Here I am, back from Supanova Brisbane after meeting a whole tribe of most excellent readers and fellow Sundergirdians. How uplifting it was to speak to you all of whom I met - someone signed my book "you were more normal than I thought you would be," which I am choosing to receive as a compliment (maybe too normal?).
But alas, such happy times always end and here I am, returned in time for more Economous.
I now have a week to catch my breath before Supanova Adelaide - of which I am now a late inclusion \o/
Economous
musgrove
© D.M.Cornish
PLEASE DO NOT PUBLISH OR REPRODUCE WITHOUT MY PERMISSION
Chapter 7 PART 2
Opportunity Unlooked For
So, in the
unhealthy steadily summer-cooking gloom Economous slowly formulated a resolve
to give up on the Moldwood, on Asthetica and fabulism and seek more certain
employment in some duller – surer –
line of trade.
Perhaps in another city? he considered with little
enthusiasm. Doggenbrass, maybe…?
Brandenbrass’ most immediate southern neighbour languishing in the shadow of
the great city’s gravity likely possessed less opportunity … but at least it is not HERE. Here where all paths were thwarted
and aspirations brought to nil.
The very
morning – was is Luneday or Meerday? – he settled with uneasy certainty upon this
sure, unhappy yet necessary answer, ascending footsteps shook with increasing
violence upon the staircases up to the garret door.
The duffers have come for me! was his
first wrenching terror, but he quickly caught hold of panic as he realised only
one pair of feet was making the awkward climb. Bidbrindle knew the stairs too
well to be so noisy, and Asthetica – even if
she might condescend to pay a visit – would have been quieter yet, besides
which, it was the wrong time of day for either of them.
It must be Scrivener-Sergeant […NAME…] ,
he realised with a dark twist of guilt in his gizzards.
Being paid a
visit from a senior metrician of the local athy was and oft threatened consequence
if a concometrist was know to be about but failed to bring their numrelogue its
for requisite quarterly numrelogical examination. Scarcely avoiding a
suspension last time, Economous had missed the year’s first review at the ………
Room in Pike Athenaeum – Brandenbrass own athy – for obvious reason. He glanced
uncomfortably to the little stack of rent binding and frayed paper that was the
vainly reconstituted remnant of his numrelogue lying where he had thrown it
down more than three weeks gone. Drawing what he saw as he saw it had always
seemed to him the best way to measure
anything, and he had contended this successfully every time he took his
number-book for inspection. Such fine argument was not going to help him here.
So ready to claim the title as a defense in a fight, surely he could scarcely call himself a
concometrist any more.
The inevitable
knock fairly rattled the thick planks of his garret door, far firmer even than
Bidbrindle in all his unwonted enthusiasm.
Easing the
portal open a cautious crack, Economous fairly unravelled with relief: it was a
stranger – a tall man clad in a frockcoat of strangely iridescent black and
wearing a lofty black stovepipe hat and not at all like the cruel-faced
officials in the archduke’s service. This the mysterious caller now swept off
his crown and flourished as he bowed: a stiff bend at the middle like his hips
were a hinge and an oddly jerking twist of the head. Under his silken coat, the
caller seemed disconcertingly gaunt – Economous might have gone so far as to
say malnourished. Yet he stood tall
and steady enough as he straightened once more in the gloom of the landing
before Economous garret door.
“Good morning…
sir,” the visitor declared proudly. “My name is… Hoopstick. I am an agent for a
great lady… of the northern realms of… the Undermeer.” Thin and breathy and
strangely inflected.
Economous
nodded a bow of his own in baffled reply.
“I hope that…”
this Mister Hoopstick continued, “you do not… mind this intrusion upon… your
civil privacy? Your grand knavery –”
he spoke this word with a sour twist of mouth “– directed me here upon… my
enquiries.” Here he paused and waited.
Roused by the
silence from his fascination for the fellow’s stilted manners, Economous
realised he was expected to respond. “Oh – not at all, sir. I have time.”
The awkward
caller gave a thin and cryptic smile. “I… come to you, good sir, to… bring my
mighty mistress’… compliments. Your fame as a… worthy pen, an … accurate
delineator of physiognomy has… gone ahead of… you, even to my mistress’… ears. And
now she seeks to offer to… you her patronage if…if you would but… come to her
mighty halls in… Meerschaum’s borders and there… daub her imago.”
A great lady?
A mighty
mistress!
Economous
innards gave a happy leap. At last,
he delighted inwardly, my labours are
sprouting fruit! Word of his work at the gala of the Branden Rose must have
made it all that way north.
Situated at on
the northern lands beyond the dread Ichormeer, Meerschaum and the united realms
of the Undermeer were at least a weeks journey or more to the north east. Yet two
years of thwarted intent had made Economous ravenous for any chance no matter how
slim or difficult and he readily accepted the offer.
“To which great
lady in which great hall should I present myself?”
“My mistress
lives… in necessary seclusion and does… not wish her name be… bandied abroad
too… readily. Yet as a… token of her good… faith and my honour as… her
messenger, allow me… to present this pledge… of our veracity.” With a staccato click of elbow and knuckles, the agent
held out a purse made of the same shimmering dark material as his coat.
Taking the
purse and peering within, the would-be fabulist beheld a golden glint – ten
gold coins of alien denomination, larger by size and weight that the sou of the
Soutlands or oscadril of the Haacobin empire. Economous almost dropped the
payment in his shock; even the Branden Rose did not pay as richly!
“There is ten…
times that awaiting you – and with it… other
rewards – upon… your successful
depiction of my mistress.”
Dumbfounded,
Economous goggled at Mister Hoopstick who in his turn smiled a sunken-eyed –
almost cadaverous – smile.
“I shall depart now,” the agent concluded,
bowing another stilted, hinge-like beck, “and go… ahead of you… to report the
good… news of your agreement. When you achieve… the haven of the stout… city of
Knapphausen, wait… on me at the [………………] on [……………] Street, and I shall see you…
escorted to my mistress’… residence.”
With that
Mister Hoopstick turned and retreated down the shuddering stairs, leaving a
flabberghasted Economous blinking stupidly in his garret doorway, the purse of
wealth still open in his outstretched hand.
I have a patron…? he marvelled in shock,
arm still reaching out.
“Uh, goodbye,
sir,” Economous eventually collected himself enough to call down to departing
messenger already halfway descended to the vestibule.
I have a patron! But darker clouds
immediately threatened this glowinig prospect. Now, now, don’t tally your skins ‘til they’re skun, let’s await to see
if all bears out well.
Economous shook
his head as if to clear it.
He was not
interested in sensible-seeming, joy-dampening, parent-voiced cautions: he had a
patron! All roads had closed to bring him to this one shining opportunity. Was
he in any other state of soul, he would likely have turned such a proposition
down, but today at this moment he was ready, ready, ready!
Arriving with a
supper for two of ox tongue poached in brine, a novelty he called sun-parched
tomatoes and a thick stop of bread, Bidbrindle received the happy news with his
usual gust. “A patron, by the Lots! A patron!” he exclaimed. “Ah, a patroness to be exact. When do you plan
to go and leave us all bereft?”
“Tomorrow if
possible, the day after if not.”
The violin-maker
baulked. “I reckoned it would be prompt, but that seems a mite too prompt to me, m’boy. She-down-stairs”
– by which he meant Madamine Grouse – “will not like it one knot. I have seen
it before: she always demands a month’s written notice for such things.”
“Well, I will
tell her and see,” Economous returned with the sudden confidence that comes
from receiving excellent news. “On either hand, I am going.”
To this
Bidbrindle gave one of his knowing shrugs and the two settled to silence of
hungry eating.
“A body would
reckon I ought be glad to lose so eligible a rival for the dear Asthetica’s
attentions,” the older man said at last, becoming strangely glum as he looked
up from his poached ox tongue clumsy. “But I am not, my good sir, not at all.
Who now will I share these distant and impossible longings?”
“You are
welcome to her, Mister Bid,” Economous said a little too carlessley. “I am done
with this city and all in it – Oh! I do not mean you, sir!” he interupted
himself at sight of Bidbrindle’s open dismay. “You have been a light here when
much else is dark. I shall write you when I have achieved my glorious new
position and invite you over to visit. Mayhap my new employer might have viols
that new mending.” Silent and brooding for so long, Economous’ words fairly ran
out from him.
Bidbrindle
laughed brightly. “Yes yes! Here is hoping she does, good fellow! I could do
with a summerscale excursion.”
* * * * *
My guess as to who the mysterious would-be patroness is - she's not human and Mr. Cornish revealed her on this blog a several years ago.
ReplyDeleteThat moment when you know exactly who the patron is...to any other would-be-commenters, please please please do not ruin the surprise for those who are not in the know
ReplyDeleteWhoever the patroness may be, I am intriuged to see the route to the Ichormeer appearing again. Checking the maps, it looks like Economous is indeed up for a long ride through Sulk over level ground until he hits the hillier regions north-west of the Gluepot itself. His route may not be taking him through, but I'd wager that close to a very threwdish place, all manner of trouble might find our hero. Also worth noting, this will be our first tour of the H-c outside the Haacobin Empire. Here's to hoping that Economous' trip to assist a wealthy, mysterious, reclusive patron in a remote foreign land will turn our as interesting, if not more so, than Jonathan Harker's.
ReplyDeleteNot a lot of other thoughts specific to this segment, aside from an excitement to get on the road again.
-Ben
Has the Rabbit Lord been communicating with others of his kind? This sounds intriguing ...
ReplyDeleteExcellent!
ReplyDelete...And here I thought I was being clever in my suspicions of this patroness, but I was passed in the race thrice! This new direction is certainly unexpected and greatly exciting, especially in contrast with his recent actions (excluding his fight on the street).
ReplyDeleteMullimbar
ReplyDeletethis is my first time writing in your blog and i must say this story has pulled me in like all the others thank you for letting my imagination fly :)
i don't know if its bad or not and it feels obvious were the patron comes from unless there is a twist i can't see yet, but the journey to his patron feels full of adventure.
also is the idea of reintroducing the artist Pluto Six and have them meet any good.
Indeed, word of his skills as a portraitist have spread. But perhaps not through the channels that Economous thinks... Something tells me the "Great Lady" will be rather intimidatingly and completely unexpected. I also wonder as to the nature of the messenger...
ReplyDeleteVeery creative post
ReplyDelete