As at Quedlinhame, the stand held the library’s catalog: different scribes at many different periods had added to the list. As she leafed through the catalog, she saw where a square Dariyan script, all capitals, changed abruptly to the rounded Scripta Actuaria favored by the early church mothers and gradually picking up the minuscule letters that marked the ascendancy of Salian clerics under the influence of Taillefer’s court schola. These days, the simpler Scripta Gallica held sway, imperial yet elegant.
What riches the catalog laid bare before her eyes! Not only Ptolomaia’s Tetrabiblos but also her magisterial Mathematici’s Compilation, Virgilia’s Heleniad and also her Dialogues, various geographies of heaven and Earth by diverse ancient scholars, the Memoria of Alisa of Jarrow with its detailed instruction in the art of memory, and more volumes on natural history and astronomy than she had ever seen before in one place. She skipped over the massive inventories of the writings of the church mothers but closely examined those pages marked black for caution. The numerous condemnations and tracts against various heresies held no attraction but, as she had hoped, there were forbidden texts on sorcery, like Chaldeos’ The Acts of the Magicians and The Secret Book of Alexandros, Son of Thunder.
How amazing and odd that a library of this scope should exist in the sphere of Somorhas. But hadn’t the voice said that beyond the gateway she would find her heart’s desire?
A small voice niggled at her from deep inside, annoying as a thorn. The merest prick of pain throbbed lightly behind her right eye. Hadn’t she read somewhere that in Somorhas lay only dreams and delusions?
“It cannot be so,” her voice whispered, almost as if she were two people, one watching, one speaking. “In the city of memory a great library stands in the third sphere, where the Cup of Boundless Waters holds sway, the ocean of knowledge available to mortal kind.”
That was true, wasn’t it? Best to make use of the time while she had it. She found the notation listing the location of St. Peter of Aron’s The Eternal Geometry in one of the library chambers and, seeing that others waited patiently behind her to use the catalog, hurried away. At every moment, with every footfall, she expected one of the robed clerics to challenge her. What are you doing here? Who are you? Where have you come from?
No one ever did. It wasn’t that they didn’t see her. Gazes marked her before moving away as easily as if she were someone expected. No one unusual. Not a stranger at all.
The corridor she had thought would lead her to the room of astronomies led her instead, unexpectedly, to a chapel elaborately decorated with gilded lamps hanging from a beamed ceiling and frescoes depicting the life of St. Lucia, guardian of the light of God’s wisdom. Her knees bent as if of their own volition, and in this way she knelt behind a pair of clerics robed in white and cloaked with the scarlet, floor-length capes that in the world below distinguished presbyters in the service of the skopos.