Geoff Ryman

The King’s Last Song


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of winning and he gave it to her.

      She dipped her head, and glanced about her, and tossed the slipper so that it spun. It twirled, hissing across the wood, passing his. She had beaten him first go, and Cap-Pi-Hau was so delighted to have a worthy adversary that he laughed and clapped his hands. That made her smile.

      His turn. He threw it hard and lost.

      The second time she threw, she lost the confidence of inexperience and the shoe almost spun on the spot. The Prince experimented, shooting the slipper forward with his foot. So did she. The two of them were soon both giggling and running and jumping with excitement.

      He asked her name.

      ‘Fishing Cat,’ she replied. Cmâ-kančus.

      The name made him laugh out loud. Fishing cats were small, lean and delicate with huge round eyes. ‘You look like a fishing cat!’ Instead of laughing she hung her head. She thought he was teasing her, so he talked about something else, to please her.

      ‘Do you come attached to the royal house, like a cow?’ he asked. Groups of slaves were called thpal, the same word used for cattle.

      ‘No, Sir. I was given away, Sir.’

      This interested the Prince mightily because he had been given away as well. He pushed close to her. ‘Why were you given away?’

      Her voice went thin, like the sound of wind in reeds. ‘Because I was pretty.’

      If she was pretty, he wanted to see. ‘I can’t see you.’

      She finally looked up, and her eyelids batted to control the tears, and she tried to smile.

      ‘You look unhappy.’ He could not think why that would be.

      ‘Oh no, Prince. It is a great honour to be in the royal enclosure. To be here is to see what life in heaven must be like.’

      ‘Do you miss your mother?’

      This seemed to cause her distress. She moved from side to side as if caught between two things. ‘I don’t know, Sir.’

      ‘You’re scared!’ he said, which was such an absurd thing to be that it amused him. He suddenly thought of a fishing cat on a dock taking off in fear when people approached. ‘Fishing cats are scared and they run away!’

      Her eyes slid sideways and she spoke as if reciting a ritual. ‘We owe everything to the King. From his intercession, the purified waters flow from the hills. The King is our family.’

      The Prince said, ‘He’s not my family.’ Fishing Cat’s head spun to see if anyone could hear them. The Prince said, ‘I miss my family. I have some brothers here, but my mother lives far away in the east.’

      Cat whispered, ‘Maybe I miss my mother too.’ Very suddenly, she looked up, in something like alarm. ‘And my sisters, too. And my house by the river. We lived near the rice fields and the water. And we all slept together each night.’

      Cap-Pi-Hau saw the house in his mind.

      He saw the broad fields of rice moving in waves like the surface of the Great Lake, and long morning shadows, and the buffaloes in the mire, and rows of trees parasolling houses along the waterways.

      He saw home.

      He himself had been brought from the country, carried in a howdah with nine other distressed, hot, fearful children. He dimly remembered riding through the City, its streets full of people. Since then, he had not been allowed outside the royal enclosure.

      Cap-Pi-Hau had only been able to hear people from over the walls. The calls of stall owners, the barking of dogs, the rumbling of ox-cart wheels and the constant birdlike chorus of chatter. For him, that was the sound of freedom. He kept trying to imagine what the people were like, because he heard them laugh.

      Cap-Pi-Hau asked, ‘What did you like doing best?’

      She considered. ‘I remember my brother taking the buffalo down to the reservoir, to keep cool. It would stay in the water all day, so we could too.’

      Cap-Pi-Hau thrust himself up onto her lap, and suddenly she was like an older sister, tending the babe for her mother.

      ‘I want to stay in the water all day,’ he beamed. ‘I want to drive water buffaloes. Great big buffaloes!’ Something in the sound of that phrase, big and hearty, made him explode with giggles.

      Finally she did too. ‘You are a buffalo.’

      ‘I’m a big big buffalo and I smell of poo!’ He became a bouncing ball of chuckles. Even she chuckled. Laughter made him fond. He tilted his head and his eyes were twinkly, hungry for something different. He writhed in her grasp. ‘What else did you do?’

      She had to think. ‘My brother would catch frogs or snakes to eat. He was very brave.’

      ‘You hunted snakes and frogs?’ Cap-Pi-Hau was fascinated. He could see a boy like himself, skinnier maybe. They would hunt together in the reeds. He mimed slamming frogs. ‘Bam! Bam!’ he grinned. ‘Flat frog! Yum. I want to eat a flat frog.’

      She joined in. ‘I want to eat mashed cricket.’

      ‘I want to eat … monkey ears!’

      That joke wore out. He asked about her family. She had six brothers and sisters. They were the nias of a lord who lived far away from the perfect city. Their canal branched off from the meeting of the three rivers, far to the south. She could see all of that, but she could not remember the name of the place.

      All of her brothers and sisters slept in a tidy row on mats. When one of them was sick, that child slept cradled by their mother. So they all pretended to be sick sometimes. One night, so many of them said they were sick that Mother turned away from them all. Then their mother got sick herself. With no one to work the fields, they had to do something to feed all the children, so Fishing Cat was sent away.

      The Prince still wanted fun. ‘And you never went back, never, never, never.’ He rocked his head in time to the words. ‘I never went back either.’

      Something seemed to come out of them both, like mingled breath.

      ‘What’s your name?’ she asked, because Cap-Pi-Hau was a nickname.

      ‘Nia!’ he said, delighted, and started to chuckle again. ‘I am Prince Slave!’

      ‘I will give you orders!’ she chuckled, something irrepressible bubbling up.

      ‘I will have to dust floors for you,’ he giggled.

      ‘I will say, you, Prince, come here and help me with this thing.’ She snapped her fingers.

      ‘You can call me Prince Nia.’

      She chuckled. ‘You can call me Princess Nia!’

      For some reason the laughter faded.

      ‘I hardly remember my home either,’ said Cap-Pi-Hau.

      Until the day of his marriage, Cap-Pi-Hau called himself Prince Nia. When people expressed astonishment at the choice he would explain. ‘All princes are hereditary slaves.’

      

       The day of the procession arrived.

      The Sun King’s great new temple was to be consecrated.

      Prince Nia stood high on the steps of an elephant platform. Ahead of him the next batch of hostage children crowded the platform, scowling at the sunlight, flicking their fly whisks.

      The Prince had never stood so high off the ground. He was now level with the upper storey of the Aerial Palace. There were no walls and all the curtains were raised.

      He saw servants scurrying, carrying, airing, beating – taking advantage of their mistresses’ absence to perfect the toilet of the rooms. Category girls ran with armloads of blackened flowers to throw them away. They beat cushions against each other. They shifted low bronze