Welcome to Meldin It’s what I write when I sign books. Welcome to a world that’s been my second home for over thirty years. Let me offer you spiced lizard and mountain drink while you listen to a bard who can sing the soul from your body and another who can shift into a dragon in the blink of an eye. Let me show you fairy-tale castles with laser cannons, sewers with fine-grain mosaics and lifts made of Light and air and the bones of the dead. Let me share a world that is half fantasy, half sci-fi and half fallen heaven. And yes, I’m aware those figures don’t add up, but on Meldin nothing is ever as simple as 1 plus 1. As they say on this world ‘It’s complicated.’ Where do I start? With the facts? That’s what google did when I asked it about earth. Gave me scientific data I didn’t care about and that wouldn’t help me walk the streets of London or understand what someone meant when they told me they’d see me at Macca’s. Besides, Meldin cosmology is one of the world’s best kept secrets and I wouldn’t want to spoil the surprise. It would be giving you the end of the tale before we’ve begun. Instead, I’ve put together a collection of stories: the people and places, the facts and sayings that create a world. Some of them are told from a writer’s perspective, some of them are bits of Uriel’s history that never made it into print and some of them are interviews with the people of Meldin. And this time I don’t have an editor worrying about word limit so I’ve time to tell you the reason everyone is wearing purple at Quislayn and why Baron Zepail will have your head if you call her a Baroness. So, open the door, cross the void, crawl through a tunnel of shadows or click on a post. However, you make the journey: Welcome to Meldin. Baron Zepail is the woman who rules Zepail. And she doesn’t do so because she married a Baron. That would make her Baroness Zepail (or consort Zepail) and if you call her that she’ll have the legal right to kill you. And she will. When the first Shadowalker book was being prepared for print my editor corrected Baron Zepail to Baroness Zepail in the draft. I read it and my heart rate spiked and the hairs on the back of my neck rose in an instinctive terror. I know she doesn’t really exist but for a second there I was worried she’d jump off the page and I’d be looking for a new editor because my current one was missing a head. But getting back to the Baron (because real reactions to imaginary people is a whole new blog post). Nayndarin society is gender neutral. There is no distinction made in the pronouns used for males and females except when referring to the biological acts of sex and procreation. Because apart from having babies (reluctantly), there is no difference to social roles and psychological make-up of the two genders. Nayndarin women are as aggressive, as unperceptive, as focussed and as disagreeable as the men. That’s cool, right? A truly equal society. Maybe it is. But who looks after the babies? Because babies need carers (and after being off a battlefield for the 15 months necessary to produce a child that’s not going to be a Nayndarin mother) and aggressive focussed people need partners who aren’t going to attack them right back. So very few Nayndarin marry or have Nayndarin partners. They’ll usually have a consort (or bed partner) who will be referred to, regardless of gender, as Lady or Baroness. So, when you call Baron Zepail a Baroness you’re saying she’s an unranked consort or sex-slave. And if you do that you’d better be prepared to run. And run fast. Physically she’s a classic Nayndarin: around 2.16 sl tall (6 ft 6 inches), thin as an anorexic model, with the tintanium musculature and steel-wire tendons that give Nayndarin a strength far in excess of their weight and a speed that no other race on Meldin can match. It’s as if she’s been built for combat. Like most Nayndarin her skin is black with purple and blue highlights (not brown), her hair is a metallic silver and her eyes are amethyst. She has the long Zepail face and the lines bracketing her mouth declare a lifetime of anger and cruelty. Her hair is crewcut short and as a Baron she is always armed. The laser-edged two-swords hang at her side, attached to a belt with a magnetic clip that undoes as soon as her hands touch the hilts. That action also activates the swords turning a thin diamond shaped line of metal into a weapon that can cut through concrete as easily as it cuts through flesh. Not a woman to annoy if you want to see tomorrow. As Uriel says I’m standing in a turreted castle, where skeletons lie frozen in the lifts, their bones bleached by Light. ‘I’m not going back to Zepail,’ I say, when I recognize the castle; beautiful as a fairy-tale, in white and silver, standing in a field of flowers, with a perfume like happily ever after. It’s a palace with floors of translucent stone and doors that move to your thoughts and silver tapestries that warp space and time and can hold you trapped for days. It’s the Barony of Zepail, where I saw regular hangings and daily floggings and once, when a servant had displeased her, a flash of Baron Zepail’s sword and a man’s head rolling, shocked and empty, on the crystal floor. Don’t call her a Baroness. ‘It should keep the animals out.’ Zanar opens the cylinder that’s been storing water. ‘And about half of the monsters,’
‘Monsters?’ I say. ‘You didn’t tell me there were monsters.’ ‘I’m telling you now.’ He pulls out a set of hexes and starts setting them around our camp. ‘This should keep out the birds and the sloth, and we’ve camouflaged to hide for Basindons.’ ‘What about Bandergogs?’ Zanar shrugs. ‘No one’s ever been able to study a Bandergog, so I don’t know. They’re attracted to magic, so I’ve put an external damper on, but there’s no guarantee it will work.’ ‘So, we could get attacked by 3 sword length high creatures who spend most of their time invisible and have arms strong enough to rip a dragon’s head off?’ ‘Only a small dragon.’ ‘Zanar?’ ‘Well yes, it is a possibility,’ he admits. ‘That’s why I thought I’d stay awake. You said you wanted to sleep.’ ‘I’ve changed my mind.’ ‘You’re awake.’ The dragon tilts her head and considers me out of one black eye. She has a face shaped like a gemstone coated in silver, with delicate nostrils and laid-back ears. ‘I should tell Dad. He wanted to know when you woke up.’ Continuing the story of the dragons of Meldin is the silver-black, the spawn of two entirely dissimilar species ...
In Meldin's great city, the sewer's are paved and maintained ...
‘You can go out this way.’ Elouise lifts her head up to touch a flower made from lizard’s-eye. There’s an almost inaudible chime and the panel surrounding it slides open. Inside is a tunnel, about half the size of death, it’s walls patterned with coloured tiles and it’s floor the same cinnamon and sand cobblestones as the street above us. ‘What’s this?’ Her shoulders and wings move in a shrug. ‘It’s the sword-side sewer,’ she says. ‘It comes out on Ibbot street.’ ‘This is a sewer?’ The tunnel smells of cinnamon and cloves with a hint of darkflower and the decorations wouldn’t be out of place in a palace. ‘It doesn’t look like any cesspit I’ve ever seen.’ Elouise raises ridged eyebrows. ‘It’s a Middle Yaramite sewer,’ she says and over her wolf-song voice I can hear the affected middle city vowels. ‘Not a lower Yarum cesspool.’ There’s a dragon watching me when I wake up.
And I know that shouldn’t surprise me. Not on Meldin with its fairy-tale castles and laser canons. Not on a world where the sun rises and sets on a circling horizon and shadows only happen at noon. Since coming here I have run from spirit-tipped arrows and travelled in lifts made of light and air and the bones of the dead and a single dragon shouldn’t make me question my sanity. After all, my father told me—as we crawled through a tunnel of shadows towards this world he claimed was my own—that Meldin had four different types of dragons. (Five if you counted his half-brother Myrann.) It’s just that I’d collapsed in Yarum. And Meldin’s largest city, with over two million people, wasn’t where I expect to see my first dragon. Indoors. Eating an ice-cream. I watch this mythical creature—the unnatural union of hunting-cat and lizard: all silver-black scales and deadly menace—scoop out another mouthful of berry-red cream with an elongated tongue that is slowly turning pink. And it’s about then I wonder—again—if I am going insane. |
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Catch Tilly, 2019



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