PART I:
TURBANSK
Summer crowds of
apricots occlude the sky
Small perfumed suns that
fall onto the grass
Birds bicker in the branches
and the branches shake
And showers glaze the fallen
fruits, a dew of glass
And so they bruise and blacken
to a cloying stench
A feast for flies, although
this too will pass
All sweetness gleams but
briefly from the shade
Such webs as weave our selvings
do not last
And even our corruption is
a tiny thing
A sour breath that fades
into the past
from the Inwa of Lorica of Turbansk
1: THE WHITE CROW
A drop of sweat trickled
slowly down Hem's temple. He wiped it away and reached for another
mango.
It was so hot. Even
in the shady refuge of the mango tree the air pressed around him like a
damp blanket. There wasn't the faintest whisper of a breeze: the leaves
hung utterly still. As if to make up for the wind's inaction, the
cicadas were louder than Hem had ever heard them. He couldn't see any from
where he was, perched half-way up the tree on a broad branch which divided
to make a comfortable seat, but their shrilling was loud enough to hurt
his ears.
He leaned back against the
trunk and let the sweet flesh of the fruit dissolve on his tongue. These
mangos were certainly the high point of the day. Not, he thought
to himself sardonically, that it had been much of a day. He should have
been in the Turbansk School, chanting some idiotic Bard song or drowsing
through a boring lecture on the Balance. Instead, he had had a furious
argument with his Mentor about something he couldn't now remember and had
run away.
He had wandered about the
winding alleys behind the School, hot and bored and thirsty, until he spotted
a seductive glint of orange fruit behind a high wall. A vine offered
him a ladder, and he climbed warily into a walled garden, a lush oasis
of greenery planted with fruit trees and flowering oleanders and climbing
roses and jasmine. At the far end was a cloister which led
into a grand house, and Hem scanned it swiftly for any occupants before
making a dash for the fountain which fell back into a mosaic-floored pond
in the centre of the garden. He plunged his head under the water, soaking
himself in the delicious coolness, and drank his fill.
Then, shaking his head like
a dog, he surveyed the fruit trees. There was a fig, a pomegranate
and two orange trees as well as the mango, the biggest of all them. He
noted with regret that the oranges were still green, and then swung himself
easily into the mango tree and started plundering its fruit, cutting the
tough skin with a clasp knife and throwing the large pits onto the ground
below him, until his fingers were sticky with juice.
After he had eaten his fill
he stared idly through the leaves at the blue of the sky, which paled almost
to white at the zenith. Finally he wiped his hands carefully on his
trousers, dragged something out his pocket and smoothed it out on his leg.
It was a letter, written on parchment in a shaky script. Hem couldn't
decipher it, but Saliman, his guardian, had read it out to him that morning
and then, seeing the look on Hem's face, had given him the letter as a
keepsake.
To Hem and Saliman, greetings!
the
letter read. Cadvan and I arrived in Thorold safely, as you may
know, if the bird reached you. We are both much better than when we last
saw you. I was very seasick on my way here, Cadvan and I had to fight an
ondril, which was very big, but we got here safely. Nerili has given us
haven, and you will have heard the rest of the news from the emissary.
I hope you have arrived in Turbansk with no harm, and that Hem finds the
fruits are as big as the birds said they were. I think of you all the time
and miss you sorely. With all the love in my heart, Maerad.
Already they were being chased
by monsters: Hem knew that an ondril was a kind of giant snake that lived
in the ocean. Cadvan was possibly even braver than Saliman, and Maerad
(in Hem's eyes at least) was braver still: but they were only two, and
the Dark so many, and everywhere. And where was Thorold, after all?
Somewhere over the sea, Saliman had told him, and showed him a shape on
a map: but Hem had never even seen the sea and had only the vaguest idea
of distance. It meant nothing to him.
Hem stared at the letter
as if the sheer intensity of his gaze could unriddle its meanings, but
all it did was make the page swim and blur. The only word he could
make out was "Maerad". And what had Maerad not written down, what
other dangers was she facing? The letter was already days old: was
she still alive?
Very suddenly, as if it burned
him, Hem crumpled the letter up and shoved it back into his pocket.
Unbidden into his mind came
the memory of when he had first seen Maerad, when she had opened his tiny
refuge under the bed in the Pilanel caravan and he had looked up, terrified,
expecting a knife flashing down to slash him to ribbons, and instead found
himself staring into his own sister's astonished eyes. Only he hadn't
known she was his sister, then. That had come later… He remembered
Maerad as he had last seen her in Norloch, standing in the doorway of Nelac's
house as he and Saliman rode away, her face white with sorrow and exhaustion,
her black hair tossing in the wind. Hem bit his lip, almost hard enough
to draw blood. He was not a boy who wept easily, but his chest felt
hot with grief. He missed Maerad more than he could say, even to
himself.
Maerad was the one person
in the world he felt at home with. In the short period they had been
together his nightmares had stopped for the first time in his life.
Even before she knew he was her brother, she had taken him in her arms
and stroked his face when the bad dreams came. Even now it seemed
amazing; Hem would have hit anyone else who took such liberties with his
closed fist. He had trusted Maerad from the start: he sensed her gentleness,
and underneath that, her loneliness and sadness. But more than
anything else, Maerad accepted him just as he was, and didn't want him
to be anything else. Maerad, he thought painfully, loved him.
Now Maerad was so far away
that she might as well not exist at all. And here all anybody could talk
about was the war. It lay inside every conversation, like a fat evil
worm. It might kill Maerad, it might kill him. They might never
see each other again.
Hem puffed his cheeks and
blew out a big breath, as if trying to expel his morbid thoughts.
There was Saliman, of course. Saliman was everything Hem would have
liked to be himself: tall, handsome, strong, generous, brave, funny… Hem
had adored him, with a passion akin to hero-worship, from the first time
he had seen him. It had seemed like a miracle when Saliman had offered
to be his guardian and to bring him to Turbansk, the great city of the
south, to go to School there and learn how to be a Bard.
Since he had first gained
the Speech and had been able to speak to birds, Hem had dreamed of coming
to the south, where, the birds had told him, grew trees full of bright
fruits as big as his own head. And now, here he was.
He lived in a grand Bardhouse with Saliman, and had as much to eat as he
wanted, and dressed in fine clothes, rather than the rags he had been used
to. But although he now sat in a tree surrounded by the sweet fruit
he had once dreamed of as an impossible plenitude, happiness seemed as
far beyond him as ever.
For one thing, coming to
Turbansk had meant that he had to part with Maerad. The unfairness
of this struck deep, although even at his most surly Hem knew it wasn't
anyone's fault. And he had found that he didn't like the School much.
He wasn't used to having to sit still and concentrate, and he took the
criticisms of his mentors badly, however kindly they were given.
They also insisted on calling him Cai, which was the name he had been given
as a baby, before he had been kidnapped by Hulls and placed in the orphanage
where he had spent most of his childhood. He constantly forgot that
it was his name, so he kept getting into trouble for ignoring his teachers,
when really he hadn't realised they were speaking to him.
Hem brooded on the injustice
of the Bards for a while, unconsciously plucking and eating another mango.
It wasn't his fault that he didn't know anything. Nobody seemed to understand
how hard reading and writing was for him, and when he stumbled over a word
the scornful looks of the seven-year-olds with whom he did scripting classes
scorched his pride.
But the core of Hem's discontent
was that he was lonely. Saliman, the only person in Turbansk he trusted,
was often away, or occupied with Bard business. And these days Saliman
was often abstracted even when they did have time to speak together.
Hem was the only northern child in the School, and his pale olive face
stood out among the black-skinned Turbansk children, who thought him rough
and strange. He had already been in several fights, and now they
avoided him because he fought dirtily: he had no qualms about biting or
gouging eyes or pulling hair. He didn't speak the Suderain language,
which limited his communications to the Speech and (Hem considered with
chagrin, throwing the huge pip so it rattled through the leaves) it was
impossible to lie in the Speech, it twisted your words around.
It was proving to be a right nuisance. Though, luckily perhaps, it
also meant the other students did not understand his Annaren curses and
insults.
He thought of a class the
day before, when he had been so bored he felt dizzy. Forgetting to
stop himself, he had yawned uninhibitedly. The mentor Urbika, who was chanting
the First Song of Making in the Speech, paused mid-line and fixed Hem with
a piercing eye. It was a look comprised of irony, irritation and
compassion in equal parts, but Hem was oblivious to its subtleties.
He was too busy picking bad temperedly at his sandals.
"Minor Bard Cai, do the great
mysteries of the Making bore you, perchance?" she inquired. The other
children tittered, and turned to stare at Hem, who only slowly realised
that Urbika was speaking to him. He looked up, and realised the whole class
was staring at him, bubbling with suppressed mirth.
"Er, yes, - I mean, no, yes,
it does," he said, suddenly flustered, and burning with humiliation.
Urbika had given him a long look, silenced the class with another and said
nothing more about it; but Hem brooded over that trivial incident for the
rest of the day. Nobody laughed at him, nobody. One day he'd
make them pay for it...
A noise of which he had been
half-aware now forced itself into the forefront of Hem's reverie.
Some kind of ruckus was going on underneath his feet. He looked down
through the leaves and saw a brawl of feathers on the ground, six or seven
crows attacking something in their midst. Consumed by curiosity,
he dropped from the branch to the ground right next to the fight.
The crows were so intent on their business that they didn't even notice
him. He saw now that they were savagely pecking a white bird which
had obviously given up on any idea of escape and was now trying vainly
to hide its head under its wing. Blood spotted its feathers where
the crows had torn its skin.
Filled with a swift anger,
Hem lifted his hand and cried out in the Speech, Der ni, mulchar!
Begone, carrion!
A blue bolt of lightning
leapt from his fingers and hit the attacking crows, which screeched in
surprise and dismay and flapped off in a stench of scorched feathers.
Their victim lay on the grass surrounded by tufts of white feathers with
blood at their tips, its eyes closed, its breast heaving. Very gently
Hem picked it up, feeling its body trembling in his hands. He involuntarily
drew in his breath at the bird's lightness: underneath the feathers its
body was so small, a mere scrap of life.
Are you hurt, little one?
he asked, in the Speech.
At the sound of his voice
the bird opened its eyes, and then almost immediately shut them again.
Hem regretted he hadn't taken notice of the noise sooner, because it was
likely now the bird would die of shock. He cradled it against his
chest, cupping his hands around its head to create a darkness which at
least might make the creature feel less afraid. Though no doubt it
was past fear.
He was thinking that it was
probably time he left the garden when an angry cry came from the cloisters
behind him. He started, and looked around wildly for a means of escape.
A very large man in long green robes was running swiftly towards him, shouting
in Suderain. The only quick way out was to swarm up the mango tree
and drop down the other side of the wall, but Hem was hampered by the bird,
and he didn't want to jolt it by moving quickly. He assessed his
chances, cursing, and decided he had no choice but to stand his ground.
When the man reached him,
panting hard with both exertion and anger, he drew back his hand to cuff
Hem across his head. The boy flinched and steeled himself for the
blow: but the man stopped with his hand still high in the air and stared
at him in astonishment and what seemed to be rising anger. Then came
a flood of questions, of which Hem understood little, apart from the word
Djella,
which he knew meant Bard. Hem realised that the reason he hadn't
been summarily punished was that the man had recognised the distinctive
robes of a student at Turbansk School. He smiled as ingratiatingly
as he could, and said, every time the man paused for breath, "Saliman
Turbansk de."
The man gave Hem a sceptical
look, and then grabbed him painfully by his earlobe and pulled him into
the house. Hem concentrated on not falling over and hurting the bird
he had rescued. He was propelled swiftly through wide hallways and
shaded rooms smelling of sandalwood in which he caught glimpses of rich
colours, glints of gold and crimson and azure, and finally through a large
atrium. At the far end the man opened a huge bronze door and stepped
out into the blinding sunlight of the street. For a moment Hem thought
with relief that was the end of it, but the man still had an unrelenting
grip on his ear. He was marched humiliatingly through the streets
until they reached Saliman's house, which was thankfully not very far away.
There his captor tolled the brass bell and waited stolidly until the door
was answered.
The bewildered minor Bard
who answered the door was blasted with a flood of Suderain. She spread
her hands to stop the flow, looking sharply at Hem, and appeared to invite
the man in. The man shook his head, and she fled to find Saliman.
Hem and his captor stood outside in the heat in complete silence for some
time. Hem passed the wait staring at the front doorstep, his teeth set
against the pain in his ear. The bird in his hands was still alive;
he could feel its heart fluttering against his palm.
At last Saliman came to the
door. When he saw Hem his eyebrows shot up to his hairline.
"Hem!" he said. "What
have you been doing? Alimbar el Nad! Greetings!"
The man, his sense of grievance
exacerbated by the wait, poured out his complaint. Saliman answered
him in Suderain, and Hem stopped trying to follow the conversation.
At least Alimbar had let go of him. He stood patiently, rubbing his ear
with his free hand. It seemed Saliman was trying to invite Alimbar
inside, but that Alimbar was insisting that he would not enter. After
a few more exchanges the man seemed a little mollified, and finally he
bowed to Saliman, who held open the door for him. Saliman turned
to Hem and waved him in also, and his eyes were hard.
"You," he said in Annaren,
"I will deal with later. I want you to go to your chamber, and to stay
there."
Hem, who had been totally
unfussed by Alimbar's anger, quailed before Saliman's. He nodded
meekly and scurried off.
Back in his chamber, Hem
carefully put the bird down on his bed. It gave a small squawk and
then lay with its eyes shut, its breast heaving. Hem, who was familiar
with birds, was puzzled: it was of some kind he did not know. It
looked like a crow, but its plumage was white. It was obviously a
young bird, only just losing its baby fluff to adult feathers; its tail
and wing feathers were stubby and short, and it had a scrawny, half-made
look about it.
Gently Hem examined its injuries.
He couldn't see any great damage, apart from a couple of savage tears in
the flesh of its body and neck, but there could be internal hurts that
he couldn't see. No bones seemed to be broken, and it wasn't bleeding
freely any more. What worried him most of all was the shock; birds
could easily die of such things. He looked around his room, and saw
the chest in which he kept his spare clothes. He summarily threw
his clothes onto the bed, spread a cloth he used for drying himself on
the bottom of the chest, and gently placed the bird inside.
There, little one, he
murmured in the Speech. You are safe now.
The bird made a soft peep,
as if thanking him, and he closed the lid so it would feel safe in the
dark. Then he worried that it might not have enough air, and stuffed
a shirt under the chest's lid so it wouldn't close completely.
If it was alive in an hour,
he thought to himself, it would have a chance. In two hours, more
of a chance. If it was alive tomorrow, it would definitely live.
It would need water.
He had a jug and a cup on his worktable, but no dish to put water in for
the bird. He could get one easily enough from the kitchen, but he
didn't dare leave his chamber; if Saliman arrived and Hem was not there,
he would be even angrier with him. He would have to wait until Saliman
turned up.
He sat and fidgeted on his
bed, wondering how Saliman would punish him for his latest escapade.
Would he be thrown out of the Bardhouse? Hem uneasily considered
the possibility: in his mind, it seemed quite likely. When he thought
about it, there weren't a lot of reasons for Saliman to keep him there;
none of the other minor Bards liked him much, and he was always getting
into trouble, and he wasn't exactly shining in his classes...
Within a short time, Hem's
fear had turned into a certainty. Where could he go, if he didn't
live with Saliman? He would have to live on the streets. Perhaps
he could get a job in the marketplace as a caller, carrying the goods for
sale and telling of their virtues, he could be good at that… and then he
remembered he couldn't speak Suderain. He would have to be a thief,
then. He was good at stealing things. Though it would be more
difficult now than when he was a small boy; he was tall now, and in Turbansk
his paler skin meant that he had lost the ability to go unnoticed in a
crowd. He would head north then, and find Maerad - he could steal
things along the way to feed himself. The only thing was, he would
miss Saliman.
And the other thing was Cadvan,
Maerad's mentor. Hem admired Cadvan much as he did Saliman, but he found
Cadvan much more forbidding. He remembered very well how stern the
Bard could be. If Hem did find Maerad, he would find Cadvan as well,
and Cadvan would likely be very cross with him...but on the other hand,
Maerad would speak up for him. Then all three of them could go on
an adventure together.
Hem brooded on his new future
for a while, concocting an enjoyable fantasy in which his own heroic acts
featured prominently, and then remembered the bird. It had been very
quiet, and he was sure it must have already died. But it was
now standing up, and when he opened the chest it scuffled into a corner,
trying to hide. Hem made some soothing noises, but didn't attempt
to speak to it or lift it up. He noted that its beak wasn't gaping
with thirst, which relieved his mind, and he gently shut the lid again.
It seemed ages before he
heard steps in the corridor and a knock on the door. There was a
pause, while Hem braced himself for a round telling off and wondered why
the door remained shut, and then Saliman said, "Hem? May I come in?"
Hem still wasn't used to
these courtesies. "Yes, yes, come in," he said breathlessly, as he
scrambled for the door and opened it.
Saliman stood in the corridor
dressed in the red robes of a Turbansk Bard. His long black hair
was tied back from his face in an intricate pattern of braids, and a golden
brooch in the shape of a sunburst was pinned on his shoulder. He
looked, Hem thought, glancing nervously at his dark face, not quite so
cross as he might; surely that was the ghost of a smile haunting his lips?
But maybe not...
Saliman was in fact looking
in astonishment at the mess of clothes piled on Hem's bed. "I hope,
Hem, that you are not thinking of running away?" he said, picking up a
blue tunic.
Hem gulped. "No," he
said. "I...I had to put the bird somewhere."
Saliman turned to face him,
his face expressionless. "Bird?" he said.
"It was hurt. And they
need a dark place, so they're not frightened. So I..." He faltered
and stopped. Perhaps putting injured birds in clothes chests was
not allowed in Bardhouses.
"Yes?"
"So I put it in the chest..."
He gestured vaguely towards the other side of the room. "But I took
all my clothes out first. So they wouldn't be dirtied. I didn't think
it would be wrong," he added hastily, putting on his most virtuous expression,
although whether his clothes remained clean wasn't something that ever
bothered Hem. "I just wanted to help the bird."
Saliman stood very still,
looking searchingly at Hem. Then he sat down on Hem's bed and rested
his brow in his hands in a gesture of despair that made Hem grin despite
himself, although he took care to straighten his face when Saliman looked
up.
"Hem," he said at last.
"Do you have any idea whose garden you entered today?"
Hem shook his head.
"I have just had a very long
and very boring conversation with Alimbar el Nad. He is a Vizier
of the Ernan of Turbansk, and is fifth in authority to the Ernan herself.
It seems that he found you in his private courtyard, which he keeps expressly
for his own use. Not even his servants are allowed there. And
yet you seem more worried about whether or not your clothes are soiled..."
He shook his head. "What were you doing there?"
Hem studied his feet closely.
He wasn't going to admit that he was stealing mangoes if no one had accused
him; he would be thrown out for sure. Saliman sighed heavily and
stood up.
"After a great many courtesies
and sweetmeats, and after offering to place the spell of bounty on his
house, a most exhausting and complicated charm, I may add, and also the
promise that I would whip you soundly, I managed to soothe him. Alimbar
is a hasty and impatient man, quick to take offence - and to give it, truth
be told. I had to swallow my pride at least three times, and that
goes hard for Saliman of Turbansk. But you almost caused a most difficult
friction between the School of Turbansk and the Court, and it could not
be worse timed."
Hem stared at the floor until
his eyes burned, only half comprehending what Saliman was saying.
"Hem," Saliman continued
gravely. "I am very angry with you, and I ought to punish you.
But, to be honest, I don't believe it would make anything better than it
is. So I will not be whipping you. Although perhaps that is
merely to save what little shreds of my pride remain."
"So you're not going to send
me away?" Despite himself, Hem's voice wavered.
Saliman looked surprised.
"Send you away? Whether you stay here or not is your decision, Hem,
not mine. No, I would not send you away."
Hem gave an involuntary sigh
of relief. He was not afraid of being whipped, although no one had
hit him since he had met Maerad, and perhaps he had lost some of his old
toughness. But now Saliman was standing with his back to him, looking
out of the window. He was silent for a long time, and Hem began to
feel ashamed of himself.
"I'm sorry," he mumbled,
when the silence had stretched out too long.
"But are you, Hem?" asked
Saliman, turning around. "Are you really sorry? It is not enough
to say so, and then to do the same thing again."
Now Saliman's face was very
serious, and a fluttering started in Hem's stomach. When Saliman was happy
with him Hem felt exultant, but his displeasure hurt more than any whipping.
It wasn't because Hem was frightened of him, although Saliman was one of
the few human beings he wholeheartedly respected. There was an unsettling
power in Saliman's dark gaze, which seemed to see without prejudice or
fear through any dissembling.
"Well?" Saliman's voice
was gentle, but within it was a strength like steel.
"I am sorry," said Hem, a
little more clearly. "I don't mean to cause trouble."
Saliman sighed again, and
sat back down on the bed, patting the cushions beside him. "Sit down,
Hem. Tell me, are you very unhappy?"
Hem blinked at the unexpectedness
of the question. He had not spoken to Saliman about his feelings.
He opened his mouth to answer, and then shut it again.
"Urbika tells me you are
not making friends," said Saliman. "And she says you are struggling
with the Suderain language, which can't help."
Despite himself, Hem blushed.
He didn't like the thought that people were observing him like that.
He struggled with himself. He had longed for the chance to pour out
his heart to Saliman, to tell him all his troubles. Saliman would
understand his constant nightmares, his fears, the difficulties he had
talking to people, how he hated the other minor Bards. He knew that
Saliman would not judge him. But now the chance had come, it was
as if his jaws were sewn together with wire.
"I miss Maerad," he said
at last.
"That, alas, is a wound I
cannot heal," said Saliman gently. "Although I can perhaps help with
other things."
There was another long silence,
while Hem sat scowling and speechless.
"Well," said Saliman, when
it was clear that Hem would not volunteer anything further. "Perhaps
we should look at this bird of yours."
Hem brightened up at the
change of subject, and opened the chest. The bird cowered in the
corner, staring at them unblinkingly. Saliman picked it up carefully,
whispering to it in the Speech, and it relaxed into his hand.
"Do you think it will be
all right?" asked Hem, watching Saliman anxiously.
"I think it has sustained
no great hurt," said Saliman. He examined the bird closely, murmuring
in the Speech as he did so. As he did, he began to glow faintly with
a strange inner light. Hem, who had now seen a few Bards using their
Gift, knew he was making a healing charm, and relaxed. He felt a
strange affinity with this tatty, abused bird, and he was relieved that
it was getting the proper treatment. He could do healing, but he
wasn't confident about his ability.
After a short time Saliman
had finished, and he coaxed the bird onto Hem's wrist, where it perched,
perfectly tame, as if it were a falcon. Its feet felt cold against
his skin, and its claws dug in with a surprising strength. Hem chirped
at it, and then said, in the Speech, Are you all right, Little One?
Better, said the bird.
Hungry!
And it made an interrogative noise very close to the wheezing gasp of a
baby bird asking for food.
"It's scarce more than a
nestling!" Saliman said, smiling. "But what is it?"
"I thought you might know,"
said Hem eagerly. "It looks kind of like a crow..."
"Yes, but it's white." Saliman
regarded it with his head cocked to one side. "How did you find it?"
"Well, I was sitting in the
mango tree when…" Hem stopped.
Saliman glanced at him ironically.
"I had assumed that you were raiding Alimbar's fruit trees," he said.
"Very expensive fruit it is, too. And then?"
Hem blushed for his slip,
and told the full story of how he had found the bird. Saliman listened
attentively, and then stroked the bird's head. "An outcast, eh?"
he said. "Perhaps it will not want to go back to its kin, where it
will be persecuted. I think it is a crow, who was so poorly
used because it is unlike the others. Crows will do that. You
may have found a companion, Hem." He stood up. "I'll leave
you to decide whether you want to look after a crow. I have many
things to do, and I am now running grievously late."
He walked to the door, and
turned around. "I haven't forgotten your trespass," he said.
"We'll say no more for today. But I will do some thinking, and I
think that you ought to, as well." Then he left.
Hem nodded abstractedly;
his attention was all turned to the bird. It now looked very perky,
but it was, he thought, rather scruffy. It would look better when
all its adult feathers had grown and it didn't have greyish fluff poking
through them, which gave it a kind of ragamuffin look.
So, he said. Do
you want to stay with me? I can look after you.
Feed me? said the
bird.
Yes, I'll feed you.
And keep those others away. You'll be safer.
The bird ruffled its feathers,
stuck out its tail and soiled the floor.
But you'll have to do
that outside, Hem added, thinking with dismay of Saliman's rather stern
housemaster. Because people will get cross with me.
The bird turned its head,
fixing Hem with one of its eyes.
I stay, it said.
So what is your name?
asked Hem.
Name?
What do they call you?
I was not given a name,
said the crow. The flock would not name me, when my wing feathers
came, because I am wrongcoloured. I have no name.
You have to have a name,
said Hem. He thought for a moment, and remembered the word for "bird"
that had been used by the Pilanel people he had briefly known. How
about Irc?
Irc? The bird bobbed
up and down comically on his wrist. Irc! I have a name!
Irc! It soiled the floor again.
I told you, said Hem.
You'll
have to do that outside.
Feed me? Hungry!
All right Irc, Hem
said, sighing, but only with pretended impatience. I'll feed you.
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