The rose field, p.1
The Rose Field, page 1

Lyra Stood and Looked At Everything.
Her Head Was as Full as Her Heart.
Also by Philip Pullman
The Book of Dust
La Belle Sauvage
The Secret Commonwealth
The Rose Field
His Dark Materials
The Golden Compass
The Subtle Knife
The Amber Spyglass
Lyra’s Oxford
Once Upon a Time in the North
The Collectors
Serpentine
The Golden Compass Graphic Novel
The Subtle Knife Graphic Novel
Sally Lockhart Mysteries
The Ruby in the Smoke
The Shadow in the North
The Tiger in the Well
The Tin Princess
The Broken Bridge
The White Mercedes
Count Karlstein
I Was a Rat!
The Scarecrow and His Servant
Spring-Heeled Jack
Two Crafty Criminals!
A Borzoi Book published by Alfred A. Knopf
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Text copyright © 2025 by Philip Pullman
Cover art and interior illustrations copyright © 2025 by Chris Wormell
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Contents
Dedication
Epigraph
Prologue
Part One
One: Beings of Another Kind
Two: The Infirmary
Three: Towards Aleppo
Four: At Marletto’s Cafe
Five: Number Theory
Six: Eagle Works Terrier 1500
Seven: The Orange Tree
Eight: The Powers of the Air
Part Two
Nine: Gold, and Gold
Ten: Always Leila
Eleven: Mount Damāvand
Twelve: Resonating Lodestone
Thirteen: A Spy in the House of God
Fourteen: Dynamic Illustration
Fifteen: An Island in the Flood
Sixteen: Out of Bounds
Seventeen: The French Teacher
Eighteen: Noli Me Tangere
Nineteen: Arctic Healing
Twenty: The Sermon
Twenty-One: The Clean Wind of God
Twenty-Two: Coruscating
Part Three
Twenty-Three: No, Impossible
Twenty-Four: The Death of Sorush
Twenty-Five: High Mountain Cradle
Twenty-Six: The Hard Problem
Twenty-Seven: The Bijou of Atlas
Twenty-Eight: Double Thunder
Twenty-Nine: Kilkenny Aflame
Thirty: He Is Younger Than You Are
Thirty-One: Merchant People
Thirty-Two: The Pieces Gather on the Board
Thirty-Three: Into the Red Building
Thirty-Four: The Alkahest at Work
Thirty-Five: Dust and Roses
Thirty-Six: An Incident by the Lake at the Moon Festival
Epilogue
Acknowledgments
About the Author
_153512829_
To Caradoc King, MDOC
Sixty years…
Entre la rose et moi, je la vois qui s’abrite;
Sur la poudre qui danse, elle glisse et n’irrite
Nul feuillage, mais passe, et se brise partout…
Between the rose and me, I see her shelter;
On the dancing dust, she glides without stirring
The leaves, she goes past in a thousand pieces…
—Paul Valéry, La jeune parque
At the end of the previous book, The Secret Commonwealth, Lyra reaches the deserted city, al-Khan al-Azraq, in her search for her dæmon, Pan.
Under the moon, she goes alone into the ruins.
She turned to avoid a broken mass of gleaming marble that had once been a temple. There she found herself at one end of a colonnade, which cast black bars of shadow across the snow-white stone of the path.
And there was a girl sitting on a fallen piece of masonry, a girl of sixteen or so, of North African appearance and shabby dress. She wasn’t a phantom: she cast a shadow, as Lyra herself did, and like her, she had no dæmon. She stood up as soon as she saw Lyra. In the moonlight she looked tense and full of fear.
“You are Miss Silvertongue,” she said.
“Yes,” said Lyra, astonished. “Who are you?”
“Nur Huda el-Wahabi. Come on, come quickly. We have been waiting for you.”
“We? Who—? You don’t mean…?”
But Nur Huda tugged urgently at Lyra’s right hand, and they hurried together along the colonnade, towards the heart of the ruins.
* * *
—
And now the final part begins.
Part One
One
Beings of Another Kind
“But who?” said Lyra. “Who is waiting?”
“Me,” said Nur Huda, “and my dæmon, Jamal, but they won’t—”
“Is he here? Is your dæmon here?”
“Yes, but they won’t let him—won’t let me…”
Lyra stopped. The moonlight shone full in the younger girl’s face, glistening on the lip she was biting and on the unshed tears in her eyes. All around them were tumbled columns of marble, statues of long-forgotten queens or gods, some still intact, and walls and arches and colonnades, gleaming brilliantly white where the moon touched them, among jagged shadows of fathomless black where it did not.
“But who are they?” said Lyra.
“Just voices. I don’t know! It’s like a war in here. They fight, and I don’t know why, I don’t know who they are, and I can’t see them. I’m so frightened. Just voices. I can’t see them.”
“And they won’t let you do what? Take your dæmon away, is that it? They’re keeping him prisoner?”
Nur Huda nodded. The movement shook a tear from one eye and she wiped it away with the heel of her hand.
“And how did you know my name?”
“Your dæmon told me. Pan. He said you were coming.”
“Pan? You’ve seen Pan? Where? Is he here?”
Lyra’s eagerness was so sudden and passionate that she didn’t even notice that she’d seized the girl’s arm. Nur Huda pulled away, her eyes wide with alarm.
Lyra let go. “Oh, I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to startle you…Only, I’ve been following him all this way, trying to find him, and if he’s not here…”
But she’d spoken too quickly, too impatiently. The girl was hungry, and tired, and horribly alone.
She was going to cry, so Lyra hugged her and said, “Let’s sit down. We’re both exhausted and frightened. Just tell me everything that happened to you. I won’t interrupt, I promise.”
They sat on a crumbled shelf of stone surrounding a basin where a fountain had once played. A trickle of water fell from the time-smudged mask of a satyr; it must have gushed from his mouth when it was built, and the spring that supplied it was still flowing. Nur Huda turned and scooped up a handful of water and sipped it. Lyra did the same. It was ice-cold and clean, and she drank some more. She had no idea she was so thirsty.
“Where have you come from?” Lyra asked.
“From Baghdad with my family. But we were in a boat and it sank, and when I swam to the shore I found Jamal was gone. I thought he was dead and that meant I was too, and I was very afraid. I was alone for a while. I didn’t know what to do. But then Pan found me asleep on a hill and he guarded me and when I woke up he told me about you and we thought Jamal might have come to this place so we came here. Pan was with me so it didn’t look as if…you know.”
“Jamal is your dæmon?”
“Yes.”
“What did Pan say?”
“He said he was looking for something you’d lost.”
“Did he tell you what that was?”
Nur Huda shook her head. “He said he was going ahead of you to find it and keep it safe. To the east, where the roses come from, that’s what he said. But he told me you would come here soon and I would know you because you had no dæmon, like me…” Her voice was unsteady.
“And…is Jamal here?”
“No. I don’t think so. Something happened. A man came out of the desert and was hiding from a giant bird, and then he saw that Jamal was close by, and snatched him before I could reach him.”
“A man? Was he one of the voices?”
“No. Only a man. He looked like a Scythian, I don’t know, maybe Chorasmian—”
Lyra blinked with surprise.
Nur Huda noticed, and went on. “I don’t know. He might not be real anyway. He’s only got one eye…The bird was hunting him. It was so big, when it flew overhead it darkened the whole sky. I thought maybe the man took Jamal to give him to the bird as a—as a, you know, when you throw something to a wolf to distract it…”
“A decoy?”
“I didn’t know that word. Yes, that. I don’t know, I’m sorry! I’m so frightened…”
“And you said it’s like a war here…What did you mean? Dæmons fighting other dæmons, something like that?”
“I can’t tell. Only that sometimes the air is full of screams and anger and crying. Probably not dæmons. There are not many dæmons here, really. Only the voices…”
“What do they say? What language do they speak?”
“Many languages. They whisper. Sometimes you think it’s insects, maybe crickets, cicadas, and then you hear them say real words…”
“When do they speak?”
“You can hear them now.”
Lyra listened. The silence was vast. It was the sort of night when you might hear the planets moving among the stars. She found herself comparing it with the silence in the world of the dead, but that was a closed silence, where nothing was alive, and that world was stale and stuffy, for all its immensity. But the silence in al-Khan al-Azraq was open, and not quite silence either. There were little scratches, little susurrations and clicks and rasps, none of them louder than a pinch of sand dropped on the skin of a snare drum, and they all meant…nothing. She remembered a night some years before, in Oxford, when she had thought that everything had a meaning, and had seen how she might understand it. But that was before she’d read Gottfried Brande and Simon Talbot, at a time when Pan was still happy with her.
“You can’t hear them?” said Nur Huda.
She spoke tentatively, anxious that Lyra should believe her, and Lyra saw how young the girl was, and how much she’d suffered, and felt how tightly Nur Huda was still gripping her arm.
“Yes, I can a bit, but I don’t know what they’re saying. Is this the best place to listen to them?”
“It’s better in the marketplace. This way.”
They had to clamber over the fallen stones and make their way around the broken walls of a basilica before they came to an open area that did look like a marketplace, a public space to hold meetings: a forum.
The sand underfoot was so fine and white that it might have been newly milled flour. In the center of the forum there was a plinth where a statue had once stood. The statue itself lay in three pieces beside it, toppled by an earthquake, perhaps: a bearded god whose sightless eyes glared up at the moon. Lyra and Nur Huda sat on his muscular chest. There was nothing moving in the forum, not a sign of life anywhere, and everything around was drenched in moonlight and frozen in stillness.
Lyra gradually became more aware of the scratchy little susurrus, the scraping of insect claws, the clicks and rustlings like dry leaves in a porcelain bowl being stirred by a breeze. The girl’s arm pressing against hers, her flesh warm in the cold air, made Lyra realize a little of what their dæmons must be feeling, so bare and vulnerable away from the solid comfort of a human body.
She gathered her breath to say something, but Nur Huda whispered, “Shhh…”
Lyra could hear no difference in the tiny scratchings and scrapes. She strained to hear better, and tried to focus her ears on whatever was there, and then remembered Giorgio Brabandt telling her how to see the secret commonwealth: You got to look at it sideways, he’d said. Out the corner of your eye. So you gotta think about it out the corner of your mind. It’s there and it en’t, both at the same time.
Of course. She shouldn’t strain at it. She should listen as if she was reading the alethiometer in the old way, as if it didn’t mean anything, and as if it did. She relaxed her mind and her eyes and her ears, and let the night flow in and out of her body. A nimbus of perception spread out around her as if her senses themselves were slowly merging with the City of the Moon.
And in the clicks and rasps and scratches she began to hear words:
…you alone…we want you to hear…this is not for the girl…send her to the fountain…this is your task, not hers…
Nur Huda heard them as well. She gripped Lyra’s arm more tightly and began to say something, but Lyra hushed her and she fell silent. The voices were scratching softly at the silence.
…girl…Nur Huda…you must leave us…go to the fountain…wait there…you will know when we have finished…
Nur Huda whispered, “Should I go?”
“Yes,” Lyra whispered in return. “Go there now and wait. I’ll come and find you soon.”
The girl rose unsteadily and walked away, looking back every few steps as if to make sure Lyra was still there. The floury sand rose up like mist around her feet as she made her way out of the forum, and then settled back infinitely slowly.
Lyra waited until everything was still. Then she said into the dark, “Who are you? Are you angels?”
…we are beings of another kind…
“Are you part of the secret commonwealth?”
…deeper by far than that…we come from the gulfs between the good numbers…
“The gulfs between…Did I hear you properly?”
No reply.
“Then tell me something else,” she said. “Tell me what’s in the red building in the desert of Karamakan. The building the roses come from.”
…an opening into another world…
Lyra was silent for a moment. The stars wheeled overhead.
“An opening—d’you mean the sort of thing Will used to call a window?”
…a doorway into another world…that is why they guard it so fiercely…
“The world where the roses come from?”
…they could come from nowhere else…
As simple as that, and she hadn’t thought of it. A knife-bearer from Cittàgazze, long ago, must have cut that window in his travels from world to world, and left it open. Her grasp on things was loosening, and she felt giddy, as if she’d lost her sense of up and of down, of now and of then, of here and of everywhere.
The voices said something else, but she didn’t understand it.
…the alkahest…
“The…alphabet? Is that what you said?”
…the alkahest…
“Alkahest? What’s that?”
…the destroyer of bonds…
She heard it clearly, and it was impossible to understand. “What d’you mean? What about this alkahest? What is it?”
…destroy everything…
Lyra was bewildered. It was too much. She dragged herself back to the present task. “Where is Nur Huda’s dæmon? Where is Jamal?”
…in the treasury…
“And where’s that?”
…behind you…
Lyra turned to look. The building that had stood there was now a jumbled heap of stones, with a few dry shrubs growing through them.
She said, “Who is keeping him prisoner?”
…a man who is asleep…












