Part 1 (1/2)

TALES FROM THE MONSTERNOMICON.

EXTRAORDINARY.

ZOOLOGY.

HOWARD TAYLER.

PROLOGUE.

The Widower's Wood, Early Autumn, 606 AR.

The rich, peaty ground under the tiny village of Bednar rumbled, and Nally almost dropped her bushel of walnuts. She looked to the twisty tree line just forty paces beyond the village fence, but nothing came pounding out of the Widower's Wood.

”You all heard that, right?” she shouted.

In the green, the north field, the orchard, and the doorways of their thatched-roof homes, Nally's neighbors and family stood staring into the woods.

n.o.body said a word. Nally s.h.i.+vered.

”Aye, la.s.s.” Her uncle Bairyck finally spoke. He stood at the woodpile, his old Radcliffe Roar service carbine held at the ready and a heavy splitting axe within easy reach. Bairyck had once felled a charging gorax from that exact stance: one shot through the eye with the large-bore carbine and a bloodletting sweep below its belly with the axe as it charged. Bairyck wore three parallel scars across his shoulder, acquired before blood loss finally laid the monster low.

Bairyck wasn't the only one with scars. Nally's family had been one of a dozen to claim this fertile patch at the edge of the Widower's Wood a generation agoa”with nothing but gumption, three Radcliffes, and a low, st.u.r.dy fence. Trouble, typically with teeth and claws, was never far off, but Bednar always fought back.

Nally hurried across the small village green to her home, pausing twice to look over her shoulder at the woods, where everyone else's eyes remained fixed. She set her walnut harvest next to the door, unslung the small kindling axe at her hip, and faced the tree line again. Whatever shook the ground was no gorax.

”Morrow preserve us,” she said. One hand gripped her axe, while the other went to the Morrowan sunburst pendant she wore. As she pulled it forward, the tightness of the chain against the back of her neck was a small, sharp comfort. ”Strengthen our hands, and steady our feet, that we may master tribulation.”

The ground shook again, harder. Steady our feet, indeed. Nally heard a groan from deep below, as if Caen itself was speaking, and the voice of the world was quite close.

”Sounds like your house, Nally!” Bairyck yelled.

Nally turned, facing her door just a pace away. Then her house exploded in an eruption of dark, wet earth.

PART I: LYNUS.

Lynus Wesselbaum gingerly turned pages as he searched for woodcuts of carrion flies in Professor Viktor Pendrake's laboratory. The professor's collection of texts was formidable. One might kill half a day just reading the spines, and any of Pendrake's junior students would have been at this particular task for hours. As Pendrake's senior a.s.sistant, Lynus already knew what all the spines saida”and where they were.

He drew a deep breath as he paged through the book in his hand. This end of the large, ever-cluttered laboratory smelled pleasantly like leather covers, aging paper, and the book glue Lynus used to maintain the tomes. He had earned the responsibility for maintenance thanks to his habit of hauling books along on expeditions. Saddlebags and satchels were rough enough, but over the last four years he had dropped, thrown, and tripped over more than a few books, usually at a dead run with something dangerous close behind.

Scholars.h.i.+p was terrifying. And Lynus wouldn't trade it for anything.

The rest of Pendrake's lab smelled of alchemy, particularly of the preservative sort. Pendrake insisted that no number of fresh cadavers, old carca.s.ses, or stripped skeletons were an excuse for the stench of death, and the liberal application of antiputrescent agents was the first duty a.s.signed to new students of extraordinary zoology.

That tangy, caustic smell was strong of late. Lynus and Edrea had been testing a theory of Lynus', that even weeks-dead corpses could be dated by patterns in the generations and species of blowflies.

The battered book in Lynus' hands was a favorite of his, but he never carried this one in the field. It looked like it had seen years of service and had almost been eaten by a dog. The truth was more interesting: it had seen years of service and had almost been eaten by a two-headed dog.

Lynus held the textbook with a measure of reverence as he thumbed through it. The binding and cover had survived the enthusiastic mauling at the left head of Professor Pendrake's pet, so the volume was clearly st.u.r.dy, but it was more than just a book. It was a symbol of what he hoped to attain in life; full of knowledge, it had survived the worst and was too cherished to be cast aside for a newer edition. Even though the professor could afford to replace this tome a hundred times over, he still kept it around, telling students like Lynus to ”read around the tooth marks.”

A tricky proposition. The punctures had stretched bits of the cover deep into the book, and the pages, less flexible than leather, had ripped and compressed, distorting the text and the woodcuts as much as a quarter inch around the one-inch hole. The hole, at least for Lynus, was just as fascinating a study as the material it distorted. And so, instead of reading around the tooth marks, Lynus found himself reading the marks themselves, pondering the bite pressure, tooth size, and salivary chemistry of Viktor Pendrake's now-departed pet.

”Distracted again?” came a voice just behind Lynus.

”Edrea!” Lynus said. ”I didn't hear you sneak up on me.” He turned to face her, still clutching the argus-mauled tome.

Edrea Lloryrr held up a specimen jar with a single maggot writhing across its bottom. With her other hand, she swept a strand of hair back behind a pointed ear.

”You'd been gone so long I thought you might have forgotten what the specimen looked like.” His cheeks grew warm as she arched an eyebrow at him. ”And I wasn't sneaking, Lynus.”

”An Iosan spell, then. You have an unfair advantage.”

”I walk softly, and you weren't paying attention.”

He opened his mouth to protest, but in truth he hadn't been paying attention, and that was an unhealthy habit for any of Pendrake's students. The professor's field studies sent them traipsing through some of the darkest, most dangerous wilds in western Immoren. Some students came home with scars. Some came home maimed. Some didn't come home at all.

”It's a ringback, second-instar larva, maybe a day from molting,” he said, looking down at the book. He shrugged. ”I guess I knew that before I even opened the book. I wanted to see how the woodcut compared to the specimen.”

”And?”

Lynus blushed again, his ears hot. Edrea was inviting him to expound, to talk to her. With her. Even after his clumsy comment about the magic he was still half-convinced she was using. He drew a deep breath.

”Burrick was a fine artist, but ham-handed with tweezers and pins. The woodcut shows distortions along the ventral axis.” He held the page so Edrea could compare it to the worm in the jar. ”He drew this one after mounting it. Pulled a bit too hard to get it over the pin.”

Edrea smiled and nodded, but Lynus worried she was patronizing him. She was a decade his senior and had known the professor twice as long as he had. He was convinced that if she'd actually enrolled in the university, she'd be the professor's senior a.s.sistant rather than him. How did she feel about that? Did Iosans feel jealousy the same way people did? Was there a spell for that? Why hadn't she ever enrolled? Why was she looking at him with that one lifted eyebrow as ifa”

Lynus realized he was staring.

”I'm sorry,” he said, breaking off his gaze. ”We're supposed to be testing a theory, not critiquing ill.u.s.trations.” He replaced the book on the shelf, then stepped around Edrea into the examination room.

Three large bottles of rotting meat stood on a stained metal table. Edrea had brought them in an hour ago, after aging them on the porch for weeks and not letting Lynus know which one was which.

”The ringback came from sample two,” he said, ”which also had eggs and adults, meaning the flesh's first exposure to the air was eighteen days ago.”

Edrea looked to the jars on the table, her expression flat.

Lynus held up a finger. ”Wait! I almost forgot!” He grabbed a notebook from the stand next to the table and flipped through it. ”Four days ago we had our first cold snap. That slows these fellows down a lot.” He rubbed his nose. ”Fourteen days. Fifteen at the outside. Hmmm . . .” He scratched his head. ”So close to third-instar. Fourteen and a half.”

Edrea's eyes widened. ”Congratulations. Fourteen days and,” she drew a watch from her pocket and nodded, ”nine hours.”

Lynus felt himself grinning like a fool. A fool who, given a record of the weather and a list of the species of carrion bug common to the area, might tell you how long something had lain dead.

”I told you he could do it!” Viktor Pendrake strode around the corner. ”Sorry to eavesdrop. I didn't want to spook you.”

”Err . . . thank you?” Lynus said.