“You are a tax collector, not a philosopher-mind your place.”
“Excuse me, Your Royal Highness, but we were philosophizing when Aristotle’s grandparents were banging rocks together.”
“Where has it gotten you though?”
Ahead, Sword of Divine Fire could see the Flat Brown Rock, which-together with the Little Gray Rock, which stood about a hundred yards distant-accounted for most of the local topography. The Fourth Meander made a small excursion to go around it. The clan of the Flat Brown Rock Excursion were reputed to be the finest horticulturalists of the whole Ditch, and on cold nights were known to stay up sitting on their cabbages like hens warming their eggs. Normally, they would be turning round to smile proudly at their monarch. But today they squatted on the bank, hunched over with their backs turned to him, and refused to meet his gaze. Sword of Divine Fire could not fathom it until he noticed a gap forming in the line of persons. They were packed in nearly shoulder-to-shoulder, but still they were finding some way to shift sideways, creating an open space two yards across, which gradually expanded to three. In the center of that open space, a bony woman in a threadbare garment was hunched over a dead plant.
Sword of Divine Fire’s reaction was succinct: “Fuck!” The woman cringed as if he’d hit her with a bullwhip. Then: “What has happened to our potato?”
“Sire, I launched an investigation as soon as I was informed. The khud-kashta of the Fourth Meander has been sternly brought to account. Furthermore, I have made discreet inquiries with Lord of Righteous Carnage, as well as with Shambhaji, to ascertain whether it might be possible to buy a replacement potato…”
“Come off it! Where’s the money coming from? We can’t even feed the bullock.”
“If we put off purchasing a new rope…”
“The rope has been spliced so many times it’s naught but splices. Besides! Jesus Christ! Shambhaji!? You asked him? I was sent down here to make war on Shambhaji.”
“But you have not actually conducted an offensive operation against him in years.”
“What, I’m besieging his citadel.”
“You call it a Siege-others would describe it as a very long Picnic.”
“In any event-Shambhaji is the enemy.”
“In Hindoostan, all things are possible.”
“Then where is my fucking potato!?”
Silence. Then the woman flung herself on the ground and began to beseech Sword of Divine Fire for mercy.
“Oh, splendid! Now she’s probably going to go set fire to herself or something,” the king muttered. Then he sighed. “What has your investigation turned up?”
“It may have been sabotage.”
“Those Right Bankers, y’think?”
“Retribution for many Ditch-Jumpings.”
“Well, I don’t want to start a war,” mused Sword of Divine Fire, “or my rutabaga will be next.”
“I would not put anything beneath the Right Bank Vhadriyas, they are scarcely above apes.”
“Tell ’em it’s my fault.”
“I beg your pardon, sire?”
“Karma. I looked crossways at a cow, or something…make some shit up. You’re good at that, aren’t you?”
“Truly you are the wisest ruler this kingdom has ever had…”
“Yeah, too bad my term’s up in another four months.”
Half an hour later, Sword of Divine Fire alighted from his donkey, and his zamindar emerged from his palanquin, and they stood together at the brink of the Large Hole in the Ground. All of the water that struggled out to the end of the Ditch emptied into this Hole. Members of the local Koli caste brought wagon-loads of black dirt hither from their dirt-mines in other parts of the jagir and dumped it into the hole. Then they pounded it with timbers, mixing it with the ditch-water, and drew off the liquor that floated on top and put it into a motley collection of pots and pans. These they boiled over fires made with wood brought down out of the hills by the people of the wood-splitter caste. When the pots had nearly boiled dry, they dumped their contents out into flat shallow earthenware trays and left them out under the sun. After a while, those trays filled up with a whitish powder-
“Who the hell is that man in the robe, and why is he eating my saltpeter?” demanded Sword of Divine Fire, visoring his eyes with one hand and gazing over towards the tray-farm.
Everyone looked over to see that, indeed, a figure in a long off-white robe-a cross between a Frankish monk’s robe and an Arab djellaba-was nibbling at a handful of saltpeter-slush that he’d scooped up from one of the trays. His face was obscured by the hood of the robe, which he’d pulled over his head to shield himself from the sun.
A couple of rowzinders and three archers on foot-about half of Sword of Divine Fire’s body-guards-bestirred themselves, and began trotting over that way, unlimbering weapons as they went. But the robed visitor turned out to have a sort of body-guard of his own: two men on horseback who rode forth and took up positions on the flanks, and let it be known that they had muskets.
“Sire, this would appear to be a better-organized-than-usual assassination attempt,” said the zamindar, stepping over to his palanquin and retrieving a musket of his own. “May I suggest you climb down into the Large Hole in the Ground?”
The king for his part pulled a pistol from his garment and checked the pan. “This fitteth not the profile of an assassination,” he observed. “Perhaps they are wandering potato-merchants.” He spurred his donkey forward, and rode past his body-guards, who had been stopped in their tracks by the appearance of those muskets.
As he drew closer to the robed man, he was surprised-but then again, not really-to observe a red beard. The visitor pulled his hood back to divulge a fountain of silver hair. He spat saltpeter on the ground and smacked his lips for a few moments, like a connoisseur of wine.
“I’m afraid it is contaminated with much that is not actually saltpeter,” he said. “It would work for ballasting ships, but not for making gunpowder.”
“Strange you should mention that, Enoch, as I may be needing some ballast soon.”
“I know,” said Enoch Root. “Unfortunately, many others in Christendom know it, too, Jack.”
“That is most annoying, for I went to vast expense to bring in a scribe who knew how to employ cyphers.”
“The cypher was broken.”
“How is Eliza?”
“She is a Duchess in two countries.”
“Does she know that I am a King in one?”
“She knows what I knew, before I left. Namely that there are tales of a Christian sorcerer who, some years ago, was traveling in a caravan to Delhi that was attacked by a Maratha army that came down out of the hills on elephants. The Marathas had the upper hand until nightfall, when they and their elephants alike were thrown into a panic by a cold fire that limned the warriors and the horses of the caravan without consuming them. This caravan reached Delhi without further incident, and Aurangzeb, the Great Mogul, according to his long-standing practice, elevated the victor to the rank of omerah, and rewarded him with a three-year jagir.”
“And so you decided to come out and see who was putting your alchemical knowledge to such ill uses.”
“I came for many reasons, Jack, but that was not one of them…I knew who the sorcerer was.”
“Did you bring the thing I asked for?”
“We will speak of that later,” Enoch said judiciously. “But I did bring two things you should have asked for, and forgot to.”
“Hmm, let me think…I love riddles…a replacement penis, and a keg of decent beer?”
“I love riddles, too, Jack, but I hate guessing-games. Can we go somewhere that is not so, er…” And here Enoch Root turned his gaze one way, then the other, taking in most of the hundred-mile expanse between the hills and the coastal marshes. “…exposed?”
Jack laughed. “If it’s privacy you want, you’re in the wrong subcontinent.”
“So you say-and yet there is more here than meets the eye, no?” said Enoch Root, staring Jack in the eye.