The Pharos Keeper: An Imbrium Cozy Mystery
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Beschrijving
Bol
Master Pell Brindl-Karven had been cataloging Citadel-of-Vrann stone-blocks for eighteen years when he found the one that did not belong.Block 3,847 came up from the dredging-boat on a Twoday morning in the second cycle. An ordinary upper-course wall-block of the kind the program had cataloged hundreds of, three feet by two by eighteen inches, dressed on five sides and rough on the bottom. He signed the dredging-crew's receipt-slip. He paid the crew. He waited until they had gone back to the boat.Then he turned the stone over with his apprentice and his three-legged stone-jack.The bottom face - the face that should have been rough - was not rough. It was dressed. And on the dressed bottom face was an inscription.Thirteen thousand seasons ago a master stonemason named Mira of Vresh-Mar cut a witness on the inside face of a structural block of the Pharos of Mar-Vrann lighthouse, the great work everyone has for thirteen thousand seasons attributed to Master Threnn of Mar. The witness names a different architect - the apprentice's master, the man the apprentice poisoned at the evening table, the man whose work the apprentice claimed and renamed. Mira cut the witness knowing she would not live to see it read. She trusted that if the lighthouse ever came down and was ever reassembled, the witness would be there.The Sundering brought it down. The harbor took it. Eight thousand seasons later the harbor gave it back.And Master Pell Brindl-Karven, eighteen years into his cataloging career, turned the block over.The Pharos Keeper is a quiet archaeology-discovery cozy mystery about the patience of the carver who left a witness for a future she would never see, the cataloger who happened to be the one to read it, the institutional politics of asking two ancient family-foundations to absorb a thirteen-thousand-season correction with grace, and the question of who else in the dredged-up stone-yard may have left witnesses still waiting to be read.The eighth published novelette in Tales of the Imbrium. Returning readers will recognize Junior Master Anna Sennan-Vell from Murder in the Threadhouse, now Cardrenne University's premier young Lexicon-reader. Standalone - no prior reading required.For readers of Louise Penny's quieter mysteries, Susan Hill's Simon Serrailler novels, Eleanor Catton's The Luminaries, Susanna Clarke, and anyone who reads cozy mystery for the patient unfolding of a long-buried truth.
Master Pell Brindl-Karven had been cataloging Citadel-of-Vrann stone-blocks for eighteen years when he found the one that did not belong.Block 3,847 came up from the dredging-boat on a Twoday morning in the second cycle. An ordinary upper-course wall-block of the kind the program had cataloged hundreds of, three feet by two by eighteen inches, dressed on five sides and rough on the bottom. He signed the dredging-crew's receipt-slip. He paid the crew. He waited until they had gone back to the boat.Then he turned the stone over with his apprentice and his three-legged stone-jack.The bottom face - the face that should have been rough - was not rough. It was dressed. And on the dressed bottom face was an inscription.Thirteen thousand seasons ago a master stonemason named Mira of Vresh-Mar cut a witness on the inside face of a structural block of the Pharos of Mar-Vrann lighthouse, the great work everyone has for thirteen thousand seasons attributed to Master Threnn of Mar. The witness names a different architect - the apprentice's master, the man the apprentice poisoned at the evening table, the man whose work the apprentice claimed and renamed. Mira cut the witness knowing she would not live to see it read. She trusted that if the lighthouse ever came down and was ever reassembled, the witness would be there.The Sundering brought it down. The harbor took it. Eight thousand seasons later the harbor gave it back.And Master Pell Brindl-Karven, eighteen years into his cataloging career, turned the block over.The Pharos Keeper is a quiet archaeology-discovery cozy mystery about the patience of the carver who left a witness for a future she would never see, the cataloger who happened to be the one to read it, the institutional politics of asking two ancient family-foundations to absorb a thirteen-thousand-season correction with grace, and the question of who else in the dredged-up stone-yard may have left witnesses still waiting to be read.The eighth published novelette in Tales of the Imbrium. Returning readers will recognize Junior Master Anna Sennan-Vell from Murder in the Threadhouse, now Cardrenne University's premier young Lexicon-reader. Standalone - no prior reading required.For readers of Louise Penny's quieter mysteries, Susan Hill's Simon Serrailler novels, Eleanor Catton's The Luminaries, Susanna Clarke, and anyone who reads cozy mystery for the patient unfolding of a long-buried truth.
AmazonPages: 25, Paperback, Independently published
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