nothing more. Caud was full of ghosts these days.
Halfway along Gauze Street the rider broke down, spilling passengers out in a discontented mass. We
had to wait for the next available service and the schedule was disrupted. I was near the back of the
crowd and though I pushed and shoved, I could not get on the next vehicle and had to wait for the one
after that. I stood shivering in the snow for almost an hour, looking up at the shuttered faces of the
weedwood mansions that lined Gauze Street. Many of them were derelict, or filled with squatters. I saw
the gleam of a lamp within one of them: it looked deceptively welcoming.
By the time I reached the tenement, varying my route through the filthy alleys in case of pursuit, it was
close to the curfew gong. I hurried up the grimy stairs and triple-bolted the steel door behind me. I half
expected the flayed warrior to be waiting for me--sitting on the pallet bed, perhaps--but there was no
one there. The power was off again, so I lit the lamp and sat down at the antiscribe, hoping that the
battery had enough juice left to sustain a call to Winterstrike.
Gennera's voice crackled into the air.
"Anything?"
"No, not yet. I'm still looking." I did not want to tell her about the warrior.
"You have to find it," Gennera said. "The situation's degenerating, we're on the brink. The Caud
Matriarchy is out of control."
"You're telling me. The city's a mess. Public transport's breaking down, there are scissor-women
everywhere. They seek distraction, to blame all their problems on us rather than on their own
incompetence. The news-views whip up the population, night after night."
"And that's why we must have a deterrent."
"If it's to be found, it will be found in the library. What's left of it."
"They've delivered an ultimatum. You saw?"
"I saw. I have three days." There was a growing pressure in my head and I massaged my temples as I
spoke into the ‘scribe. I felt a tingling on the back of my neck, as though something was watching me.
"I have to go. The battery's running down." It could have been true.
"Call me when you can. And be careful." The ‘scribe sizzled into closure.
I put a pan of dried noodles over the lamp to warm up, then drew out the results of the day's research:
the documents that were too dirty or damaged to be scanned into the ‘scribe. There was little of use.
Schematics for ships that had ceased to fly a hundred years before, maps of mines that had long since
caved in, old philosophical rants that could have been either empirical or theoretical, impossible to say
which. I could find nothing resembling the fragile rumor that had sent me here: the story of a weapon.
"If we had such a weapon, it would be enough," Gennera said. "We'd never need to use it. It would be
sufficient that we had it, to keep our enemies in check."
Ordinarily, this would have created disagreement throughout the Matriarchy, purely for the sake of it:
Gennera was thought to be too popular in Winterstrike, and was therefore resented. But the situation had
become desperate. A conclave was held in secret and they contacted me within the hour.
 
"They remember what you did in Tharsis," Gennera said. "You were trained out on the Plains, and these
days you are the only soul-speaker in Winterstrike. You have a reputation for accomplishing the
impossible."
"Tharsis was not impossible, by definition. Only hard. And that was thirteen years ago, Gennera. I'm not
as young as I once was, soul-speaker or not."
"That should benefit you all the more," Gennera said.
"If I meet a man-remnant on the Plain, maybe not. My fighting skills aren't what they were."
Even over the ‘scribe, I could tell that she was smiling. "You'd probably end up selling it something,
Hestia."
But I had not come to Caud to sell, and I was running out of time.
In the morning, I returned to the library. I had to dodge down a series of alleyways to avoid a squadron
of scissor-women, all bearing heavy weaponry. These morning patrols were becoming increasingly
frequent and there were few people on the streets. I hid in the shadows, waiting until they had passed by.
Occasionally, there was the whirring roar of insect craft overhead: Caud was preparing for war. My
words to Gennera rose up and choked me.
I reached the ruin of the library much later than I had hoped. The remains of the blasted roof arched up
over the twisted remains of the foremost stacks. The ground was littered with books, still in their round
casings. It was like walking along the shores of the Small Sea, when the sand-clams crawl out onto the
beaches to mate. I could not help wondering whether the information I sought was even now crunching
beneath my boot heel, but these books were surely too recent. If there had been anything among them,
the matriarchy of Caud would be making use of it.
No one knew precisely who had attacked the library. The matriarchy blamed Winterstrike, which was
absurd. My government had far too great a respect for information. Paranoid talk among the tenements
suggested that it had been men-remnants from the mountains, an equally ridiculous claim. Awts and
hyenae fought with bone clubs and rocks, not missiles. The most probable explanation was that
insurgents had been responsible: Caud had been cracking down on political dissent over the last few
years, and this was the likely result. I suspected that the library had not been the primary target. If you
studied a map, the matriarchy buildings were on the same trajectory and I was of the opinion that the
missile had simply fallen short. But I volunteered this view to no one. I spoke to no one, after all.
Even though this was not my city, however, I could not stem a sense of loss whenever I laid eyes on the
library. Caud, like Winterstrike, Tharsis, and the other cities of the Plain, went back thousands of years,
and the library was said to contain data scrolls from very early days. And all that information had been
obliterated in a single night. It was a loss for us all, not just for Caud.
I made my way as carefully as I could through the wreckage into the archives. No one else was there and
it struck me that this might be a bad sign, a result of the increased presence of the scissor-women on the
streets. I began to sift through fire-hazed data scrolls, running the scanning antenna of the ‘scribe up
each one. In the early days, they had written bottom-to-top and left-to-right, but somewhere around the
Age of Children this had changed. I was not sure how much difference, if any, this would make to the
antiscribe's pattern-recognition capabilities: hopefully, little enough. I tried to keep an ear out for any
interference, but gradually I became absorbed in what I was doing and the world around me receded.
The sound penetrated my consciousness like a beetle in the wall: an insect clicking. Instantly, my
awareness snapped back. I was crouched behind one of the stacks, a filmy fragment of documentation in
 
my hand, and there were two scissor-women only a few feet away.
It was impossible to tell if they had seen me, or if they were communicating. Among themselves, the
scissor-women do not use speech, but converse by means of the patterns of holographic wounds that
play across their flesh and armor, a language that is impossible for any not of their ranks to comprehend.
I could see the images flickering up and down their legs through the gaps in the stack--raw scratches and
gaping mouths, mimicking injuries too severe not to be fatal, fading into scars and then blankness in
endless permutation. There was a cold wind across my skin and involuntarily I shivered, causing the
scattered documents to rustle. The play of wounds became more agitated. Alarmed, I looked up, to see
the ghost of the flayed warrior beckoning at the end of the stack. I hesitated for a moment, weighing
ghastliness, then rose silently and crept toward it, setting the ‘scribe to closure as I did so in case of
scanning devices.
The ghost led me along a further row, into the shadows. The scissor-women presumably conversed and
finally left, heading into the eastern wing of the library. I turned to the ghost to thank it, but it had
disappeared.
I debated whether to leave, but the situation was too urgent. Keeping a watch out for the scissor-women,
I collected an assortment of documents, switching on the antiscribe at infrequent intervals to avoid
detection. I did not see the ghost again. Eventually, the sky above the ruined shell grew darker and I had
to leave. I stowed the handfuls of documentation away in my coat. They rustled like dried leaves. Then I
returned to the tenement, to examine them more closely.
The knock on the door came in the early hours of the morning. I sat up in bed, heart pounding. No one
good ever knocks at that time of night. The window led nowhere, and in any case was bolted shut behind
a grate. I switched on the antiscribe and broadcast the emergency code, just as there was a flash of
ire-palm from the door lock and the door fell forward, blasted off its hinges. The room filled with acrid
smoke. I held little hope of fighting my way out, but I swept one of the scissor-women off her feet and
tackled the next. But the razor-edged scissors were at my throat within a second and I knew she would
not hesitate to kill me. Wounds flickered across her face in a hideous display of silent communication.
"I'll come quietly," I said. I raised my hands.
They said nothing, but picked up the antiscribe and stashed it into a hold-all, then made a thorough
search of the room. The woman who held the scissors at my throat looked into my face all the while,
unblinking. At last, she gestured. "Come." Her voice was harsh and guttural. I wondered how often she
actually spoke. They bound my wrists and led me, stumbling, down the stairs.
As we left the tenement and stepped out into the icy night, I saw the flayed warrior standing in the
shadows. The scissor-woman who held the chain at my wrists shoved me forward.
"What are you looking at?"
"Nothing."
She grunted and pushed me on, but as they took me toward the vehicle I stole a glance back and saw
that the warrior was gone. It occurred to me that it might have led the scissor-women to me, but, then, in
the library, it had helped me, or had seemed to. I did not understand why it should do either.
They took me to the Mote, the matriarchy's own prison, rather than the city catacombs. That suggested
they might have identified me, if not as Hestia Memar, then as a citizen of Winterstrike. That they
suspected me of something major was evident by the location, and the immediacy and nature of the
questioning. Even Caud had abandoned the art of direct torture, but they had other means of persuasion:
 
haunt noise, and drugs. They tried the haunt-tech on me first.
"You will be placed in this room," the doctor on duty explained to me. She sounded quite matter of fact.
"The blacklight matrix covers the walls. There is no way out. When you are ready to come out, which will
be soon, squeeze this alarm." She handed me a small black cube and the scissor-women pushed me
through the door.
The Matriarchies keep a tight hold on the more esoteric uses of haunt-tech, but everyone will be familiar
with the everyday manifestations: the locks and soul-scans, the weir-wards that guard so many public
buildings and private mansions. This chamber was like a magnified version of those wards, conjuring
spirits from the psycho-geographical strata of the city's consciousness, bringing them out of the walls and
up through the floor. I saw dreadful things: a woman with thorns that pierced every inch of her flesh, a
procession of bloated drowned children, vulpen and awts from the high hills with glistening eyes and
splinter teeth. But the matriarchy of Caud was accustomed to breaking peasants. I had grown up in a
weir-warded house, filled with things that swam through the air of my chamber at night, and I was used to
the nauseous burn that accompanied their presence, the sick shiver of the skin. This was worse, but it
was only a question of degree. Fighting the urge to vomit, I knelt in a corner, in a meditational control
posture, placed the alarm cube in front of me, and looked only at it.
After an hour, my keepers evidently grew tired of waiting. The blacklight matrix sizzled off with a fierce
electric odor, like the air after a thunderstorm. From the corner of my eye, I saw things wink out of sight.
I was taken from the chamber and placed in a cell. Next, they tried the drugs.
From their point of view, this may have been more successful. I cannot say, since I remember little of
what I may or may not have said. Haunt-tech is supposed to terrify the credulous into speaking the truth.
The mind-drugs of the matriarchies are crude and bludgeon one into confession, but those confessions
are all too frequently unreliable, built on fantasies conjured from the depths of the psyche. When the drug
that they had given me began to ebb, I found my captors staring at me, their expressions unreadable.
Two were clearly matriarchy personnel, wearing the jade-and-black of Caud. The scissor-women
hovered by the door.
"Put her under," one of the matriarchs said. She sounded disgusted. I started to protest, more for the
form of it than anything else, and they touched a sleep-pen to my throat. The room fell away around me.
When I came round again, everything was quiet and the lights had been dimmed. I rose, stiffly. My wrists
were still bound and the chains had chafed the skin into a raw burn. I peered through the little window set
into the door of the cell. One of the scissor-women sat outside. Her armor, and the few inches of
exposed skin, were silent, but her eyes were open. She was awake, but not speaking. I could not see if
there was anyone else in the room. I knocked on the window. I needed her undivided attention for a few
minutes and the only way I could think of to do that was by making a full confession.
"I'll talk," I said, when she came across. "But only to you."
I could see indecision in her face. It was not really a question of how intelligent the scissor-women were;
they operated on agendas that were partially programmed, and partly opaque to the rest of us. Her voice
came though the grill.
"I am activating the antiscribe," she said. "Speak."
"My name is Aletheria Tole. I am from Tharsis. I assumed another identity, which was implanted. I came
here looking for my sister, who married a woman from Caud many years ago...."
I continued to speak, taking care to modulate the rhythm of my voice so that it became semi-hypnotic.
 
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