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Seasons of War

Seasons of War

Titel: Seasons of War Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Daniel Abraham
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raindrops and the songs of birds between them. He stood, fished the chalk from his sleeve, and went back to the wall.
    ‘If you’d like, you could light a fire in the office grate,’ Maati said. ‘We could surprise the others with some fresh tea.’
    It wasn’t called for, but it gave the girl something to do. He squinted at the figure he’d drawn until the lines came into focus. Ah, yes. Four categories of being.
    The rain slackened as the others arrived. Large Kae checked the coverings over the windows, careful that no stray light betray their presence, as Irit fluttered sparrowlike lighting the lanterns. Small Kae and Ashti Beg adjusted the seats and benches, the younger woman’s light voice contrasting with her elder’s dry one.
    The scents of wood smoke and tea made their warehouse classroom seem less furtive. Vanjit poured bowls for each of his students as they took their places. The soft light darkened the stone so that the chalk marks almost seemed written on air. Maati took a moment to himself to think of his teachers, of their lectures. He willed himself to become one of their number.
    ‘The world,’ Maati began, ‘has two essential structures. There’s the physical’ - he slapped the stone wall behind him - ‘and there’s the abstract. Two and two are always four, regardless of whether you’re talking about grains of sand or racing camels. Twelve could always be broken into two sets of six or three sets of four long before anybody noticed the fact. Abstract structure, you see?’
    They bent toward him like flowers toward the sun. Maati saw the hunger in their faces and the set of their shoulders.
    ‘Now,’ Maati said. ‘Does the physical require the abstract? Come on. Think! Can you have something physical that doesn’t have abstract structure?’
    There was a moment’s silence.
    ‘Water?’ Small Kae asked. ‘Because if you put two drops of water together with two drops of water, you just get one big drop.’
    ‘You’re ahead of yourself,’ Maati said. ‘That’s called the doctrine of least similarity. You’re not ready for that. What I mean is this: is there anything real that can’t be described by its abstract structure? Any of you? No one has a thought about this? I answered that one correctly before I’d seen ten summers.’
    ‘No?’ suggested Irit.
    ‘No. How many of you think she’s right? Go on! Take a stand about it one way or the other! Good. Yes. Irit’s right,’ Maati said and spat at the floor by his feet. ‘Everything physical has abstract structure, but not everything abstract need be physical. That’s what we’re doing here. That’s the asymmetry that lets the andat exist.’
    In all their faces, turned to his, there was the same expression. Hunger, he thought, or desperation. Or longing halfway forged into something stronger. It gave him hope.
    After the lecture, he made them run through grammar exercises, and then, as the moon rose and the lanterns smoked and the rats came out to chuff and chitter at them from the shadows, they considered the failed bindings of the women who had gone before them. Slowly, they were developing a sense of what it was to capture an andat, to take a thought and translate it into a different form. To give it volition and a human shape. To keep the binding present in your mind for the rest of your life, holding the spirit back from its natural state of nothingness like holding a stone over a well: slip once, and it is gone. Maati could see the knowledge growing in the set of their poses and hear it in the questions they asked. He had almost reached the end of his night’s plan when the small door to the street flew open again.
    Eiah strode in, her breath labored. She wore a drab cloak over a silk robe rich with all the colors of sunset. The others fell silent. Maati, standing before a wall now covered in white, ghostly notations and graphs, took a pose that expressed his alarm and asked the cause of hers.
    ‘Uncle Maati,’ she said between gasps, ‘there’s news from Galt. My father.’
    Maati shifted toward several poses at once, managing none of them. Eiah’s expression was grim.
    ‘That’s all for tonight,’ he said. ‘Come back tomorrow.’
    He had intended to assign exercises, translation puzzles for them to work in their time away from class. He abandoned the idea and shooed them out the door. All of them left except Eiah, sitting on a low chair in the warehouse office, her face lit by the shifting flames

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