Daylight saving has just started and I have lost a hour - a WHOLE hour - from the day. Whatever will I do? Where did it go? To the place where time is killed?
Anyway, Economous presses on once more; but what is a soul to do when the aftermath of an extraordinary event is just more of the same old boring blah?
Economous
musgrove
© D.M.Cornish
PLEASE DO NOT PUBLISH OR REPRODUCE WITHOUT MY PERMISSION
Chapter 5 PART 2
Wretched Obscurity
For a long time
all Economous could do was blink in awed dismay at the blue sigil rabbits tossing
and flicking so prettily on the silken banners while the goodly citizens they
represented bustled about beneath them in complete ignorance to their true
import. What if they did? What if it suddenly became wide and accepted
revelation that a monster-lord dwelt in the very heart of their safety? Would
the entire city suddenly rise up in revolt, invade the Moldwood, drive the
Lapinduce from his warren and burn the feral park to its stumps? Would they
seek to keep such terrible information from the ken of their neighbours already
jealous and ever so keen to find just such a powerfully justifiable excuse to
band together and wipe their chief rival from the map?
Already
perplexed by his secret knowledge, his intelligence of the Lapinduce suddenly
felt a ponderous weight indeed. Seeking to escape this increasing heaviness,
Economous finally turned his attention to his note and shaking his head to
clear it, began:
Most dear Asthetica…
He hesitated
for a fretful beat… Is that too emphatic
for such a note? Too intimate? His stylus hovered in uncertain hand a
moment longer than scrawled on: the greeting would remain, it was how he felt
and it needed to be said whatever the outcome.
How can I make amends for my carelessness!
I have a profound thing to tell you and can only hope it suffices for my
unaccountable absence and my cruel want of basic civility.
Please allow me to meet with you to make my
excuses.
May I extend my invitation for you to join
me for Lestwichnight tomorrow, that I might spend the ending of one year and the
heralding of the new in your…
… While he
searched mind and wind for the right word to sum his view of Asthetica’s
character, Economous became aware of the twitching regard of beady rabbit eyes
glimpsed in the obscurity of a footway that ran between his bunkhouse and its
neighbour. Why didn’t you let me find
you! he complained inwardly as he glowered at the blighted animals, as if
the Lapinduce might fathom such thoughts through what were surely his furtive
agents.
In a windy
flapping of black wings, a pied daw dropped and landed without warning upon the
left balustrade of the tenement steps to peer at Economous with its
disconcertingly shrewd yellow eye. Here in the city these birds were despised
as cousins of the crow: the barer of ill-news and unhappy dreams. Yet out in
the parishlands about Lo such creatures were also held as signals of shifting
circumstance for both ill and good.
Economous
regarded the handsome bird closely and reflexively began to draw its heavy bill
and beady frown upon the top left corner of the letter leaf.
With a peculiar
almost word-like croak, the pied daw took wing again and rose up swiftly to disappear
over ridgecaps.
Perhaps the
time had come for the aimless drawer to shift his circumstance and be more
forthright with Miss Grouse about his own, far truer intent; to stride out boldly
upon this last path left to him…
… your
excellent and steady company.
Ever in respect and admiration,
[PICTURE HERE]
He marked this with
a cartoon of a pair of cooing doves, beak to beak, there heads enclosed with a
circle. About to knock upon the Grouse’ hallowed ground floor door, he thought
better of it and simply left the brief missive slotted between floor and jamb
as the one for him had been, to be found by the damasel on her return from the
day’s duties.
To stop himself
from being consumed by expectation for a reply the would-be fabulist returned
to his apartment for his hat, his coat and his usual bland calibrator and
stepped out. He did briefly consider bringing his prize with him instead, but
it would surely not do to wander about with an entire yard of black elder in
hand… and he was uncertain he wanted to feel its alien restlessness in his hand as he attempted to restore what passed for
his mundane routine.
Taking the hour
walk from the more salubrious northen-western corner of the Alcoves – where not
everyone was an unrepentant scoundrel yet rents were low enough for some one of
such inconstant means – he made his way along steadily improving streets to the
grand and hectic circuit known as the Spokes. Here it was his intent to employ the
afternoon within the green domed colonnades of the grand knavery of Letter and
Coursing House, seeking and applying for fabulist work with whichever
teratologist would have him.
From his very
first day fresh-arrived in Brandenbrass, the Coursing House had served as the
focus of Economous’ aspiration, a compass to which he always turned to remind
him of his path when low winds threatened to cast him adrift. The Mouldwood now
failing him, the knavery would have to do as a refuge.
Up the marble
steps and through heavy wooden doors, Economous strode into the cool Removing
his tricorn he took his place in the shortest of the three lines before the
clerking stalls and he basked for a breath in the soft blue glow of the
gretchen globes that hung in rows of carbuncles from the high domed ceiling.
Costly luminescent pearls each the size of a pumpkin, these gretchens were said
to be formed in the gizzards of the sea-dwelling kraulschwimmen and spat up to
be found by unnaturally brave meerlunkers or fortune-favoured beachcombers. In
this lofty space – this house of goals achieved – it was his hope to avoid the
heights of his anxiety through the shuffling of papers and arguing with the ubiquitously
disdainful and obstructive knaving clerks.
A loud clearing
of the throat brought Economous to abrupt awareness.
A teratologist
was standing on his right, clearly insisting upon pushing ahead of Economous in
the line.
It was an
unchallenged custom of any knavery that the monster-hunters themselves had
implicit seniority. And though no decent teratologist would ever be so rude as
to push in directly, it was a given that they should be allowed ahead of any lesser soul in any queue – especially
the longer sort. The best sort of monster-slayer did not stand in any manner of
line, of course, but had staff – a factotum or valet or hand-maiden – to do
such petty things for them.
Economous
stepped back reflexively with scarce a glance at the upstart knave.
For a dark,
gizzard-tumbling beat he thought it was the very teratologist he had last
served with such ill result these sixteen months gone, the one whose kill he
had foiled with his fascination for the small bogle they were certificated to
kill.
It was not.
The fellow – a
lightning-grasping fulgar with a great red diamond in the middle of his
forehead – fixed him with a withering smirk before taking his enforced place at
the line’s head.
Let him scowl and glower¸ Economous
counselled himself. I fathom he could not stand a moment in the court of a
lord of monsters. Well aware of where he was – a veritable bastion committed
entirely to monster-slaughter – the would-be fabulist stifled this route of
thinking lest it somehow show on his dial and sink him in to deeper strife.
With the fulgar
came a servant hefting a clearly weighty bag that was most surely holding the
severed trophy of a successful hunt: the necessary proof for gaining a glorious
pot of prize money.
Had the creature deserved such a bitter
ending?
The dangerous
question flashed across Economous’ thoughts and was gone again before he could
arrest it. Keeping his face from showing guilt and knowing full well how absurd
he was being, he looked to left and right to see if anyone in the queues at
either hand had noticed him having such a treacherous idea. No one was paying
him even the slightest regard.
“One might reckon that with your soiled
reputation, Master Musgrove,” came the sardonic voice of the knaving clerk in
the now vacated lattice before him, “you would cease wasting our time with your
continued applications.”
Too shocked at
himself, Economous had not realised the teratologist had concluded their
business and moved on. Seeking to shove all sedonary notions as far from his
inner turnings as he could, he stepped to the stall and got on with the usual
trade of finding employment. Yet, as he sparred words with the quill-licking
clerks and carefully filled and filed several Certificates of Intention and
Offer of Compact a notion occurred that stopped his labour short. Stylus
hovering over the seventh Intent he had filled that day, he blinked sightlessly
at the latticed booth screen before him.
How can I join the hunt for monsters now that
I have met one of their lords?
With a defeated
sigh, he put his elbows heavily on the scribing shelf of the booth and covered
his face with his hands.
Surely of all souls I have to own that not all monsters ought be slain outright?
What of his
ambitions now?
For the last
two years he had been telling himself that teratologists only pursued the worst
monsters, those who by their violence had brought such deadly attention upon
themselves. In his deepest thoughts he had always known that this was a thin
rationale; that in the thrill of the chase and with it wealth and glory, no
teratologist made such nice distinctions. The rationale was thin, yes, but it
had let him live within a society were the common opinion – the only opinion – was that all monsters were worthy only of
destruction. Ever since his shaggy childhood saviour had been mercilessly and
mindlessly hunted by the stoutest souls of Lo and a teratologist from the city
sent for to find and properly “do the wicked creature in!” he had been schooled
in this all too well. More than this, such thin thinking had let him somewhat
untroubled of soul to seek an alliance with monster-hunters as their fabulist.
But now he had
not simply glimpsed but spent a day in the very company of a monster – a king
of monsters no less. His thin rationale was blasted; with a shock he could see
that driven by selfish ambition he too had lapsed into his own kind of mindlessness,
operating upon the thoughtless presumption of doing right.
A great groan
of frustration roiled in his milt.
One small sour
consolation was that he had participated in only three such hunts, and for the
first time felt some good that he had helped that childlike bogle of the last
of these to escape destruction, however unintentional it might have been. He must
have unwittingly given actual voice to this inward cry, for looking up at last
he found the factoti, the teratology agents, the lesser teratologists filling
their own papers and other desperate souls in the booths on on either hand
looked up to frown or sneer or snicker at him.
Bereft and
aimless, would-be fabuilist no longer, Economous fled the Knaving House.
Geez, poor guy. Having to deal with all of this after such a wonderful event. I have no doubt it'll make later events that much more savory, though!
ReplyDeleteThis chap needs to take a leaf out of Pluto Six's folio. Seems like that's one of the few remaining options, unless he wants to turn back to measuring and such. Economous seems now to have been driven to wit's end, at which point something rash or nothing at all seem to be the options.
ReplyDeleteLooking forward to seeing where he goes.
-Ben
I loved the previous chapter. I found this one a little more cumbersome and slow going, but it feels like it's leading up to something, so that's all well and good.
ReplyDeleteCan't wait to see what happens next.
Although Economous, himself, is in the midst of emotional turmoil, what I'm seeing from the comfortable seat of a reader is a fellow who's beginning to grow some spine in a variety of ways. I've enjoyed all of the installments so far, but this is the first which I've finished with the thought of "I like this guy; I'd like to take him out to lunch."
ReplyDeleteWhat a roller coaster of emotions Economous has travelled! Precipitous ups and downs with Asthetica, the Lapinduce, and now his conscience won't allow him to pursue the career he dreams of. What does a fellow do when he's slammed with the realization that the thing he wants to do more than anything in life -- the thing that only days ago seemed so morally certain and right-- collides with the very essenc of who he wants to be? Ambition vs. character...I like it! (Someone close to me went through something very similar with a career in law enforcement, and I'm so proud of him for having the courage to follow his conscience despite the difficulties it's since caused him.) After being saved by a monster in childhood, I suppose the moral ambiguity was always roiling under the surface for Economous, whether he acknowledged it or not.
ReplyDeleteThe churlish knaving clerks remind me more than ever of my own exasperated attempts to sort out licensing issues at the state Department of Motor Vehicles Office, so I could relate to poor Economous there: "Oh, you accidentally filled out this form in blue ink instead of the required black? Well, well. What a pity. To the back of the 3 hour line with you!"