Rereid
of Prince of Nothing Trilogy
Book
1: The Darkness that Comes Before
by
R. Scott Bakker
Part
3
The
Harlot
Chapter
9
Sumna
And the Nonman King
cried words that sting:
“Now to me you must
confess,
For death above you
hovers!”
And the Emissary
answered ever wary:
“We are the race of
flesh,
We are the race of
lovers.”
—“Ballad of the
Inchoroi,” Ancient Kûniüri Folk Song
My
Thoughts
Our
first mention of the Inchoroi, the race behind the Sranc, the Second
Apocalypse, and the other horrors. This seems to describe the first
meeting between the Nonmen and the Inchoroi. We learn the most
important aspect of the Inchoroi, they are the race of flesh and
lovers. Sex is everything to them. They use it as a weapon, they
motivate their creations with it. Back in the prologue, Leweth tells
Kellhus how Sranc hunt men for other hungers.
Inchoroi
seems derived from inchoate, a word that means “being only partly
in existence or operation; especially imperfectly
formed or formulated.” From Merriam-Webster online dictionary. This
implies that the Inchoroi are flawed, or that their creations are
flawed. Bakker is always adding to my vocabulary.
Early
Winter, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk, Sumna
Esmenet has just finished
with a client, a priest named Psammatus, who tells her this will be
his last visit. Esmenet tells him he's found a younger whore and he
apologizes. Esmenet responds, “No. Don't be sorry. Whore know
better than to pout like wives.” As he dresses, Esmenet thinks that
she's becoming old, and that is one of the reasons Akka left her.
Inrau's death had broken
Achamian and he left Sumna. She had begged him to take her with him
or to stay with her. She didn't want her life to return back to the
drudgery. She was enamored with greater events.
And this was the irony
that held her breathless. For even in the midst of enjoying that new
life through Achamian, she’d been unable to relinquish the old.
“You say you love me,” Achamian had cried, “and yet you still
take custom. Tell me why, Esmi! Why?”
Because I knew you
would leave me. All of you leave me . . . all the ones I love.
“Esmi,” Psammatus was
saying. “Esmi. Please don’t cry, my sweet. I’ll return next
week. I promise.” She shook her head and wiped the tears from her
eyes. Said nothing.
Weeping for a man! I’m
stronger than this!
Esmenet wipes her tears,
and asks Psammatus if he knew Inrau. Psammatus answers, that he's the
priest who killed himself in the Hagerna, causing a scandal. She asks
if he's sure, and he answers yes. Psammatus leaves, and Esmenet lies
in her bed, depressed. She thinks of Inrau, Achamian and her
daughter. Esmenet notices someone at her door.
The man is handsome and
richly dress. Esmenet tells him her price, twelve talents, and the
man strikes her hard, telling her she's not a “twelve-talent
whore.” He tells her relationships should not begin with lies and
reveals he's after information on a Mandate Schoolman, Achamian.
Before Achamian left, he
warned her that someone might come. That she would need to play the
whore and not ask questions. So she agrees to sell both herself and
the information. The pair negotiate the price and the man pulls out a
single, gold coin. Esmenet agreed, staring at the coin with greed.
The man begins to caress her and Esmenet instantly realizes something
is wrong, something inhuman.
Pleasure floods Esmenet,
more than she's ever felt. She is willing to tell the man anything as
he interrogates her in the midst of their coupling. She just wants
the “nightmarish ecstasy” to continue. She realizes she would do
anything to keep filling this pleasure. She tells him everything
about Achamian. Finally, as dawn approaches, the man finish, spilling
his seed on her belly.
The golden coin fluttered
in his hand, bewitching her with its glitter. He held it above her
and let it slip between his fingers. It plopped onto the sticky pools
across her belly. She glanced down and gasped in horror.
His seed was black.
“Shush,” he said,
gathering his finery. “Say a word of this to no one. Do you
understand, whore?”
“I understand,” she
managed, tears now streaming. What have I done?
Esmenet is trying not to
throw up, as the man opens the shutters. She hears a flap of wings
and the man is gone. The man leaves an inhuman stench behind and
Esmenet vomits on the floor.
When she finally
recovers, Esmenet washes and leaves her room, knowing she can never
return. She wanders to the Ecosium Market. It is busy in the morning,
and Esmenet is drinking in the sights. She loves Sumna but she had to
leave.
She remembers that
Achamian told her this might happen. That she would have to barter
with whoever comes and be compliant. She would have to sell him out
and tell them the truth and she'll survive. She asks why they would
spare her. Achamian answers, by hiding her strength and being useful,
they will hope to use you again. She asks if that won't put him in
danger.
“I’m a Schoolman,
Esmi,” he had replied. “A Mandate Schoolman.”
At last, through a screen
of passing people, she saw a little girl standing barefoot in dusty
sunlight. She would do. With large brown eyes the girl watched
Esmenet approach, too wary to return her smile. She clutched a stick
to the breast of her threadbare shift.
I survived, Akka. And
I did not survive.
Esmenet stooped before
the child and astounded her with the gold talent. “Here,” she
said, pressing it into small palms.
So like my daughter.
Achamian is ridding on a
mule through the valley of Sudica on his way from Sumna to Momemn.
Achamian is taking a longer route to avoid people. The valley, once
inhabited in the days of Kyraneas, is no mostly abandoned thanks to
Scylvendi raids. Achamian makes his way up to the ruined
Fortress-Temple of Batathent and absently wanders through the ruin
until nightfall, making his camp in the ruins.
In his sleep, he dreamed
of that day when every child was stillborn, that day when the
Consult, beaten back to the black ramparts of Golgotterath by the
Nonmen and the ancient Norsirai, brought emptiness, absolute and
terrible, into the world: Mog-Pharau, the No-God. In his sleep,
Achamian watched glory after glory flicker out through Seswatha’s
anguished eyes. And he awoke, as he always awoke, a witness to the
end of the world.
Achamian is suffering
from guilt and depression, fearing that if Inrau really committed
suicide then he murdered him. Achamian tried to find the truth of
Inrau's death, but got no where and was relieved when Nautzera and
the Quorum ordered him to Momemn to join the Holy War, to watch the
Scarlet Spire.
After Inrau's death,
Achamian relationship with Esmenet deteriorated He wanted her to
distract him from his problems while she endlessly asked him
questions, debated the meanings of what he learned. She also
continued to see clients. When Achamian offered to pay for her
exclusivity, she cried. Esmenet does not want to be Achamian's whore.
Achamian thinks about why he fell in love with her.
Often, in his soul’s
eye, she was inexplicably thin and wild, buffeted by rain and winds,
obscured by the swaying of forest branches. This woman who had once
lifted her hand to the sun, holding it so that for him its light lay
cupped in her palm, and telling him that truth was air, was sky, and
could only be claimed, never touched by the limbs and fingers of a
man. He couldn’t tell her how profoundly her musings affected him,
that they thrashed like living things in the wells of his soul and
gathered stones about them.
Regret fills Achamian,
and he realizes he has become overwhelmed by circumstances and
decides to try to make sense of things. He pulls at a sheet of
parchment and rights Maithanet's name in the center, whom Achamian
suspects of murdering Inrau. He writes Holy War to the right,
“Maithanet's hammer.” Below, he writes Shimeh, the objective To
the right of Shimeh he writes, Cishaurim. He writes Scarlet Spire and
traces a line from Cishaurim through Scarlet Spire to the Holy War.
Achamian again wonders how Maithanet knew their secret war. Adjacent
to Holy War, he writes the Emperor, based on rumors of Xerius's
Investiture.
In the upper, right
corner, he adds the Consult. Achamian ponders the Consult, wandering
where they were and if they were involved. Finally, he writes Inrau
below Maithanet. Achamian shakes away thoughts of guilt, he could not
avenge Inrau if he wallowed in self-pity. The answers were on this
map.
Achamian often made such
maps—not because he worried he might forget something, but because
he worried he might overlook something. Visualizing the connections,
he found, always suggested further possible connections. Moreover,
this simple exercise had often proved a valuable guide for his
inquiries in the past. The crucial difference this time, however, was
that instead of naming individuals and their connections to some
petty agenda, this map named Great Factions and their connections to
a Holy War. The scale of this mystery, the stakes, far exceeded
anything he had encountered before . . . aside from his dreams.
His breath caught.
A prelude to the
Second Apocalypse? Could it be?
Achamian is certain the
Consult is involved They could never stay out of something this
large. Achamian fixes on Maithanet and ponders how to learn his
secrets. And then it comes to him, Proyas. Achamian writes Proyas's
name between Maithanet's and the Holy War. Proyas, his former
student, was a confident of Maithanet. If Achamian could mend his
relationship with Proyas, he could learn more of Maithanet. “He
needed answers, both to quiet his heart and, perhaps, to save the
world.”
Achamian breaks camp and
continues his lonely journey.
Esmenet walks through the
Gates of Pelts and leaves Sumna. She pauses, looking out over the
landscape, fearful. She told herself that everything would be fine.
She would “sell peaches” as the soldiers say. “Men mights stand
midway between women and the Gods, but they hungered like beasts.”
The road would be kind.
Eventually, she would find the Holy War. And in the Holy War she
would find Achamian. She would clutch his cheek and kiss him, at long
last a fellow traveller.
Then she would tell him
what had happened, of the danger.
Deep breath. She tasted
dust and cold.
She began walking, her
limbs so light they might have danced.
It would be dark soon.
My Thoughts
The
Synthese returns, in the guise of a man, and know we have a name to
call this abomination, an Inchoroi. As the folk song at the start of
the passage says, they are a race of lovers. It's a hard passage to
read. The Inchoroi violates her and makes her enjoy it more than
anything she's ever felt.
My
heart breaks for Esmenet.
.
The
Inchoroi has polluted her home and Sumna. Even the gold coin, a lot
of money for Esmenet, was tainted. And as always with Esmenet, her
thoughts turn to her daughter. She's trying to have some good come
out of that terrible encounter.
The
Inchoroi embodies sex and yet his seed is black: death. This informs
why they make creatures, the Sranc, dragons, and the abominations
like Sarcellus. They are a the race of flesh, and they seem masters
forming new things.
Achamian
has been deeply depressed since Inrau died. And as often happens, it
creates a rift between Achamian and Esmenet. He wants to forget his
problems and she, I believe, is trying to help Achamian move past his
hurt. Achamian, however, was not ready. He need more to time to
grieve.
Finally,
sitting in these ruins, Achamian takes action. He realizes he has
been wallowing in self-pity and to avenge Inrau, he needs to stop
being overwhelmed. The map he draws is a great way to do this.
Putting everything on paper, drawing lines, trying to see how
everything connects. Achamian has a plan for the first time in the
book.
We
learn more about the horror of the No-God. The fact that once it was
created, every child was stillborn. That is horrible. It goes back to
the Inchoroi, while creatures of sex and thus of creation, only
create death. Achamian fears that the first steps of the Second
Apocalypse have begun.
And
we come back to Esmenet, who like Achamian is also making her own
plans, seizing her own actions. She knows the Consult is involved and
she is going to track Achamian down and tell him. I'm concerned that
she doesn't appear to have supplies. She is putting a lot of trust
into her fellow travelers. Esmenet, you need to be careful. This
world is terrible to women, watch your back.
I
also hope that Esmenet thoughts on “men stand midway between women
and Gods” as lies that men tell women as opposed to actual
scripture. As Esmenet right points out, men are no more holy then
women.
Below
is a scan of Achamian's map from the end of the book. I edited out
the changes Achamian adds later on in the story. I
really like the script that Bakker came up with. Similar to Arabic in
its cursive style, but written top to bottom like many Southeast
Asian (Chinese, Japanese, Korean)
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