Thoughts & jottings, blogs in progress





the aussie in cambridge entries
late nite maths
keys and porters
who lived here?
thesis supervision
dinner suits
new in town
hogwarts ahoy

the fun stuff so far:
seriously, you’re where? (by lyn)
airport security
musical comedy
cocktail hour of madness
lawyers and lara croft
bond villains
peace by force
moving, again
Tuesdays

reviews:
Gould's Book of Fish
Fury
The Tournament
The God of Small Things
Dead Souls
Murray Wheelan
Last Drinks
Perdido Street Station
The Scar
The Glass Key

news, views and rants:
guantanamo bay
peace march
canberra fires
rogue nations
free trade

the crime serial:
Naylor's Canberra
(regular reader already? the current Naylor is over here)




 
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favourite reads:
my kinja digest of faves
burnt toast
fridaysixpm
hole in my head
hot soup girl
hot water
invisible shoebox
jill/txt
kecks
krinks
londonmark
mr alphabet
lyn screens
masterkill
odalisk
road scholar
scary duck
she sells sanctuary
spin starts here
toxic custard
viscerate
version n
what's new, pussycat?
whimsicality
wild thoughts
wuyuetian
85 george st

Law stuff:
UN news
UN documents
masters
jean monnet program
bag & baggage
quantum meruit

news of home and elsewhere:
the age
the australian
abc news
BBC Cambridgeshire
NY Times

the death of my productivity:
dilbert
sluggy freelance
red meat
D2WO4
liberty meadows
films at St John’s
films at Cauis
films at Corpus Christi
films at Queens
films at Robinson
films at Christ's



 
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RQU notebook
 
Thursday, May 06, 2004  
The Wheel

Trumpington looked through the eyepiece for a last time, confirming the alignment of the survey pegs, calling the figures to her assistant. Then, opening her spyglass, she looked out along her line to the bleeding sunset on the desert's sepia horizon. A dark smudge stood against the russet disk. Her earthworks were still in alignment with the Wheel.

"Pay the men and let them go," she said, collapsing the 'glass. "I'll be here until a few standard-days after sunset."

She turned from her amanuensis to walk the track up the bluff to the camp. She had paid impossible sums of money on what her employees thought a folly.

This deep in the desert, only the mines could afford to pay labourers and that only because they could work in the steady, cool underground temperatures. Up here six months of bone-cold night followed six months of blistering day. Two to four weeks of sunset and twilight was the best you could hope for.

She had waited a long time for everything she needed to align so perfectly. The enterprise, in the parching desert heat, had drunk her fortune greedily to the lees. But it was done.

A rectangular hole in the desert, a great wedge of earth removed from it. At three hundred metres wide and five hundred long it should suffice. There was some room for error.

The simple genius of it was the gradient on each axis: on the long West-East axis, it dropped from the level of the desert floor in the West, to tens of metres below it at the East end. It made a ramp leading down from the sunset to nothing: to a towering wall of dirt.

But not an even ramp, the floor of the pit sloped down Southwards at a more and more dramatic angle the further East one went. A large ball dropped anywhere would roll the focal South-East corner.

Her father, the surveyor and late stationmaster, would have been proud. Just as he was proud of having helped extend the Fourth City railway into the hinterlands and settling along its route himself. Its construction had not been easy.

The problem of an old land, he'd said, is you're constantly up against history and all its immovable objects.

He was right, of course. The dominant place of the Fist, and other strange Brobdingnagian relics, on the Fourth City skyline confirmed it. But his axiom neglected the alien, ancient vastnesses still moving pieces, its turning Wheels.

The settlers had known of the Wheels, of course. Even before the sightings, when the stranded, accidental colonists had begun building their Fourth City from the wrack of their arrival, the native Candlemen and Sonambulists had brought stories of them.

Vast disks of bronze, higher than cliffs, wider than six houses, inexorably rolled their endless way across deserts and dried seas and plied the ridgelines above the hinterland forest.

As barnacles attach to ships, elaborate trader cities had grafted themselves to the Wheels' sides: a mercantile ecosystem of huts and houses tethered on huge ball-bearing joints, swaying gently like Ferris wheel seats as their Wheel rolled on.

These Wheel cities were strangely democratic: poor and rich alike took their turn to have the highest views, and to dodge chamber-pot emptyings.

But no-one had thought the juggernaut Wheels could change course or pace.

During a dry deep-night winter of her girlhood, months as waterless as this present desert, the scrub around the railway-siding town like tinder, it happened. Much had been moved for safety, in case of fire, into the tall stationmaster’s tower.

By its fires, a Wheel had been spotted ascending the ridgeline. No-one thought anything of it. The ridge was rock, no spark would carry on the still air.

It was the avalanche of sound that later woke sleeping residents to fear: the rending of the eucalypt forest by metal. The Wheel had slid from the ridge, but remained implacably upright – bearing with fearful new momentum down upon the railway town.

Its limpet houses swung in crazy discord in the dark, a bobbing mass of houselights, and soon, spreading fire.

Catastrophe enveloped both sides of the Wheel in flame, and flame roared ahead of the dreadful engine, blasting through the mist of oil that clung above the eucalypt canopy. Many farmers and settlers could not outrace the flame to the railway tower, those who did found a new trap.

The tower roof was high above the tree-line, safe from the orange blazing contagion sweeping the forest. It was less safe from the near-passage of the Wheel, a double-sided city in flames, throwing sparks high into the air. The tower roof caught light, and more died in the panic than the fire.

Trumpington lost her father and neighbours to the fire, her childhood to the scent of burnt flesh.

But on the Wheel, she heard, there were no survivors.

The earthworks were the culmination of half a life's planning and study, not to mention the dangerous businesses she had pursued to fund this expedition. She had always kept track, more or less, of the Wheel's progress, kept abreast of its rumoured path and cursed reputation.

All she had to do, now that she had the knowledge and money, was to get sufficiently ahead of it. She had to prove that the Wheels, that blind tyrannous history, could be stopped.

She had set a snare for history. The Wheel would roll in, a wall of earth slowly rising on its North side, the ground slipping dangerously away from it to the South.

It would begin to tilt, the tilt would exaggerate as it accelerated down the Eastern slope. It would hit a thirty metre wall, solid as the desert's foundations, already listing North, and it would topple, catch the wall and fall like a rolled coin.

Ignorant, the men left after sleeping. She sent off her assistant before sunset to return with fresh horses and food within a hundred hours. It would be enough. She wanted to see the culmination of her plan alone.

She was glad of her solitude initially, even in the gathering desert night-winter; but at dusk faded to darkness, what she saw of the disk through her spyglass terrified her.

Its dark sides were studded with pinprick firelights.

Not the wraith-lights of the long dead, but the kitchen fires of new traders. The Wheel's twin townships had been resettled – and all sailed oblivious towards a terror that would fall upon them, crashing in the night.

An end to history of her making.

8:56 PM

Monday, March 08, 2004  
Law in the Fourth City - a micro-fiction

If you asked most citizen-subjects of the Fourth City, they would tell you that law was a set of rules. If broken, there were penalties. That was all. The more reflective might laugh and say: "Law is just a word to describe what lawyers do."

He knew this was wrong. Jonathon Tallow, an advocate to the Court of the First Ward, knew what all lawyers know: law is language used to change the world, to changes lives. The house is sold, the child taken, the convict executed. It even changed the past, annulling contracts, marriages, decisions of the Governor, making them things that had never been.

If law were simply rules, it would not take study to become a lawyer, the law would be open to anyone who could read. But when a lawyer said "innocent", "reasonable", "intent" or "equal" it has a meaning the untrained mind cannot divine. Yet, all subjects were deemed by the law to know the law, and more than one man had died for failing to guess what he could never conceive.

Rules, too, would be fixed. They would not be something that could be changed by the mere act of a judge observing them. Law was not a clockwork machine, it was a living thing, formed by the minds of lawyers but existing outside them. It was its a mystery, even to initiates.

This is what Tallow had learned in long training, and he had had the best. He had studied at the College of the Child-in-the-Fields, spacious buildings from the Fourth City's earliest days (once a free hospital and asylum, and thus called by its detractors "New Bedlam"). He had reached the matter-of-fact realisation that law was, simply, a form of alchemy. By words and ritual it allowed its initiates to change reality. What other word described that?

But no citizen of the Fourth City would call it magic. They were entirely used to it, even if they held the legal profession in awe and suspicion. Even when the Court of First Ward raised a judgement against a fugitive and sent its shadow into the lawless places, this was unremarkable. When a contract was ratified in the shadow of the Court, when literally standing in the looming shadow of the Fist, and the man who later broke it was struck blind, this too was simply the way things were.

But Tallow had studied the Constitution. Not the Governor's paper authority, but the true basis of the settlement. It could be seen on the face of the Fourth City. First Ward was the area crossed on the longest summer's day by the moving shadow of an enormous wind-scarred basalt-black plinth, the Fist. Indeed, in the right light it did look like the clenched, defiant hand of a buried giant. Which is what it was.

The Fourth City was an accident. A collision of young history with an old inhabited place. A mislaid colony, and not the first here as any little archaeology could uncover. The giants here were not dead and ossified, nor even truly sleeping; but for them, time was not as it was for short-lived humanity. Yet a pact had been made, a compromise between the colony's law and the substance-shadow of the giants' dreaming-lives. Three Cities had preceded them, and each had not survived its pact with these original powers. Tallow, as an initiated lawyer and graduate of New Bedlam knew this, and it troubled him even as he solemnised his first oath-contracts, and saw a judgement raised from the Fist's shadow stalk out across the City.

1:26 PM

Tuesday, February 03, 2004  
An overdose of insomulin

And so, his imagination soaked with it, each night he dreamed a world of his own. A world the size of that we know, but circling a giant planet as a moon; following its orbit but unrotating on its own axis, so that each night and each day lasted one half a month. Each night would have a coldest part, when the moon passed through its parent’s shadow, both hemispheres out of the light of the sun.

He dreamed of its inhabitants, of pallid Candlemen, their heads crowned with anemone tendrils that gleamed with latern-fish light and gathered smaller creatures of the night into a concealed mouth. Such people might look human in part, but would need no lips or mouth upon their face.

Somnambulists, too, might live in such a world – beings with two nervous and organic systems within the one body, so that half of them might sleep while the other half woke and took control. Two intelligences could thus share one person, each moving between waking sleep and sleeping wide-awake. Somnambulists would be large, but not strong, and have two sets of eyes that never opened together. What social order would serve a race like this? How do four people with two bodies chose to breed or marry?

In all of this strangeness, he dreamt a human colony, founded on a shipwreck, abandoned. A city built about the petrified remains of two giants, and the creature they died fighting: a fist, a face, a talon extruding as vast obsidian slabs from the soil. A city that mixed law and lawlessness, five wards with courts where a judgement is as it was in Irish myth – a doom that alters one’s fate. The wards draw their strength from the giant’s relics. Beyond are the lawless grounds, where all is free but fierce. Among the men and women move people built of perpetual clockwork, able to act out a precisely ordained fate, changing only if by some accident they should ever need re-winding – their memories lasting only as long as their gears turn.

He saw a strange, precise society, turning on its old grooves, run more by judges than its governor and wondered what might come to pass if the colony should even meet its founders once again.

Sometimes the memory of it kept him from sleeping, and sometimes the dreaming of it made him slow to wake.


1:01 PM

Sunday, January 25, 2004  
New entry

I'm just experimenting with a new template here.

How we lookin' now?

Can't make this column wider, which could make pictures tricky.

10:40 PM

 
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