V1- ripped from official book -kud
GARTH NIX
Across the Wall
A Tale of the ABHORSEN and OTHER Stories
To Anna, Thomas, and Edward and all my family and friends
Contents
Preface IV
Nicholas Sayre and the Creature in the Case 3
Under the
Lake 95
Charlie
Rabbit 107
From the
Lighthouse 125
The Hill
The Hill 139
Lightning
Bringer 157
Down to
the Scum Quarter 173
Heart’s
Desire 223
Hansel’s
Eyes 237
Hope
Chest 253
My New
Really Epic Fantasy Series 287
Three
Roses 295
Endings 301 About the Author Credits Cover
Copyright About the Publisher
PREFACE
Four years ago, after a Christmas lunch, my younger brother passed around a very
small “book” of four stapled-together pages that he said he’d found while
helping my mother clean out a storage area under the family home. The book
contained four stories written in shaky capital letters, with a couple of
half-hearted illustrations done with colored pencils. On the front, it had
“Stories” and “Garth Nix” in the handwriting one would expect from someone aged
around six.
The stories included such gems as “The Coin
Shower,” which was very short and went something like:
a boy went outside it started raining coins he
picked them up
I had no memory of this story or the little booklet, and at first
I thought it had been fabricated by my brother as a joke, but my parents
remembered me writing the stories and engaging in this bit of self-publishing
at an early age.
I wrote “The Coin Shower” and the other stories in that collection
about thirty-five years ago, and I’ve been writing
V
ever
since. Not always fiction, though. In my varied writing career I’ve written all
kinds of things, from speeches for CEOs to brochures about brickworks to
briefing papers on new Internet technologies.
I
first got into print writing articles and scenarios for the role-playing games
“Dungeons and Dragons” and “Traveler” when I was sixteen or seventeen. I wrote
for magazines like M u l t i v e r s e a n d B r e a k o u t !
in
This
minor success in getting role-playing game articles or scenarios into print led
me to try my hand at getting some of my fiction published. I’d written quite a
few stories here and there without success, but when I was nineteen years old,
I wrote a whole lot more while I was traveling around the
I
don’t write everything in longhand first, though; sometimes I just take to the
keyboard. Most of my short fiction begins with handwritten notes, and perhaps a
few key sentences put down with my trusty Waterman fountain pen, but then I
start typing.
VI
The pen comes into its own again
later, when I print out the story, make my changes and corrections, and then go
back to the computer. This process often occurs when I have only part of the
story written. I quite often revise the first third or some small part of a
story six or seven times before I’ve written the rest of it. Often the revision
occurs because I have left the story incomplete for a long time, and I need to
revisit the existing part in order to feel my way into the story again.
Both
my short and long fiction works usually begin with a thinly sketched scene,
character, situation, or some combination of all three, which just appears in
my head. For example, I might suddenly visualize a huge old mill by a broad
river, the wheel slowly turning, with the sound of the grinding stones
underlaid by the burble of the river. Or I might think of a character, say a
middle-aged man who has turned away from the sorcery of his youth because he is
afraid of it, but who will be forced to embrace it again. Or a situation might
emerge from my subconscious, in which a man, or something that was once a man,
is looking down on a group of travelers from a rocky perch, wondering whether
he/it should rob them.
All
these beginnings might come together into the story of a miller, once a
sorcerer, who is transformed into a creature as the result of a magical compact
he thought he had evaded. So he must leave his settled life and become a
brigand, in the hope of finding, on one of the magicians or priests he robs on
the road, the one item of magical apparatus that can return his human shape.
Or
they might not come together. I have numerous notes for stories, and many
partly begun stories, that have progressed no further. Some of these fragments
might be used in my novels, or at least be the seeds of some elements in one. A
few ideas will progress and grow and become stories, complete in
VII
themselves.
The great majority of my jotted-down ideas, images, and scraps of writing will
never become anything more than a few lines in a black-and-red notebook.
The
stories in this collection are the ones that got past the notes stage, that
became a few paragraphs, then a few pages, and somehow charged on downhill to
become complete. They represent a kind of core sample taken through more than
fifteen years of writing, from the callow author of twenty-five who wrote “Down
to the Scum Quarter” to the possibly more polished forty-one-year-old writer
of “Nicholas Sayre and the Creature in the Case.”
Fortunately,
you have been spared some even earlier efforts, including the heavily T. H.
White–influenced short story I published in my school magazine at fifteen, and even
my very first professional short story sale, which felt like a great triumph
for me at nineteen years old but now looks rather out of place with my later
works.
I hope you find some stories here that you will enjoy, or
wonder about, or that linger uncomfortably in the mind when you wish they
didn’t. But if your favorite story is “The Coin Shower,” please do not write
and tell me that my writing has been going downhill ever since I was six.
GARTH NIX December 1, 2004
VIII
introduction
to
nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
I have explored Ancelstierre and the
Old Kingdom a little in my novels Sabriel, Lirael, and Abhorsen, and in the process I have found out (for that’s often
what it feels like, even though I’m the one making it up) quite a lot about
these lands, the people and creatures that inhabit them, and their stories.
But
there is much, much more that I don’t know about, and will never know about
unless I need it for a story. Unlike many fantasy writers, I don’t spend a lot
of time working out and recording tons of background detail about the worlds
that I make up. What I do is write the story, pausing every now and then to
puzzle out the details or information that I need to know to make the story
work. Some of that background material will end up in the story, though it
might be veiled, myst erious, or tangential. Much more will sit in my head or
roughly jotted down in my notebooks, until I need it next time or until I
connect it with something else.
Every
time I reenter the world of the Old Kingdom and Ancelstierre, I find myself
stitching together leftover bits and pieces that I already knew about, as well
as inventing some more that seem to go with what is already there.
“Nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case” was particularly interesting for me to
write, because in it I connect various bits and pieces of information about
Ancelstierre, rather than the
Like nearly everything I write, this is a fantasy
adventure story,
3 across the
wall
this time with a dash of country-house mystery, a twist of
1920sstyle espionage, and a humorous little umbrella on the side that may be
safely ignored by those who don’t like it (or don’t get it). Some readers may
detect the influence of some of the authors outside the fantasy genre (as it is
usually defined today) whom I admire, including Dorothy Sayers and P. G.
Wodehouse.
Planned to be a
longish short story, “Nicholas Sayre and the Creature in the Case” grew and
grew till it became a novella and ended up taking many more months to write
than I had anticipated. It started with these notes:
Nicholas and Uncle to country house Full of debs and
stupid young men Thing in the Case, eyes follow Nick Autumn haymaking thing
gets some of Nick’s blood? refuge in river, thing closes sluice hay fires in a
circle it is powerful, but poisoned how far are we from the Wall?
That was the kernel, from which a novella grew over about
ten months. I don’t know why I wrote it rather than something else. It wasn’t
sold to a publisher, I didn’t have a deadline for it, and I had plenty of other
things to do. But only a week or so after writing those notes, I sat down and
wrote the first three or four pages in one sitting. I kept coming back to it
thereafter, caught up (as I often am as both writer and reader) simply by the
desire to see what happened next.
4
Nicholas Sayre and the Creature in the
Case
“I am going back
to the
Nicholas’s
uncle Edward, more generally known as The Most Honorable Edward Sayre, Chief
Minister of Ancelstierre, shut the red-bound letter book he was reading with
more emphasis than he intended, as their heavily armored car lurched over a
hump in the road. The sudden clap of the book made the bodyguard in front look
around, but the driver kept his eyes on the narrow country lane.
“Have I
said anything about a job or a marriage?” Edward enquired, gazing down his
long, patrician nose at his nineteen-year-old nephew. “Besides, you won’t even
get within a mile of the Perimeter without a pass signed by me, let alone across
the Wall.”
“I could
get a pass from Lewis,” said Nicholas moodily,
5 across the
wall
referring
to the newly anointed Hereditary Arbiter. The previous Arbiter, Lewis’s
grandfather, had died of a heart attack during Corolini’s attempted coup
d’état half a year before.
“No, you
couldn’t, and you know it,” said Edward. “Lewis has more sense than to involve
himself in any aspect of government other than the ceremonial.”
“Then I’ll
have to cross over without a pass,” declared Nicholas angrily, not even trying
to hide the frustration that had built up in him over the past six months,
during which he’d been forced to stay in Ancelstierre. Most of that time spent
wishing he’d left with Lirael and Sam in the immediate aftermath of the
Destroyer’s defeat, instead of deciding to recuperate in Ancelstierre. It had
been weakness and fear that had driven his decision, combined with a desire to
put the terrible past behind him. But he now knew that was impossible. He could
not ignore the legacy of his involvement with Hedge and the Destroyer, nor his
return to Life at the hands—or paws—of the Disreputable Dog. He had become
someone else, and he could only find out who that was in the
“You would
almost certainly be shot if you try to cross illegally,” said Edward. “A fate
you would richly deserve. Particularly since you are not giving me the
opportunity to help you. I do not know why you or anyone else would want to go
to the
“What!
Really?”
“Yes,
really. Have I ever taken you or any other of my nephews or nieces to a house
party before?”
6 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
“Not that I
know—”
“Do I
usually make a habit of attending parties given by someone like Alastor
Dorrance in the middle of nowhere?”
“I suppose
not....”
“Then you
might exercise your intelligence to wonder why you are here with me now.”
“Gatehouse
ahead, sir,” interrupted the bodyguard as the car rounded a sweeping corner and
slowed down. “Recognition signal is correct.”
Edward and
Nicholas leaned forward to look through the open partition and the windscreen
beyond. A few hundred yards in front, a squat stone gatehouse lurked just off
the road, with its two wooden gates swung back. Two slate-gray Heddon-Hare
roadsters were parked, one on either side of the gate, with several
mackintosh-clad, weapon-toting men standing around them. One of the men waved
a yellow flag in a series of complicated movements that Edward clearly understood
and Nicholas presumed meant all was well.
“Proceed!”
snapped the Chief Minister. Their car slowed more, the driver shifting down
through the gears with practiced double-clutching. The mackintosh-clad men
saluted as the car swung off the road and through the gate, dropping their
salute as the rest of the motorcade followed. Six motorcycle policemen were
immediately behind, then another two cars identical to the one that carried
Nicholas and his uncle, then another half dozen police motorcyclists, and
finally four trucks that were carrying a company of fully armed soldiery.
Corolini’s attempted putsch had failed, and there had surprisingly been no
further trouble from the Our Country Party since, but the government continued
to be nervous about the safety of the nation’s Chief Minister.
7 across the
wall
“So, what
is going on?” asked Nicholas. “Why are you here? And why am I here? Is there
something you want me to do?”
“At last, a
glimmer of thought. Have you ever wondered what Alastor Dorrance actually does,
other than come to Corvere three or four times a year and exercise his
eccentricities in public?”
“Isn’t that
enough?” asked Nick with a shudder. He remembered the newspaper stories from
the last time Dorrance had been in the city, only a few weeks before. He’d
hosted a picnic on Holyoak Hill for every apprentice in Corvere and supplied
them with fatty roast beef, copious amounts of beer, and a particularly cheap
and nasty red wine, with predictable results.
“Dorrance’s
eccentricities are all show,” said Edward. “Misdirection. He is in fact the
head of Department Thirteen. Dorrance Hall is the Department’s main research
facility.”
“But
Department Thirteen is just a made-up thing, for the moving pictures. It
doesn’t really exist . . . um . . . does it?”
“Officially,
no. In actuality, yes. Every state has need of spies. Department Thirteen
trains and manages ours, and carries out various tasks ill suited to the more
regular branches of government. It is watched over quite carefully, I assure
you.”
“But what
has that got to do with me?”
“Department
Thirteen observes all our neighbors very successfully, and has detailed files
on everyone and everything important within those countries. With one notable
exception. The
“I’m not
going to spy on my friends!”
Edward
sighed and looked out the window. The drive beyond the gatehouse curved through
freshly mown fields,
8 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
the hay
already gathered into hillocks ready to be pitchforked into carts and taken to
the stacks. Past the fields, the chimneys of a large country house peered above
the fringe of old oaks that lined the drive.
“I’m not
going to be a spy, Uncle,” repeated Nicholas.
“I haven’t
asked you to be one,” said Edward as he looked back at his nephew. Nicholas’s
face had paled, and he was clutching his chest. Whatever had happened to him in
the
“All I want
you to do is to spend the weekend here with some of the Department’s technical
people,” continued Edward. “Answer their questions about your experiences in
the
“I’ll cross
the Wall,” said Nick forcefully. “One way or another.”
“Then I
suggest it be my way. You know, your father wanted to be a painter when he was
your age. He had talent
9 across the
wall
too,
according to old Menree. But our parents wouldn’t hear of it. A grave error, I
think. Not that he hasn’t been a useful politician, and a great help to me. But
his heart is elsewhere, and it is not possible to achieve greatness without a
whole heart.”
“So all I
have to do is answer questions?”
Edward
sighed the sigh of an older and wiser man talking to a younger, inattentive,
and impatient relative.
“Well, you
will have to appear a little bit at the party. Dinner and so forth. Croquet
perhaps, or a row on the lake. Misdirection, as I said.”
Nicholas
took Edward’s hand and shook it firmly.
“You are a
splendid uncle, Uncle.”
“Good. I’m
glad that’s settled,” said Edward. He glanced out the window. They were past the
oak trees now, gravel crunching beneath the wheels as the car rolled up the
drive to the front steps of the six-columned entrance. “We’ll drop you off,
then, and I’ll see you Monday.”
“Aren’t you
staying here? For the house party?”
“Don’t be
silly! I can’t abide house parties of any kind. I’m staying at the Golden
Sheaf. Excellent hotel, not too far away. I often go there to get through some
serious confidential reading. Place has got its own golf course, too. Thought
I might go round tomorrow. Enjoy yourself!”
Nicholas
hardly caught the last two words as his door was flung open and he was assisted
out by Edward’s personal bodyguard. He blinked in the afternoon sunlight, no
longer filtered through the smoked glass of the car’s windows. A few seconds
later, his bags were deposited at his feet; then the Chief Minister’s cavalcade
started up again and rolled out the drive as quickly as it had arrived, the
10 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
Army
trucks leaving considerable ruts in the gravel.
“Mr. Sayre?”
Nicholas
looked around. A top hatted footman was picking up his bags, but it was
another man who had spoken. A balding, burly individual in a dark-blue suit,
his hair cut so short it was practically a monkish tonsure. Everything about him
said policeman, either active or recently retired.
“Yes, I’m
Nicholas Sayre.”
“Welcome to
Dorrance Hall, sir. My name is Hedge—”
Nicholas
recoiled from the offered hand and nearly fell over the footman. Even as he
regained his balance, he realized that the man had said Hodge and then followed
it up with a second syllable.
Hodgeman.Not Hedge.
Hedge the
necromancer was finally, completely, and utterly dead. Lirael and the
Disreputable Dog had defeated him, and Hedge had gone beyond the Ninth Gate. He
couldn’t come back. Nick knew he was safe from him, but that knowledge was
purely intellectual. Deep inside him, the name of Hedge was linked irrevocably
with an almost primal fear.
“Sorry,”
gasped Nick. He straightened up and shook the man’s hand. “Ankle gave way on
me. You were saying?”
“Hodgeman
is my name. I am an assistant to Mr. D o rrance. The other guests do not
arrive till later, so Mr. Dorrance thought you might like a tour of the
grounds.”
“Um,
certainly,” replied Nick. He fought back a sudden urge to look around to see
who might be listening and, as he started up the steps, resisted the temptation
to slink from shadow to shadow just like a spy in a moving picture.
“The house
was originally built in the time of the last Trouin-Durville Pretender, about
four hundred years ago, but
11 across the
wall
little of
the original structure remains. Most of the current house was built by Mr.
Dorrance’s grandfather. The best feature is the library, which was the great
hall of the old house. Shall we start there?”
“Thank
you,” replied Nicholas. Mr. Hodgeman’s turn as a tour guide was quite
convincing. Nicholas wondered if the man had to do it often for casual
visitors, as part of what Uncle Edward would call “misdirection.”
The library
was very impressive. Hodgeman closed the double doors behind them as Nick
stared up at the high dome of the ceiling, which was painted to create the
illusion of a storm at sea. It was quite disconcerting to look up at the waves
and the tossing ships and the low scudding clouds. Below the dome, every wall
was covered by tiers of shelves stretching up twenty or even twenty-five feet
from the floor. Ladders ran on rails around the library, but no one was using
them. The library was silent; two crescent-shaped couches in the center were
empty. The windows were heavily curtained with velvet drapes, but the gas
lanterns above the shelves burned very brightly. The place looked like there
should be people reading in it, or sorting books, or something. It did not have
the dark, dusty air of a disused library.
“This way,
sir,” said Hodgeman. He crossed to one of the shelves and reached up above his
head to pull out an unobtrusive, dun-colored tome, adorned only with the
Dorrance coat of arms, a chain argent issuant from a chevron argent upon a
field azure.
The book
slid out halfway, then came no farther.
Hodgeman
looked up at it. Nick looked too.
“Is
something supposed to happen?”
“It gets a
bit stuck sometimes,” replied Hodgeman. He
12 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
tugged on
the book again. This time it came completely out. Hodgeman opened it, took a
key from its hollowed-out pages, pushed two books apart on the shelf below to
reveal a keyhole, inserted the key, and turned it. There was a soft click, but
nothing more dramatic. Hodgeman put the key back in the book and returned the
volume to the shelf.
“Now, if
you wouldn’t mind stepping this way,” Hodgeman said, leading Nick back to the
center of the library. The couches had moved aside on silent gears, and two
steel-encased segments of the floor had slid open, revealing a circular stone
staircase leading down. Unlike the library’s brilliant white gaslights, it was
lit by dull electric bulbs.
“This is
all rather cloak-and-dagger,” remarked Nick as he headed down the steps with
Hodgeman close behind him.
Hodgeman
didn’t answer, but Nick was sure a disapproving glance had fallen on his back.
The steps went down quite a long way, equivalent to at least three or four
floors. They ended in front of a steel door with a covered spy hole. Hodgeman
pressed a tarnished bronze bell button next to the door, and a few seconds
later, the spy hole slid open.
“Sergeant
Hodgeman with Mr. Nicholas Sayre,” said Hodgeman.
The door
swung open. There was no sign of a person behind it. Just a long, dismal,
white-painted concrete corridor stretching off some thirty or forty yards to
another steel door. Nick stepped through the doorway, and some slight movement
to his right made him look. There was an alcove there, with a desk, a red
telephone on it, a chair, and a guard— another plainclothes policeman type like
Hodgeman, this time in shirtsleeves, with a revolver worn openly in a shoulder
holster. He nodded at Nick but didn’t smile or speak.
13 across the
wall
“On to the
next door, please,” said Hodgeman.
Nick nodded
back at the guard and continued down the concrete corridor, his footsteps
echoing just out of time with Hodgeman’s. He heard behind him the faint ting of
a telephone being taken off its cradle and then the low voice of the guard,
his words indistinguishable.
The
procedure with the spy hole was repeated at the next door. There were two
policemen behind this one, in a larger and better-appointed alcove. They had
upholstered chairs and a leather-topped desk, though it had clearly seen better
days.
Hodgeman
nodded at the guards, who nodded back with slow deliberation. Nick smiled but
got no smile in return.
“Through
the left door, please,” said Hodgeman, pointing. There were two doors to choose
from, both of unappealing, unmarked steel bordered with lines of knuckle-size
rivets.
Hodgeman
departed through the right-hand door as Nick pushed the left, but it swung open
before he exerted any pressure. There was a much more cheerful room beyond,
very much like Nick’s tutor’s study at Sunbere, with four big leather club
chairs facing a desk, and off to one side a liquor cabinet with a large,
black-enameled radio sitting on top of it. There were three men standing around
the cabinet.
The closest
was a tall, expensively dressed, vacant-looking man with ridiculous sideburns
whom Nick recognized as Dorrance. The second-closest was a fiftyish man in a
hearty tweed coat with leather elbow patches. The skin of his thick neck hung
over his collar, and his fat face was much too big for the half-moon glasses
that perched on his nose. Lurking behind these two was a nondescript, vaguely
unhealthy-looking shorter man who wore exactly the same kind of suit as
Hodgeman but in a much more untidy way, so he looked
14 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
nothing
like a policeman, serving or otherwise.
“Ah, here
is Mr. Nicholas Sayre,” said Dorrance. He stepped forward, shook Nick’s hand,
and ushered him to the center of the room. “I’m Dorrance. Good of you to help
us out. This is Professor Lackridge, who looks after all our scientific
research.”
The
fat-faced man extended his hand and shook Nick’s with little enthusiasm but a
crushing grip. Somewhere in the very distant past, Nick surmised, Professor
Lackridge must have been a rugby enthusiast. Or perhaps a boxer. Now, sadly,
run to fat, but the muscle was still there underneath.
“And this
is Mr. Malthan, who is . . . an independent adviser on
Malthan
inclined his head and made a faint, repressed gesture with his hands, turning
them toward his forehead as if to brush his almost nonexistent hair away. There
was something about the action that triggered recognition in Nick.
“You’re
from the
But then,
this little man didn’t have the Charter Mark on his forehead, which might make
it more bearable for him to be on this side of the Wall. Nick instinctively
brushed his dark forelock aside to show his Charter Mark, his fingers running
across it. The Mark was quiescent under his touch, showing no sign of its
connection to the magical powers of the
15 across the
wall
Malthan
clearly saw the Mark, even if the others didn’t. He stepped a little closer to
Nick and spoke in a breathy half whine.
“I’m a
trader, out of Belisaere,” he said. “I’ve always done a bit of business with
some folks in Bain, as my father did before me, and his father before him.
We’ve a Permission from the King, and a Permit from your government. I only
come down here every now and then, when I’ve got something special-like that I
know Mr. Dorrance’s lot will be interested in, same as my old dad did for Mr.
Dorrance’s granddad—”
“And we pay
very well for what we’re interested in, Mr. Malthan,” Dorrance interrupted him.
“Don’t we?”
“Yes, sir,
you do. Only I don’t—”
“Malthan
has been very useful,” interjected Professor Lackridge. “Though we must
discount many of his, ahem, traveler’s tales. Fortunately he tends to bring us
interesting artifacts in addition to his more colorful observations.”
“I’ve
always spoken true,” said Malthan. “As this young man can tell you. He has the
Mark and all. He knows.”
“Yes, the
forehead brand of that cult,” remarked Lackridge, with an uninterested glance
at Nick’s forehead, the Mark mostly concealed once more under his floppy
forelock. “Sociologically interesting, of course. Particularly its regrettable
prevalence among our Northern Perimeter Reconnaissance Unit. I trust it is
only an affectation in your case, young man? You haven’t gone native on us?”
“It isn’t
just a religious thing,” Nick said carefully. “The Mark is more ofa...a
connection with . . . how can I ex-plain...unseenpowers. Magic—”
“Yes, yes.
I am sure it seems like magic to you,” said Lackridge. “But the great majority
of it is easily explained as mass hallucination, the influence of drugs,
hysteria, and so
16 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
forth. It
is the minority of events that defy explanation but leave clear physical
effects that we are interested in—such as the explosion at Forwin Mill.” He
looked over his half-moon glasses at Nicholas.
Dorrance
looked at him as well, his stare suddenly intense.
“Our
studies there indicate that the blast was roughly equivalent to the detonation
of twenty thousand tons of nitrocellulose,” continued Lackridge. He rapped his
knuckles on the desk as he exclaimed, “Twenty thousand tons! We know of nothing
capable of delivering such explosive force, particularly as the bomb itself
was reported to be two metallic hemispheres, each no more than ten feet in
diameter. Is that right, Mr. Sayre?”
Nick
swallowed, his throat moving in a dry gulp. He could feel sweat forming on his
forehead and a familiar jangling pain in his right arm and chest.
“I ...I
don’t really know,” he said after several long seconds. “I was very ill.
Feverish. But it wasn’t a bomb. It was the Destroyer. Not something our science
can explain. That was my mistake. I thought I could explain everything under
our natural laws, our science. I was wrong.”
“You’re
tired, and clearly still somewhat unwell,” said Dorrance. His tone was kindly,
but the warmth did not reach his eyes. “We have many more questions, of course,
but they can wait until the morning. Professor, why don’t you show Nicholas
around the establishment. Let him get his bearings. Then go back upstairs, and
we can all resume life as normal, what? Which reminds me, Nicholas—everything
discussed down here is absolutely confidential. Even the existence of this
facility must not be mentioned once you return to the main house. Naturally you
will see me, Professor Lackridge, and the
17 across the
wall
others at
dinner, but in our public roles. Most of the guests have no idea that
Department Thirteen lurks beneath their feet, and we want it to remain that
way. I trust you won’t have a problem keeping our existence all to yourself?”
“No, not at
all,” muttered Nick. Inside he was wondering how he could avoid answering
questions but still get his pass to cross the Perimeter. Lackridge obviously
didn’t believe in
He didn’t
want to dabble in anything to do with
“Follow me,
Nicholas,” said Lackridge. “You, too, Malthan. I want to show you something
related to those photographic plates you found for us.”
“I need to
catch my train,” muttered Malthan. “My horses...stabled near Bain . . . the
expense . . . I’m eager to return home.”
“We’ll pay
you a little extra,” said Dorrance, the tone of his voice making it clear
Malthan had no choice. “I want Lackridge to see your reaction to one of the
artifacts we’ve picked up. I’ll see you at dinner, Nicholas.”
Dorrance
shook Nick’s hand in parting, gave a dismissive wave to Lackridge, and ignored
Malthan completely. As Dorrance turned back to his desk, Nick noticed a
paperweight sitting on top of the wooden in-box. A lump of broken stone, etched
with intricate symbols. They did not shine or move
18 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
about, not
so far from the
Nick looked
at Dorrance again and decided that even if it meant having to work out some
other way to get across the Perimeter, he was not going to answer any of
Dorrance’s questions. Or rather, he would answer them vaguely and badly, and
generally behave like a well-meaning fool.
Hedge had
been an Ancelstierran originally, Nick remembered as he followed Malthan and
the professor out. Dorrance struck him as someone who might be tempted to walk
a path similar to Hedge’s.
They left
through the door Nick had come in by, out through the opposite door, and then
rapidly through a confusing maze of short corridors and identical riveted
metal doors.
“Bit
confusing down here, what?” remarked Lackridge. “Takes a while to get your
bearings. Dorrance’s father built the original tunnels for his underground
electric railway. Modeled on the Corvere Metro. But the tunnels have been
extended even farther since then. We’re just going to take a look in our
holding area for objects brought in from north of the Wall or found on our
side, near it.”
“You
mentioned photographic plates,” said Nick. “Surely no photographic equipment
works over the Wall?”
“That has
yet to be properly tested,” said Lackridge dismissively. “In any case, these
are prints from negative glass plates taken in Bain of a book that was brought
across the Wall.”
“What kind
of book?” Nick asked Malthan.
Malthan looked
at Nick, but his eyes failed to meet the
19 across the
wall
younger
man’s gaze. “The photographs were taken by a former associate of mine. I
didn’t know she had this book. It burned of its own accord only minutes after
the photographs were captured. Half the plates also melted before I could get
them far enough south.”
“What was
the title of the book?” asked Nick. “And why ‘former’ associate?”
“She burned
with the b-b-book,” whispered Malthan with a shiver. “I do not know its name. I
do not know where Raliese might have got it.”
“You see
the problems we have to deal with,” said Lackridge with a sneer at Malthan. “He
probably bought the plates at a school fete in Bain. But they are interesting.
The book was some kind of bestiary. We can’t read the text as yet, but there
are very fine etchings—illustrations of the b e a s t s . ”
The
professor stopped to unlock the next door with a large brass key, but he opened
it only a fraction. He turned to Malthan and Nick and said, “The photographs
are important, as we already had independent evidence that at least one of the
beasts depicted in that book really does exist—or existed at one time—in the
Old Kingdom.”
“Independent
evidence of one of those things?” squeaked Malthan. “What kind of—”
“This,”
declared Lackridge, opening the door wide. “A mummified specimen!”
The
storeroom beyond was cluttered with boxes, chests, and paraphernalia. For a
second, Nick’s eye was drawn to two very large blowups of photographs of Forwin
Loch, which were leaning on the wall near the door. One showed a scene of
industry from the last century, and the other showed the
20 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
destruction
wrought by Orannis—the Destroyer.
But the big
photographs held his attention for no more than a moment. There could be no
question what Lackridge was referring to. In the middle of the room there was a
glass cylinder about nine feet high and five feet in diameter. Inside the case,
propped up against a steel frame, was a nightmare.
It looked
vaguely human, in the sense that it had a head, a torso, two arms, and two
legs. But its skin or hide was of a strange violet hue, crosshatched with lines
like a crocodile’s, and looked very rough. Its legs were jointed backward and
ended in hooked hooves. The arms stretched down almost to the floor of the
case, and ended not in hands but in clublike appendages that were covered in
inch-long barbs. Its torso was thin and cylindrical, rather like that of a
wasp. Its head was the most human part, save that it sat on a neck that was
twice as long; it had narrow slits instead of ears, and its black, violet-p u p
i l e d eyes—presumably glass made by a skillful taxider-mist—were pear-shaped
and took up half its face. Its mouth, twice the width of any human’s, was almost
closed, but Nick could see teeth gleaming there.
Black teeth
that shone like polished jet.
“No!”
screamed Malthan. He ran back down the corridor as far as the previous door,
which was locked. He beat on the metal with his fists, the drumming echoing
down the corridor.
Nick pushed
Lackridge gently aside with a quiet “Excuse me.” He could feel his heart
pounding in his chest, but it was not from fear. It was excitement. The
excitement of discovery, of learning something new. A feeling he had always
enjoyed, but it had been lost to him ever since he’d dug up the metal spheres
of the Destroyer.
He leaned
forward to touch the case and felt a strange,
21 across the
wall
electric
thrill run through his fingers and out along his thumbs. At the same time, there
was a stabbing pain in his forehead, strong enough to make him step back and
press two fingers hard between his eyes.
“Not a bad
specimen,” said Lackridge. He spoke conversationally, but he had come very
close to Nick and was watching him intently. “Its history is a little murky,
but it’s been in the country for at least three hundred years and in the
Corvere Bibliomanse for the past thirty-five. One of the things my staff has
been doing here at Department Thirteen is cross-indexing all the various institutional
records, looking for artifacts and information about our northern neighbors.
When we got Malthan’s photographs, Dorrance happened to remember he’d seen an
actual specimen of one of the creatures somewhere before, as a child. I
cross-checked the records at the Bibliomanse and found the thing, and we had it
brought up here.”
Nick nodded
absently. The pain in his head was receding. It appeared to emanate from his
Charter Mark, though that should be totally quiescent this far from the Wall.
Unless there was a roaring gale blowing down from the north, which he supposed
might have happened since he came down into Department Thirteen’s subterranean
lair. It was impossible to tell what was going on in the world above them.
“Apparently
the thing was found about ten miles in on our side of the Wall, wrapped in
three chains,” continued Lackridge. “One of silver, one of lead, and one made
from braided daisies. That’s what the notes say, though of course we don’t have
the chains to prove it. If there was a silver one, it must have been worth a
pretty penny. Long before the Perimeter, of course, so it was some time before
the authorities
22 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
got hold of
it. According to the records, the local folk wanted to drag it back to the
Wall, but fortunately there was a visiting Captain-Inquirer who had it shipped
south. Should never have gotten rid of the Captain-Inquirers. Wouldn’t have
minded being one myself. Don’t suppose anyone would bring them back now.
Lily-livered lot, the present government . . . excepting your uncle, of
course.. . .”
“My
father also sits in the Moot,” said Nick. “On the government benches.”
“Well,
of course, everyone says my politics are to the right of old Arbiter Werris
Blue-Nose, so don’t mind me,” said Lackridge. He stepped back into the corridor
and shouted, “Come back here, Mr. Malthan. It won’t bite you!”
As
Lackridge spoke, Nick thought he saw the creature’s eyes move. Just a fraction,
but there was a definite sense of movement. With it, all his sense of
excitement was banished in a second, to be replaced by a growing fear.
It’salive,
thought Nick. He stepped back to the door, almost knocking over Lackridge, his
mind working furiously.
The
thing is alive. Quiescent. Conserving its energies, so farfromtheOldKingdom.
ItmustbesomeFreeMagiccrea-ture,andit’sjustwaitingforachance—
“Thank
you, Professor Lackridge, but I find myself suddenly rather keen on a cup of
tea,” blurted Nick. “Do you think we might come back and look at this specimen tomorrow?”
“I’m
supposed to make Malthan touch the case,” said Lackridge. “Dorrance was most
insistent upon it. Wants to see his reaction.”
Nick
edged back and looked down the corridor. Malthan
23 across the
wall
was
crouched by the door.
“I think you’ve
seen his reaction,” he said. “Anything more would simply be cruel, and hardly
scientific.”
“He’s only
an
“What!”
exclaimed Nick.
“Within
reason,” Lackridge added hastily. “I mean, nothing too drastic. Do him good.”
“I think he
needs to get on a train north and go back to the
“I’ll just
see how he is,” added Nick. An idea started to rise from the recesses of his
mind as he walked down the corridor toward the crouched and shivering man
pressed against the door. “Perhaps we can walk out together.”
“Mr.
Dorrance was most insistent—”
“I’m sure
he won’t mind if you tell him that I insisted on escorting Malthan on his way.”
“But—”
“I am
insisting, you know,” Nick cut in forcefully. “As it is, I shall have a few words
to say about this place to my uncle.”
“If you’re
going to be like that, I don’t think I have any choice,” said Lackridge
petulantly. “We were assured that you would cooperate fully with our research.”
24 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
“I will
cooperate, but I don’t think Malthan needs to do any more for Department
Thirteen,” said Nick. He bent down and helped the
“You don’t
understand the importance of our work,” said Lackridge. “Or our methods.
Observing the superstitious reactions of northerners and our own people
delivers legitimate and potentially useful information.”
This was
clearly only a pro forma protest, because as Lackridge spoke, he unlocked the
door and led them quickly through the corridors. After a few minutes, Nick
found that he didn’t need to half carry Malthan anymore, but could just point
him in the right direction.
Eventually,
after numerous turns and more doors that required laborious unlocking, they
came to a double-width steel door with two spy holes. Lackridge knocked, and
after a brief inspection, they were admitted to a guardroom inhabited by five
policeman types. Four were sitting around a linoleum-topped table under a
single suspended lightbulb, drinking tea and eating doorstop-size sandwiches.
Hodgeman was the fifth, and clearly still on duty, as unlike the others he had
not removed his coat.
“Sergeant
Hodgeman,” Lackridge called out rather too loudly. “Please escort Mr. Sayre
upstairs and have one of your other officers take Malthan to Dorrance Halt and
see he gets on the next northbound train.”
“Very good,
sir,” replied Hodgeman. He hesitated for a moment, then with a curiously
unpleasant emphasis, which
25 across the
wall
Nick would
have missed if he hadn’t been paying careful attention, he said, “Constable
Ripton, you see to Malthan.”
“Just a
moment,” said Nick. “I’ve had a thought. Malthan can take a message from me
over to my uncle, the Chief Minister, at the Golden Sheaf. Then someone from
his staff can take Malthan to the nearest station.”
“One of my
men would happily take a message for you, sir,” said Sergeant Hodgeman. “And
Dorrance Halt is much closer than the Golden Sheaf. That’s all of twenty miles
away.”
“Thank
you,” said Nick. “But I want the Chief Minister to hear Malthan directly about
some matters relating to the
Nick took
out his notebook and gold propelling pencil and casually leaned against the
wall. They all watched him, the five policeman with studied disinterest masking
hostility, Lackridge with more open aggression, and Malthan with the sad eyes
of the doomed.
Nick began
to whistle tunelessly through his teeth, pretending to be oblivious to the
pent-up institutional aggression focused upon him. He wrote quickly, sighed and
pretended to cross out what he’d written, then ripped out the page, palmed it,
and started to write again.
“Very hard
to concentrate the mind in these underground chambers of yours,” Nick said to
Lackridge. “I don’t know how you get anything done. Expect you’ve got
cockroaches too... maybe rats . . . I mean, what’s that?”
He pointed
with the pencil. Only Malthan and Lackridge turned to look. The policemen kept
up their steady stare. Nick
26 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
stared
back, but he felt a slight fear begin to swim about his stomach. Surely they
wouldn’t risk doing anything to Edward Sayre’s nephew? And yet . . . they were
clearly planning to imprison Malthan at the least, or perhaps something worse.
Nick wasn’t going to let that happen.
“Only a
shadow, but I bet you do have rats. Stands to reason. Underground. Tea and
biscuits about,” Nick said as he ripped out the second page. He folded it,
wrote “Mr. Edmund Garran” on the outside, and handed it to Malthan, at the same
time stepping across to shield his next action from everyone except Lackridge,
whom he stumbled against.
“Oh,
sorry!” he exclaimed, and in that moment of apparently lost balance, he slid
the palmed first note into Malthan’s still open hand.
“I...ah...
still not quite recovered from the events at Forwin Mill,” Nick mumbled, as
Lackridge suppressed an oath and jumped back.
The
policemen had stepped forward, apparently only to catch him if he fell.
Sergeant Hodgeman had seen him stumble before. They were clearly suspicious but
didn’t know what he had done. He hoped.
“Bit
unsteady on my pins,” continued Nick. “Nothing to do with drink, unfortunately.
That might make it seem worthwhile. Now I must get on upstairs and dress for
dinner. Who’s taking Malthan over to the Golden Sheaf?”
“I am, sir.
Constable Ripton.”
“Very good,
Constable. I trust you’ll have a pleasant evening drive. I’ll telephone ahead
to make sure that my uncle’s staff are expecting you and have dinner laid on.”
“Thank you,
sir,” said Ripton woodenly. Again, if Nick hadn’t been paying careful
attention, he might have missed the
27 across the
wall
young
constable flicking his eyes up and down and then twice toward Sergeant
Hodgeman—a twitch Nick interpreted as a call for help from the junior police
officer, looking for Hodgeman to tell him how to satisfy his immediate masters
as well as insure himself against the interference of any greater authority.
“Get on
with it then, Constable,” said Hodgeman, his words as ambiguous as his
expression.
“Let’s all
get upstairs,” Nick said with false cheer he dredged up from somewhere. “After
you, Sergeant. Malthan, if you wouldn’t mind walking with me, I’ll see you to
your car. Got a couple of questions about the
“Anything,
anything,” babbled Malthan. He came so close, Nick thought the little trader
was going to hug him. “Let us get out from under the earth. With that—”
“Yes, I
agree,” interrupted Nick. He gestured toward the door and met Sergeant
Hodgeman’s stare. All the policemen moved closer. Casual steps. A foot slid
forward here, a diagonal pace toward Nick.
Lackridge
coughed something that might have been “Dorrance,” scuttled to the door leading
back to the tunnels, opened it just wide enough to admit his bulk, and squeezed
through. Nick thought about calling him back but instantly dismissed the idea.
He didn’t want to show any weakness.
But with Lackridge
gone, there was no longer a witness. Nick knew Malthan didn’t count, not to
anyone in Department Thirteen.
Sergeant
Hodgeman pushed one heavy-booted foot forward and advanced on Nick and Malthan
till his face was inches away from Nick’s. It was an intimidating posture, long
28
nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
beloved of sergeants, and Nick knew it
well from his days in the school cadets.
Hodgeman
didn’t say anything. He just stared, a fierce stare that Nick realized hid a
mind calculating how far he could go to keep Malthan captive, and what he might
be able to do to Nicholas Sayre without causing trouble.
“My uncle
is the Chief Minister,” Nick whispered very softly. “My father a member of the
Moot. Marshal Harngorm is my mother’s uncle. My second cousin is the Hereditary
Arbiter himself.”
“As you
say, sir,” said Hodgeman loudly. He stepped back, the sound of his heel on the
concrete snapping through the tension that had risen in the room. “I’m sure you
know what you’re doing.”
That was a
warning of consequences to come, Nick knew. But he didn’t care. He wanted to
save Malthan, but most of all at that moment he wanted to get out under the sun
again. He wanted to stand aboveground and put as much earth and concrete and
as many locked doors as possible between himself and the creature in the case.
Yet
even when the afternoon sunlight was softly warming his face, Nick wasn’t much
comforted. He watched Constable Ripton and Malthan leave in a small green van
that looked exactly like the sort of vehicle that would be used to dispose of a
body in a moving picture about the fictional Department Thirteen. Then, while
lurking near the footmen’s side door, he saw several gleaming, expensive cars
drive up to disgorge their gleaming, expensive passengers. He recognized most
of the guests. None were friends. They were all people he would formerly have
described as frivolous and now just didn’t care
29
across
the wall
about
at all. Even the beautiful young women failed to make more than a momentary
impact. His mind was elsewhere.
Nick was thinking about
Malthan and the two messages he carried. One, the obvious one, was addressed to
Thomas Garran, Uncle Edward’s principal private secretary. It said:
Garran
Uncle will want to talk to the bearer (Malthan, an
Nicholas.
The other, more hastily
scrawled, said:
Send telegram TO MAGISTRIX WYVERLEY COLLEGE NICK
FOUND BAD KINGDOM CREATURE DORRANCE HALL TELL ABHORSEN HELP.
There
was every possibility neither message would get through, Nick thought. It would
all depend on what Dorrance and his minions thought they could get away with.
And that depended on what they thought they could do to one Nicholas
30 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
Sayre
before he caused them too much trouble.
Nick
shivered and went back inside. As he expected, when he asked to use a
telephone, the footman referred him to the butler, who was very apologetic and
bowed several times while regretting that the line was down and probably would
not be fixed for several days, the telegraph company being notoriously slow in
the country.
With that
avenue cut off, Nick retreated to his room, ostensibly to dress for dinner. In
practice he spent most of the time writing a report to his uncle and another
telegram to the Magistrix at
Danjers’s
valet was famous among servants for his ability with shoe polish, champagne,
and a secret oil. So neither he nor anyone else in the belowstairs parlor was
much surprised when the Chief Minister’s nephew sought him out with a pair of
shoes in hand. The valet was a little more surprised to find a note inside the
shoes asking him to go out to the village and secretly send a telegram, but as
the note was wrapped around four double-guinea pieces, he was happy to do so.
When he’d finished his duties, of course.
Back in his
room, Nick dressed hastily. As he tied his bow tie, his hands moved
automatically while he wondered what else he should be doing. All kinds of
plans raced through his head, only to be abandoned as impractical, or foolish,
or likely to make matters worse.
31 across the
wall
With his
tie finally done, Nick went to his case and took out a large leather wallet.
There were three things inside. Two were letters, both written neatly on thick,
linen-rich handmade paper, but in markedly different hands.
The first
letter was from Nick’s old friend Prince Sameth. It was concerned primarily
with Sam’s current projects and was illustrated in the margins with small
diagrams. Judging from the letter, Sam’s time was being spent almost entirely
on the fabrication and enchantment of a replacement hand for Lirael, and the
planning and design of a fishing hut on an island in the Ratterlin Delta. Sam
did not explain why he wanted to build a fishing hut, and Nick had not had a
reply to his most recent letter seeking enlightenment. This was not unusual.
Sam was an infrequent correspondent, and there was no regular mail service of
any kind between Ancelstierre and the
Nick didn’t
bother to read Sam’s letter again. He put it aside, carefully unfolded the
second letter, and read it for the hundredth or two hundredth time, hoping that
this time he would uncover some hidden meaning in the innocuous words.
This
letter was from Lirael, and it was quite short. The writing was so regular, so
perfectly spaced, and so free of ink splotches that Nick wondered if it had
been copied from a rough version. If it had, what did that mean? Did Lirael
always make fine copies of her letters? Or had she done it just for him?
Dear Nick,
I
trust you are recovering well. I am much better, and Sam says my new hand will
be ready soon. Ellimere has been teaching me to play tennis, a game
32 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
from
your country, but I really do need two hands. I have also started to work with
the Abhorsen. Sabriel, I mean, though I still find it hard to call her that. I
still laugh when I remember you calling her “Mrs. Abhorsen, Ma’am Sir.” I was
surprised by that laugh, amidst such sorrow and pain. It was a strange day,
wasn’t it? Waiting for everything to be discussed and sorted and explained just
enough so we could all go home, with the two of us lying side by side on our
stretchers with so much going on all around. You made it better for me, telling
me about my friend the Disreputable Dog. I am very grateful for that. That is
why I’m writing, really, and Sam said he was sending something so this could
go in with it.
Be
well.
Lirael, Abhorsen-in-Waiting and Remembrancer
Nick stared
at the letter for several minutes after he finished reading it, then gently
folded it and returned it to the wallet. He drew out the third thing, which had
come in a package with the letters three weeks ago, though it had apparently
left the
Nick held
it up to the light. He could see faint etched symbols upon the blade, but that
was all they were. Faint etched symbols. Not living, moving Charter Marks,
bright and flowing, all gold and sunshine. That’s what Charter-spelled swords
normally looked like, Nick knew, the marks leaping and splashing across the
metal.
33 across the
wall
Nick knew
he ought to be comforted. If the Charter Marks on his dagger were still and
dead, then the thing beneath the house should be as well. But he knew it
wasn’t. He’d seen its eyes flicker.
There was a
knock on the door. Nick hastily put the dagger back in its sheath.
“Yes!” he
called. The sheathed dagger was still in his hand. For a moment he considered
exchanging it for the slim .32 automatic pistol in his suitcase’s outer pocket.
But he decided against it when the person at the door called out to him.
“Nicholas
Sayre?”
It was a
woman’s voice. A young woman’s voice, with the hint of a laugh in it. Not a
servant. Perhaps one of the beautiful young women he’d seen arrive. Probably a
not very successful actor or singer, the usual adornments of typical country
house parties.
“Yes. Who
is it?”
“Tesrya.
Don’t say you don’t remember me. Perhaps a glimpse will remind you. Let me in.
I’ve got a bottle of champagne. I thought we might have a drink before
dinner.”
Nick didn’t
remember her, but that didn’t mean anything. He knew she would have singled him
out from the seating plan for dinner, homing in on the surname Sayre. He
supposed he should at least tell her to go away to her face. Courtesy to women,
even fortune hunters, had been drummed into him all his life.
“Just one
drink?”
Nick
hesitated, then tucked the sheathed dagger down the inside of his trousers, at
the hip. He held his foot against the door in case he needed to shut it in a
hurry; then he
34 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
turned the
key and opened it a fraction.
He had the
promised glimpse. Pale, melancholy eyes in a very white face, a forced smile
from too-red lips. But there were also two hooded men there. One threw his
shoulder against the door to keep it open. The other grabbed Nick by the hair
and pushed a pad the size of a small pillow against his face.
Nick tried
not to breathe as he threw himself backward, losing some hair in the process,
but the sickly-sweet smell of chloroform was already in his mouth and nose. The
two men gave him no time to recover his balance. One pushed him back to the
foot of the bed, while the other got his right arm in a wrestling hold. Nick
struck out with his left, but his fist wouldn’t go where he wanted it to. His
arm felt like a rubbery length of pipe, the elbow gone soft.
Nick kept
flailing, but the pad was back on his mouth and nose, and all his senses
started to shatter into little pieces like a broken mosaic. He couldn’t make
sense of what he saw and heard and felt, and all he could smell was a sickly
scent like a cheap perfume badly imitating the scent of flowers.
In
another few seconds, he was unconscious.
Nicholas Sayre returned to his senses
very slowly. It was like waking up drunk after a party, his mind still clouded
and a hangover building in his head and stomach. It was dark, and he was
disoriented. He tried to move and for a frightened instant thought he was
paralyzed. Then he felt restraints at his wrists and thighs and ankles and a
hard surface under his head and back. He was tied to a table, or perhaps a hard
bench.
“Ah, the
mind wakes,” said a voice in the darkness. Nick thought for a second, his
clouded mind slowly processing the
35 across the
wall
sound. He
knew that voice. Dorrance.
“Would you
like to see what is happening?” asked Dorrance. Nick heard him take a few
steps, heard the click of a rotary electric switch. Harsh light came with the
click, so bright that Nick had to screw his eyes shut, tears instantly welling
up in the corners.
“Look, Mr.
Sayre. Look at your most useful work.”
Nick slowly
opened his eyes. At first all he could see was a naked, very bright electric
globe swinging directly above his head. Blinking to clear the tears, he looked
to one side. Dorrance was there, leaning against a concrete wall. He smiled and
pointed to the other side, his hand held close against his chest, fist
clenched, index finger extended.
Nick rolled
his head and then recoiled, straining against the ropes that bound his ankles,
thighs, and wrists to a steel operating table with raised rails.
The
creature from the case was right next to him. No longer in the case, but
stretched out on an adjacent table ten inches lower than Nick’s. It was not
tied up. There was a red rubber tube running from one of Nick’s wrists to a
metal stand next to the creature’s head. The tube ended an inch above the
monster’s slightly open mouth. Blood was dripping from the tube, small dark
blobs falling in between its jet black teeth.
Nick’s
blood.
Nick struggled
furiously for another second, panic building in every muscle. The ropes did
not give at all, and the tube was not dislodged. Then, his strength exhausted,
he stopped.
“You
need not be concerned, Mr. Nicholas Sayre,” said Dorrance. He moved around to look
at the creature, gently tapping Nick’s slippered feet as he passed. “I am
taking only a
36
nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
pint. This will all just be a nightmare
in the morning, half remembered, with a dozen men swearing to your conspicuous
consumption of brandy.”
As he
spoke, the light above him suddenly flared into white-hot brilliance. Then,
with a bang, the bulb exploded into powder and the room went dark. Nick
blinked, the afterimage of the filament burning a white line across the room.
But even with that, he could see another light. Two violet sparks that were
faint at first but became brighter and more i n t e n s e .
Nick
recognized them instantly as the creature’s eyes. At the same time, he smelled
a sudden, acrid odor, which got stronger and stronger, coating the back of his
mouth and making his nostrils burn. A metallic stench that he knew only too
well.
The smell
of Free Magic.
The violet
eyes moved suddenly, jerking up. Nick felt the rubber hose suddenly pulled from
his wrist and the wet sensation of blood dripping down his hand.
He still
couldn’t see anything save the creature’s eyes. They moved again, very quickly,
as the thing stood up and crossed the room. It ignored Nick, though he
struggled violently against his bonds as it went past. He couldn’t see what happened
next, but something . . . or someone . . . was hurled against his table, the
impact rocking it almost to the point of toppling over.
“No!”
shouted Dorrance. “Don’t go out! I’ll bring you blood! Whatever kind you need—”
There
was a tearing sound, and flickering light suddenly filled the room. Nick saw
the creature silhouetted in the doorway, holding the heavy door it had just
ripped from its steel
37
across
the wall
hinges. It threw this aside and strode
out into the corridor, lifting its head back to emit a hissing shriek that was
so high-pitched, it made Nick’s ears ring.
Dorrance
staggered after it for a moment, then returned and flung open a cabinet on the
wall. As he picked up the telephone handset inside, the lights in the corridor
fizzed and went out.
Nick heard
the dial spin three times. Then Dorrance swore and tapped the receiver before
dialing again. This time the phone worked, and he spoke very quickly.
“Hello?
Lackridge? Can you hear me? Yes . . . ignore the crackle. Is Hodgeman there?
Tell him ‘Situation Dora.’ All the fire doors must be barred and the exit
grilles activated. No, tell him now. . . . ‘Dora’ . . .Yes, yes. It worked, all
too well. She’s completely active, and I heard Her clearly for the first time,
speaking directly into my head, not as a dreaming voice. Sayre’s blood was too
rich, and there’s something wrong with it. She needs to dilute it with normal
blood. . . . What? Active!Running around! Of course you’re in danger! She
doesn’t care whose blood. . . . We need to keep Her in the tunnels; then
I’llfind someone...one of the servants. Just get on with it!”
Nick kept
silent, but he remembered the dagger at his hip. If he could bend his hand back
and reach it, he might be able to unsheath it enough to work the rope against
the blade. If he didn’t bleed to death first.
“So, Mr.
Sayre,” said Dorrance in the darkness. “Why would your blood be different from
that of any other bearer of the Charter Mark? It causes me some distress to
think I have given Her the wrong sort. Not to mention the difficulty that now
arises from Her desire to wash Her drink down.”
“I don’t
know,” Nick whispered after a moment’s hesitation.
38 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
He’d thought of pretending to be
unconscious, but Dorrance would certainly test that.
In the
distance, electric bells began a harsh, insistent clangor. At first none
sounded in the corridor outside, then one stuttered into life. At the same
time, the light beyond the door flickered on, off, andonagain, beforegiving
upin a shower of sparks that plunged the room back into total d a r k n e s s .
Something
touched Nick’s feet. He flinched, taking off some skin against the ropes. A few
seconds later there was a click near his head, a whiff of kerosene; and a
four-inch flame suddenly shed some light on the scene. Dorrance lifted his
cigarette lighter and set it on a head-high shelf, still b u r n i n g .
He took a
bandage from the same shelf and started to wind it around Nick’s wrist.
“Waste not,
want not,” said Dorrance. “Even if your blood is tainted, it has succeeded
beyond my dearest hopes. I have long dreamed of waking Her.”
“It, you
mean,” croaked Nick.
Dorrance
tied off the bandage, then suddenly slapped Nick’s face hard with the back of
his hand.
“You are
not worthy to speak of Her! She is a goddess! A goddess! She should never have
been sent away! My father was a fool! Fortunately I am not!”
Nick chose
silence once more, and waited for another blow. But it didn’t come. Dorrance
took a deep breath, then bent under the table. Nick craned his head to see what
he was doing but could hear only the rattle of metal on metal.
The man
emerged holding two sets of old-style handcuffs, the kind whose cuffs were
screwed in rather than key locked.
39 across the
wall
He quickly handcuffed Nick’s left wrist
to the metal rail of the bed, then did the same with the second set to his
right wrist.
“It has
been politic to play the disbeliever about your Charter Magic,” he said as he
screwed the handcuffs tight. “But She has told me different in my dreams, and
if She can rise so far from the Wall, perhaps your magic will also serve
you...and ropes do burn or fray so easily. Rest here, young Nicholas. My
mistress may soon need a second drink, whether the taste disagrees with Her or
not.”
After
shaking the handcuffs to make sure they were secure, Dorrance picked up his
still-burning cigarette lighter and left, muttering something to himself that
Nick couldn’t quite hear. It didn’t sound entirely sane, but Nick didn’t need
to hear bizarre mumblings to know that Dorrance was neither the harmless
eccentric of his public image or the cunning spymaster of his secret identity.
He was a madman in league with a Free Magic creature.
As soon as
Dorrance had gone, Nick tested the handcuffs, straining against them. But he
couldn’t move his hands more than a few inches off the table, certainly not far
enough to reach the screws. However, he could reach the pommel of his dagger
with the tips of three fingers. After a few failed attempts, he managed to get
the blade out, and by rolling his body, he sliced through the rope on his left
wrist, cutting himself slightly in the process.
He was
trying to move his left ankle up toward his hand when he heard the first
distant gunshots and screams. There were more, but they got fainter and
fainter, lending hope that the creature was moving farther away.
Not that it
made much difference, Nick thought as he rattled his handcuffs in frustration.
He couldn’t get free by
40 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
himself. He
would have to work out a plan to get Dorrance to at least uncuff him when he
returned. Then Nick might be able to surprise him. If he did return. Until
then, Nick decided, he should try to rest and gather his strength. As much as
the adrenaline coursing through his bloodstream would let him rest, immobilized
on a steel operating table in a secret underground facility run by a lunatic,
with a totally inimical creature on the loose.
He lay in
silence for what he estimated was somewhere between fifteen minutes and an
hour, though he was totally unable to judge the passage of time when he was in
the dark and so wound up with tension. In that time, every noise seemed loud
and significant, and made him twist and tilt his head, as if by moving his ears
he could better capture and identify each sound.
There was
silence for a while, or near enough to it. Then he heard more gunshots but
without the screams. The shots were repeated a few seconds later, louder and
closer, and were followed by the slam and echo of metal doors and then hurrying
footsteps. Of more than one person.
“Help!”
cried Nick. “Help! I’m tied up in here!”
He figured
it was worth calling out. Even fanatical Department Thirteen employees must
have realized by now that Dorrance was crazy and he’d unleashed something awful
upon them.
“Help!”
The
footsteps came closer, and a flashlight beam swung into the room, blinding
Nick. Behind its yellow nimbus, he saw two partial silhouettes. One man
standing in front of another.
“Get those
shackles off and untie him,” ordered the second
41 across the
wall
man. Nick
recognized the voice. It was Constable Ripton. The man who shuffled ahead,
allowing the light to fall on his face and side, was Professor Lackridge. A
pale and trembling Lackridge, who fumbled with the screws of the handcuffs.
Ripton was holding a revolver on him, but Nick doubted that was why the
scientist was so scared.
“Sorry to
take so long, sir,” said Ripton calmly. “Bit of a panic going on.”
Nick
suddenly understood what Ripton had actually been trying to convey with his
quick glances back in the guardroom. His uncle’s words ran through his head.
Itiswatchedoverquitecarefully,Iassureyou.
“You’re not
really D13, are you? You’re one of my uncle’s men?”
“Yes, sir.
Indirectly. I report to Mr. Foxe.”
Nick sat up
as the handcuffs came off, and quickly sliced through the remaining ropes. He
was not entirely surprised to see the faint glimmer of Charter Marks on the
blade, though they were nowhere near as bright and potent as they’d be near the
Wall.
“Can you
walk, sir? We need to get moving.”
Nick
nodded. He felt a bit light-headed but otherwise fine, so he guessed he hadn’t
lost too much blood to the creature.
“Sorry,”
Lackridge blurted out as Nick slid off the table and stood up. “I never . . .
never thought that this would happen. I never believed Dorrance, thought only
to humor him. . . . He said that she spoke to him in dreams, and if it wasmore
awake, then . . . We hoped to be able to discover the secret of waking mental
communication.. . . It was—”
“Mind
control is what Dorrance thought he could get from it,” Ripton said,
interrupting him. He tapped his coat
42 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
pocket.
“I’ve got your diary here. Mind control through people’s dreams. And you just
went along with whatever Dorrance wanted, you stupid sod.”
“What’s
actually happening?” asked Nick. “Has it killed anyone?”
Lackridge
choked out something unintelligible.
“Anyone!
It’s killed almost everyone down here, and by now it’s probably upstairs
killing everyone there,” said Ripton. “Guns don’t work up close to it, bullets
fired farther back don’t do a thing, and the electric barrier grilles just went
p h h h t when it walked up! As soon as I figured it was trying to get out, I
doubled around behind it. Now I reckon we follow its path outside and then run
like the clappers while it’s busy—”
“We can’t
do that,” said Nick. “What about the guests? And the servants—even if they do
work for D13, they can’t be abandoned.”
“There’s
nothing we can do,” said Ripton. He no longer appeared so calm. “I don’t know
what that thing is, but I do know that it has already killed a dozen highly
trained and fully armed D13 operatives. Killed them and . . . and drunk their
blood. Not...not something I ever want to see again.. . .”
“I know
what it is,” said Nick. “Somewhat. It is a Free Magic creature from the
“They
bounced off. I saw the lead splashes on its hide.. . . Here’s a flashlight. You
go in front, Professor. Get your key ready.”
“We have to
try to save the people upstairs,” Nick said firmly as they nervously entered
the corridor, flashlight beams
43 across the
wall
probing the
darkness in both directions. “Has it definitely already got out of here?”
“I don’t
know! It was through the second guardroom. The library exit might slow it more.
It’s basically a revolving reinforced concrete-and-steel slab, like a vault
door. Supposed to be bombproof—”
“Is there
another way up?”
“No,” said
Ripton.
“Yes,” said
Lackridge. He stopped and turned, the bronze key gleaming in his hand. Ripton
stepped back, and his finger whipped from resting outside the trigger guard to
curl directly around the trigger.
“The
dumbwaiter!” Lackridge blurted out. “Dorrance has a dumbwaiter from the wine
cellar below us here, which goes up through his office to the pantry above.”
“What time
is it?” asked Nick.
“Half
eight,” said Ripton. “Or near enough.”
“The guests
will be at dinner,” said Nick. “They won’t have heard what’s going on down
here. If we can take the dumbwaiter to the pantry, we might be able to get
everyone out of the house before the creature breaks through to the library.”
“And then
what?” asked Ripton. “Talk as we go. Head for the office, Prof.”
“It’s not a
Dead thing, so running water won’t do much,” said Nick as they broke into a
jog. “Fire might, though. ...If we made a barrier of hay and set it alight,
that could work. It would attract attention at least. Bring help.”
“I don’t
think the sort of help we need exists around here,” said Ripton. “I’ve never
been up north, but I know people in the NPRU, and this is right up their alley.
Things like this just don’t happen down here.”
44 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
“No, they
don’t,” said Nick. “They wouldn’t have happened this time, either, only
Dorrance fed his creature the wrong blood.”
“I don’t
understand,” Lackridge said, puffing after them. Now that they were heading for
a possible exit, he had gotten more of a grip on himself. “I didn’t believe him
. . . but . . . Dorrance thought the blood of one of you people with the
Charter brand would rouse the creature a little, without danger. Then when we
got you to come in for the Forwin Mill investigation, he saw you had a Charter
Mark. The opportunity was too good to resist—”
“Shut up!”
ordered Ripton. As Lackridge calmed down, the policeman got more tense.
“Dorrance
worships the creature, but I don’t think even he wanted it this active,”
snapped Nick. “I can’t explain the whole thing to you, but my blood is infused
with Free Magic as well as the Charter. I guess the combination is what got the
creature going so strongly . . . but it was too rich or something; that’s why
it’s trying to dilute it with normal blood. . . . I wonder if that means that
the power it got from my blood will run out. Maybe it’ll just drop at some
point.. . .”
Lackridge
shook his head, as if he still couldn’t believe what he was hearing, despite
the evidence.
“It might
come back for a refill from you as well,” said Ripton. “Here’s the office. You
first, Professor.”
“But what
if the creature’s in there?”
“That’s why
you’re going first,” said Ripton. He gestured with his revolver, and when
Lackridge still didn’t move, he pushed him hard with his left hand. The bulky
ex-boxer rebounded from the door and stood there, his eyes glazed and jowls
shivering.
45 across the
wall
“Oh, I’ll
go first!” said Nick. He pushed Lackridge aside a little more gently, turned
the door handle, and went into Dorrance’s office. It was the room he’d been in
before, with the big leather club chairs, the desk, and the liquor cabinet.
“It’s
empty—come on!”
Ripton
locked the door after them as they entered the room, and then he slid the top
and bottom bolts home.
“Thought I
heard something,” he whispered. “Maybe it’s coming back. Keep your voices
down.”
“Where’s
the dumbwaiter?” asked Nick.
Lackridge
crossed to a bookshelf and pressed a corner. The whole shelf swung out an inch,
allowing Lackridge to get a grip and open it out completely. The beam of Nick’s
flashlight revealed a square space behind it about three feet high and just as
wide: a small goods elevator or dumbwaiter.
“We’ll have
to go one at a time,” said Ripton. He slipped his revolver into his shoulder
holster, laid his flashlight on the desk, and dragged one of the heavy studded
leather chairs against the door. “You first, Mr. Sayre. I think it must have
heard us, or smelled us, or something; there’s definitely movement outside—”
“Let me
go!” Lackridge burst out, darting toward the elevator. He was brought up short
as Ripton whirled around and kicked him behind the knee, bringing him crashing
down, his fall rattling the bottles in the liquor cabinet.
Nick
hesitated, then climbed into the dumbwaiter. There were two buttons on the
outside frame of the elevator, one marked with an up arrow and one with a down;
but as he expected, neither did anything. However, there was a hatch in the
ceiling, which when pushed open revealed a vertical shaft and some heavily
greased cables. The shaft was walled with
46 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
old yellow
bricks, and some had been removed every few feet to make irregular, but usable,
hand and footholds.
Nick ducked
his head out and said, “It’s electric, not working. We’ll have to climb the—”
His voice
was drowned out as the metal office door suddenly rang like a bell and the
middle of it bowed in, struck with tremendous force from the other side.
“Fire!”
Nick shouted as he jumped out of the elevator. “Start a fire against the door!”
He rushed to
the liquor cabinet and ripped it open as the creature struck the door again.
This second blow sheared the top bolt and bent the top half of the door over,
and a dark shape with glowing violet eyes could be seen beyond the doorway. At
the same time, Ripton’s flashlight shone intensely bright for a second, then
went out forever.
The
remaining flashlight, left in the elevator, continued to shine erratically.
Nick frantically threw whisky and gin bottles at the base of the door, and
Ripton struck a match on the chair leg, swearing as it burst into splinters
instead of flame. Then his second match flared and he flicked it across to the
alcohol-soaked chair, and there was a blue flash and a ball of flame exploded
around the door, searing off both Ripton’s and Nick’s eyebrows.
The
creature made a horrid gargling, drowning sound and backed away. Nick and
Ripton retreated to the wall and hunched down to try to get below the smoke,
which was already filling the room. Lackridge was still slumped on the floor,
not moving, the smoke twirling and curling over his back.
“Go!”
Ripton coughed, gesturing with his thumb at the dumbwaiter.
47 across the
wall
“What
about . . . ridge?”
“Leave him!”
“You go!”
Ripton
shook his head, but when Nick crawled across to Lackridge, Ripton climbed into
the dumbwaiter. The professor was a dead weight, too heavy for Nick to move
without standing up. As he tried again, an unopened bottle exploded behind
him, showering the back of his neck with hot glass. The smoke was getting thicker
with every second, and the heat more intense.
“Get up!”
Nick coughed. “You’ll die here!”
Lackridge
didn’t move.
Flames
licked at Nick’s back and he smelled burning hair. He could do nothing more for
the professor. He had only reduced his own chances of survival. Cradling his
arms around his head, Nick dived into the dumbwaiter.
He had
hoped for clean air there, but it was no better. The elevator shaft was acting
as a chimney, sucking up the smoke. Nick felt his throat and lungs closing up
and his arms and legs growing weaker. He thrust himself through the hatch,
climbed onto the roof of the dumbwaiter, and felt about for the hatch cover,
slapping it down in the hope that this might stop some of the smoke. Then,
coughing and spitting, he found the first missing bricks and began to climb.
He could
hear Ripton somewhere up above him, coughing and swearing. But Nick wasn’t
listening for Ripton. All his senses were attuned to what might be happening
lower down. Would the creature come through the fire and swarm up the shaft?
The
smoke did begin to thin a little as Nick climbed, but it was still thick enough
for him to smash his head into Ripton’s boots after he had climbed up about
forty feet. The sudden shout it provoked confirmed that Ripton had been thinking
48 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
about
where the creature was as well.
“Sorry!” Nick gasped. “I don’t think
it’s following us.”
“There’s a
door here. I’m standing on the edge of it, but I can’t slide the bloody thing—
Got it!”
Light
spilled into the shaft as smoke wafted out of it. Hard white gaslight. Ripton
stepped through, then turned to help Nick pull himself up and over.
They were
in a long whitewashed room lined from floor to ceiling with shelves and shelves
of packaged food of all varieties. Tins and boxes and packets and sacks and
bottles and puncheons and jars.
There was a
door at the other end. It was open, and a white-clad cook’s assistant was
staring at them openmouthed.
“Fire!”
shouted Nick, waving his arms to clear the smoke that was billowing out fast
from behind him. He started to walk forward, continuing to half shout, his
voice raspy and dulled by smoke. “Fire in the cellars! Everyone needs to get
out,tothe... Which field is closest, with hay?”
“The home
meadow,” croaked Ripton. He cleared his throat and tried again. “The home
meadow.”
“Tell the
staff to evacuate the house and assemble on the home meadow,” Nick ordered in
his most commanding manner. “I will tell the guests.”
“Yes, sir!”
stammered the cook’s assistant. There was still a lot of smoke coming out, even
though Ripton had managed to close the door to the dumbwaiter. “Cook will be
angry!”
“Hurry
up!” said Nick. He strode past the assistant and along a short corridor, to
find himself in the main kitchen, where half a dozen immaculately white-clad
men were engaged in an orderly but complex dance around a number of counters
and stove tops, directed by the rapid snap of
49 across the
wall
commands
from a small, thin man with the tallest and
whitest hat.
“Fire!” roared Nick. “Get out to the
home meadow! Fire!”
He repeated
this as he strode through the kitchen and out the swinging doors immediately
after a waiter who showed the excellence of his training by hardly looking
behind him for more than a second.
As Nick had
thought, the dinner guests were making so much noise of their own that they
would never have heard any kind of commotion deep in the earth under their
feet. Even when he burst out of the servants’ corridor and jumped onto an empty
chair near the head of the table that was probably his, only five or six of the
forty guests looked around.
Then Ripton
fired two rapid shots into the ceiling.
“Ladies and
gentlemen, I do beg your pardon!” shouted Nick. “There is a fire in the house!
Please get up at once and follow Mr. Ripton here to the home meadow!”
Silence met
this announcement for perhaps half a second; then Nick was assaulted with
questions, comments, and laughter. It was such a babble that he could hardly
make out any one coherent stream of words; but clearly half the guests thought
this was some game of Dorrance’s; a quarter of them wanted to go and get their
jewels, favorite coats, or lapdogs; and the last quarter intended to keep
eating and drinking whether the house burned down around them or not.
“This isn’t
a joke!” Nick screamed, his voice barely penetrating the hubbub. “If you don’t
go now, you’ll be dead in fifteen minutes! Men have already died!”
Perhaps ten
of the guests heard him. Six of them pushed their chairs back and stood. Their
movement caused a m o m e n t a r y lull, and Nick tried again.
50 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
“I’m
Nicholas Sayre,” he said, pointing at his burnt hair and blackened dress shirt,
and his bloodied cuffs. “The Chief Minister’s nephew. I am not playing games
for Dorrance. Look at me, will you! Get out now or you will die here!”
He jumped
down as merry pandemonium turned into panic, and almost knocked down the
butler, who had been standing by to either assist or restrain him; Nick
couldn’t be sure which.
“You’re
D13, right?” he asked the imposing figure. “There’s been an accident
downstairs. There is a fire, but there’s an . . . animal... loose. Like a
tiger, but much stronger, fiercer. No door can hold it. We need to get everyone
out on the home meadow, and get them building a ring of hay. Make it about
fifty yards in diameter, and we’ll gather in the middle and set it alight to
keep the animal out. You understand?”
“I believe
I do, sir,” said the butler, with a low bow and a slight glance at Ripton, who
nodded. The butler then turned to look at the footmen, who stood impassively
against the wall as guests ran past them, some of them screaming, some
giggling, but most fearful and silent. He tuned his voice to a penetrating pitch
and said, “James, Erik, Lancel, Benjamin! You will lead the guests to the home
meadow. Lukas, Ned, Luther, Zekall! You will alert Mrs. Krane, Mr. Rowntree,
Mr. Gowing, and Miss Grayne, to have all their staff immediately go to the home
meadow. You will accompany them. Patrick, go and ring the dinner gong for the
next three minutes without stopping, then run to the home meadow.”
“Good!”
snapped Nick. “Don’t let anyone stay behind, and if you can take any bottles of
paraffin or white spirits out to the meadow, do so! Ripton, lead the way to the
library.”
“No, sir,”
said Ripton. “My job’s to get you out of here. Come on!”
51 across the
wall
“We can bar
the doors! What the—”
Nick felt
himself suddenly restrained by a bear hug around his arms and chest. He tried
to throw himself forward but couldn’t move whoever had picked him up. He
kicked back but was held off the ground, his feet uselessly pounding the air.
“Sorry,
sir,” said Ripton, edging well back so he couldn’t be kicked. “Orders. Take him
out to the meadow, Llew.”
Nick
snapped his head back, hoping to strike his captor’s nose, but whoever held him
was not only extremely big and strong but also a practiced wrestler. Nick
craned around and saw he was in the grip of a very tall and broad footman, one
he had noticed when he had first arrived, polishing a suit of armor in the
entrance hall that, though man-size, came up only to his shoulder.
“Nay, you
shan’t escape my clutch, Master,” said Llew, striding out of the dining room
like a determined child with a doll. “Won the belt at Applethwick Fair seven
times for the wrestling, I have. You get comfortable and rest. It baint far to
the home meadow.”
Nick
pretended to relax as they joined the column of people going through the main
doors and out across the graveled drive and lawn. It was still quite light, and
a harvest moon was rising, big and kind and golden. Many of the people slowed
down as the sudden hysteria of Nick’s warning ebbed. It was a beautiful night,
and the home meadow looked rustic and inviting, with the haycocks still
standing, the work of spreading the hay into a defensive ring not yet begun,
though the butler was already directing servants to the task.
Halfway
across the lawn, Nick suddenly arched his back
52 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
and tried
to twist sideways and out of Llew’s grip, but to no avail. The big man just
laughed.
The lawn
and the meadow were separated by a fence in a ditch, or ha-ha, so as not to
spoil the view. Most of the guests and staff were crossing this on a narrow
mathematical bridge that supposedly featured no nails or screws, but Llew
simply climbed down. They were halfway up the other side when there was a
sudden, awful screech behind them, a shrill howl that came from no human throat
or any animal the Ancelstierrans had ever heard.
“Let me
go!” Nick ordered. He couldn’t see what was happening, save that the people in
front had suddenly started running, many of them off in random directions, not
to what he hoped would be safety. If they could get the hay spread quickly
enough and get it alight . . .
“Too late
to go back now, sir,” said Ripton. “Let him go, Llew! Run!”
Nick looked
over his shoulder for a second as they ran the last hundred yards to the center
of the meadow. Smoke was pouring out of one wing of the house, forming a thick,
puffy worm that reached up to the sky, black and horrid, with red light
flickering at its base. But that was not what held his attention.
The
creature was standing on the steps of the house, its head bent over a human
victim it held carelessly under one arm. Even from a distance, Nick knew it was
drinking b l o o d .
There were
people running behind Nick, but not many; and while they might have been
dawdling seconds before, they were sprinting now. For a moment Nick hoped that
everyone had gotten out of the house. Then he saw movement behind
53 across the
wall
the
creature. A man casually walked outside to stand next to it. The creature
turned to him, and Nick felt the grip of horror as he expected to see it snatch
the person up. But it didn’t. The creature returned to its current victim, and
the man stood by its side.
“Dorrance,”
said Ripton. He drew his revolver, rested the barrel on his left forearm, and
aimed for a moment, before holstering the weapon again. “Too far. I’ll wait
till the bas-tard’s closer.”
“Don’t
worry about Dorrance for the moment,” said Nick. He looked around. The guests
were all clustered together in the center of the notional fifty-yard-diameter
circle, and only the servants were spreading hay, under the direction of the
butler. Nick shook his head and walked over to the guests. They surged toward
him in turn, once again all speaking at the same time.
“I demand
to know—”
“What is
going on?”
“Is that...
that animal really—”
“Clearly
this is not properly—”
“This is an
outrage! Who is respons—”
“Shut up!”
roared Nick. “Shut up! That animal is from the
Without
waiting to see their response, Nick ran to the nearest haycock and tore off a
huge armful of hay and ran to add it to the circle. When he looked up, some of
the guests were helping the servants, but most were still bickering and
complaining.
He looked
across at the house. The creature was no longer
54 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
on the
steps. There was a body sprawled there, but Dorrance had vanished as well.
“Start
pouring the paraffin!” shouted Nick. “Get more hay on the ring! It’s coming!”
The butler
and some of the footmen began to run around the circle, spraying white
petroleum spirit out of four-gallon tins.
“Anyone
with matches or a cigarette lighter, stand by the ring!” yelled Nick. He
couldn’t see the creature, but his forehead was beginning to throb, and when
he pulled his dagger out an inch, the Charter Marks were starting to glow.
Two people
suddenly jumped the hay and ran across the meadow, heading for the drive and
the front gate. A young man and woman, the woman throwing aside her shoes as
she ran. She was the one who had come to his door, Nick saw. Tesrya, as she had
called herself.
“Come
back!” shouted Nick. “Come back—”
His voice
fell away as a tall, strange shape emerged from the sunken ditch of the ha-ha,
its shadow slinking ahead. Its arms looked impossibly long in the twilight, and
its legs had three joints, not two. It began to lope slowly after the running
couple, and for a brief instant Nick thought perhaps they might have a chance.
Then the
creature lowered its head. Its legs stretched; the lope became a run and then a
blurring sprint that caught it up with the man and woman in a matter of
seconds. It knocked them down with its clubbed hands as it overshot them, turning
to come back slowly as they flopped about on the ground like fresh-caught fish.
Tesrya was
screaming, but the screams stopped abruptly as the creature bent over her.
Nick looked
away and saw a patch of tall yellow flowers
55 across the
wall
near
his feet. Corn daisies, fooled into opening by the bright moonlight. . . .
wrapped in three chains. One of silver, one of lead, and
onemadefrombraideddaisies...
“Ripton!”
“Yes, sir!”
Nick jumped
as Ripton answered from slightly behind him and to his left.
“Get anyone
who can make flower chains braiding these daisies, and those poppies over there
too. The maids might know how.”
“What?”
“I know
what it sounds like, but there’s a chance that thing can be restrained with
chains made from flowers.”
“But...”
“The
“I knows
the braiding of flowers,” Llew said, bending down to gently pick a daisy in his
huge hand. “As does my kin here, my nieces Ellyn and Alys, who are chambermaids
and will have needle and thread in their apron pockets.”
“Get to it
then, please,” said Nick. He looked across at where the young couple had
fallen. The creature had been there only seconds ago, but now it was gone.
“Damn! Anyone see where it went?”
“No,”
snapped Ripton. He spun around on the spot as he tried to scan the whole area
outside the defensive circle.
“Light the
hay! Light the hay! Quickly!”
Ripton
struggled with his matches, striking them on his heel, but others were quicker.
Guests with platinum and gold cigarette lighters flicked them open and on and
held them to the hay; kitchen staff struck long, heavy-headed matches and threw
56 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
them; and
one old buffer wound and released a clockwork cigar fire starter, an
affectation that had finally come into its own.
Accelerated
by paraffin, brandy, and table polish, the ring of hay burst into flames. But
not everywhere. While the fire leapt high and smoke coiled toward the moon over
most of the ring, one segment about ten feet long remained stubbornly dark,
dank, and unlit. The meadow was sunken there, and wet, and the paraffin had not
been spread evenly, pooling in a hole.
“There it
is!”
The
creature came out of the shadow of the oaks near the drive. Its strangely
jointed legs propelled it across the meadow in a sprint that would have let it
run down a leopard. It moved impossibly, horribly fast, coming around the
outside of the ring. Nick and Ripton started to run too, even though they knew
they had no chance of beating the creature.
It would be
at the gap in seconds. Only one person was close enough to do anything—a
kitchen maid running with a lit taper clutched in her right hand, her left
holding up her apron.
The
creature was far faster, but it had farther to go. It accelerated again, becoming
a blur of movement.
Everyone
within the ring watched the race, all of them desperately hoping that the fire
would simply spread of its own accord, all of them wishing that this fatal hole
in their shield of fire would not depend upon a young woman, an easily
extinguished taper, and an apron that was too long for its wearer.
Six feet
from the edge of the hay, the apron slipped just enough for the girl to trip
over the hem. She staggered, tried to recover her balance, and fell, the taper
dropping from her hand.
57 across the
wall
Though she
must have been shocked and bruised by the fall, the maid did not lie there.
Even as the creature bunched its muscles for the last dash to the gap, the
young woman picked up the still-burning taper and threw it the last few feet
into the center of the dark section.
It caught
instantly, fed by a pool of paraffin that had collected in the dip in the
ground. Blue fire flashed over the hay, and flames licked up toward the yellow
moon.
The
creature shrieked in frustration, its hooked heels throwing up great clods of
grass and soil as it checked its headlong rush. For a moment it looked as if
it might try to jump the fire, but instead it turned and loped back to the
ha-ha, disappearing out of sight.
Nick and
Ripton stopped and bent over double, resting their hands on their knees,
panting as they tried to recover from their desperate sprint.
“It doesn’t
like fire,” Ripton coughed out after a minute. “But we haven’t got enough hay
to keep this circle going for more than an hour or so. What happens then?”
“I don’t
know,” said Nick. He was acutely aware of his ignorance. None of this would be
happening if the creature hadn’t drunk his blood. Hisblood, pumping furiously
around his body that very second but a mystery to him. He knew nothing about
its peculiar properties. He didn’t even know what it could do, or why it had
been so strong that the creature needed to dilute it with the blood of others.
“Can you do
any of that
“No,” said
Nick. “I . . . I’m rather useless, I’m afraid. I’ve been planning to go to the
58 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
“So we’re
pretty well stuffed,” said Ripton. “When the fire burns down, that thing will
just waltz in here and kill us all.”
“We might
get help,” said Nick.
Ripton
snorted. “Not the help we need. I told you. Bullets don’t hurt it. I doubt even
an artillery shell would do anything, if a gunner could hit something moving
that fast.”
“Keep your
voice down,” Nick muttered. Most of the people inside the ring were huddled
right in the center, as much to get away from the drifting smoke of the fires
as for the psychological ease of being farther away from the creature. But a
knot of half a dozen guests and servants was only a dozen yards away, the
servants helping the kitchen maid up and the guests getting in the way. “I
meant
Ripton bent
his head and mumbled something.
“What? What
did you say?”
“Malthan
never made it past the village,” Ripton muttered. “I handed him over to two of
Hodgeman’s particular pals at the crossroads. Orders. I had to do it, to
maintain my cover.”
Nick was
silent, his thoughts on the sad, frightened, greedy little man who was now
probably dead in a ditch not too many miles away.
“Hodgeman
said you’d never follow up what happened to Malthan,” said Ripton. “He said
your sort never did. You were just throwing your weight around, he said.”
“I would
have checked,” said Nick. “I would have left no stone unturned. Believe me.”
He looked
around at the ring of fire. Sections of it were already dying down, generating
lots of smoke but little flame.
59 across the
wall
If Malthan had managed to send the
telegram six or more hours ago, there might have been a slim chance that the
Abhorsen ...or Lirael . . . or somebody competent to deal with the creature
would have been able to get there before they ran out of things to burn.
“Hodgeman’s
dead now, anyway. He was one of the first that thing got.”
“I sent
another message,” said Nick. “I bribed Danjers’s valet to go down to the
village and send a telegram.”
“Nowhere to
send one from there,” said Ripton. “Planned that way, of course. D13 keeping
control of communications. The closest telephone would be at Colonel Wrale’s
house, and that’s ten miles away.”
“I don’t
suppose he would have managed it anyway—”
Nick broke
off and peered at the closer group of people and then at the central muddle,
wiping his eyes as a tendril of smoke wafted across.
“Where is
Danjers? I don’t remember seeing him at the dinner table, and he’s pretty hard
to miss. What’s the butler’s name again?”
“Whitecrake,”
said Ripton, but Nick was already striding over to the butler, who was issuing
orders to his footmen, who in turn were busy feeding the fires with more straw.
“Whitecrake!”
Nick called before he had closed the distance between them. “Where is Mr.
Danjers?”
Whitecrake
rotated with great dignity, rather like a dread-nought’s gun turret, and bowed,
allowing Nick to close the distance before he replied.
“Mr.
Danjers removed himself from the party and left at five o’clock,” he said. “I
understand that the curtains in the dining room clashed with his waistcoat.”
60 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
“His man
went with him?”
“Naturally,”
said Whitecrake. “I believe Mr. Danjers intended to motor over to Applethwick.”
Nick felt
every muscle in his shoulders and neck suddenly relax, as a ripple of relief
passed through on its way to his toes.
“We’ll be
all right! Danjers’s valet is bound to have sent that telegram! Let’s see, if
they got to Applethwick by seven thirty...the telegram would be at Wyverley by
eight at the latest....They’d getthe message on to the Abhorsen’s House however
they do it. . . . Then if someone flew by Paperwing toWyverley, they’ve got
those aeroplanes at the flying school there to fly south . . . though I suppose
not at night, even with this moon....”
The tension
started to come back as Nick came to the realization that even if the Abhorsen
or King Touchstone’s Guard had already received his message, there was no way
anyone could be at Dorrance Hall before the morning, at the very earliest.
Nick looked
up from the fingers he’d been counting on and saw that Ripton, Whitecrake,
several footmen, a couple of maids, and a number of the guests were all hanging
on his every word.
“Help will
be coming,” Nick announced firmly. “But we have to make the fires last as long
as we can. Everything that can burn must be gathered within this ring. Every
tiny piece of straw, any spare clothes, papers you may have on you, even
banknotes . . . need to be gathered up. Mr. Whitecrake, can you take charge of
that? Ripton, a word if you don’t m i n d . ”
No one
objected to Nick’s taking command, and he hardly noticed himself that he had.
He had often taken the lead
61 across the
wall
among his
school friends and at college, his mind usually grasping any situation faster
than his fellows did and his aristocratic heritage providing more than enough
self-confidence. As he turned away and walked closer to the fire, Ripton followed
at his heels like an obedient shadow.
“There
won’t be any useful help till morning at the earliest,” Nick whispered, his
voice hardly audible over the crackle of the fire. “I mean
Ripton eyed
the burning straw.
“I suppose
there’s a chance the fire’ll last till dawn, if we rake it narrower and just
try to maintain a bit of flame and coals. Do you...Is there a possibility that
. . . that thing doesn’t like the sun, as well as fire?”
“I don’t
know. But I wouldn’t count on it. From the little I heard my friend Sam talk
about it at school, Free Magic creatures roam the day as freely as they do the
night.”
“Maybe
it’ll run out of puff,” said Ripton. “Like you said. Dorrance didn’t even expect
it to wake up, and here it is running around—”
“What’s
that noise?” interrupted Nick. He could hear a distant jangling, carried on the
light breeze toward him. “Is that a bell?”
“Oh no . .
.” groaned Ripton. “It’s the volunteer fire brigade from the village. They know
they’re not to come here, no matter what.. . .”
Nick looked
around at the ring of red fire, and beyond that at the vast column of spark-lit
smoke that was winding up from Dorrance Hall. No firefighter would be able to
resist that clarion call.
“They’re
probably only the first,” he said quietly. “With this
62 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
moon, the
smoke will be visible for miles. We’ll probably have town brigades here in an
hour or so, as well as all the local volunteers for a dozen miles or more.
I’ll have to stop them.”
“What! If
you leave the circle, that monster will be on you in a second!”
Nick shook
his head.
“I’ve been
thinking about that. It ran away from me after it drank just a little of my
blood. Dorrance was yelling something about getting it other blood to dilute
mine. It could e a si l y have killed me then, but it didn’t.”
“You can’t
go out,” said Ripton. “Think about it! It’s drunk enough in the last hour to
dilute your blood a hundred times over! It could easily be ready for more. And
it’s your blood that revved it up in the first place. It’ll kill you and get
more powerful, and then it’ll kill us!”
“We can’t
just let it kill the firemen,” Nick said stubbornly. He started to walk to the
other side of the circle, closer to the drive. Ripton hurried along beside him.
“I might be able to hurt... even kill...the creature with this.”
He pulled
out Sam’s dagger and held it up. Fire and moonlight reflected from the blade,
but there was green and blue and gold there, too, as Charter Marks swam slowly
across the metal. Not fully active, but still strange and wonderful under the
Ancelstierran moon.
Ripton did
not seem overly impressed.
“You’d
never get close enough to use that little pigsticker. Llew! Llew!”
“You’re
not catching me like that again,” said Nick, without slowing down. He stowed
the dagger away and picked up a rake, ready to make a gap in the burning
barrier. A glance over his shoulder showed him the huge-shouldered Llew
63 across the
wall
getting
up from where he was braiding flowers. “If I want to
go, you’re going to let me this time.”
“Too late,” said Ripton. “There’s the
fire engine.”
He pointed
through the smoke. An ancient horse-drawn tanker, of a kind obsolete everywhere
save the most rural counties, was coming up the drive, with at least fourteen
volunteer firemen crammed on or hanging off it. They were in various states of
uniform, but all wore gleaming brass helmets. Several firemen on horseback came
behind the engine, followed by a farm truck loaded with more irregular
volunteers, who were armed with fire beaters and buckets. Two small cars
brought up the rear, transporting another four brass-helmeted volunteers.
“How did
they—”
“There’s
another entrance to the estate from the village by the gamekeeper’s cottage.
Cuts half a mile off the front drive.”
Nick
plunged at the fire with the rake, and dragged some of the burning hay aside
before he had to fall back from the smoke and heat. After a few seconds to
recover, he pushed forward again, widening the gap. But it was going to take a
few minutes to get through, and the firemen would be at the meadow before he
could get out.
After his
third attempt he reeled back into the grasp of Llew, who held Nick as he tried
to swipe his legs with the rake, till Ripton grabbed it and twisted it out of
his hands.
“Hold hard,
Master!” said Llew.
“It’s not
attacking them!” cried Ripton. “Just keep still and take a look.”
Nick
stopped struggling. The fire engine had come to a halt as close as the men and
horses could stand the heat, some fifty yards from the house. Firemen leapt off
onto the
64 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
lawn and
began to bustle about with hoses as the truck and cars screeched to a halt
behind them, throwing up gravel. The two mounted firemen continued on toward
the meadow, their horses’ hooves clattering on the narrow bridge over the h a -
h a .
“It’ll take
the horsemen,” said Nick. “It mustbe hiding in the ditch.”
But the
riders passed unmolested over the bridge and across the meadow, finally
wheeling about close enough to the ring of fire for one of them to shout, “What
on earth is h a ppening here?”
Nick didn’t
bother to answer. He was still looking for the creature. Why hadn’t it
attacked?
Then he saw
it through the swirling smoke. Not attacking anyone, but slinking up from the
ha-ha and across the meadow toward the drive. Dorrance was riding on its back,
like a child on a bizarre mobile toy, his arms clasped around the creature’s
long neck. He pointed toward the gatehouse, and the creature began to run.
“It’s
running away!” exclaimed Ripton.
“It’s
running,” echoed Nick. “I wonder where?”
“Who
cares!” Ripton exclaimed happily.
“I do,”
said Nick. He slipped free of Llew’s suddenly relaxed grasp, took a deep,
relatively smoke-free breath, sprinted forward, and jumped the ring of fire
where he’d already made a partial gap.
He landed
clear, fell forward, and quickly rolled in the grass to extinguish any flames
that might have hitched a ride. He felt hot but not burned, and he had not
breathed in any great concentration of smoke.
Looking
back, he saw Ripton and Llew frantically raking
65 across the
wall
the fire
apart, but they had not dared to jump after him. He got up and ran toward the
lawn, the parked cars, the fire engine, and the burning house.
There was
only one reason the creature would flee now. It had nothing to fear from any
weapons the Ancelstierrans could bring to bear. It could have stayed and killed
everybody and drunk their blood. It must have decided to cut and run because
the power it had gained from Nick’s blood was waning and it didn’t dare drink
any more from him. That meant it would be heading north, toward the
Nick
couldn’t let it do that.
He reached
the rearmost car and vaulted into the driver’s seat, deaf to the roar of the
fire, the thud of the pumps, and the contained shriek of the high-pressure
hoses. Even when Nick pressed the starter button, none of the firemen looked
around, the sound of the little two-seater’s engine lost amid all the noise and
action.
The car was
a Branston Four convertible, very similar to the Branston roadster Nick used to
rent occasionally when he was at Sunbere. He slapped the gear lever into
reverse with the necessary double tap and gently pulled the hand throttle. The
little car rolled back onto the lawn. Nick tapped the lever into the first of
the two forward gears and nudged forward.
The firemen
still hadn’t noticed, but as Nick opened up the hand throttle, the car
backfired, hopped forward, and stalled. Someone, presumably the owner of the
car, shouted. Nick saw a bronze-helmeted head approaching in the side-view
mirror. To his left, Ripton and Llew charged up out of the ha-ha.
66 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
He
depressed the clutch, hit the starter again, and hoped he had the throttle
position right. The car backfired once more and leapt six feet forward, and
then the engine suddenly hit a sweet, drumming note. The speedometer stopped
hiccuping up and down and started to slowly climb toward the top speed of
thirty-five miles per hour. A breeze ruffled Nick’s hair, undiminished by the
tiny windscreen.
The bronze
helmet disappeared from the mirror as the car accelerated along the drive.
Ripton and Llew got almost close enough to lay a hand on the rear bumper before
they, too, were left behind. Ripton shouted something, and a second later, Nick
felt something rebound off his shoulder and land on the seat next to him. He
glanced down and saw a chain of yellow daisies, punctuated every ten blooms or
so with a red poppy.
Nick didn’t
bother switching on the car’s headlights. The moon was so bright that he could
even read the dashboard dials and see the drive clearly. What he couldn’t see
was the creature and Dorrance, but he had to presume they were heading for the
front gate. The wall around the estate was probably no great barrier for the
creature, but if it didn’t need to climb it, he hoped, it wouldn’t.
His guess
was rewarded as he turned out of the gate and stopped to look in both
directions, up and down the lane. It was darker here, the road shadowed by the
trees on either side. But on a slight rise, several hundred yards distant, Nick
caught sight of the odd silhouette of the creature, with Dorrance still riding
on its back. It disappeared over the crest, running very fast and keeping to
the road.
Nick sped
after it, the little car vibrating as he wrenched the hand throttle out as far
as it would go. The speedometer went past the curlicued3 5that indicated the
car’s top speed
67 across the
wall
and got
stuck against the raised letter n that completed the word B r a n s t o n on
the dial. But even at that speed, by the time he got to the top of the rise,
the creature and Dorrance were gone. The lane kept on, with a very gentle curve
to the left, so if Nick’s quarry was anywhere within a mile, he should have
been able to see them in the clear, cool light of the vast moon overhead.
Various
possibilities whisked through Nick’s mind. The most disturbing was the thought
that they had seen him and were hiding off the road, the creature ready to
spring on him as he passed. But the most likely possibility quickly replaced
that fear. He hadn’t seen it at first, because of the trees, but another road
joined the lane just before it started to curve away. The creature must have
gone that way.
Nick took
the corner a little too fast, and the car slid off the paved road and onto the
shoulder, sending up a spray of clods and loose asphalt. For a moment he felt
the back end start to slide out, and the steering wheel was loose in his hands,
as if it were no longer connected to anything. Then the tires bit again, and he
overcorrected and fishtailed furiously for thirty yards before getting fully
under control.
When he
could properly look ahead, Nick couldn’t see the creature and Dorrance. But
this road only continued for another two hundred yards, ending at a small
railway station. It was not much more than a signal box, a rudimentary waiting
room, a platform, and the stationmaster’s house set some distance away. A
single line of track looped in from the southwest, ran along the platform,
then looped back out again, to join the main line that ran straight and true a
few minutes’ walk away.
It had to
be Dorrance Halt, the private railway station for
68 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
Dorrance
Hall. There was a train waiting at the platform, gray-white smoke busily
puffing out of the locomotive and steam wafting around its wheels. It was a
strangely configured train, in that there were six empty flatcars behind the
engine, then a private car. Dorrance’s private car, with his crest upon the
doors.
Nick suddenly
realized the significance of the blazon of the silver chain. Dorrance’s
several-times-great-grandfather must have been the Captain-Inquirer who found
the creature, and the money gained from the sale of a silver chain was part of
the current Dorrance’s inheritance.
The
significance of the empty flatcars was also apparent to Nick. They were there
to separate the locomotive from any Free Magic interference caused by the
creature. Dorrance had thought out this mode of transport very carefully.
Perhaps he had always planned to take the creature away by train. The thing’s
long-term goal must always have been to return to the
Even as
Nick pushed the little Branston to its utmost, the locomotive whistled and
began to pull out of the station. As the rearmost carriage passed the waiting
room, the electric lights outside fizzed and exploded. The train slowly picked
up speed, the gouts of smoke from its funnel coming faster as it rolled away.
Nick
wrenched the throttle completely out of its housing, drove off the road, raced
through the station garden in a cloud of broken stakes and tomato plants, and
drove onto the platform in a desperate effort to crash into the train and stop
the creature’s escape.
But he was
too late. All he could do was lock his knee and try to push his foot and the
brake pedal through the floor, as the Branston squealed and slid down the
platform, prevented
69 across the
wall
from
sliding off the end only by a slow-speed impact with a long and very sturdy
line of flowerpots.
Nick stood
up and watched the train rattle onto the main line. For a moment, he thought he
saw the glow of the creature’s violet eyes looking back at him through the rear
window of the carriage. But, he told himself as he put the flower chain around
his neck and then jumped out of the badly dented Branston, it was probably just
a reflection from the moon.
A sound
from the waiting room made Nick jump and draw his dagger, but he sheathed it
again straightaway. A man wearing a railway-uniform coat over blue-striped
pajamas was standing in the doorway, staring, as Nick had just done, at the
departing train.
“Where’s
that train going?” Nick demanded. “When’s the next train coming here?”
“I...I
...sawa real monster!” said the man. His eyes were wide with what Nick at first
thought was shock but slowly realized was actually delight. “I saw a monster!”
“You’re
lucky it left you alive to remember it,” said Nick. “Now answer my questions!
You’re the stationmaster, aren’t you? Get a grip on yourself!”
The man nodded
but didn’t look at Nick. He kept staring after the train, even as it
disappeared from sight.
“Where’s
that train going?”
“I...I
don’t know. It’s Mr. Dorrance’s private train. It’s been waiting for days, the
crew sleeping over at the house . . . then the call to be ready came only an
hour ago. It got a slot going north, that’s all I know, direct from Central at
Corvere. I guess it’d be going to Bain. You know, I never thought I’d see
something like that, with those huge eyes, and those spiked hands. Not here,
not—”
70 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
“When’s the
next train north?”
“The Bain
Flyer,” the man replied automatically. “But she’s an express. She doesn’t stop
anywhere, least of all here.”
“When is it
due to go past?”
“Ten-oh-five.”
Nick looked
at the clock above the waiting room, but it was electric and so had ceased to
function. There was a watch chain hanging from the stationmaster’s pocket, so
he snagged that and drew out a regulation railway watch. Mechanical clockwork
did not suffer so much from Free Magic, and its second hand was cheerfully
moving round. According to the watch, it was three minutes to ten.
“What’s the
signal for an obstruction on the line?” snapped Nick.
“Three
flares: two outside, one on the track,” the man said. He suddenly looked at
Nick, his attention returned to the here and now. “But you’re not—”
“Where are
the flares?”
The
stationmaster shook his head, but he couldn’t hide an instinctive glance toward
a large red box on the wall to the left of the ticket window.
“Don’t try
to stop me,” said Nick very forcefully. “Go back to your house and, if your
phone’s working, call the police. Tell them...Oh, there’s no time! Tell them
whatever you like.”
The flares
were ancient, foot-long things like batons, which came in two parts that had to
be screwed together to mix the chemicals that in turn ignited the magnesium
core. Nick grabbed a handful and rushed over the branch line to the main track.
Or what he hoped was the main track. There were four railway lines next to each
other, and he couldn’t be
71 across the
wall
absolutely
sure which one Dorrance’s train had taken heading north.
Even if he
got it wrong, he told himself, any engineer seeing three red flares together
would almost certainly stop. He screwed the first flare together and dropped it
on the track, then the other two followed quickly, one to either side.
With the
flares gushing bright-blue magnesium and red iron flames, Nick decided he
couldn’t afford explanations, so he crossed the tracks and crouched down behind
a tree to w a i t .
He didn’t
have to wait long. He had barely looked over his shoulder at the expanding pall
of smoke from Dorrance Hall, which now covered a good quarter of the sky,
before he heard the distant sound of a big, fast-moving train. Then, only seconds
after the noise, he saw the triple headlights of the engine as it raced down
the track toward him. A moment later there was the shriek of the whistle, and
then the awful screech of metal on metal as the driver applied the brakes, a
screech that intensified every few seconds as the emergency brakes in each of
the following carriages came on hard as well.
Nick, on
hearing the horrid scream of emergency braking and seeing the sheer speed of
the approaching lights, suddenly remembered the boast of the North by Northwest
Railway, that its trains averaged 110 miles per hour, and for a fearful moment
he wondered if he’d made a terrible mistake. It was one thing to risk his life
pursuing the creature, but quite another if he was responsible for derailing
the Bain Flyer and killing all the passengers on board.
But despite
the noise and speed, the train was slowing under total control, on a long
straight path. It came to a shrieking, sparking halt just short of the flares.
72 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
Even before
it completely stopped, the engineer jumped down from the engine and conductors
leapt from almost every one of the fifteen carriages. No one got out on the far
side, so it was relatively easy for Nick to run from his tree, climb the steps
of a second-class carriage, and go inside without being observed—or so he
hoped.
The
carriage was split into compartments, with a passageway running down the side.
Nick quickly glanced into the first compartment. It had six passengers in it,
almost the full complement of eight. Most of them were squashed together
trying to look out the window, though one was asleep and another reading the
paper with studied detachment. For a brief second, Nick thought of going in,
but he dismissed the notion immediately. The passengers would have been
together for hours, and the appearance of a bloodied, blackened young man with
burnt eyebrows could not go unnoticed or unremarked. Somehow, Nick doubted that
any explanation he could provide would satisfy the passengers, let alone the
conductor.
Instead,
Nick looked up at the luggage rack that ran the length of the carriage. It was
pretty full, but he saw a less-populated section. Even as he hoisted himself up
and discovered that his chosen resting place was on top of a set of golf clubs
and an umbrella, the engine whistled twice, followed by the sound of doors
slamming and then the appearance of a conductor and two large, annoyed male
passengers, who had just come back aboard.
“I don’t
know what the railway’s coming to.”
“Wrack and
ruin, that’s what.”
“Now, now,
gentlemen, no harm’s done. We’ll make up our time, you’ll see. We’re expected
in at twenty-five minutes after midnight, and the Bain Flyer is never late. The
railway
73 across the
wall
will buy
you a drink or two at the station hotel, and all will be right with the world.”
If only,
thought Nicholas Sayre. He waited for the men to move along, then wriggled into
a slightly less uncomfortable position and rearranged the flower chain across
his chest so it would not get crumpled. He lay there, thinking about what had
happened and what could happen, and built up plan after plan the way he used to
build matchstick towers as a boy, only to have them suffer the same fate. At
some point, they always fell over.
Finally, it
hit him. Dorrance and the creature had gotten away. At least, they’d gotten
away from him. His part in the whole sorry disaster was over. Even if
Dorrance’s special train was going to Bain, they would arrive at least fifteen
minutes ahead of Nick. And there was a good chance that Ripton would have made
it to a phone, so the authorities would be alerted. The police in Bain had some
experience with things crossing the Wall from the
At least I
tried, Nick thought. When I see Lirael . . . and Sam . . . and the
Abhorsen—though I hope I don’t have to explain it to her—then I can honestly
say I really did my best. I mean, even if I had managed to catch up with them,
I don’t know if I’d have been able to do anything. Maybe my Charter-spelled
dagger would have worked . . . maybe I could have tried something else....
Nick
suddenly felt very tired, and sore, the weariness more urgent than the pain.
Even his feet hurt, and for the first time he realized he was still wearing
carpet slippers. He was sure his
74 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
shoes
had been wonderfully shined, but by now they would be ash in the ruins of
Dorrance Hall. Nick shook his head at the thought, pushed back on the golf bag,
and, without meaning to, fell instantly asleep.
He woke to
find something gripping his elbow. Instantly he lashed out with his fist,
connecting with something fleshy rather than the scaly, hard surface his
dreaming mind had suggested might be the case.
“Ow!”
A young man
dressed in ludicrously bright golfing tweeds looked up at Nick, his hand
covering his nose. Other passengers were already in the corridor, most of them
with their bags in hand. The train had arrived in Bain.
“You’ve
broken my nose!” “Sorry!” Nick said as he vaulted down. “I’m very sorry!
Mistaken identity. Thought you were a monster.” “I say!” called out the man.
“Wait a moment. You can’t just hit a man and run away!”
“Urgent
business!” Nick replied as he ran to the door, weaving past several other
passengers, who quickly stood aside. “Nicholas Sayre’s the name. Many
apologies!”
He jumped
out onto the platform, half expecting to see it swarming with police, soldiers,
and ambulance attendants. He would be able to report to someone in authority
and then check into the hotel for a proper rest.
But there
was only the usual bustle of a big country station in the middle of the night,
with the last important train finally in. Passengers were disembarking. Porters
were gathering cases. A newspaper vendor was hawking a late edition of the
Times, shouting, “Flood kills five men, three horses. Getcher paper! Flood
kills three—”
75 across the
wall
There’d be
a different headline in the next edition, Nick thought, though it almost
certainly wouldn’t be the real story. “Fire at Country House’ would be most
likely, with the survivors paid or pressured to shut up. He would probably get
to read it over breakfast, which reminded him that he was extremely hungry and
needed to have a very late, much-delayed dinner. Of course, in order to eat,
he’d need to get some money, and that meant . . .
“Excuse me,
sir, could I see your ticket, please?”
Nick’s
train of thought derailed spectacularly. A railway inspector was standing too
close to him, looking sternly at the disheveled, blackened, eyebrowless young
man in ruined evening wear with a chain of braided daisies around his neck and
carpet slippers on his feet.
“Ah, good
evening,” replied Nick. He patted his sides and tried to look somewhat tipsy
and confused, which was not hard. “I’m afraid I seem to have lost my ticket.
And my coat. And for that matter my tie. But if I could make a telephone call,
I’m sure everything can be put right.”
“Undergraduate,
are you, sir?” asked the inspector. “Put on the train by your friends?”
“Something
like that,” admitted Nick.
“I’ll have
your name and college to start with,” said the inspector stolidly. “Then we can
see about a telephone call.”
“Nicholas
Sayre,” replied Nick. “Sunbere. Though technically I’m not up this term.”
“Sayre?”
asked the inspector. “Would you be . . .”
“My uncle,
I’m afraid,” said Nick. “That’s whom I need to call. At the Golden Sheaf Hotel,
near Applethwick. I’m sure that if there is a fine to pay, I’ll be able to sort
something out.”
76 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
“You’ll
just have to purchase a ticket before you leave the station,” said the
inspector. “As for the phone call, follow me and you can—”
He stopped
talking as Nick suddenly turned away from him and stared up at the pedestrian
bridge that crossed the railway tracks. To the right, in the direction of the
station hotel and most of the town, everything was normal, the bridge crowded
with passengers off the Flyer eager to get to the hotel or home. But to the
lonely left, the electric lights on the wrought-iron lampposts were flickering
and going out. One after the other, each one died just as two porters passed
by, wheeling a very long, tall box.
“It must be
the...but Dorrance was at least fifteen minutes ahead of the Flyer!”
“You’re
involved in one of Mr. Dorrance’s japes, are you?” The inspector smiled. “His train
just came in on the old track. Private trains aren’t allowed on the express
line. Hey! Sir! Come back!”
Nick ran,
vaulting the ticket inspection barrier, the inspec-tor’s shouts ignored behind
him. All his resignation burned away in an instant. The creature was here, and
he was still the only one who knew about it.
Two
policemen belatedly moved to intercept him before the stairs, but they were too
slow. Nick jumped up the steps three at a time. He almost fell at the top step,
but turned the movement into a flèche, launching himself into a sprint
across the bridge.
At the top
of the stairs at the other end, he slowed and drew his dagger. Down below, at
the side of the road, the tall box was lying on its side, open. One of the two
porters was sprawled next to it, his throat ripped out.
77 across the
wall
There was a
row of shops on the other side of the street, all shuttered and dark. The
single lamppost was also dark. The moon was lower now, and the shadows deeper.
Nick walked down the steps, dagger ready, the Charter Marks swimming on the
blade bright enough to shed light. He could hear police whistles behind him and
knew that they would be there in moments, but he spared no attention from the
street.
Nothing
moved there until Nick left the last step. As he trod on the road, the creature
suddenly emerged from an alcove between two shops and dropped the second porter
at its hoofed feet. Its violet eyes shone with a deep, internal fire now, and
its black teeth were rimmed with red flames. It made a sound that was half hiss
and half growl and raised its spiked club hands. Nick tensed for its attack and
tried to fumble the flower chain off his neck with his left hand.
Then
Dorrance peered over the creature’s shoulder and whispered something in its ear
slit. The thing blinked, single eyelids sliding across to dim rather than close
its burning violet eyes. Then it suddenly jumped more than twenty feet—but
away from Nick. Dorrance, clinging to it for dear life, shouted as it sped
away.
“Stay back,
Sayre! It just wants to go home.”
Nick
started to run, but stopped after only a dozen strides, as the creature
disappeared into the dark. It had evidently not exhausted all the power it had
gained from Nick’s blood, or perhaps simply being closer to the Old Kingdom
lent it strength.
Panting,
his chest heaving from his exertion, Nick looked back. The two policemen were
coming down the stairs, their truncheons in hand. The fact that they were still
approaching indicated they had not seen the creature.
Nick sheathed
his dagger and held up his hands. The
78 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
policemen
slowed to a walk and approached warily. Then Nick saw a single headlight
approaching rapidly toward him. A motorcycle. He stepped out into the street and
waved his hands furiously to flag the rider down.
The
motorcyclist stopped next to Nick. He was young and sported a small,
highly-trimmed mustache that did him no favors.
“What
occurs, old man?”
“No...
time...to explain,” gasped Nick. “I need your bike. Name’s Sayre. Nicholas.”
“The fast
bowler!” exclaimed the rider as he casually stepped off the idling bike,
holding it upright for Nick to get on. He was unperturbed by the sight of
Nick’s strange attire or the shouts of the policemen, who had started to run
again. “I saw you play here last year. Wonderful match! There you are. Bring
the old girl back to Wooten, if you don’t mind. St. John Wooten, in Bain.”
“Pleasure!”
Nick said as he pushed off and kicked the motorcycle into gear. It rattled away
barely ahead of the running policemen, one of whom threw his truncheon,
striking Nick a glancing blow on the shoulder.
“Good
shot!” cried St. John Wooten, but the policemen were soon left behind as easily
as the creature had left Nick.
For a few
minutes Nick thought he might catch up with his quarry fairly soon. The
motorcycle was new and powerful, a far cry from the school gardener’s old
Vernal Victrix he’d learned on back at Somersby. But after almost sliding out
on several corners and getting the wobbles at speed, Nick had to acknowledge
that his lack of experience was the limiting factor, not the machine’s
capacity. He slowed down to a point just slightly beyond his competence, a
speed insufficient to do
79 across the
wall
more than
afford an occasional glimpse of the creature and Dorrance ahead.
As Nick had
expected, they soon left even the outskirts of Bain behind, turning right onto
the Bain High Road, heading north. There was very little traffic on the road,
and what there was of it was heading the other way. At least until the creature
ran past. Those cars or trucks that didn’t run off the road as the driver saw
the monster stalled to a stop, their electrical components destroyed by the
creature’s passage. Nick, coming up only a minute or so later, never even saw
the drivers. As might be expected this far north, they had instantly fled the
scene, looking for running water or, at the very least, some friendly walls.
The
question of what the creature would do at the first Perimeter checkpoint was easily
answered. When Nick saw the warning sign he slowed, not wanting to be shot. But
when he idled up to the red-striped barrier, there were four dead soldiers
lying in a row, their heads caved in. The creature had killed them without
slowing down. None of them had even managed to get a shot off, though the
officer had his revolver in his hand. They hadn’t been wearing mail this far
south, or the characteristic neck-and nasal-barred helmets of the Perimeter
garrison. After all, trouble came from the north. This most southern checkpoint
was the relatively friendly face of the Army, there to turn back unauthorized
travelers or tourists.
Nick was
about to go straight on, but he knew there were more stringent checkpoints
ahead, before the Perimeter proper, and the chance of being shot would greatly
increase. So he put the motorcycle in neutral, sat it on its stand, and, looking
away as much as he could, took the cleanest tunic, which
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Sayre and the Creature in the Case
happened to
be the officer’s. It had a second lieutenant’s single pip on each cuff. The
previous wearer had probably been much the same age as Nick, and moments before
must have been proud of his small command, before he lost it, with his life.
Nick
figured wearing the khaki coat would at least give him time to explain who he
was before he was shot at. He shrugged it on, left it unbuttoned with the
flower chain underneath, got back on the motorcycle, and set off once more.
He heard
several shots before he arrived at the next checkpoint, and a brief staccato
burst of machine-gun fire, followed a few seconds later by a rocket arcing up
into the night. It burst into three red parachute flares that slowly drifted
north by northwest, propelled by a southerly wind that would usually give
comfort to the soldiers of the Perimeter. They would not have been expecting
any trouble.
The second
checkpoint was a much more serious affair than the first, blocking the road
with two heavy chain-link-and-timber gates, built between concrete pillboxes
that punctuated the first of the Perimeter’s many defensive lines, a triple
depth of concertina wire five coils high that stretched to the east and west as
far as the eye could see.
One of the
gates had been knocked off its hinges, and there were more bodies on the ground
just beyond it. These soldiers had been wearing mail coats and helmets, which
hadn’t saved them. More soldiers were running out of the pillboxes, and there
were several in firing positions to the side of the road, though they’d stopped
shooting because of the risk of hitting their own people farther north.
Nick
throttled back and weaved the motorcycle through the slalom course of bodies,
debris from the gate, and the live but shaken soldiers who were staring north.
He was just about
81 across the
wall
to
accelerate away when someone shouted behind him.
“You on the motorcycle! Stop!”
Nick felt
an urge to open the throttle and let the motorcycle roar away, but his
intelligence overruled his instinct. He stopped and looked back, wincing as the
thin sole of his left carpet slipper tore on a piece of broken barbed wire.
The man who
had shouted ran up and, greatly surprising Nick, jumped on the pillion seat
behind him.
“Get after
it!”
Nick only
had a moment to gain a snapshot of his unexpected passenger. He was an
officer, not visibly armed, wearing formal dress blues with more miniatures of
gallantry medals than he should have, since he looked no more than twenty-one.
He had the three pips of a captain on his sleeves and, more important, on his
shoulders the metal epaulette tags NPRU, for the Northern Perimeter
Reconnaissance Unit, or as it was better known, the Crossing Point Scouts.
“I know
you, don’t I?” shouted the captain over the noise of the engine and rush of the
wind. “You tried out for the Scouts last week?”
“Uh, no,”
Nick shouted back. He had just realized that he knew his passenger too. It was
Francis Tindall, who had been at Forwin Mill as a lieutenant six months ago.
“I’m afraid I’m . . . well, I’m Nicholas Sayre.”
“Nick
Sayre! I bloody hope this isn’t going to be like last time we met!”
“No! But
that creature is a Free Magic thing!”
“Got a
hostage, too, from the look of it. Skinny old duffer. Pointless carrying him
along. We’ll still shoot.”
“He’s an
accomplice. It’s already killed a lot of people down south.”
82 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
“Don’t
worry, we’ll settle its hash,” Tindall shouted confidently. “You don’t happen
to know exactly what kind of Free Magic creature it is? Can’t say I’ve ever
seen anything like it, but I only got a glimpse. Didn’t expect anything like
that to run past the window at a dining-in night at Checkpoint Two.”
“No, but
it’s bulletproof and it gets power by drinking the blood of Charter Mages.”
Whatever
Tindall said in response was lost in the sound of gunfire up ahead, this time
long, repeated bursts of machine-gun fire, and Nick saw red tracer bouncing up
into the air.
“Slow
down!” ordered Tindall. “Those are the enfilading guns at Lizzy and
Nick
obediently slowed. The road was straight ahead of them, but dark, the moon
having sunk farther. The red tracer was the only thing visible, crisscrossing
the road four or five hundred yards ahead of them.
Then big
guns boomed in unison.
“Star
shell,” said Tindall. “Thanks to a southerly wind.”
A second
after he spoke, four small suns burst high above, and everything became stark
black and white, either harshly lit or in blackest shadow.
In the
light, Nick saw another deep defensive line of high concertina wire, and
another set of gates. He also saw the creature slow not at all, but simply
jump up and over thirty feet of wire, smashing its way past the two or three
fast but foolish soldiers who tried to stick a bayonet in it as it hit the
ground running.
Dorrance
was no longer on its back.
Nick saw
him a moment later, lying in the middle of the
83 across the
wall
road.
Braking hard, he lost control of the bike at the last moment, and it flipped up
and out, throwing both him and Tindall onto the road, but fortunately not at
any speed.
Nick lay
there for a moment, the breath knocked out of him by the impact. After a
minute, he slowly got to his feet. Captain Tindall was already standing, but
only on one foot.
“Busted
ankle,” he said as he hopped over to Dorrance. “Why, it’s that idiot jester
Dorrance! What on earth would someone like him be doing with that creature?”
“Serving
Her,” whispered Dorrance, his voice startling both Tindall and Nick. The older
man had been shot several times and looked dead, his chest black and sodden
with blood. But he opened his eyes and looked directly at Nick, though he
clearly saw something or someone else. “I knew Her as a child, in my dreams,
never knowing She was real. Then Malthan came, and I saw Her picture, and I
remembered Father sending Her away. He was mad, you know. Lackridge found Her
for me again. It was as I remembered, Her voice in my head. . . . She only
wanted to go home. I had to help Her. I had to . . .”
His voice
trailed away and his eyes lost their focus. Dorrance would play the fool no
more in Corvere.
“If it
wants to go north, I suppose we could do worse than just let it go across the
Wall,” said Tindall. He waved at someone at the checkpoint and made a signal,
crossing his arms twice. “If it can, of course. We can send a pigeon to the
Guards at Barhedrin, leave it to them to sort out.”
“No, I
can’t do that,” said Nick. “I . . . I’m already responsible for loosing the
Destroyer upon them, and I did nothing to help fight it. Now I’ve done it
again. That creature would not be free if it weren’t for me. I can’t just leave
it to Lirael, I mean the Abhorsen...or whoever.”
84 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
“Some
things are best left to those who can deal with them,” said Tindall. “I’ve
never seen a Free Magic creature move like that. Let it go.”
“No,” said Nick. He
started walking up the road. Tindall swore and started hopping after him. “What
are you going to do? You have the Mark, I know, but are you a Mage?”
Nick shook
his head and started to run. A sergeant and two stretcher bearers were coming
through the gate, while many more soldiers ran purposefully behind them. With
star shell continuing to be fired overhead, Nick could clearly see beyond the
gates to a parade ground, with a viewing tower or inspection platform next to
it, and beyond that a collection of low huts and bunkers and the communications
trenches that zigzagged north.
“The word
for the day is Collectionand the countersign is Treble,” shouted Tindall. “Good
luck!”
Nick waved
his thanks and concentrated on ignoring the pain in his feet. Both his slippers
were ripped to pieces, barely more than shreds of cloth holding on at the heels
and toes.
The sergeant
saluted as he went past, and the stretcher bearers ignored him, but the two
soldiers at the gate aimed their rifles at him and demanded the password. Nick
gave it, silently thanking Tindall, and they let him through.
“Lieutenant!
Report!” shouted a major Nick almost ran into as he entered the communications
trench on the northern side of the parade ground. But he ignored the
instruction, dodging past the officer. A few steps farther on, he felt something
warm strike his back, and his arms and hands suddenly shone with golden Charter
Magic fire. It didn’t harm him at all, but actually made him feel better and
helped him recover
85 across the
wall
his breath.
He ran on, oblivious to the shocked Charter Mage behind him, who had struck him
with his strongest spell of binding and immobility.
Soldiers
stood aside as he ran past, the Charter Magic glow alerting them to his coming.
Some cheered in his wake, for they had seen the creature leap over them, and
they feared that it might return before a Scout came to deal with it, as they
dealt with so many of the strange things that came from the north.
At the
forward trench, Nick found himself suddenly among a whole company of garrison
infantry. All one hundred and twenty of them clustered close together in less
than sixty yards of straight trench, all standing to on the firing step,
looking to the front. The wind was still from the south, so their guns would
almost certainly work, but none was firing.
A
harried-looking captain turned to see what had caused the sudden ripple of
movement among the men near the communications trench, and he saw a strange,
very irregularly dressed lieutenant outlined in tiny golden flames. He breathed
a sigh of relief, hopped down from the step, and stood in front of Nick.
“About time
one of you lot got here. It’s plowing through the wire toward the Wall. D
Company shot at it for a while, but that didn’t work, so we’ve held back. It’s
not going to turn around, is it?”
“Probably
not,” said Nick, not offering the certainty the captain had hoped for. He saw a
ladder and quickly climbed up it to stand on the parapet.
The Wall
lay less than a hundred yards away, across barren earth crisscrossed with
wire. There were tall poles of carved wood here and there, quietly whistling in
the breeze among the metal pickets and the concertina wire. Wind flutes
86 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
of the
Abhorsen, there to bar the way from Death. A great many people had died along
the Wall and the Perimeter, and the border between Life and Death was very
easily crossed in such places.
Nick had
seen the Wall before, farewelling his friend Sam on vacation. But apart from a
dreamlike memory of it wreathed in fierce golden fire, he had never seen it as
more than an antiquity, just an old wall like any other medieval remnant in a
good state of preservation. Now he could see the glow of millions of Charter
Marks moving across, through, and under the stones.
He could
see the creature, too. It was surrounded by a nimbus of intense white sparks as
it used its club hands to smash down the concertina wire and wade directly
toward a tunnel that went through the Wall.
“I’m going
to follow it,” said Nick. “Pass the word not to shoot. If any other Scouts come
up, tell them to stay back. This particular creature needs the blood of Charter
Mages.”
“Who should
I say—”
Nick
ignored him, heading west along the trench to the point where the creature had
begun to force its path. There were no soldiers there, only the signs of a very
rapid exodus, with equipment and weapons strewn across the trench floor.
Nick
climbed out and started toward the Wall. It was night in the
He lifted
the daisy-chain wreath over his head and held it ready in his left hand, and he
drew the dagger with his right. The flowers were crushed, and many had lost
petals,
87 across the
wall
but the
chain was unbroken, thanks to the linen thread sewn into the stems. Llew and
his nieces really had known their b u s i n e s s .
Nick was
halfway across the No Man’s Land when the creature reached the Wall. But it did
not enter the tunnel, instead hunkering down on its haunches for half a minute
before easing itself up and turning back. It was still surrounded by white
sparks, and even thirty yards away Nick could smell the acrid stench of hot
metal. He stopped, too, and braced himself for a sudden, swift attack.
The
creature slowly paced toward him. Nick lifted the wreath and made ready to
throw or swing it over the crea-ture’s head. But it didn’t attack or increase
its pace. It walked up close and bent its long neck down.
Nick didn’t
take his eyes off it for even a microsecond. As soon as he was sure of his aim,
he tossed the wreath over the creature’s head. The chain settled on its
shoulders, the yellow and red flowers taking on a bluish cast from the
crackling sparks that jetted out from the creature’s hide.
“Let us
talk and make truce, as the day’s eye bids me do,” a chill, sharp voice said
directly into Nick’s mind, or so it felt. His ears heard nothing but the wind
flutes and the jangle of cans tied to the wire. “We have no quarrel, you and
I.”
“We do,”
said Nick. “You have slain many of my people. You would slay more.”
The
creature did not move, but Nick felt the mental equivalent of a snort of
disbelief.
“These
pale, insipid things? The blood of a great one moves in you, more than in any
of the inheritors that I have drunk from before. Come, shed your transient
flesh and travel w i t h me back to our own land, beyond this prison wall.”
88 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
Nick didn’t
answer, for he was suddenly confused. Part of him felt that he could leave his
body and go with this creature, which had somehow suddenly become beautiful and
alluring in his eyes. He felt he had the power to shuck his skin and become
something else, something fierce and powerful and strange. He could fly over the
Wall and go wherever he wanted, do whatever he wanted.
Against
that yearning to be untrammeled and free was another set of sensations and
desires. He did want to change, that was true, but he also wanted to continue
to be himself. To be a man, to find out where he fitted in among people, specifically
the people of the Old Kingdom, for he knew he no longer could be content in
Ancelstierre. He wanted to see his friend Sam again, and he wanted to talk to
Lirael.. . .
“Come,”
said the creature again. “We must be away before any of Astarael’s get come
upon us. Share with me a little of your blood, so that I may cross this cursed
Wall without scathe.”
“Astarael’s
get?” asked Nick. “The Abhorsens?”
“Call them
what you will,” said the creature. “One comes, but not soon. I feel it, through
the bones of the earth beneath my feet. Let me drink, just a little.”
“Just a
little...” mused Nick. “Do you fear to drink more?”
“I fear,”
said the creature, bowing its head still lower. “Who would not fear the power
of the Nine Bright Shiners, highest of the high?”
“What if I
do not let you drink, and I do not choose to leave this flesh?”
“Your will
is yours alone,” said the creature. “I shall go back and reap a harvest among
those who bear the Charter,
89 across the
wall
weak and
prisoned remnant of my kin of long ago.”
“Drink
then,” said Nick. He cut the bandage at his wrist and, wincing at the pain,
sliced open the wound Dorrance had made. Blood welled up immediately.
The
creature leaned forward, and Nick turned his wrist so the blood fell into its
open mouth, each drop sizzling as it met the thing’s internal fires. A dozen
drops fell; then Nick took his dagger again and cut more deeply. Blood flowed
more freely, splashing over the creature’s mouth.
“Enough!”
said the voice in his mind. But Nick did not withdraw his hand, and the
creature did not move. “Enough!”
Nick held
his hand closer to the creature’s mouth, sparks enveloping his fingers, to be
met by golden flames, blue and gold twirling and wrestling, as if Charter Magic
visibly sought dominance over Free Magic.
“Enough!”
screamed the silent voice in Nick’s head, driving out all other thoughts and
senses, so that he became blind and dumb and couldn’t feel anything, not even
the rapid stammer of his own heartbeat. “Enough! Enough! E n o u g h ! ”
It was too
much for Nick’s weakened body to bear. He faltered, his hand wavering. As the
blood missed the creature’s mouth, it staggered, too, and fell to one side.
Nick fell also, away from it, and the voice inside his head gave way to blessed
silence.
His vision
returned a few seconds later, and his hearing. He lay on his back, looking up
at the sky. The moon was just about to set in the west, but it was like no
moonset he had ever seen, for the right corner of it was diagonally cut off by
the Wall.
Nick stared
at the bisected moon and thought that he
90 nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
should get
up and see if the creature was moving, if it was going to go and attack the
soldiers in order to dilute his blood once again. He should bandage his wrist,
too, he knew, for he could feel the blood still dripping down his fingers.
But he
couldn’t get up. Whether it was blood loss or simply exhaustion from everything
he’d been through, or the effects of the icy voice on his brain, he was as limp
and helpless as a rag doll.
I’ll gather
my strength, he thought, closing his eyes. I’ll get up in a minute. Just a
minute . . .
Something
warm landed on his chest. Nick forced his eyes to open just enough to look out.
The moon was much lower, now looking like a badly cut slice of pumpkin pie.
His chest
got even warmer, and with the warmth, Nick felt just a tiny fraction stronger.
He opened his eyes properly and managed to raise his head an inch off the
ground.
A coiled
spiral made up of hundreds of Charter Marks was slowly boring its way into his
chest, like some kind of celestial, star-wrought drill, all shining silver and
gold. As each Mark went in, Nick felt strength return to more far-flung parts
of his body. His arms twitched, and he raised them too, and saw a nice, clean,
Army-issue bandage around his wrist. Then he regained sensation in his legs and
lifted them up, to see his carpet slippers had been replaced with more
bandages.
“Can you
hear me?” asked a soft voice, just out of sight. A woman’s voice, familiar to
Nick, though he couldn’t place it for a second.
He
turned his head. He was still lying near the Wall, where he’d fallen. The
creature was still lying there, too, a few steps away. Between them, a young
woman knelt over Nick. A young woman wearing an armored coat of laminated
plates,
91 across the
wall
and
over it a surcoat with the golden stars of the Clayr quar
tered with the silver keys of the
Abhorsen.
“Yes,” whispered Nick. He smiled and said,
“Lirael.”
Lirael
didn’t smile back. She brushed her black hair back from her face with a
golden-gloved hand, and said, “The spells are working strangely on you, but
they are working. I’d best deal with the Hrule.”
“The
creature?”
Lirael
nodded.
“Didn’t I
kill it? I thought my blood might poison it.. . .”
“It has
sated it,” said Lirael. “And made it much more powerful, when it can digest
it.”
“You’d
better kill it first, then.”
“It can’t
be killed,” said Lirael. But she picked up a very odd-looking spear, a simple
shaft of wood that was topped with a fresh-picked thistle head, and stepped
over to the creature. “Nothing of stone or metal can pierce its flesh. But a
thistle will return it to the earth, for a time.”
She lifted
the spear high above her head and drove it down with all her strength into the
creature’s chest. Surprisingly, the thistle didn’t break on the hide that had
turned back bullets; it cut through as easily as a hand through water. The
spear quivered there for a moment; then it burst, shaft and point together,
like a mushroom spore. The dust fell on the creature, and where it fell, the
flesh melted away, soaking into the ground. Within seconds there was nothing
left, not even the glow of the violet eyes.
“How
did you know to bring a thistle?” Nick asked, and then cursed himself for
sounding so stupid. And for looking so pathetic. He raised his head again and
tried to roll over, but
92
nicholas
Sayre and the Creature in the Case
Lirael quickly knelt and gently pushed
him back down.
“I didn’t.
I arrived an hour ago, in answer to a rather confused message from the
Magistrix at Wyverley. I expected merely to cross here, not to find one of the
rarest of Free Magic creatures. And . . . and you. I bound your wounds and put
some healing charms upon you, and then I went to find a thistle.”
“I’m glad
it was you.”
“It’s lucky
I read a lot of bestiaries when I was younger,” said Lirael, who wouldn’t look
him in the eye. “I’m not sure even Sabriel would know about the peculiar nature
of the Hrule. Well, I’d best be on my way. There are stretcher bearers waiting
to come over to take you in. I think you’ll be all right now. There’s no
lasting damage. Nothing from the Hrule, I mean. No new lasting effects, that
is....I really do have to get going. Apparently there’s some Dead thing or
other farther south—the message wasn’t clear.. . .”
“That was
the creature,” said Nick. “I sent a message to the Magistrix. I followed the
creature all the way here from Dorrance Hall.”
“Then I can
go back to the Guards who escorted me here,” Lirael said, but she made no move
to go, just nervously parted her hair again with her golden-gloved hand. “They
won’t have started back for Barhedrin yet. That’s where I left my Paperwing. I
can fly by myself now. I mean, I’m still—”
“I don’t
want to go back to Ancelstierre,” Nick burst out. He tried to sit up and this
time succeeded, Lirael reaching out to help him and then letting go as if he
were red-hot. “I want to come to the
“But
you didn’t come before,” said Lirael. “When we left
93
across
the wall
and Sabriel said you should because of
what . . . because of what had happened to you. I wondered... that is, Sam
thought later, perhaps you didn’t want to . . . that is, you needed to stay in
Ancelstierre for some person, I mean reason—”
“No,” said
Nick. “There is nothing for me in Ancelstierre. I was afraid, that’s all.”
“Afraid?”
asked Lirael. “Afraid of what?”
“I don’t
know,” said Nick. He smiled again. “Can you give me a hand to get up? Oh, your hand!
Sam really did make a new one for you!”
Lirael
flexed her golden, Charter-spelled hand, opening and closing the fingers to
show Nick that it was just as good as one of flesh and bone, before she
gingerly offered both her hands to him.
“I’ve had
it for only a week,” she said shyly, looking down as Nick stood not very
steadily beside her. “And I don’t think it will work very far south of here.
Sam really is a most useful nephew. Do you think you can walk?”
“If you
help me,” said Nick.
94
introduction to Under the Lake
For someone who doesn’t like the
Arthurian mythos, I am in the odd position of having written two “Arthurian”
stories (the other one is “Heart’s Desire,” also in this collection). At least,
I always think I’m not very fond of the whole Arthur thing, believing there are
already too many stories and books that have mined the canon. But I love T. H.
White’s The Once and Future King. I love Mary Stewart’s The
Hollow Hills and The
Crystal Cave (while not being partial to the two
later sequels). I like the Arthurian elements in Susan Cooper’s The Dark Is
Rising sequence. I would especially love to see again a television cartoon
series from my childhood called King
Arthur and the Square Knights of the Round Table. I know there are many other fine Arthurian or
Arthurian-influenced books.
So I
must not have a problem with Arthurian legend as such. My dissatisfaction
probably lies in the way that the legends are used over and over again in the
same way: the same stories told with little or no variation of character, plot,
theme, or imagery.
The
Lady of the
Finding
something new in an Arthurian character was the first thing I thought about
when I was asked to write a story for an Arthurian-themed collection (after
writhing about in horror, that is, and initially declining the invitation).
Several months later, as the deadline approached, I started thinking about the
Lady of the
95 across the
wall
Why would she choose to live there?
What if she wasn’t actually a lady? Or, better still, not even human? And why
would she help Arthur? What if she wasn’t good at all? What if she was a real
monster, like a very smart psychopath?
The
story came from there. The anthology I wrote it for never proceeded, adding
insult to injury. I’d written an Arthurian story against my better judgment,
and all for nothing. But stories share a characteristic with humans, in that
they often get second, third, or even more chances. For “Under the
96
Under
the
Merlin has come a
g a i n, down to where the light has gone and there is only darkness. Darkness
and pressure, here where the water is as cold and hard as steel. He is bright
himself, so bright that he hurts my eyes and I must lid them and turn away.
Merlin uses that brightness, knowing that I cannot bear it, nor bear him seeing
the creature I have b e c o m e .
That is his
strength, and it is the reason I will ultimately give him what he wants. For
Merlin has power, and only he can give me what I need. He knows that, but as in
any negotiation, he does not know at which point he will win. For I have two
things that he seeks, and he has the price of only
o n e .
I think he
will choose Excalibur, for even he finds it difficult to think down here,
under the lake. We can both see the strands of time that unravel from this
choice, but I do not think Merlin sees as far as I in this darkness. He will
choose the sword for his Arthur, when he could have the G r a i l .
I admit the
sword seems more readily useful. With the scabbard, of course. But Merlin’s
sight does not see behind,
97 across the
wall
only
forward, and what he has learned of the sword is only a small part of the
story.
If he chose
to be less blinding, I might tell him more. But the light is cruel, and I do
not care to prolong our conversation. I will merely cast my own mind back,
while he talks. It is as effective a means as any to avoid the spell he weaves
so cleverly behind his words. Only Merlin would seek to gull me so, even
though he should know better. Let him talk, and I will send his spell back.
Back into time, when I walked under the sun, in the land that was called
Lyonnesse.
Back into
time, when the barbarians first landed on Lyonnesse’s sweet shores, and the
people came to me, begging for a weapon that would save them. They had no fear
of me in those days, for I had long held a woman’s shape, and I had never
broken the agreement I made with their ancestors long ago. Not that they ever
sought me out in times of peace and plenty, for they also remembered that I did
nothing without exacting a price.
As I did
when they asked me to make a sword, a sword that could make a hero out of a
husbandman, a warrior of an aleswiller, a savior from a swineherd. A sword that
would give its wielder the strength of the snow-fed river Fleer, the speed of
the swifts that flew around my hill, and the endurance of the great stone that
sat above my hidden halls.
They
were afraid of the barbarians, so they paid the price. A hundred maidens who
came to my cold stone door, thinking they would live to serve me in some palace
of arching caverns underearth. But it was their lives I wanted, not their service.
It was their years I supped upon to feed my own, and their blood I used to
quench the sword. I still thought of humans as I
98
under
the lake
thought of other animals then, and felt
nothing for their tears and cries. I did not realize that as I bound the power
of river, swifts, and stone into the metal, I also filled the sword with sorrow
and the despair of death.
They called
the sword Excalibur, and it seemed everything they had asked. It took many
months before they discovered it was both more and less. It was used by several
men against the barbarians and delivered great victories. But in every battle
the wielder was struck with a battle madness, a melancholy that would drive him
alone into the midst of the enemy. All would be strong and swift and untiring,
but eventually they would always be struck down by weight of numbers, or number
of wounds.
The people
came to me again, and demanded that I mend the madness the sword brought, or
make the wielder impossible to wound, so the sword could be used to its full
effect. They argued that I had not fulfilled the bargain and would pay no more.
But I sat
silent in my hill, the barbarians still came in their thousands, and there were
few who dared to wield Excalibur, knowing that they would surely die.
So they
brought the two hundred youths I had demanded. Some even came gladly, thinking
they would meet their sweethearts who had gone before. This time I was more
careful, taking their futures from them without warning, so there was no time
for pain, despair, or sadness. From their hair I wove the scabbard that would
give the wearer a hundred lives between dawn of one day and dawn the next.
I
knew nothing of human love then, or I would have demanded still younger boys,
who had no knowledge of the
99
across
the wall
girls who came to my hill the year
before. The scabbard did make the bearer proof against a multiplicity of
wounds, but it also called to the sword and held it like a lover, refusing to
let go. Only a man of great will could draw the sword, or a sorcerer, and
there were few of those in Lyonnesse, for I disliked their kind. Many a
would-be hero died with Excalibur still sheathed upon his belt. Even a hundred
lives is not enough against a hundred hundred wounds.
Each time,
the sword and scabbard came back to me, drawn to the place of their making.
Each time I returned them to the good folk of Lyonnesse, as they continued
their largely losing war against the barbarians. Not that I cared who won one
way or another, save for tidiness and a certain sense of tradition.
Many people
came to me in those times of war, foolishly ignoring the pact that spoke of the
days and seasons when I would listen and spare their lives. Consuming them, I
learned more of humanity, and more of the magic that lurked within their brief
lives. It became a study for me, and I began to walk at night, learning in the
only way I knew. Soon, it was mostly barbarians I learned from, for the local
folk resumed the practice of binding rowan twigs in their hair, and they
remembered not to walk in moonlight. Once again children were given small
silver coins to wear as earrings. Some nights I gathered many blood-dappled
coins but garnered neither lives nor knowledge.
In
time the barbarians learned too, and so it was that a deputation came to me one
cold Midwinter Day, between noon and the setting of the sun. It was composed of
the native folk I knew so well, and barbarians, joined together
100
under
the lake
in common purpose. They wanted me to
enforce a peace upon the whole
The price
they were prepared to pay was staggering, so many lives that I would barely
need to feed again for a thousand years. Given my new curiosity about
humankind, the goal was also fascinating, because for the first time in my long
existence, I knew not how it could be achieved.
They paid
the price, and for seven days a line of men, women, and children wound its way
into my hill. I had learned a little, for this third time, so I gave them food
and wine and smoke that made them sleep. Then as they slept, I harvested their
dreams, even as I walked among them and drank their breath.
The dreams
I took in a net of light, down through the earth to where the rocks themselves
were fire, and there I made the Grail. A thing of such beauty and of such hope
began to form that I forgot myself in the wonder of creation, and poured some
of my dreams into it too, and a great part of my power.
Perhaps
some of my memory disappeared in the making of the Grail, because I had
forgotten what my power meant to the
I
emerged from my hill to find the deputation gone, panicked by the ground that
shook and roared beneath them. I held the Grail aloft, and shouted that it
would bring peace
101
across
the wall
to all who drank from it. But even as I
spoke, I saw the horizon lift up like a folded cloth, and the blue of the sky
was lost in the terrible darkness of the sea. The sea, rising up higher than my
hill or the mountains behind, a vast and implacable wave that seemed
impossible—till I realized that it was not the sea that rose, but Lyonnesse
that fell. And I r e m e m b e r e d .
Long ago,
long ago, I had shored up the very foundations of the land. Now, in my making
of the Grail, I had torn away the props. Lyonnesse would drown, but I would not
drown with it. I became a great eagle and rose to the sky, the Grail clutched
in my talons. Or rather, I tried to. My wings beat in a frenzy, but the Grail
would not move. I tried to let it go, but could not, and still the wave came
on, till it blocked out the very sun and it was too late to be flying anywhere.
It was then
I knew that the Grail brought not only peace but judgment. I had filled it with
the dreams of a thousand folk, dreams of peace and justice. But I had let other
dreams creep in, and one of those was a dream that the white demon that preyed
upon them in the moonlit nights would be punished for the deaths she wrought,
and the fear she had brought upon the people.
The
wave came upon me as I changed back to human shape, crushing me beneath a
mountain wall of water, picking me up, Grail and all, for a journey without
air and light that crossed the width of Lyonnesse before it let me go. I was
broken at the end, my human form beyond repair. I took another shape, the best
I could make, though it was not pleasing to my or any other eyes. It is a
measure of the Grail’s mercy that this seemed sufficient punishment, for
102
under
the lake
only then could I let it fall.
I did let
it go, but never from my sight. For now, even waking, I dreamed of all the
folk of Lyonnesse who died under the wave, and only the Grail would give me
untroubled rest. Years passed, and I slithered from sea to river to lake, till
at last I came here, following the drifts and tumblings of the Grail. I was not
surprised to find that Excalibur awaited me, still sheathed and shining,
despite its long sojourn in the deep. It seemed fitting that everything I made
should lie together, both the things and the fate. Even the Grail seemed
content to sit, as if waiting for the future I could not see.
I cannot
remember when Merlin first found me here, but it is not so strange, given our
birthing together so long ago. He has studied humanity with greater care than
I, and used his power with much more caution.
There! I
have left his spell behind with my drowned past, and now we shall bargain in
earnest. He will give me back my human shape, he says, in return for the sword.
He knows it is an offer I cannot refuse. What is the sword to me, compared to
the warmth of the sun on my soft skin, the colors that my eyes will see anew,
the cool wind that will caress my face?
I will give
him the sword. It will bring Arthur triumph but also sorrow, as it has always
done, for his victories will never be his own. The scabbard too, will save him
and doom him, for a man who cannot be wounded is not a man whom a woman can
choose to love.
Merlin
is clever. He will not touch the sword himself, but will tell me when I must
give it up to Arthur. Only then will I receive my side of the bargain. It is
curious to feel expectation again, and something that I must define as hope.
103
across
the wall
Even the
brightness seems less wearing on my eyes, or perhaps it is Merlin who has
chosen to be kind. Yes, now he talks of the Grail, and asks me to give it up.
Merlin does not understand its nature, I think, or he would not be trying to
get it for himself.
The Grail
will wait, I tell him. Go and fetch your king, your Arthur. I will give him the
sword, the scabbard too, and may he use them well.
Merlin
knows when to wait. He has always been good at waiting. He leaps upward in a
flurry of light and I slide back into my cave, to coil around the hollow that
contains my treasures. The Grail was there yesterday, but not now. If I
thought Merlin had stolen it, I would be angry. Perhaps I would pursue him, up
into the warmer, lighter waters, to see if his power is as great as what
remains of mine.
But I will
not, for I know the Grail has left me without Merlin’s tricks or thievery, as
it has left a thousand times before. I have always followed it in the past,
seeking the relief it gave. Now I think time has served that same purpose, if
not so well. Time and cold and depth. It slows thought, and dulls memory. Only
Merlin’s coming has briefly woken me at all, I realize, and there lies the
irony of our exchange.
I will give
the sword to Arthur, but without the Grail I do not think I will long remain in
human shape. The Grail taught me guilt, but it also drank it up. Without it, I
shall have to think too much and remember too much. I will have to live with a
light that blinds me, until at last I have used up all the lives of Lyonnesse
that lie within my gut.
No. The
Grail has gone. When Excalibur is likewise gone, I shall return to the darkness
and the cold, to this place where a dull serpent can sleep without dreaming.
Till once again I
104 under the
lake
must obey
the call of strength and sorrow, of love and longing, of justice and of peace.
All these things of human magic, that I never knew till I made the sword and
scabbard, and never understood until I made the Grail.
105
introduction to Charlie Rabbit
“Charlie Rabbit” was written while
the (second) Iraq war was brewing but before it had begun, specifically for the
War Child charity anthology Kids’ Night In. War Child (www.warchild.org) is a network of independent
organizations working across the world to help children affected by war. The
royalties donated by the authors from the Kids’
Night In anthology have been used to help
children in all kinds of war-torn areas to get schooling, medical attention,
and much more.
In
“Charlie Rabbit” I wanted to tell a story, of course, but also to communicate a
snapshot of some small children caught up in a war. A nonspecific war, because
the children suffer no matter what the war is about, or where it is, or who is
fighting it. Often children in a war have little or no idea of what is really
going on. They simply suffer the consequences.
I’ve
thought a lot about war and conflict and read a lot about it, from military
history to personal accounts. I served in the Australian Army Reserve for four
years (a part-time force like the American National Guard), so I have a little
understanding of what it means to be a peacetime soldier. Back then, there were
a lot of Vietnam veterans still serving, and I listened to them, and I thought
about what might happen if I had to go to war, too, and I have thought about it
since.
But
until I sat down to work out what I was going to write for the War Child
anthology, I had never considered the particular horror of being a child in a
country at war: totally powerless, totally vulnerable, and totally innocent.
“Charlie
Rabbit” is my attempt to help other people think
107 across the
wall
about
the actual children who are affected by war, even if they survive. Children
just like your own, or the kids next door, or the children at the school across
the road.
Children who would like to have two parents, peaceful
lives, and a Charlie Rabbit.
108
Charlie
Rabbit
Abbas woke to the
scream of sirens. Half asleep, he tumbled out of the upper
bunk and shook his brother, who was asleep below.
“Joshua!
Get up!”
Joshua
opened one eye, but he didn’t move any other muscle. He was six, and unruly.
Abbas, who was eleven, felt practically grown up by comparison.
“I don’t
want to go down the hole,” complained Joshua. He still hadn’t opened his other
eye.
Abbas
pulled the bedclothes back and dragged Joshua onto the floor. Charlie Rabbit,
who had been under the blankets, fell out too. His long floppy ears sprawled
across Abbas’s bare feet, till Joshua grabbed his constant companion and hugged
him to his chest.
“It’s a
cellar, not a hole, and we have to go now!”
Joshua lay
on the floor and shut both eyes. Abbas hauled him up into a sitting position,
but Joshua was as floppy as Charlie Rabbit’s ears. As soon as Abbas let go,
Joshua slumped down again.
“Mum!”
shouted Abbas, a touch of panic in his voice. He
109
across
the wall
could feel a rapid, regular vibration
through the walls and floor, and could hear something like distant thunder
beneath the shrieking sirens. But it wasn’t thunder. The cruise missiles were
hitting the south side. The next wave would strike much closer to home. He had
to get Joshua to the shelter.
“Mum!”
There was
no answer. Abbas, still half asleep, felt a sudden pain of memory. Their mother
had been wounded in a daylight air raid that afternoon, and had been taken
away. To a hospital, Abbas desperately hoped, if there was one left. His
grandparents were supposed to come over, but they hadn’t arrived by nightfall.
Abbas had put Joshua to bed and then, much later, had fallen into an exhausted
sleep himself.
He tried
not to think about what might have happened to Grandpa and Gramma, in the same
way he tried not to think about his father, who had been drafted eighteen
months before. The single postcard they had gotten from him was still pinned to
the wall of their room, its edges curled, the ink fading.
No one
could help him, Abbas realized. He had to look after Joshua by himself.
“You stay,
then!” Abbas shouted. He snatched Charlie Rabbit from Joshua and ran to the
door. “Charlie Rabbit will come with me.”
“Wait!”
squealed Joshua. He jumped up and reached for his rabbit. But Abbas held it
above his head and ran for the stairs. Joshua followed, pleading and clutching
at his brother’s pajamas to make him stop. Somehow they made it down the stairs
together, without Abbas losing his pajamas or his temper.
The cellar
was entered through a trapdoor in the kitchen that led to a long, narrow
ladder. As Abbas flung the trapdoor
110 charlie
rabbit
open, there
was a terrible booming crash outside. The whole house shook, and a storm of
dust and pieces of plaster rained down from the ceiling. The light near the
stove sparked and went out, leaving them in darkness. Joshua lost his balance
and fell over, almost rolling into the trapdoor. Purely by luck, Abbas got in
the way, and they lay tangled together on the floor.
“Down the
ladder!” shouted Abbas as Joshua started to howl. He wrestled the little boy
around and lowered him down by feel.
“Charleeee!
Charleeee!” screamed Joshua. He hung on to the ladder with one hand while he
clawed at Abbas with the other, trying to grab Charlie Rabbit.
“Charlie’s
coming too! Climb down! Down!”
Another
missile hit nearby. Abbas felt the impact through his whole body. It took a
moment for him to realize that it had knocked him senseless for a few seconds.
He was still on the kitchen floor, but he couldn’t feel the trapdoor—or Joshua.
He couldn’t hear anything either, because it felt as if a school bell was going
off deep inside his ears.
Blinded and
deafened, he was so disoriented it took several seconds of panicked reaching
around before he realized he was backed up against the fridge. That meant the
trapdoor should be over to the right. He crawled in that direction and felt his
probing fingers drop into the open trapdoor. But where was Joshua?
There was
an electric lantern at the foot of the ladder. Abbas realized he had to get it
before he could look for Joshua. He lowered himself through the trapdoor as
another missile hit nearby. This time Abbas saw the flash, which meant the
blackout curtains over the windows were gone. Or perhaps
111 across the
wall
the whole
wall had fallen over. Hastily he stepped down, dragging the trapdoor shut
behind him, though it did little to muffle the sound of explosions.
Abbas’s
hearing started to come back before he reached the foot of the ladder. A distant,
piercing voice penetrated his aching ears. Joshua’s voice.
“It’s dark!
Where’s Charlie? Charlie!”
“Stay
still!” instructed Abbas, far too loudly, over the ringing in his ears. “I’ll
find Charlie after I get the light.”
He felt
around behind the ladder. The emergency box was there, and the large electric
lantern they used to take camping. Years ago, when there were still holidays
and you could leave the city without a special pass.
Abbas
switched the lantern on. Nothing happened, and a sob began to rise in the boy’s
throat. They had saved those batteries especially, kept them for exactly this
sort of emergency. They couldn’t have gone dead.. . .
A faint
glow appeared before the sob could leave Abbas’s mouth, and slowly grew till it
became a bright, white light. Abbas turned the sob into a cough and looked
around. Joshua was already picking up Charlie Rabbit. The little boy was dirty
but otherwise seemed unhurt, though he must have fallen halfway down the
ladder.
“Nothing
hurts?” asked Abbas.
Joshua
shook his head and hid his face in Charlie Rabbit’s ears.
Abbas
looked around. The “hole” had been an ice cellar, long ago, and was really only
a cave dug into the thick clay below the house. Where the ice blocks had once
been stacked, there was now a makeshift shelter, an A-frame made from two heavy
tabletops with the legs cut off, bolted together at the top
112 charlie
rabbit
and
sandbagged at the bottom and each end.
Another
missile exploded close by, the ground shivering from the impact. More dust fell
from the ceiling.
“Into...the
shelter,” gasped Abbas, as he pushed his brother toward the wooden A-frame. For
once, Joshua did as he was told, even taking the lantern from Abbas, who turned
back and picked up the heavy emergency box. It contained a couple of old
blankets, some food, and a bottle of water.
Abbas had
taken only two steps toward the shelter when a cruise missile hit the house
next door. The explosion shattered the whole street, smashing every house like
a sledgehammer coming down on matchstick models.
The earth
under Abbas’s feet rolled, and all the air around him was sucked up with a
terrible scream. He was lifted up, then thrown forward, almost to the shelter.
He landed hard, on his side, but had no time to think about the pain. The
scream of air dissipated, but in its place came a terrible groaning noise, an
almost human expression of pain, though it was far louder than any human sound.
It was the
house. Abbas looked up and saw the floor above bulge down, every beam protesting
under a terrible strain. The whole building was about to collapse.
Without
hesitation. Abbas threw the emergency box toward the shelter and flung himself
after it, an instant before the space where he’d been was hit by a huge ceiling
beam.
As the beam
fell, the floor above gave way and the ruins of the house came pouring down, a
great dumping of broken wooden beams, floor planks, plaster, roof tiles, and
chimney bricks, mixed in with furniture, books, even the bathtub.
The wooden
walls of the shelter boomed and shook as the cascade of ruin continued. Abbas
pushed Joshua all the way to
113 across the
wall
the back as
debris began to flow in through the shelter entrance, preceded by a thick wave
of dust; cloying, sticky dust that made it almost impossible to breathe and
dimmed the light of the lantern.
Joshua
screamed as debris continued to crash down. Abbas was about to tell him to shut
up, when he realized he was screaming too. Abbas forced himself to stop,
shutting the scream inside as he crawled to the far end of the shelter, dragging
his little brother and Charlie Rabbit with him.
Joshua’s
screaming became a choking sob as the sound of the falling debris diminished.
Abbas kept holding him, as much for his own comfort as his brother’s. Both of them
jumped and shivered every time the shelter was hit by something particularly
large. Would it hold? Could it hold?
It did
hold. Eventually the crashing descent of debris stopped. A little more spread
in through the entrance, but there were no more terrifying booms and thuds upon
the shelter.
Joshua’s
sobs slowed. He coughed and mumbled a few words. It took Abbas a few seconds to
work out that he’d asked, “Are we dead?”
“No,
we’re...” began Abbas. He had to stop and cough before starting again. There was
so much dust that he could barely breathe, let alone talk.
“Not dead!”
he gasped. “Don’t move. I’ll . . . get water.”
He crawled
across to the emergency box. It was buried under bits of broken wood and
plaster rubble, but Abbas managed to dig through and retrieve it. Beyond the
box, the entrance to the shelter was completely blocked with debris. There was
no way out.
Abbas tried
to open the water bottle, but his hands were shaking too much. He put the
bottle between his knees and
114 charlie
rabbit
tried
again, and managed to unscrew the cap. He took a cautious swallow and spat out
a mouthful of muddy dust. Then he held the bottle for Joshua, making sure his
brother could not drink too much or spill it.
“More!”
demanded Joshua.
Abbas shook
his head and screwed the lid tight.
“No more
for now,” he said quietly. “Later.”
Joshua’s
lower lip trembled but he didn’t protest. He just held Charlie Rabbit tighter,
his small face crumpled in shock and puzzlement.
Abbas wiped
the dust off the lantern. The light brightened, but that didn’t help. It lit up
a tiny pocket of clear space, just big enough for the two of them to crouch in.
They were
completely buried under the ruins of the house.
From the
continuing tremble he could feel through the floor, Abbas knew that there were
still missiles falling, though they were striking farther away. That meant
there would be little or no chance of rescue. There were already thousands of
destroyed houses. No one would search under this one. No one knew they would be
here.
Joshua
mumbled something, the words lost in Charlie Rabbit’s ears.
“It’s
okay,” said Abbas. He wished he sounded more convincing. He cleared his throat
and tried again. “We’re safe here, now.”
“Where’s Mum?” asked
Joshua, more audibly. “I want Mum.” Abbas closed his eyes for a second. I have
to be brave. I havetobebrave. “She’s okay too. She’ll . . . she’ll come and get
us in the morning.”
115 across the
wall
“When
is it morning?” “Not for a long time. Try to go back to sleep.” Joshua stared
at his brother. “Can’t sleep.” “I’ll tell you a story.” “A Charlie Rabbit
story?” “Uh, I suppose. Let me try and remember the story for a
second.” Joshua nodded his agreement. He
loved stones. Abbas didn’t try to think of a story. He tried to think
about
what they could do. He had to remember everything his father had told him about
the shelter, about what to do. But it was over a year ago, and he hadn’t paid
attention—
“Who
else is in the story?” “What?” “Who else is in the story, besides Charlie?” Abbas
shook his head. He couldn’t think, but Joshua
needed a story. He had to be distracted
from their situation. “There were two boys,” he said. “Their names were—”
“Abbas and Joshua!” “Okay, Abbas and Joshua. They lived long ago in a city of
white
flowers, in a beautiful and peaceful kingdom. Everyone was happy, and there was
plenty to eat and good things to drink, like hot chocolate. Abbas and Joshua
went to a school that had lots of books and teachers for every subject. But one
day a terrible giant appeared and demanded that everyone in the city hand over
half their gold or—”
“He
would eat them?”
“No . . . he would destroy their city.
The giant was so big and so horrible that the people had no choice. Abbas and
Joshua had no gold, but their parents had to give up half their
116 charlie
rabbit
life’s savings to the giant. The giant
took the gold and went
away, and everyone was happy again.”
“Didn’t they ask Charlie Rabbit for
help?”
“No, not
yet. They thought if they gave the gold, the giant would go away. But the next
year the giant came back again, and this time he had brought his friends. Three
huge giants who stamped and shouted and demanded all the gold that was left or
they would smash the people into little p i e c e s . ”
“Why didn’t
they fight? I bet Abbas and Joshua would fight.”
“They
couldn’t fight. The giants were too big, and they could throw huge rocks from
far away. So the people of the city handed over their gold and hoped that they
would never see the giants again.”
“But the
giants came back?”
“Yes, the
giants came back. This time they didn’t ask for gold. They said they were going
to smash the city into little bits and there was nothing anyone could do about
it—”
“Except
Charlie Rabbit!”
“Yes, but
no one knew where Charlie Rabbit was. He’d gone away and he hadn’t come back.”
“But he
did!”
“Well,
first of all Abbas and Joshua decided to go looking for him. But before they
could leave, the giants started to throw rocks at the city. Huge rocks, bigger
than houses, that fell down from the sky, smashing everything to bits.
“Abbas and
Joshua were in their house when the first rock struck. They knew they couldn’t
go out, so they climbed down a ladder into a cave. There was a secret tunnel
from the cave that came out beyond the city walls. But while they were still
117 across the
wall
in the
cave, a really big rock hit directly above them!”
Joshua took
a sharp intake of breath. His eyes were huge, staring at Abbas, waiting for
what happened next.
“The cave
collapsed all around the two boys. They were trapped.”
“What
happened then?”
“Then . .
.” Abbas began, but he couldn’t go on. His mouth trembled and he felt tears
start in his eyes. “Then . . .”
“Then
Charlie Rabbit came back,” said Joshua, eagerly taking over the story. “Charlie
Rabbit smelled the boys in the tunnel, and he dugged them up. Then Charlie
Rabbit jumped over to the giants and he kicked them with his big foots. Wham!
Wham! Wham! Wham! Wham! The giants ran away and everyone was happy and Charlie
Rabbit ate a c a r r o t . ”
Abbas
nodded.
“Yes . . .
that was what happened.”
“I’m going
to sleep now,” announced Joshua. He dragged one of the old blankets out of the
box and curled up on it. “Wake me up when Charlie Rabbit comes to dig us out.”
“I will,”
said Abbas. He felt truly helpless. If only there were
a secret tunnel, or a real Charlie
Rabbit . . .
Secret
tunnel. Another way out.
Abbas
remembered what his father had said. There was another way out. The shelter
backed onto the old ice chute, which had been used long ago to slide the ice
blocks from the street down to the cellar.
Abbas took
a deep breath, then coughed it away. There was too much dust for deep breaths.
Or maybe the air was running out. He took a shallower breath and edged around
Joshua to the back of the shelter. The wall there looked just
118 charlie
rabbit
like the
hard clay of the other walls.
Abbas
tapped it and was rewarded with a hollow sound. He let out a sobbing half laugh
and started to scrape. There was a wooden hatch behind the clay, one so rotten
that it crumbled at his touch. Abbas attacked it eagerly, pulling at the wood
in a frenzy, ignoring the splinters.
There was a
narrow chute beyond the hatch. Abbas crawled a little way up it, then looked
back at Joshua, marveling at his little brother’s ability to sleep. Should he
wake him? Or should he make sure the chute was clear all the way to the street?
Abbas
hesitated, then edged back down. As he backed into the shelter again, he heard
Joshua sit up. And there was another noise, something rustling in the debris.
A sound he couldn’t quite place.
“Abbas!
It’s wet!”
It took
Abbas a second to turn around in the confined space. By the time he could see,
he could already feel the water around his ankles. It was freezing cold, and rising
very quickly.
Broken
water pipe. Maybe a big one. A water main. We havetogetout!
“It’s okay,
Josh,” Abbas said quickly. He picked up the lantern and showed Joshua the
entrance. “I’ve found the tunnel. The secret tunnel. You go up first.
Quickly.”
Joshua
scrambled up into the ice chute. Still sleepy, he didn’t pick up Charlie
Rabbit. Abbas started after him but at the last moment grabbed the rabbit.
Joshua would want it for sure, later.
Water
burbled around Abbas’s knees as he climbed up into the chute. It was rising
very quickly, far too quickly. Abbas pushed at Joshua’s legs to make him go
faster.
119 across the
wall
“Hurry up!”
They
crawled up at least thirty feet, with the water always lapping at Abbas’s feet,
sometimes even catching up to his knees. Joshua’s speed varied, and Abbas had
to keep pushing at him.
Then Joshua
stopped altogether and let out a howl of protest as Abbas shoved at his legs.
“What’s
wrong? Keep going!”
“Can’t,”
said Joshua.
Abbas shone
the light up. He could see the top hatch. But it was broken and hanging down,
and where the open air should be, there was a huge slab of concrete, its
reinforcing wires hanging down like severed tree roots.
It was the
roof of the bus shelter from across the street. It must have been blown off and
come straight down on the ice chute exit. Now there really was no way out.
Abbas
twisted around. The water was slowly swirling around his thighs. Cold, dark
water, constantly rising.
“Lie on
your side,” instructed Abbas. Joshua rolled over, and Abbas crawled up next to
him. They could both just fit that way, though it was a squeeze. Charlie Rabbit
was once again between them, and Joshua gratefully grabbed his ears.
Abbas
worked the lantern around and shone it on the concrete slab that blocked their
way. There was a small gap in one corner, not much larger than a softball.
Abbas reached out and tried to crumble the concrete edges, but that only made
his fingers bleed.
“Can...can
you fit through there?” Abbas asked his brother hopefully. The water was up to
his knees again, despite the extra yards he’d gained by moving next to Joshua.
120 charlie
rabbit
Joshua
shook his head. The gap was far too small.
Abbas put
his hand against the wall. He couldn’t feel any explosions. The missile strike
must be over. The civil defense teams would be out. But how could he attract
their attention quickly enough? They’d be drowned in ten or twenty minutes.
“Help!” he
shouted, the word leaping out of his mouth almost without him thinking about
it. Joshua flinched at the noise. “Help!”
The sound
echoed back from the concrete and the rising water, but Abbas knew it had not
penetrated aboveground. No one could hear him.
“I’m cold,”
whimpered Joshua. “It’s wet.”
“I’m trying
to get help,” said Abbas. “I’m trying—
“Charlie
Rabbit—”
“Shut up
about Charlie Rabbit!” screamed Abbas. He grabbed the rabbit and pulled its
ears apart, trying to rip it in his desperate anger. “Charlie Rabbit is a toy!”
Joshua
started to sob again—deep, wracking sobs that shook his whole body.
Abbas
stopped pulling Charlie Rabbit’s ears and stared at its big-eyed, long-nosed,
furry face. Charlie Rabbit was a toy. A very fancy toy.
“Ssshhh,
it’s okay,” Abbas said more gently. “I’m sorry. Charlie Rabbit is going to help
us.”
Joshua’s
sobs became a sniffle.
“He is?”
“He
is,” confirmed Abbas. He tore off a long piece of wood from the broken hatch
and propped it against the gap in the concrete block. Then he opened the panel
on the back of Charlie Rabbit. “Only we have to sit in the dark for a while,
121 across the
wall
because
Charlie needs the batteries from the lantern. Can you be brave for Charlie
Rabbit?”
“Yes...”
Abbas set Charlie down between them,
turned off the lantern, and took out the carefully hoarded batteries one at a
time. Oneslipnow,onebatterydroppeddownthechute...I
mustconcentrate...thishastowork....
He
got the batteries in, slid the switch to “maximum,” and closed the panel. Would
Charlie still work? Even if he did, would it help? The water was up to his
waist now, and it was so cold, he couldn’t feel his legs anymore.
“Joshua,”
he whispered. “Feel for Charlie. Twist his nose.”
He
heard Joshua move. Then there was a sudden light and a burst of sound. Charlie
Rabbit twitched, and his eyes shone with a deep, bright-green glow; his paws
went up and down, and his internal speaker began to hum.
Abbas pushed Charlie
Rabbit into the gap above, then used the broken timber to shove the toy
through, into the open air. As it emerged, the rabbit started to sing its trademark
song:
“Hoppity,
hoppity, hoppity me, I’m as happy as I can be Carrot, lettuce, radishes, too,
I’m Charlie Rabbit, how do you do? Hoppity, hoppity, hoppity through, Let’s all
be happy, too—”
The
song suddenly stopped. Abbas waited, holding his breath, hoping that he would
122 charlie
rabbit
hear the stupid song start again, or
someone call out to them, or something. But there was nothing. The chill water
was up under his arms, rising even more swiftly now.
“Joshua,”
said Abbas quietly, “crawl up as far as you can and put your face against that
hole. Pull your legs up, out of the water.”
“Charlie
Rabbit will get help,” said Joshua confidently as he curled into a small ball.
“Yes,” said
Abbas in the darkness. He closed his eyes and let his head rest on the ground,
close to the water that was caressing his neck. He was so cold now, he couldn’t
really care what happened. “Charlie Rabbit will get help.”
“Hoppity,
hoppity, hoppity through, Let’s all be happy, too,” sang Joshua. “Hoppity,
hoppity . . . Abbas!”
“What?”
“Look,
Abbas! Light!”
Abbas
opened his eyes. The concrete block was rising up, rising into the air. Harsh,
white electric light spilled down the chute, so bright he had to shield his
eyes. Hands came reaching down to take Joshua, and then Abbas was lifted out
himself, water spilling out onto the street behind him. Loud voices were all
around him, shouting, asking questions, too much noise for Abbas to make any
sense of it, save for one small voice that cut through everything. Joshua’s voice,
shrill in the night.
“Charlie! I
want my Charlie Rabbit!”
123
introduction to From the Lighthouse
Both my memory and my records are
rather blank on this story. I thought I wrote it specifically for the 1998
anthology Fantastic Worlds (edited by Paul Collins), but when I checked the copyright
date for “From the Lighthouse,” I found it was 1996, and all the other stories
were 1998. Which suggests the story appeared somewhere else first, and I do
have a faint niggling memory that it did see print somewhere obscure before
being collected in Fantastic Worlds.
This
completely destroys my explanation of the origins of the story. When I thought
it first appeared in Fantastic Worlds, I was going to say that I must have started with landscape
because of the anthology title, with the idea of an island in the ice,
protected by a Summer Field. I’m pretty certain that the setting came first,
and some of the details of the place and its people, but it can’t have been
sparked by the anthology title.
This is one of my notionally science fiction stories, in
that it features technology and some vague explanation of that technology, but
it still has the feel of fantasy. Perhaps it is science fantasy, a handy label
for one of the many borderlands of the overlapping genres. I’ve never written
any “hard” science fiction, in which the science can bear rigorous examination
or is a real extrapolation of current knowledge. I’d like to think that this is
not just laziness and a lack of intellectual stamina, but rather a love of
story, which always is paramount to me. Having to make the science work as well
as everything else just seems too hard. I like to read it, though, which
suggests that I am actually just lazy.
125
across
the wall
I
suspect that I originally intended to revisit this setting in another story,
and I do have a faint recollection of jotting down some notes about the island
and its people. But those notes are lost, seemingly like everything else
related to “From the Lighthouse,” apart from a few letters having to do with Fantastic Worlds. But
as I haven’t revisited the oasis island of Lisden for about a decade, I guess
it can wait until I find a story welling up out of my subconscious that wants
or needs to be set there, at which time I can reinvent everything I made up
before.
126
From
the Lighthouse
1.
Arrival
Everyone gathered
at the wharf when the gold-hulled ice
cruiser docked. Not because they’d been told to, though some people thought
there had been some sort of instruction, or invitation. It was simply
curiosity.
The Kranu
hunters had met the yacht some five relgues offshore and, finding the Kranu
refusing to rise through the hot holes and the day dull, had formed up around
it as an escort. The villagers, seeing the hunters skating in two lines on
either side of a great vessel with sun-colored sails, had naturally come to
see the hunters’ prize.
Marcus
Kilman saw it quite differently. From the poop of theMercurialGadflyhe waved
left-handed, in the manner of a ruler to newfound vassals. His right hand crept
finger by finger between the buttons of his crisp white suit. In his
gold-heeled boots he was five foot one, and thanks to a nightly exercise with
lead sinkers his earlobes were almost pendulous enough to be handsome.
127 across the
wall
When the
MercurialGadflyfinished tying up at the wharf that poked out of the island’s
Summer Field into the ice, the crew paraded on the foredeck, the ex-Senatorial
Navy bosun plying his whistle in what Kilman believed to be a salute, but was
actually the opening bars of the theme from the comic opera The Great Kranu
from the Deep.As always, the crew smirked solemnly, laughter submerged in
hacking coughs. Kilman frequently had his Bonesman check them for lung rot or
throat curse. He was afraid of any kind of infection, physical or
intellectual. The Bonesman never found either sort aboard Kilman’s ship.
Kilman
descended from the poop, reappearing at the gangway. The waiting crowd of
islanders, silent out of politeness rather than awe, pleased him immensely.
Respect! At last he had found somewhere untainted by egalitarian ideals. He
would be king, and they would be his peasantry.
“People of
Lisden!” he declaimed, his voice breaking pitch like a badly blown trumpet. “I
am Marcus Kilman, and I have purchased this island. I am your new owner.”
The
islanders greeted this disclosure with equanimity. Kilman had allocated ten
seconds for rapturous applause but resumed speaking after only six seconds of
embarrassing silence.
“People of
Lisden! I will bring you a new era of peace and prosperity, lower taxes, and
good government.”
This
provoked a reaction of sorts. A murmur ran through the audience like a water
spider skidding from lily to lily or, in this case, from each mainland speaker
in the crowd. Lisden already had peace; as much prosperity as they could handle
without having greed; taxes were nonexistent, as the Kranu
128
from
the lighthouse
cooperative provided all services from
its profits (if any); and the only government was the board of the cooperative,
which included every adult islander. Theoretically, there was a mainland
government department that looked after their affairs, and the Humble and
Obedient Senate of the People beyond that, but both had lost the Lisden file
years ago, and consequently denied the island’s existence.
Kilman saw
this reaction as suppressed joy at the good news, and was about to launch into
further grandiose announcements when a woman stepped out of the crowd and onto
the gangplank. She was much younger than Kilman—but the sort of woman who could
be anywhere between sixteen and thirty and very striking in looks and stature.
She was at least six foot two, and looked taller in her plain black dress, with
a long silver scarf draped over one shoulder like an arrow, emphasizing her
height.
“Sir,” she
said, in Mainland so untainted by accent that it was clearly not her native
tongue. “May I ask from whom you purchased this island?”
“Why,
little lady,” Kilman answered, looking down on her from the high end of the
gangplank, hoping she wouldn’t come up any farther, “I purchased this island
from the Lisden Fish Export Company, for the sum of one point seven five
million gold bezants.”
“Ah,”
said the woman, who knew that the Lisden Fish Export Company had been
superseded by the Lisden Fish Enterprise Cooperative one hundred seventy-six
years ago, and so couldn’t sell anybody anything. She turned and spoke briefly
to the crowd in their native tongue, explaining that the poor short man with
the badly fitting toupee was a crazy millionaire
129
across
the wall
who’d been the victim of a confidence
trickster. They should humor him, provided it was not too difficult. Spare him
embarrassment, she asked. Be kind, and in due course we will tell him the truth
about his purchase.
The crowd
nodded, waved, or spoke their agreement and dispersed, laughing and talking
among themselves. Kilman watched his audience disappear, disgruntlement showing
in the folds of flesh about his mouth.
“Why are
they going?” he snapped. “I didn’t say that they could go.”
“They’re
going to prepare a proper welcome for our new owner,” the woman invented,
seeing that he was quite hurt, and a little angry.
She felt
sorry for him, having to wrap an ego the size of the legendary Great Kranu
Hunter of Remm in flesh not much bigger than the Kranu lures the hunters put
down the hot holes. She took a few steps back down the gangplank and slumped a
little.
“Who are
you anyway?” the proud owner of Lisden asked as she retreated. He suddenly felt
an interest in her now, even an incipient fondness. She wasn’t as
arrogant-looking as he’d first thought.
“My name
is...in Mainland, you would say Malletta, or Maryen... even perhaps Margon.”
“Okay,
Margalletta,” said Kilman, who only ever remembered numbers properly. “Why don’t
you get hold of a wheeler and show me over my new property?”
“It
would be my pleasure,” replied Margalletta (as she was now resigned to being
named). She slumped a little more, and gripped the rail of the gangplank as if
overcome by weakness.
130
from
the lighthouse
2.
Sightseeing
Wheelers—and
their theoretically impossible system of
motivation that relied on a refusal to rotate at the same speed as the
planet—had not arrived in Lisden. There was a steam car instead, a
two-hundred-year-old vehicle of doubtful provenance. It had been locally
repaired several times, so the panel work, while distinctive, was no longer
representative of any particular manufacturer. Similarly, any badges, ornamental
exhausts, or hood ornaments it might once have had were long gone. A stuffed
parrot hung from the khat-catcher at the front of the boiler, but this was
clearly not a factory-issue embellishment.
Margalletta
sat, or rather slumped, behind the wheel. Kilman sat in the back. Instead of
leather upholstery he had a fringed carpet. Margalletta told him this was a
local tra-dition—the island’s ruler always had such a carpet: lining a chariot;
as a saddle blanket for horse or camel; or under the howdah of an elephant.
Kilman was pleased by this image, unable to discern that it was a complete
fabrication. The only elephants or camels ever seen on Lisden appeared in
several very old books.
For
all its odd appearance, the steam car was mechanically sound. Once it had built
up sufficient pressure for the safety valve to scream alarmingly, Margalletta
engaged all six drive wheels and shot off up the road, taking the corners that
switchbacked up the island’s central mountain with considerable
1
across
the wall
elan, choosing whichever side of the
road took her fancy.
Kilman,
enquiring about road safety in a voice of blustering, ill-concealed fear, was
informed that this was the only vehicle, and everyone knew she was taking him
up the mountain. So there was no danger from horse-drawn vehicles or the occasional
camel. Oh yes, the ceremonial camels had bred in the wild....
Kilman kept
his nose perpendicular to the window. Looking for camels, but also seeing the
deep blue-gray-green of the sea suddenly meeting the blue sheen of ice; the
picturesque fishing village nestled at the apex of a triangular bay; the
orange and lemon orchards rising up the terraced slopes. All of it safely
maintained by the Summer Field that made this oasis possible amid the vast sea
of ice that had sprung up millennia ago as the result of a misguided
application of a Winter Field. The ancient savants who had invented both were
very successful at starting the fields, and phenomenally unsuccessful at
turning them off.
Not that
anyone would want to turn off Lisden’s field. Or banish it, since no one really
knew what made the Fields occur. Some said mirrors in the sky, and others fire
or ice elementals mixed together.
Kilman
certainly didn’t want to change his oasis. Despite being obscure, it was only
eighteen days’ sail from the Republic, and there was a growing desire among
the wealthy citizens for travel and well-regulated adventure.
Lisden
would perfectly meet the demand of this new industry. In his imagination he
saw hostelries spring up all along the coast, and houle gardens. There would be
khat netting parties and Kranu hunts with steam harpoons. The lemon groves
would give way to a dalliance maze, where masked frolics
132 from the
lighthouse
could be
conducted, with refreshments and prophylactics sold at exorbitant prices.
Margalletta,
sharp eared and sharp eyed, heard him whispering to himself, and saw the thick
mouth move, saliva wetting the lower lip, as if he were about to moisten his
finger to count money. She no longer felt sorry for him. Instead, a slight
twinge of alarm caused her to open the power venturi further and accelerate
rather violently out of a turn. Kilman didn’t really own the island, but he
thought he did, and to such a man, that might be enough to eventually make it
so.
“There is a
lookout at the top of the mountain,” Margalletta announced, as she slowed to
negotiate another corner. “You will be able to survey the whole of the island
from there...the entirety of your realm.”
“My
realm...” Kilman repeated, his chin thrusting out and up, right hand once again
thrusting between the third and fifth gleaming bronze jacket button. “My
conquest!”
Margalletta
suppressed a shrug of distaste. “Conquest” indeed! The man was more unpleasant
than she had thought, and clearly not an object of pity. He was also dangerous.
Kilman’s wealth gave him a weapon—and he lacked both the morality and the sense
to use it wisely.
Still, by
calling the island his conquest, he had clarified Margalletta’s role.
To have a
conquest, one must conquer an enemy. If he had truly conquered the island, she
would be his enemy. Now, though he only thought he’d conquered the island, it
might still become a reality. Margalletta would be his enemy then, so she might
as well think and act like an enemy now. Logic was not her strong point, but
she rarely needed it, having intuition and common sense instead.
133 across the
wall
“This road
will have to be widened,” Kilman pronounced a few minutes later, as they
bounced around yet another bend. “At least four lanes. Of maybe we could get
one of those cable-car things...you know.”
Margalletta
did know. Unlike most of the islanders, her parents had dragged her around many
parts of the globe, believing travel to be far superior to a school education.
One of her
most unpleasant memories was of being stranded for hours in an antique
clockwork cable car, swaying a hundred span above an icy crevasse, the wind
screeching through a gap under the ill-fitting door. It had taken everyone on
board six hours to rewind the mechanism, taking it in turns. She still had
nightmares about cold, heights, and a slowly turning key.
Her silence
did not dissuade Kilman from further musings. A few corners on, with perhaps a
third of the mountain still to come, he suddenly sat up like a spring-wound
Archimedes jumping out of a model bathtub.
“A railway!
It could circle all the way around, with stops every forty-five degrees of
circumference. Viewing platforms. Bars. A summit restaurant. The Kilman
Express.”
“A
railway?” asked Margalletta. “There was one once. A clockwork rail, to take the
tailings from the glazmium mine.”
“Glazmium!
No one told me about glazmium!” Kilman squawked. Fear and greed were evenly
balanced in his voice, but the scales were teetering. Margalletta decided to
give them a push.
“Oh,
there’s no glazmium now,” she said brightly. “Only the waste from the mine. We
used it as infill for the breakwater. And the village. Not to mention this
road.”
Kilman was
silent for a while; then Margalletta saw him
134 from the
lighthouse
take out a
slightly soiled dove from his right sleeve and shake it awake.
It was one
of the new paper-and-blood doves, short-lived but swift. He whispered to it
with his habitual secrecy and cast it out the window. The wind shook it into
life and it grew plump, winging down to the waiting ship.
Margalletta
drove with newfound glee. She had defeated him so easily, with a lie about as
digestible as a logy Lisden haddock.
On the next
corner, the dove was back. Obligingly it flew into Kilman’s lap and expired,
becoming paper again, with a message shining wet and red upon the sheet.
“The
breakwater and the village?” murmured Kilman, reading the message. “Well, I
guess it must have been mighty low-grade glazmium. My Bonesman on the Gadsays
his skull hardly chatters. Was it buried a long time ago, Miss Margalletta?”
The
unexpected counterattack is the most effective. Margalletta flinched, nodded
halfheartedly, and sat up straighter, taller by several inches. Kilman
disgusted her now and, being cleverer than she thought, frightened her more too.
For his part, Kilman felt her shadow fall across him and increase as she
stretched. His previous good feeling, dissipated by the glazmium scare, ebbed
further. He was tired of the road, tired of the car, and tired of its driver.
“How long
till we get to the damn top?” he asked, querulous, as if he’d missed his
breakfast by several meals. “And what’s there anyway?”
“I believe
I mentioned the view,” Margalletta replied stiffly. “It is most spectacular
from the lighthouse.”
“Lighthouse!
Why didn’t you say so? I love lighthouses!”
135 across the
wall
He did,
too, though Kilman had never actually bothered to set foot in one. He liked
pictures of lighthouses, and the idea of lighthouses. The only thing wrong with
lighthouses was that they cost money instead of making it. That was why they
were the natural monopoly of governments. In Kilman’s worldview everything that
cost money and produced no revenue was the business of the Republic.
He was
unaware that the Lisden lighthouse was a great revenue producer. It had begun
life as the folly of a Lirugian colonial governor, grown to maturity under a
Hamallish one, and been bastardized by a Treton, who used it as gull-shooting
platform. But as far as anyone living could remember, its main purpose was as a
giant trellis for passion-fruit vines, and its biannual crop was flavorsome,
heavy, and lucrative.
To Kilman,
at first sight, it just looked as if it were painted a particularly rich green.
He didn’t really see it anyway, for his imagination had added gas flares,
spelling out K I L M A N’S
O B S E R V A T O R I U M in letters of fire. It
would be huge, a landmark for all the visitors to the island, seen from every
angle, the backdrop of every organized and expensive activity.. . .
He
didn’t even notice the vines as they parked next to the entrance, and
Margalletta jumped out to unlock the lighthouse door.
3.
Departure
“The lighthouse is sixty-four
merads, or 189 spans high,” Margalletta said, as she trod purposefully up the
winding
136 from the
lighthouse
stairs. “There are 277 steps, of varying
height, due to the different building techniques employed and different
builders over the seventy-seven hundred years it was under construction.”
“Where’s
the altivator?” asked Kilman, chuckling to show it was a joke. He knew about
lighthouses. He had open-cut diagrams of them. Books with plans. A snow dome
featuring a famous lighthouse on some rock in the Boratic Ocean. He forgot its
name.
Margalletta
led the way at a cracking pace, rejoicing at the wheezing noises behind her,
praying he would have a heart attack. Not that she believed in a single God,
though most of the islanders did. Just in prayer. It was good for you, even if
it didn’t work.
Kilman
wheezed, but it was only cosmetic. No heart attack was in the offing, and none
eventuated. They both reached the top breathless and red-faced, but with
arteries intact and pounding. Margalletta opened the door, pulled-back hair
encountering the wind and defeating it aided by a large black comb and rigid
preparation that morning. Kilman’s toupee, less disciplined, rose from his
scalp and flapped like a hatch on a hinge, till he clapped one hand upon it and
pushed past Margalletta in an urgent, embarrassed rush.
She waited
for a few minutes, then closed the door and went down. Fortunately, the steam
car was on the opposite side from the balcony door, so there would be no need
for further panel work. The passion fruit hadn’t fared so well, as Margalletta
discovered when she walked around—the vines were all torn away near the top.
There was a particularly nasty bare patch, just where the balcony railing would
have been, if only the Treton governor hadn’t dismantled it for being Hamallish
and getting in his field of fire.
137 across the
wall
Curiously
enough, one of Mr. Kilman’s blood-and-paper doves had fallen out of his other
sleeve and seemed unharmed by the fall. Margalletta picked it up and whispered
into its ear, breath bringing it slowly to life.
“Hello. Is
that Mr. Kilman’s ship? I’m afraid there’s been an accident. I gave Mr. Kilman
some bad news about his purchase, and he . . . he...”
Margalletta
released the dove into the wind and let them imagine her sobbing. She watched
it fly down to the golden ship and she laughed, laughed madly, the sound
twining up around the lighthouse like the vines and off into the bright-blue
sky of summer.
138
introduction to The Hill
“The Hill” was written for an
interesting international publishing scheme, in which a bunch of publishing
houses in Europe and Allen & Unwin in Australia decided to simultaneously
publish the same collection of short stories in English and four European
languages, with the theme of the new millennium.
I was
one of two Australian writers invited to participate, and I wrote “The Hill” in
an attempt to try to tell an overtly Australian story—something I’m not known
for, since nearly all my work is set in imagined worlds. This proved to be
somewhat problematical, particularly when in the first drafts of “The Hill,” I
made the major characters part Aboriginal and tried to interweave a backstory
involving Aboriginal myth and beliefs about land. I knew this would be
difficult to pull off, but I didn’t expect my Australian publisher’s reaction,
which was basically that, as a white Australian, I simply couldn’t use either
Aboriginal characters or Aboriginal myth. My initially simplistic attitude was
that, as a fantasy writer, I should be able to draw on anything from everywhere
for inspiration; that I could mine any history, myth, or religion.
After
some discussions with both the publisher and an Aboriginal author, I realized
that the issue was more complex, and that many Aboriginal people would feel
that I was not inspired by their myth but was appropriating something valuable,
one of the few things of value that hadn’t been taken over in the process of
colonization. It would be particularly hurtful because, as an Australian, I
should know that some Aboriginal people would consider this yet another theft.
139 across the
wall
So
the fantasy element of “The Hill,” inspired by some Aboriginal myths, was
removed, and I rewrote it in a more straightforward way. However, given the
constraints of the multilingual publishing schedule, and some misunderstanding
along the way, the original version of the story is the one that got translated
and is in the Norwegian, French, Spanish, and German editions. Only the
English-language version is different.
I’m
still not quite sure where I stand on the matter of allowable use of myth,
legend, and history, save that if I do decide at some point to seek inspiration
from the rich traditions and lore of the Australian Aboriginal people, I will
ask permission first.
140
The
Hill
Rowan sniffed as the
awful hospital smell met him at the front door of the Home. A mixture of
antiseptic and illness, hope and despair, churned by air-conditioning that was
always slightly too cool or slightly too hot.
He ignored
the reception desk, which was easy, since no one was there, and went straight
up the stairs, leaping two at a time, unconscious of the old eyes that watched
him, remembering when steps were not beyond them.
His
great-grandfather’s room was the first on the left after the nurses’ station,
but no one was there. Rowan stuck his head around to make absolutely sure, then
continued on to the television room at the end of the hall. He slowed as he
approached, reluctant as ever to see the group of old people who suffered so
much from Alzheimer’s or senile dementia that they couldn’t speak or move
themselves, so they just sat watching the TV. Or at least had their faces
pointed toward the set. Rowan wasn’t sure they saw anything.
They were
there, but his great-grandfather wasn’t. Sister Amy was helping one of the old
ladies sit back up. She saw Rowan and gave him a smile.
“Come to
see your great-grandpop, then?” she asked.
141 across the
wall
“He’s out in the garden.”
“Thanks,” said Rowan. “Is he . . . ?”
“He’s
having one of his good days,” said Amy. “Bright as a button, bless him. I only
hope I do as well at his age. If I even get that far, of course. Now, up we go,
Mrs. Rossi!”
Mrs. Rossi
dribbled all over Amy’s shoulder as she was lifted up. Rowan mumbled a good-bye
and fled, wanting to get out into the fresh air as quickly as possible. He was
glad Great-grandad was having a good day. It would make everything much
easier. On his bad days, the old man wouldn’t talk, or possibly couldn’t
talk—and he didn’t seem to hear anything either.
But as Amy
said, he was still a wonder, even on his bad days. When he wanted to talk, he
talked intelligently and clearly. When he wanted to walk, he walked, with the
aid of two canes. But he was most remarkable for his age. Albert Salway was the
oldest person in the Home, the oldest person in the city, the oldest in the
state, maybe even the oldest in the country. He had been born in the last
decade of the nineteenth century, and now he was only a day away from the
beginning of the twenty-first. He was 108 years old and was actually Rowan’s
great-great-grandfather. But he always said that was too many greats, and
anyway, he preferred Rowan to call him Bert.
He was
sitting on the bench next to the roses, watching them sway slightly in the
breeze, petals ruffling. As always when he went outside, he was properly
dressed in moleskin trousers, a flannel shirt, tweed coat, and hat. His two
blackwood canes were propped up against the bench, their brass handles bright
in the sun.
“Hello,
Bert,” said Rowan. He sat down and they shook hands, the old man’s light and
brittle in the boy’s, the pressure
142 the hill
of his
fingers very light, their skin barely touching. Bert smiled, showing his gold
tooth on one side and the gap on the other. Apart from the gap and the gold
incisor, he still had all his own teeth. Bert had outlived four dentists who
couldn’t understand the healthiness of his mouth, and many more doctors who
couldn’t believe his age and condition.
“You’ve got
troubles, my boy,” said Bert. “I can see it in your face. Is it school?”
“No,”
replied Rowan. He coughed and cleared his throat, uncertain of how to go on.
“Hmmm,”
said Bert. “Something you don’t know how to tell me. Is it a girl?”
“No,” said
Rowan, embarrassed. “It’s Dad.”
“Ah,” said
Bert, letting out a whistling sigh. “What’s my great-grandson done now?”
“He’s... he’s
selling the Hill,” Rowan blurted out. He knew he had to tell Bert, but he was
afraid the news would hurt the old man badly. Maybe even kill him.
Bert stared
at him, his sharp brown eyes seeming to look through Rowan and off into the
distance. To the Hill, Rowan thought. The Hill was all that remained of their
family property. A great saddleback of earth and stone, crowned by a forest of
ancient gum trees, lording over the flat farmland around it.
The Hill
was the center and the most important part of the 5,000 acres that had belonged
to the Salways since 1878.
“He can’t
sell that land,” said Bert finally.
“But he
has!” exclaimed Rowan. “I heard him telling Mum about it last night. He’s
getting three million dollars and we’re all moving to Sydney. But I don’t want
to go. And I don’t want the Hill to go, either.”
143 across the
wall
“He can’t
sell that land,” repeated the old man. He started to struggle up, his crooked,
shrunken hands taking up the canes. “Give me a hand, Rowan.”
“What are
you going to do?” asked Rowan anxiously.
“We’re
going to pack my stuff,” said Bert, leaning forward onto his canes, Rowan
steadying him as he took his first step. “Then we’re going to move back to the
Hill. I’ll need you to get a few things, Rowan. It’s been a few months since
I’ve been up there.”
“You’ve
been up there that recently?” asked Rowan, almost letting go of him in
surprise. “How? I mean, Dad wouldn’t even take me this year. I had to cycle
last time, and it took three hours. He shouted at me when I got back and told
me to keep away from it.”
“Taxi,”
said Bert. He didn’t have a lot of breath to talk when he was walking.
They had a
bit of trouble getting out of the Home, but Bert had known the Matron—or Guest
Health Services Director, as she was now called—for a long time. They spoke
together briefly, then she even phoned for the taxi herself.
“Make sure
he doesn’t get wet or cold,” she said to Rowan as she helped Bert into the car.
“Good luck, Bert.”
They
stopped on the way to get some food, bottled water, blankets, and kerosene for
the old stove in the shack. Bert had quite a lot of money with him. Old
fifty-dollar notes, the paper ones that were replaced by the smaller polymer
variety years before. The checkout girl didn’t want to take them at first, particularly
from Rowan, but when he showed her Bert waiting in the taxi and explained that
he didn’t like the “new money,” she relented.
It took
half an hour by taxi to get to the Hill. Rowan had
144 the hill
expected
the gate to be locked and had worried about the climb up the track for Bert,
but it was not only unlocked, it was open. The track looked a bit rough, but
the taxi driver said it wasn’t his cab so he wasn’t worried.
“Besides,”
he added, “if a big Mercedes like that can make it up, we can.”
He pointed
through the windscreen, and Rowan and Bert saw that there was a very large
dark-blue Mercedes parked next to the shack. Two men were standing next to it.
Rowan recognized his father and felt the lump of anxiety that had been in his
stomach all day flower into panic. He didn’t recognize the other man, the one
in the suit and glittering sunglasses.
“Dad’s here
already!” exclaimed Rowan.
“Not for
long,” said Bert. “Just park up next to the shack, will you, mate?”
Rowan felt
himself instinctively crouching down as they approached and both men looked
over to see who it was. Both looked puzzled; then his dad’s face bloomed red as
anger sent the blood swirling around his nose and cheeks. He stormed over and
yanked the door open, pulling Rowan out by his shirt collar.
“What the
bloody hell are you doing, son?” he shouted.
“He’s
helping me,” said Bert, who was being helped out the other door by the taxi
driver. “Let him go, Roger. Then you and your friend have got two minutes to
get off my property.”
“Your
property?” said the man in the suit, smiling. He looked at Roger. “I don’t
think so.”
Bert
laughed, his gold tooth gleaming.
“Another
smart arse from the city who hasn’t done his homework,” he said. “Perhaps I
should introduce myself. I’m Albert Salway.”
145 across the
wall
“Salway?”
said the man. “Salway!”
He looked
at Roger Salway, the smile and his relaxed slouch gone. He was angry too, now.
“What’s his
relationship to you, Roger? Does he have any claim over this land?”
“He’s my great-grandfather,”
muttered Roger, not meeting the other man’s eyes and not answering his
question either.
“It’s my
land,” repeated Bert. “Has been for nearly seventy years. And like I said, you
have one minute to get off my property.”
“Well, we
seem to have got off on the wrong foot,” said the businessman, trying to smile
again. “Let me introduce myself. I’m John Ragules, representing FirstLaunch
Space Services. We plan to build a satellite launching facility in this area—a
spaceport. We need this hill, for . . . well, we call it the ski launch
component.”
Rowan
listened in astonishment. This was the first he’d heard of the Hill being used
to help launch satellites. His fascination with space was almost as great as
his love for the Hill, and for a moment he found himself thinking of how
fantastic it would be to have a spaceport close to home. Then he remembered
that they would be moving to Sydney anyway, and that the spaceport could be
built only if he lost the Hill.
“The Hill’s
not for sale,” said Bert. “Plenty of other places you can build your spaceport,
Mr. Ragules. Places already ruined.”
He leaned
on one cane and gestured with the other, a wide sweep that encompassed all the
huge gray gum trees that stood around like an army of giants, whispering in the
wind.
“There’s
trees here that are hundreds of years old,” said Bert. “Animals that have fled
here from the farms and the city.
146 the hill
Birds you don’t find anywhere else
anymore. There are stories here, in the stone and the red dirt, in the bark and
the leaves, in the ants and the spiders, the wallabies and the kookaburras. You
build a spaceport and they will all be gone, forever. You’ve got thirty seconds
now. Roger, you can hand over the key to the gate as well.”
“Like hell
I will,” said Roger. He stormed over to the old man and seemed about to shake
him, till he saw the taxi driver watching with an unblinking stare, the tattoo
of a snake on his forearm twitching up and down. Instead he bent over and
whispered, “We can sell this place for three million dollars, Bert! Three
bloody million! We’ll never get offered that kind of money again.”
“The land
isn’t for sale,” Bert said. “We don’t need a spaceport here, anyway!”
“What are
you talking about, you old fool!” spat Roger. “Three million! And I will sell
it, even if I have to have you declared senile and incompetent!”
“It still
won’t be yours to sell,” said Bert. He lifted a cane and gently tapped Roger’s
shin. “Now get off my land.”
“I’ll be
back!” shouted Roger, the heat in his face now spread like a rash to his neck
and ears. “I’ll be back with a court order to make me your guardian and stick
you back in that Home for as long as it takes for you to finally bloody croak.
I should have done it years ago!”
He seemed
almost about to push Bert again, then he suddenly whipped around and made a
beeline for Rowan, who scrambled behind the nearest tree.
“As for
you, you’ll get a hiding when we get home!” he roared, lunging around the
trunk. But Rowan was already fleeing farther into the bush, pushing blindly
through the
147 across the
wall
scrub,
crashing through spiderwebs, small tree branches, and spiky shrubs. When he
felt he was far enough away, he turned back to look, the pain of dozens of tiny
scratches building into the greater pain he felt deep inside.
“I’m not
going back!” he screamed. “I’m never going back.”
The only
answer was the sudden well-modulated sound of the Mercedes engine, followed by
the noise of its wheels on the gravel near the gate. Then there was silence,
the silence of the bush. Wearily, Rowan found a clearer path back to the shack.
The taxi
driver was helping Bert to an old chair he’d pulled out of the shack, and was
unloading all the gear. When Rowan started to help him, he offered his hand to
shake.
“Name’s
Jake,” he said. “Your dad’s a rotten bastard, isn’t he? You’ll have to watch
out for him.”
“I’m
Rowan,” said Rowan. “Yeah. It’s lucky you were here, or he might have gone for
Bert as well.”
“How long
you planning to stay out here?” asked Jake as they took the last blanket out
and he slammed the trunk shut.
“I don’t
know,” said Rowan, shrugging to hide his anxiety. “I guess it depends on
Bert.”
He looked
over to where the old man seemed to have fallen asleep in his chair, facing the
trees, his canes propped out widely, almost like oars.
“He looks a
bit old to be camping out,” said Jake dubiously. “Do you reckon your dad’ll be
able to have him declared senile or whatever?”
“He’s one
hundred and eight,” said Rowan proudly. “And he’s always been much tougher than
anyone thinks. He’s got a lot of friends in town, too, people who’ve known him
all their
148 the hill
lives. I
reckon Dad’ll find it hard work to get Bert out of the way.”
“Legally,
maybe,” said Jake, looking over to the old man. “He might try something else,
though. Listen, how about I come back up later to see if you’re okay?”
“I don’t
know...” said Rowan, eyeing the snake tattoo. Jake seemed like a nice bloke,
and he certainly had prevented his dad from running amok. But he’d seen all Bert’s
money—
“I’d just
like a chance to talk to Bert,” added Jake. “I mean, it’s not every day you get
to talk to someone who was around last century. Hell, tomorrow he’ll have lived
in three different centuries! Maybe I could bring my wife as well?”
“Okay,”
agreed Rowan after a further slight hesitation. He guessed it would be safer
than being here alone with Bert. “See you later then.”
“We’ll come
up after I get off work. About eight.”
“Sure,”
agreed Rowan. He thought of his father and added, “Come earlier, if you like.”
When Jake
left, Rowan checked on Bert, who seemed to be okay. He was just sitting,
starting at the bush, blinking occasionally and humming to himself. Rowan left
him alone and went in to sweep the shack clean and get the spiders and ants out
of the old hammocks.
He was
sweeping away vigorously when he heard a car again. Keeping the broom, he went
out, his heart already beating faster. As Rowan had feared, it was his father,
in the old red utility truck. The vehicle screeched to a stop at the gate, and
Roger jumped out to open it.
“What’ll we
do?” whispered Rowan, edging over to stand next to Bert.
“Whatever
has to be done,” said the old man, sighing.
149 across the
wall
“You know, when I was a boy, Rowan, the
bush went all the way to town. There were no cars, no airplanes, no radio, no
television, no computers. At your age I hadn’t even seen a telephone. When the
twentieth century began, I didn’t think things would change much. I was wrong,
of course. We’ll be in the twenty-first century tomorrow, and now everybody
expects change. Change, change, change, without thinking what it’ll cost in
things that can’t be replaced. I saw your face when that man said he’d build a
spaceport here. You wanted it, didn’t you?”
“Not if it
takes the Hill,” said Rowan anxiously, still looking down the track. “They can
build it somewhere else. But what’ll we do about Dad? He’ll kill me!”
“No, he
won’t,” said Bert. “Help me up.”
As soon as
he was upright, the old man started shuffling off into the bush. Rowan walked
along next to him, trying to anticipate a fall. Behind them, Roger Salway
jumped back into the truck, and it accelerated up the path.
“Where are
we going?” asked Rowan. “He’ll catch us for sure!”
“I want him
to catch up with us,” said Bert. “At the right place.”
He
hesitated then, looking around at the rocks and the huge gums, as if he’d
forgotten where he wanted to go. Then the glint came back into his eyes and he
shuffled off to the right, Rowan following him, most of his attention focused
behind them. His father was already out of the truck and running, crashing
through the bush without even looking for a path.
As far as
Rowan could see, Bert was just making it easier for Roger to beat him up in
secret. They were out of sight
150 the hill
of the
shack now, on the forward slope of the hill. Worse, there was nowhere to run to
from here. The slope fell off rapidly into a series of rocky cliffs, and Rowan
didn’t want to even try to climb down with his father up above throwing rocks
or something. Bert wouldn’t be able to climb at all, anyway.
“This is
it,” said Bert as Rowan was desperately trying to think of something to do. He
could just lie on the ground, he supposed, and hope his father didn’t kick him
too much.
“What?”
asked Rowan. He’d missed whatever Bert said.
“This is
it,” said Bert, pointing to a crevasse in the rock ahead, so narrow it was hard
to see in the fading light. “We’ll just zip across this log. I bet your dad
doesn’t remember the Narrow.”
Rowan
looked at the crevasse they’d always called the Narrow. It looked dark and
nasty, a thin mouth stretching all the way across the hill. It wasn’t that
deep. He’d climbed up and down it many times. When Rowan was a small child, his
father had helped him up and down, standing in the cool, fern-lined shadows
below. “Course he’ll remember!”
“No he
won’t,” said Bert. “If he remembered, he wouldn’t be trying to sell up.”
Hesitantly,
the old man put his foot out on the ancient fallen log that bridged the Narrow.
“Bert...” Rowan started to say, but the
words slipped away from him as Roger came puffing through the bush, his face
red and twisted with rage. Fearfully, Rowan scuttled across the log.
Roger
barreled on, sticks snapping under his feet, branches whipped back by his passage.
He was bellowing, waving his
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wall
fists,
fists that Rowan knew would happily connect with him. He might even be so crazy
mad with anger that he would hit Bert.
“Don’t!”
Rowan shouted. “Don’t!”
He wasn’t
sure if his shout was a warning about the Narrow or a feeble attempt to turn
away all that concentrated fury and those terrible fists.
It didn’t
matter, because Roger was too far gone in his rage to listen. One second he was
right in front of them, his face as red as the setting sun, his mouth pouring
out words that were so twisted up they sounded like an animal’s howl.
Then he was
gone, and there was sudden silence.
Bert
shuffled to the edge of the crevasse and looked down. After a second Rowan
looked too, shutting one eye because that might somehow make whatever he saw
easier to cope with.
“He’s
alive, anyway,” said Bert, as a whimper came up out of the Narrow. “You all
right down there, Roger?”
Rowan held
his breath while he waited for an answer. Finally it came. A small voice, the
rage all drained away.
“I
think...I think I’ve busted my wrist.”
“Forgot
about the Narrow, didn’t you?” said Bert conversationally. “You used to climb
up and down it enough as kid. Was it you or your dad who broke his arm down
there?”
“Dad,” said
Roger. He seemed a bit dazed, thought Rowan. He hadn’t heard his father
speaking so quietly for ages.
“And now
you’ve done your wrist,” said Bert. “Losing any blood? Anything else broken?”
“No,” said
Roger shortly. “Just my wrist.”
“Must run
in the family,” Bert said to Rowan, peeling
152 the hill
back his
sleeve to show a faded scar along his forearm. “Not a break. Cut it open
mucking around down there.”
“I can’t
climb out by myself,” said Roger. They couldn’t even see him now, the way the
night had poured into the Narrow. The stars were getting brighter overhead, a
great swathe of them that you couldn’t see in the city, where they were swamped
by artificial light.
“I guess
you can’t,” said Bert. “So you might as well sit down and listen while I tell
you a few things.”
“I’m
listening,” said Roger. Rowan could hear him moving about, settling down on
one of the ledges.
“First, no
one’s selling the Hill,” said Bert. “Not while I’m alive, and not after it,
either. I had a team of fancy lawyers work out how to make sure of that more
than ten years ago. The family will be trustees, no more. If you’d bothered to
ask, I would have told you.
“Second, I
reckon your temper is getting out of hand. I’ve got a bit of money put by. Not
three million, but a tidy sum. I’m going to leave it all to Rowan. If he feels
like it, he might give you some. So if it’s money you’re after, you’d better
learn to talk to your son instead of throwing your weight around. You’ll live
longer too. Bad for the heart, getting a n g r y . ”
There was a
really long silence after Bert stopped talking.
Rowan
looked at the stars, unable to believe what he was hearing. The Hill not to be
sold. His father having to talk to him instead of hitting him.
After a few
more minutes when Roger still didn’t say anything, Bert went back across the
log bridge, his old arms outstretched for balance. Rowan walked behind him,
quite close, so he could steady him if necessary.
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wall
“Where are
you going?” asked Roger. There was a hint of panic in his voice.
“Thought
we’d leave you to think about things for a while,” said Bert. “We’ve got a
visitor coming up. It’s New Year’s Eve, remember?”
“What about
me?”
“We’ll be
back next century,” said Bert. “Course, you still have to agree to behave
yourself.”
He chuckled
a bit then, and started up the hill.
“Wait!”
called Roger. “I agree! I agree!”
Bert kept
walking. Rowan looked at him, then back at the Narrow. His father was calling
him now, desperation in his voice. In the distance, he could hear a car
approaching. It had to be Jake in the taxi, back a bit early.
“Come on,”
said Bert. “We’ll go meet Jake. We can come back for Roger later.”
“But,” said
Rowan, “what about Dad?”
“We won’t
leave him too long,” said Bert. “Just long enough for him to work out what he
can do.”
“Like
what?” asked Rowan nervously.
“Like
nothing,” said Bert. “That’s what I want him to work out.”
“So
everything’s going to be all right?” asked Rowan.
Bert
shrugged. Then he shakily held out his arms, as wide as they would go, taking
in Rowan, the Hill, the night, and the stars.
“You
can never guess what a new year will bring, even when you’ve seen more than a
hundred of them,” he said. “Sometimes you see what’s coming and can’t do a
thing about it. Sometimes you can.”
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the
hill
He
paused and took a deep breath of the eucalyptus-scented air, closed his arms
around his great-great-grandson, and added, “Out here, right now, I reckon
maybe everything will be as close to all right as it can possibly get.”
155
introduction to Lightning Bringer
I always enjoy watching electrical
storms, though I prefer to do so from inside a house, behind a nice glass
window. The undesirability of becoming more closely acquainted with lightning
was brought home to me once, when lightning struck a drainpipe a few yards away
from me. I’m not exactly sure what happened, because I found myself sitting on
the very wet mat outside the back door, with spots dancing before my eyes and
my ears ringing. My friend inside told me that the whole house had shaken and
the thunderclap had made everything rattle; she thought I must have been killed
when she ran through the kitchen and saw me slumped against the door.
Despite
this near miss, I remained fascinated by lightning, as anyone who has read even
one or two of my books can probably tell. A few weeks before I wrote this
story, I was held spellbound by a television documentary on lightning. In this
documentary, they had amazing film that showed the “streamers” that flow up
from anything vertical. These streamers actually make the connection with the
lightning leaders coming down from the thunderclouds. I saw ghostly streamers
rising up from trees and buildings, from weathercocks, and, most importantly,
from people.
The
taller and stronger the streamer, the more likely that it will connect with the
storm. When it does, there is an electrical discharge down from storm to
ground, through the conductor. If the conductor is a metal lightning rod,
that’s okay. But people are not so well equipped to deal with bolts of energy
that at their core are as hot as the surface of the sun.
I
vaguely knew how lightning worked, but it wasn’t until I
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wall
saw
these strange, luminous streamers rising up out of vertical structures that it
really made sense. At the same time, I was struck with the way the streamers
varied, even between people of the same height. Some people just had stronger
streamers.
I
also knew that there were people who tended to get struck by lightning quite a
lot, but who still survived. I had a dim memory of a man who was struck by
lightning seven times over quite a few years. He was apparently going to the
post office to mail the proof of his many lightning strikes to the Guinness Book of World Records when he was hit by an eighth lightning bolt. He survived
that as well, though his clothes were burned off and some of his papers singed.
Put
together, all this gave me an idea about people who could see the streamers and
who could manipulate electrical energy in various ways. Small, secret ways,
like changing the electrical energies in people’s minds, or big, flashy ways,
like calling down lightning. That was the central idea. Then I had to find a
story to use that idea.
At the time my most pressing need was for something to submit
to the anthology Love & Sex, edited by Michael Cart, so I was also trying to work out
a story that would concern sex. Mixing up my ideas about controlling minds and
lightning with sex and love seemed like it might produce an interesting story.
“Lightning Bringer” is the result.
158
Lightning
Bringer
It was six years
ago when I first met the Lightning Bringer,
on a cloudy day just a few weeks past my tenth birthday.
That’s when
I invented the name, though I never spoke it, and no one else ever used it.
Most of the townsfolk called him “Mister” Jackson. They didn’t know why they
called him mister, even though he looked pretty much like any other hard-faced
drifter. Not normally the sort they’d talk to at all, except maybe to order off
their property—once they were sure the police had arrived.
I
knew he was different the first second I saw him. It’s like a photograph stuck
in my personal album, that memory. I walked out the school gate, and there he
was, leaning against his motorcycle. His jet-black motorcycle that looked like
a Harley-Davidson but wasn’t. It didn’t have any brand name or anything on it.
He was leaning against it, because he was tall, two feet taller than me, easily
six foot three or four. Muscles tight under the black T-shirt, the twin blue
lightning tattoos down his forearms. Long hair somewhere between blond and red,
tied back under a red-and-white-s p o tted bandanna.
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But what I
really noticed was his aura. Most people have dim, fuzzy sorts of colors that
flicker around them in a pathetic kind of way. His aura was all blue sparks,
jumping around like they were just waiting to electrocute anyone who went near.
The guy
looked like trouble. Then he smiled, and if you couldn’t see the aura, that smile
would somehow make you think that he was all right, the biker with the heart of
gold, the drifter who went around helping out old folk or whatever.
But I saw
part of the energy go out of his aura and into the smile, flickering out like a
hundred snakes’ tongues to touch and spark against the dull colors of the
people around him.
He charmed
them, that’s what. I saw it happening, saw the tongues coming out and lighting
up the older kids’ gray days. And then I saw all the electric currents come
together to caress one student in particular: Carol, the best-looking girl in
the whole school.
Of
course I was only ten back then, so I didn’t really appreciate everything Carol
had going for her. I mean, I knew that she had movie-star looks, with the
jet-black hair and the big brown eyes, and breasts that went out exactly the
right amount and a waist that went in exactly as it should and legs that could
have been borrowed from a Barbie doll. But it was sort of secondhand
appreciation at that stage. I knew everyone thought she looked good, but I
didn’t really know why myself. Now I can get really excited thinking about the
way she looked when she was playing basketball, with that tight top and the
pleated skirt . . . at
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least till I remember what happened to
her.. . .
She was
looking especially good that day. With hindsight, I reckon she’d found out
that she was really attractive to men, picking up a certain confidence. That
air of the cat that’s worked out it’s the kind of cat that’s always going to
get the cream.
When the
Lightning Bringer’s smile reached out for her, her eyes went all cloudy and she
kind of sleepwalked over to him, as if nothing else even existed. They talked
for a while; then she walked on. But she looked back—twice—and that electricity
kept flowing out of the drifter, crackling around her like fingers just aching
to undo the big white buttons on the front of her school dress.
Then she
was around the corner, and I realized everyone else had gone. There was just me
and the man, leaning against his bike. Watching me, not smiling, the blue-white
tendrils pulling back into the glowing shell around him. Then he laughed, his
head pulled back, the laughter sending a stream of blue-white energy up into
the sky.
That laugh scared
the hell out of me, and I suddenly felt just like a rabbit that realizes it’s
been staring into the headlights of an oncoming truck.
Like a lot
of rabbits, I realized this too late. I’d hardly got one foot up, ready to run,
when he was suddenly looming over me, fingers digging into my shoulders like
old tree roots boring into the ground. Like maybe he’d never let go till his
fingers plunged through the flesh, squishing me like a rotten apple.
I
started to scream, but he shook me so hard, I just stopped.
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across
the wall
“Listen,
kid,” he said, and his voice was scraped and raw, like maybe he’d drunk a
bottle of whiskey the night before, on top of a cold. “I’m not going to hurt
you. You can see, can’t you?
I knew he
wasn’t talking about normal eyesight. I nodded, and he eased off his grip.
“I’ll tell
you something for free,” he said, real serious. He bent down on one knee and
looked me right in the eye, except I ducked my head, so I had only about a
second of that fierce, yellow-eyed gaze burning into my brain.
“One day
you can be like me,” he whispered, voice crawling with little lightnings,
power licking away at my head. “You saw how that girl looked at me? I’m going
to have her tonight. I can get any woman I like—or any man, if I was that way
inclined. No one can touch me either. I do what I want. You know why? Because I
was born with the Power. Power over things seen and unseen, Power over folk and
field, Power over wind and water. You’ve got it too, boy, but you don’t know
what it can do yet. It can go away again if you don’t look after it right.
You’ve got to keep it charged up. You’ve got to use it, boy. That’s the truth.
You have to feed the Power!”
Then he
kissed me right on the forehead, fire flaming through my skull, and I could smell
my hair burning like a hot iron, and I was screaming and screaming and then the
world spun around and around and I wanted to throw up but instead I lay down
and everything went black.
When
I came to, the Darly twins were turning my pockets inside out, looking for
money. I was still pretty dizzy, but I punched one while I was still on the
ground, and he fell
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lightning
bringer
back into the other one, so I got up and
kicked them both down the street.
That made
me feel better, and I thought maybe the worst of the day had happened and it
could only get better from there.
But I was
wrong.
I was real
restless that night. Everybody was. The air was hot and sticky, with
thunderheads hanging off on the horizon, black and grumbling but not doing anything
about moving in to break the heat. There was nothing on television either, and
we all sat there flicking between channels and complaining, till Mom lost her
temper and tried to send everyone to bed. Including Dad, but he lost his temper
too and they had a shouting fight, which was rare enough to send us shocked to
bed.
I remember
thinking that I wouldn’t be able to get to sleep, but I did. For a while,
anyway. I had this awful dream about the Lightning Bringer, how he was creeping
through the house and up the stairs, blue sparks jumping around the bent-back
toes of his boots. Then just as those lightning-tattooed arms were reaching
down, fingers spreading around my neck, there was this incredibly loud burst of
thunder, and I woke up screaming.
The thunder
was real, drowning my scream and bringing a cold wind that rattled the shutters
in counterpoint to the bright flashes of lightning behind them. But the rest
was just a dream. There was no one there except my brother, Thomas, and he was
asleep.
Still,
it shook me up pretty bad. I can’t think why else I would’ve gone to the window
and looked outside. I mean, if
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the wall
you have a nightmare, normally that’s
the last thing you do, just in case you see something.
Well, I saw
something. I saw the Lightning Bringer on his motorcycle, parked out in our
street, looking right up at the window. He had Carol with him; her arms tightly
wrapped around his well-built, leather-clad chest. She had a bright-red jacket
on and jeans, and a red woolen hat instead of a helmet. She looked like the
sort of helper Santa Claus might choose if Santa read Penthousea lot.
The
Lightning Bringer smiled at me and waved. Then he mouthed some words, words I
understood without hearing, words that seemed to enter my brain directly,
punctuated by the distant lightning.
“I can have
anything I want, boy. And you can be just like me.”
Then he
revved up the bike and they were gone, heading up the road to the mountain, the
lightning following on behind.
I never saw
Carol again, and neither did anyone else. They found her a few days later,
burned and blackened, her fabled beauty gone, life snuffed out.
“Struck by
lightning,” said the coroner. “Accidental death.”
No one
except me had seen her with the Lightning Bringer. No one except me thought it
was anything but a tragic accident. She’d been foolish to go out walking in the
thunderstorm, stupid to be out that late at night anyway. Some people even said
she was lucky it was the lightning that got her.
I
was the only one who knew she didn’t have a choice, and
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lightning
bringer
it wasn’t any ordinary lightning that
killed her. But I didn’t tell anyone. Who could I tell?
I’d like to
say that I never thought of the Lightning Bringer after that day—and what he’d
said—but I’d be lying. I thought about him every day for the next six years.
After I got interested in girls, I think I thought about him every five
minutes. I tried not to, but I just couldn’t shake the memory of how Carol had
looked at him. I wanted a girl like Carol to look at me like that, and do a
whole lot more besides.
I used to
think about the Lightning Bringer before school dances when I just couldn’t get
a date. Which, to be honest, was all the school dances up until about two
months ago. Then I met Anya. Okay, she didn’t look at me like Carol had looked
at the Lightning Bringer, and she didn’t look like Carol. But she was pretty,
with sort of an interesting face and clever eyes, and she used to know what I
was thinking without me saying anything. Like when I’d want to undo the back of
her bra strap and just slide my hand around, and she’d shift just enough so I
couldn’t reach—before I even started to do anything.
Which
was frustrating, but I still really liked her. She had an interesting aura,
too, a bit like apricot jam. I mean apricot jam–colored, and quite thick, not
like most of the fuzzy, thin auras I saw. I often wondered if she could see
auras too and what mine looked like, but I was too embarrassed to ask her.
Which was a bit of a problem, because I was too embarrassed to talk about sex
with her either, and I knew that this was probably half the reason why she kept
shifting around when I tried to put my hands places that seemed quite normal to
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go. And why she never let me kiss her
for more than a minute at a time.
I mean, I
think she would have if I’d talked to her about it. Maybe. Once I ignored her
trying to pull away and I just kept kissing, sticking my tongue in even harder
and putting my hands down the back of her jeans. Then she started jiggling
about, and I thought it meant she was getting excited, till I realized it was
sort of panic and she was just trying to get loose of me. I let go and said
sorry straight away because I could see in her aura she was really frightened,
and I’d gotten sort of scared as well. Anyway, she was mad at me for a week
and wouldn’t let me even hold her hand for two weeks after that.
It was only
a few days after we had gotten back to the holding-hands stage that the
Lightning Bringer showed up again. Outside the school, on his black motorcycle,
just like he’d done six years before. I felt my heart stop when I saw him, as
if something from a nightmare had just walked out into the sun. An awful fear
suddenly becoming real.
Which it
was, because this time he was smiling at Anya. My Anya! And all those electric
tendrils were reaching out for her, blue-spark octopus tentacles, wrapping
around and caressing her like I wanted to do but didn’t know how.
I
tried to hold her back, but she ignored me, and I felt these shivers going
through her, like when a dog’s fur ripples when you scratch in exactly the
right place. Then she pulled her hand out of mine and pushed me away, and I saw
her looking at the Lightning Bringer just like Carol had six years before, with
her mouth slightly open and her tongue just whisking around to leave her lips
wet and her chest pushed
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lightning
bringer
forward so the buttons went tight.. . .
I screamed
and charged at the man, but he just laughed, and the blue energy came gushing
out with his laughter, smacking into me like a fist, and I went down, winded.
He laughed again, beating me with Power, so all I could do was crawl away and
vomit by the bushes next to the gate. Vomit till there was nothing to come up
except black bile that choked and burned till it felt like it was taking the
skin off the inside of my mouth and nose.
When I
finally got up, the Lightning Bringer and Anya were gone. For a second I
thought maybe she’d gone home, but I knew she hadn’t. She didn’t stand a
chance. If the Lightning Bringer wanted her, he’d take her. And he’d do
whatever he wanted with her, till he got tired and then she’d be just like
Carol. An accidental-death-by-lightning statistic.
I think it
was then that I realized that I didn’t just like Anya, I was in love with her.
I’d been petrified of the Lightning Bringer for six years, terrified of what he
could do, and of the darker fear that I might somehow be like him.
Now all I
cared about was Anya and how to get her back, back safe before the
thunderclouds in the distance rolled over the town and up the mountain. Because
I knew that was where the Lightning Bringer had gone. I felt it, deep inside.
He’d gone to get closer to the clouds, and he’d gone to call a storm. It was
answering him, the charge building up in the sky, answering the great swell of
current in the earth. Soon they would come together.
I
think it was about this time that I completely flipped out. Totally crazy.
Anyway, the Darly twins later said they saw me running along the mountain road
without my shirt,
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bleeding from scratches all over and
frothing at the mouth. I think they made up the frothing, though the scratches
were certainly true.
Basically,
I turned into a sort of beast, just following the one sense that could lead me
to Anya. I could tell where she’d gone from the traces of her apricot aura and
the blue flashes left by the Lightning Bringer. They were intermingled, too,
and in some deep recess of my mind I knew that they were kissing and those
tree-strong hands were roaming over her, her own clasped tightly around him as
they’d never been properly clasped around me.
I think it
was that thought that started the animal part of me howling...butI stopped soon
enough, because I needed the breath, just as the first thunderheads rolled
above me with the snap of cold air and a few fat drops of rain, the lightning
coming swift and terrible behind.
I ran even
faster, pain stitching up my side, eating into my lungs, and then I was
staggering out onto the lookout parking area, and there was the black
motorcycle silhouetted against the lightning-soaked sky. I looked around
desperately, practically sniffing the aura traces on the ground. Then I saw
them, the Lightning Bringer pressing his black-clad body against Anya, her back
on the granite stone that marked some local hero’s past. She was naked, school
dress blown to the storm winds, lips fastened hungrily to the man, arms clasped
behind his head. I watched, frozen, as those arms sank lower, hands unzipping
his leather trousers, then fingers lacing behind muscular buttocks.
He raised
her legs around him, then thrust forward, his hands reaching toward the sky.
With my strange sight I saw streamers fly up from his outstretched fingers,
streamers
168 lightning
bringer
desperately
trying to connect with the electric feelers that came questing down from the
sky. When they did connect, a million volts would come coursing down through
the man’s upraised arms—and through Anya.
I ran
forward then, leaping onto the Lightning Bringer’s back, lifting my hands above
his, making the streamers he’d cast my own. He stumbled, and Anya fell away
from him, rolling partly down the hill.
Then the
lightning struck. In one split, incandescent second it filled me with pure
light, charging me with Power, too much Power to contain, Power that demanded a
release. It was an ache of pleasure withheld, the moment before orgasm magnified
a thousand times. It had to be released before the pleasure burned all my
senses away. Suddenly I knew what the Lightning Bringer knew, knew how I could
have not only the Power, but the ecstasy of letting part of it run through me
to burn its way, uncaring, as I took my pleasure.
“You see!”
he crowed, crouching before me, shielding his eyes from the blazing inferno
that my aura had become. “You see! Take her, spend the Power! Feed her to the
Power!”
I looked
down at Anya, seeing her naked for the first time, her pale skin stark against
the black tar of the parking area. She was frightened now, partly free from the
Lightning Bringer’s compulsion.
I started
toward her and she screamed, face crumpling. And somewhere in the midst of all
the burning, flowing Power I remembered her fear—and something else, too.
“I love
her,” I said to the Lightning Bringer. Then I kissed him right in the middle of
his forehead.
I don’t
know what happened next because I was knocked unconscious. Anya says that both
of us turned into one
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wall
enormous
blue-hot ball of chain lightning that bounced backward and forward all across
the parking area, burning off her bangs and melting both the motorcycle and the
bronze plaque on the stone. It didn’t leave anything at all of the Lightning
Bringer.
When I came
to, I was a bit disoriented because I had my head in Anya’s lap and I was
looking up at her—but since her bangs were gone, I didn’t know who she was for
a couple of seconds. She had her dress back on again too, or what was left of
her dress. It had some really interesting tears, but I was in no state to
appreciate them.
“You’d
better go,” I croaked up at her, my voice sounding horribly like the Lightning
Bringer’s. “He might be back.”
“I don’t
think so,” she said, rocking me backward and f o rward as if I needed to be
soothed or something. I liked it, a n yway.
“I’m just
like him,” I whispered, remembering when I wouldn’t stop kissing her,
remembering the feel of the Power, wanting to use it to make myself
irresistible, to slake its lust and my own on her, make her just a receptacle
for pleasure . . .
“No, you’re
not,” she said, smiling. “You always gave me the choice.”
I thought
about that for a second, while the dancing black spots in front of my eyes
started to fade out and the ringing in my ears quieted down to something like
school bells.
“Anya...can
you see auras?” I said.
“Sometimes,
with people I know well,” she whispered, bending down to kiss me on the eyes,
her breast brushing my ear.
“What
color’s mine?” I asked. It seemed very important
170 lightning
bringer
to know,
all of a sudden. “It’s not blue and kind of . . . kind of . . . electric, is
it?
“No!” she
answered firmly, bending over to kiss me properly on the lips. “It’s orange,
shot with gold. It looks a lot like marmalade.”
171
introduction to Down to the Scum Quarter
This is the oldest piece of my work
you will find in this book. Written in either 1986 or 1987, it was published in
two Australian gaming magazines, Myths
and Legends and then Breakout! It is
not a story as such, but an interactive narrative experience: in other words, a
“choose your own adventure” in which the pro-tagonist’s story proceeds
according to the choices the reader makes, which direct him or her to read
particular paragraphs.
But
unlike the “Choose Your Own Adventure” or “Fighting Fantasy” books, it is not a
serious interactive narrative that is on offer. “Down to the Scum Quarter” is a
loving parody of the paragraph-choice game format. It’s also something of an
homage to one of my favorite books, The
Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas, and to the best
movie version of that book, done as two films: The Three Musketeers and
The Four Musketeers, directed by Richard Lester, from scripts by George
McDonald Fraser (whose own novels are also excellent).
Because
much of my work is serious and can be quite grim, people are sometimes
surprised that I also write humorous stories and that I like to make people
laugh when I talk to audiences. I also try to have moments of humor and
lightness even in my grimmest novels, because life has moments of laughter and
comedy even amid darkness and despair. Similarly, when writing humorous stuff,
I approach it seriously and try to mix in enough solid, “real” stuff to
underlie the comic material.
“Down
to the Scum Quarter” I wrote purely for myself, and then I looked around to see
if I could find somewhere to publish it. It may be sad to admit it, but even
seventeen years later a lot of it
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wall
still
makes me laugh. Possibly because the whole concept of the paragraph adventure
game lends itself to parody.
And
speaking of such, I should alert interested readers to the fact that there are
three or four paragraphs in “Down to the Scum Quarter” that you will never be
directed to by other paragraphs. Paragraphs 96 and 97 are two examples. When I
wrote those two, I thought there was a story waiting to be written from them,
and even now I suspect there still is.
But
enough of this rambling. Lady Oiseaux has been kidnaped and the night is yet
young. Strap on your rapier, slap on your plumed hat, and sally forth!
174
Down to the Scum Quarter
A
Farcical Fantasy Solo Adventure
How
to Play
1
Decide
whether you’re going to cheat or not. Most people cheat
in solo adventures, even if they don’t admit it. If you’re not going to cheat,
get a six-sided die.
2
Go down to
the local costume rental shop and get a Three Musketeers outfit. This is called
“getting into character.”
3
If you’re
old enough, stop by the liquor store on the way back and pick up a few bottles
of cheap red wine.
4
Rent a
video of The Three Musketeers. Start watching it, and practice knocking the
tops off the wine bottles with your plastic rapier. This is called “getting the
atmosphere.”
5
Give up
after you break the rapier, and open a bottle with a corkscrew. Drink all of
it.
6
Read “The
Prelude.”
7
Select five
items from the list of equipment (unless cheating,in which case you presume you
always have exactly what you need).
8
Go to “The
Adventure Begins!”
175 across the
wall
9.
Carefully evaluate the situation, choose a course of action, and go to the
paragraph indicated, rolling a die when necessary.
The Simple
Method:
Get a 6-sided die, and ignore steps 2–5.
The
Prelude
Your
beautiful mistress, the Lady Oiseaux, has been kidnaped.
There is only one slim clue that may lead you to her—a brief message, scrawled
in pale-gold eye paint across the side of her hijacked palanquin:
Oh!
This is awful! I am being kidnaped! They are taking me to sell to a desert
chieftain at an auction, which I think is going to take place at midnight
somewhere near the river, and I’ll miss the party tonight. And I was going to
wear my new dress with the ruby chips sewn on cloth of gold, and the peacock
feather fan from . . .
Those few
words, and the “For Sale” brochure you hold in your kid-gloved hand, lead you
to suspect that Lady Oiseaux is being held at the infamous Quay of Scented
Rats—a floating bordello now stuck in the mudflats of the River Sleine.
Pausing
only to slip your trusty rapier into its scabbard, you draw your cloak around
you and erupt out into the
176 Down to the
scum quarter
shadows
of the night—toward the Sleine—and the vicious, nasty, disgusting . . . (roll
of drums) . . . Scum Quarter of the Old City!
You walk a few yards
with considerable bravado and then whip back to your townhouse. Only a complete
fool would go down to the vicious, nasty, disgusting Scum Quarter without
pistols and a dagger or two. Maybe you should call in on the lads at the
Fencing Academy . . . but there’s no time. Select five items from the following
list before once again slinking out into the shadows of the night.. . .
Equipment
Dagger
Pistol (with powder & balls for five shots) Bag of 20 gold bezants Portrait
of Lady Oiseaux (3'6" square) Scented handkerchief Halberd 20' rope
Repeater watch Bottle El Superbeau Cognac 2 pairs silk stockings A glove puppet
of Cyrano de Bergerac Small plaster saint Bottle Opossum perfume Five-pronged
fish spear
177
The
Adventure
Begins!
1Moving
from shadow to shadow down the wide Boulevard of the Muses, you feel very much
like the intrepid adventurer hurrying to rescue his beloved lady. Y o u are so
caught up in this delightful little daydream that you don’t notice the six
Watchmen following your erratic shadow-to-shadow progression down the street
till you go one shadow too many and find yourself caught in the glare of their
lanterns.
If you are
carrying a halberd or five-pronged fish spear, Go to 50
If
you aren’t carrying either of these, Go to 30
2Who
do you think you are—the unnatural offspring of the Three Musketeers and
Michael York? Roll one die. 1–3 At least you
feinted toward somebody’s left eye. Pity it was your own. Then you stuck your
rapier in your left foot....The bravo takes pity on you and lets you limp away.
Minus one on all future combat rolls due to both stupidity and injury. Go to 52
4 Both of
you fence away quite competently, crying “Caramba!” and “Take that! And that!
And this little one! And that that.” Eventually you become so tired, you lean
on
178 Down to the
scum quarter
your swords
and just whisper: “Aha—foul blaggard!” etc. The bravo gets bored of this first,
and leaves. You rest briefly, then continue on your way. Go to 52
5–6
Your fencing master would be proud—there’s always a first time. You feint,
parry, and riposte as if you knew Errol Flynn intimately when you were a young
boy—and tried to keep him at a distance. The bravo is struck several times and
retires bleeding to the nearest laundress. You continue on your way. Go to 52
3Descending to the next floor, you find
yourself in a barbershop, the walls lined with mirrors. There are four doors,
sixteen reflections, and a trapdoor.
Do
you go through the door marked with a tiger? Go to 85 Or the door marked with a
lady? Go to 39 Or through the door marked with both a lady and a tiger?
Go to 34 Or the one with two ladies and
a tiger? Go to 92 Or through the trapdoor, which is marked with a lamb
chop? Go to 58
4It’s
not very nice up the Emperor August’s nostril. Four or five hundred bats seem
to have used it as a toilet for about a century. You wait inside for several
minutes, then emerge as a grotesque mound of bat guano. The balloon is still
179 across the
wall
there, but
whoever is in it doesn’t recognize you. Add one to all future combat rolls due
to your repellent exterior. You head south. Go to 54
5You
smile sickeningly and cross over to the tiger, mumbling “nice pussums . . .
good kit-e-kat.. . .” You reach down to scratch its stomach, and it grabs you
with both paws and bites your head off. As your soul becomes a delicate
butterfly and floats off to the transit lounge, you feel that this would never
have happened if you had read The Jungle Books as
a child. The End.
6The
Western Wall Originally built to hold out the
barbarians, the Western Wall fell into disrepair when the barbarians became
civilized and bought the city in an underhanded real-estate deal. Now only a
crumbling ruin inhabited by thieves, cutthroats, and defrocked clergymen, the
wall is rarely visited by anyone else.
You
remember this as a defrocked clergyman bears down on you, swinging his incense
pot with deadly intent.
Do you get
out your five-pronged fish spear, leer evilly, and say: “How many prongs do you
want, and where do you want them?” Go to 77
Run back to
the Arc de Trihump? Go to 99
180 Down to the
scum quarter
7You
stand in the line before the main entrance to the Quay of Scented Rats—a vast,
overdecorated houseboat that is now firmly embedded in the mudflats of the
Sleine. At the front of the line two burly men (who look suspiciously like
beavers) demand the five-bezant entry fee.
Do you pay
them? Go to 55
Say, “Back
off, bucktooth. I’m with Scum Quarter Vice”? Go to 36
Offer
them the bottle of El Superbeau cognac? Go to 17
8Hanging
by one hand, you tie the rope to the sail and climb down to the next one. From
this one you climb through a window to the inside of the mill. Go to 35
9You
wrench the door open and leap through it. But will you evade the tiger? Roll
one die. 1–3 Damn! The doorknob would be stiff..
. . You half turn to meet your doom like a brave warrior, but the tiger smashes
you to the floor, and you let out a pitiful little shriek instead. Fortunately,
this is the exact cry of an orphan tiger cub! The tiger stands back, bemused,
while you crawl across the room and out through the exit. Go to 79
181 across the
wall
4–6 The
door slams shut just as the tiger slams against the other side. You lean
against it, sweating in fear. Go to 79
10You
wrench open the bottle of Opossum perfume and scatter a few drops toward the
awful hag. A beautiful aroma fills the room, and she steps back, spitting and
cursing. “Back, foul fiend!” you cry, throwing a few more drops, which burn
through her outstretched arm like acid—so you throw the whole bottle and bolt
for the exit. You don’t look back. Go to 79
11Just
as you are about to fleché across the room and drive your rapier through
the poor unsuspecting woman’s heart, a great gong rings . . . and time stops.
As the echoes of the gong die away, a disembodied voice fills the room with the
weary pronouncement, “The Age of Chivalry Is Now Officially Dead.” Time
suddenly resumes, but your heart isn’t in the wild attack, so you merely lunge
at the tiger. It backs off snarling; you circle around to the other door and
duck through it. As you leave, the woman throws the voodoo doll at your head.
Subtract one from all future combat rolls due to wax burns on your face. Go to
79
182 Down to the
scum quarter
12fishgut
Alley And you thought the Street of
Fishmongers smelt bad. Obviously this is where all the fish guts end up after
the beggars have tried to eat them—for the second time. At the other end of the
alley, a hulking giant of a man is standing, a spiked club in his hand.
Do you
approach him for directions to the Sleine? Go to 57
Or
return to the Street of Fishmongers? Go to 41
13As
your hand touches the hilt of your rapier, you start, and the eyes in your head
bulge dramatically. The hag is wearing the Black Apron of a Master of
Cleaver-Fu—a deadly martial art you cannot possibly cope with! Go to 62
14There
really is nothing like just messing about in boats. Pitting one’s strength
against the vicious tidal bores that sweep up the river, or the onrush of
sewage from the city that sweeps down. But lo! There on the port bow you see a
heavily decorated houseboat, firmly embedded in the mudflats. The heavy use of
purple fur around the windows (and fake gold trim on the gutters) convinces you
this must be the infamous Quay of Scented Rats.
Do you
heroically leap from your boat as you pass the
183 across the
wall
Quay of
Scented Rats, do a triple somersault in the air, and land upon its sleazy deck
with an air of casual arrogance? Go to 64
Or
cautiously pole up to one end, tie up your boat, and sneak aboard like a rat?
Go to 26
15You
emerge into a long corridor lined with various prints of the activities of the
Quay of Scented Rats. To your right there is a door marked “Auction Goods.” To
your left there is a door marked “Not the Auction Goods.”
Do you go
left? Go to 80
Or right? Go to 23
16The River
Sleine You sneak past the hustlers of the
Southgate and out through a postern. Before you lie the winding, deep-blue
waters of the River Sleine, alive with wildfowl amid the teeming rushes.. . .
Then your eyes clear and you realize you are looking at a picture tacked to the
postern door. You open it, and there before you lies the turgid, coal-black
watercourse that makes slimy pollution look good—the true River Sleine. Steps
lead down toward the river, and you think you can see a boat tied up at the bottom.
Do
you go down? Go to 27
184
Down
to the scum quarter
Or
turn back, you coward, only to be killed by a lightning-struck albatross
falling out of the sky? (This is called a premonition.) Go to 45
17“Before
we descend to crass commercial transactions,” you say suavely, “you may care
to have a drop of...El Superbeau cognac.” You hold the bottle in front of them
as they drool and reach out with grasping fin-gers—then fling it into the
Sleine! The two guards hurl themselves into the slime, desperate to reach it
before it gurgles away into the murky depths. Seconds later, you are flattened
as a horde of eager customers storms across the bridge. You get up wearily and
hobble after them. Go to 61
18The
merchant reels back, a garfish sticking out of his left ear. Bleating with
fear, he crashes into another merchant’s stall. Within seconds, the Place of
Plaice becomes a whirling mass of rioting merchants, customers, and airborne
tubs of fish. You have to get out! You run toward the Arc de Trihump. Go to 99
185
across
the wall
19Roll one
die.
1–3
The man in black is entranced. Your fingers
manipulate
Cyrano’s arms briliantly, andhis rapierflickers ba c k and forth, gleaming in
the light from the two-hundred-wat
t
chandelier above. Z draws closer and closer . . . then you strike. The puppet’s
swordshearsoff halfof Z’s mustache! Shrieking, he bursts past you, smashes
through the door, and runs away. Goto 100
4–6
You are a little nervous, and Cyrano moves jerkily, producing a very
second-rate display of swordsmanship. Z watches for a while, then exclaims:
“Non! Non! Ziss iz not ze way ze Thibault iz exerzized! Give eet to me!” You
hand over the puppet. Soon Z is totally occupied, putting Cyrano through the
seventy-seven Lunges of Señor Ricardo. You slink past. Go to 100
20“Twenty!”
you exclaim, exhibiting profound knowledge of history that hasn’t happened yet,
the current year being a sort of alternate 1624. Still, “What’s an anachronism
between friends?” you mutter to yourself. Z takes this as a riddle and begins
to knead his forehead in deep thought. Six hours later, still unable to answer
your question, he overexerts his brain and faints away. You step over his
unconscious form and go through the door. Go to 100
186 Down to the
scum quarter
21Avenue
Of Champignons A broad and leafy avenue, much
frequented by bands of rioters from the Green and Blue factions of the
donkey-cart races. Many bravos stalk the avenue, seeking opponents from rival
factions.
Are you wearing a blue one-piece body
stocking? Go to 33 Are you wearing something else? Go to 33 anyway
22You
stand there, gaping. The shadow of the balloon looms closer and closer, and the
stench of manure is overpowering. A man in a pin-striped suit looks out at you
and says, “Nah—he hasn’t got what it takes,” and the balloon flies on.
Sometimes it pays to be a ninny. Go to 54
23You
open the door marked “Auction Goods” only to be confronted by the giggling
eunuch you may have been unlucky enough to see earlier. The thin, sickly man
accompanying him carries a gladstone bag in one hand and a gleaming scalpel in
the other. The eunuch titters, “That’s him, Doc!” and leaps forward to pinion
you in his blubbery arms.
Do you trip
the eunuch, use him as a springboard, hurtle through the air, head butt the
doctor, somersault, and land on your feet whistling “Dixie”? Go to 68
187 across the
wall
Or
pirouette gracefully and bolt back through the door? Go to 47
24Your
rapier is barely out of its scabbard before the black-clad man has reduced your
clothing to tatters. Little “z”s have been cut in every available piece of
cloth and leather. Your trousers fall down.
Do you
attempt to continue this rather farcical duel? Go to 73
Or
say, “Sorry—wrong door,” and back out, holding up your trousers with both hands,
rapier clutched between your teeth? Go to 94
25“You
sure it’s only a five-pronged fish spear?” asks the Sergeant. “Because a
six-pronged fish spear is a different kettle of . . .”
“Halberds?”
you suggest.
“Right.
That’s a different kettle of halberds. Now, be on your way.”
You
leave the Sergeant and his men discussing what a kettle of halberds would
actually look like, and proceed to the Street of Fishmongers. Go to 41
188 Down to the
scum quarterx
26You
pole to the southern end of the gaudy monstrosity and carefully tie up your
boat. Several guards look over the railing at you, but you remember your
Mandrake lessons well. A few hypnotic passes convince them you are a harmless
moron who thinks he’s a rat. Squeaking feverishly, you swarm up the bowline and
onto the deck—then it is but the work of moments to chew a gaping hole in a
nearby door. Go to 44
27You
leap into the boat just like Captain Silver used to—but he only had one leg, so
it was excusable. Eventually you get upright again, ship the oars, hoist the
topgallants, splice the mainbrace, cast off, and purl three. That all taken
care of, you push off with a piece of old stick and head downstream. Far off,
you can see pink lights on the water and smell cheap scent. There lies the
infamous Quay of Scented Rats. You pole on. Go to 14
28Roll
one die. 1–2 As you poke out your tongue, you
slip on some slimy fish and bite the end off this valuable appendage. The pain
is intense! You drop your rapier and stagger about howling. The hulking giant
runs away in terror. Go to 95
3–4 To cut
a long story short, the hulking giant gets in a few good blows and gives you a
black eye before you see him
189 across the
wall
off with
some little cuts to the face. Subtract one from all future combat rolls due to
partial blindness. Go to 95
5–6
The tongue goes out . . . the rapier goes in. The hulking man is surprised. So
are you—you nervously let go of your rapier. The giant staggers off with it
still in his chest. You chase after him, and pull it out when he falls over and
expires. A quick search gains you a silver Bixby—a pair of long-handled biscuit
tongs. Go to 95
29The
tigers settle back down as you sit, and the two women explain that they’re
playing a local variation of poker, where a red two is called the tiger and can
be used as any other card. There are a number of other special rules, but
you’re sure you can get the hang of it. Roll one die.
1–3 You
lose all your money and possessions, except for your clothes and rapier. You’re
sure there’s cheating going on, but every time you try to look more closely at
the others, or under the table, the tigers come and breathe heavily in your
ear, licking their chops and slavering. After an hour you retire gracefully
through the other door, declining their offer of “just another hand.” Go to 79
4–5 You
know they’re cheating after about fifteen minutes. Those tigers are reading
your cards and signaling to the women by twitching their whiskers. With this
knowledge, you keep your losses to a minimum—and lose half your money. After
about ten hands, you get up to “stretch your dealing hand,” and dash through
the other door, the tigers hot on your heels. Go to 79
190 Down to the
scum quarter
6
Ah, those long days spent visiting your grandfather in Cell 3B of The Pastille
(an infamous lozenge-shaped prison) at last reap their reward. You use all your
dear grandpapa’s tricks and win twenty-eight bezants over sixteen hands. You
bow gracefully, thank the ladies for the game, and saunter to the exit,
gloating over your newfound wealth. Go to 79
30“Wot,
I say, wot ’ave we ’ere, then?” says the Watch Sergeant, in the peculiar patois
spoken by Watchmen everywhere. “Oi (I) fink (think) we might ’ave (have) a
Nimoy (person in search of something) ’ere (at this location) . . . perhaps
(perhaps) searching (looking) for his lost (mislaid) demoiselle (lady who
drinks a lot of sweet white wine).” While the other Watchmen are trying to
translate the Sergeant’s words with their Watch Patois/English phrasebooks, you
slink past and continue on your way. Go to 41
31The
Carved Heads of Past Emperors The Carved Heads of
Past Emperors were once ranked as the four hundred sixteenth wonder of the
world. Now only twenty of the sixty heads carved into the Eastern Wall have any
discernible features. You scan them briefly, but the Montgolfier is still
approaching from b e h i n d .
191 across the
wall
Do you hide
up the stone nostril of Emperor August the 10th? Go to 4
Climb
the profile of HIH Alfredo (known as “Alfredo the Chinless”)? Go to 89
32The
hag raises her cleaver as you reach inside your doublet, then drops it on the
floor as you proffer the silk stockings. “Just what I wanted for my thuggee
lessons!” she exclaims, swiftly making the stockings into a noose and looking
around for a test neck. But you are long gone, running like a young colt (i.e.,
on shaky legs), through the other door. Go to 79
33As
you casually saunter down the avenue in your unobtrusive blue body stocking (or
whatever), a bravo leaps out, brandishing his rapier. You have only a moment
to realize that he is dressed entirely in green before combat is upon you.
Do you
tremble with fear, knock your knees together, and start blubbering? Then, when
he starts laughing, whip out a pistol and blow the smirk off the blaggard’s
face? (You must have a pistol.) Go to 76
Or feint
toward his left eye, parry in sixte, and riposte over your shoulder, plunging
your rapier through the knave’s heart? Go to 2
192 Down to the
scum quarter
harsh-faced
woman looks up from her
34A
voodoo
doll as you enter and screams, “A bur
glar! Sic him, Tiggums!” A tiger leaps
down on you from a platform above the door.
Do you run
back through the door? Go to 9
Fleché
across the room and run the woman through? Go to 11
Shoot the tiger with your pistol? Go to
43
35You
are now on one of the floors of the windmill. It is an eerie place, all white
with flour dust, and the sound of the creaking sails and machinery echoing in
every nook and cranny. Strange cogs and mechanical arms move back and forth,
and a central driveshaft turns with uncanny speed.
There is a
piece of paper lying on the floor. Do you pick it up? Go to 60
Or
ignore it, trip, and fall down the central driveshaft into the grinding stones
below? Go to 70
36They
look at
you, taking in your cheap
cloak,
three-bezant haircut, muddy boots, and distinct lack of a Ferrari-red
palanquin. “Make that ten bezants, for trying to be smart,” says one, crushing
a rock and snorting the fragments to show how tough he is.
193 across the
wall
Do
you pay ten bezants? Go to 55 Go back to the end of the line? Go to 7 Or follow
the river westish, hoping to find another way to
the Quay of Scented Rats? Go to 52
37Your
arms get
more and more tired, the
wind
comes up, and it starts raining. You almost fall several times. Then, in
desperation, you start to climb down. Unfortunately, you slip, slide down the
wind-mill’s roof, and out... down at least forty feet. Fortunately, the
hunchback breaks your fall . . . and you break both your legs. You crawl away
before the hunchback regains consciousness. For you, this adventure is over,
and you are about to embark upon another. (See “The Ferocious Bill of
Orthopedic Surgeon Fu Manchu” Adventure 27 in this series.)
38Roll
one die. 1–6 You back off, and off—this guy
twirls his club so fast, you think he may moonlight as a windmill. He drives
you back to the Place of Plaice before losing interest. Go to 83
194
Down
to the scum quarter
39There
is a heavily clawed mannequin in the opposite corner, and a low, menacing growl
from a platform above the door. Go to 85
40The tiger stops in its tracks and looks
from side to side, as if to see if anybody is watching. Then it rolls on its
back and starts making purring sounds. Do you go
over and scratch its stomach? Go to 5 Or run like a million zephyrs (windily)
to the other door? Go to 79
41the
Street of Fishmongers This street really stinks. Rotten fish
guts, rotten gutfish, and people who smell like they died at sea several years
ago—and look like they died several centuries ago. You hurry through, with a
fold of your cloak stuffed up each nos-tril—all the fashion in the Street of
Fishmongers.
Toward the
end of the street, a porcelain model of a toadfish points toward Fishgut
Alley, and a statue of a naked mermaid (with rotating flukes) beckons toward
the Place of Plaice.
If you walk
toward Fishgut Alley, Go to 12
If you stroll toward the Place of
Plaice, Go to 83
195
across
the wall
42As
you say “No thanks,” the agent’s forked tail and horns break out of his
pin-striped suit. He draws a pitchfork from his shoulder holster . . . just a
little too late. There is a flash of blue lightning, and the “Choose Your Own
Adventure” agent is now no more than a patch of oily scum. A white-suited man
strolls up, the gold wings on his breast pocket gleaming in the sun. He blows
the smoke from a magnum pen and slips it back into his pocket. “Get on with
it,” he says. “Finish up—I need the money.”
You
nod and head south. Go to 54
43As
the tiger leaps, you draw your pistol in one smooth motion, wind the wheel lock
faster than a speeding bullock cart, prime it quicker than a flash of lightning,
aim, and . . . Roll one die.
1–3
Congratulations. All these frantic motions have hypnotized the tiger. It is
staring at you, its eyes great circles of disbelief. This puts you off, so you
don’t fire but edge past to the other door. Go to 79
4–6 It
springs on you before you can fire, so you have to do all the winding, priming,
and so forth at the same time as being savagely mauled by a four-hundred-pound
Bengal tiger! It’s lucky you’re a hero—you fire, the tiger dies, and you get to
live out the rest of your tragic life with the terrible scars the tiger has
inflicted. You staunch the blood where your little finger is bleeding, and eye
the scratch marks with depression. Absolutely bound to scar, you think sadly,
as you head for the other door. Go to 79
196 Down to the
scum quarter
44The
Salon You open the door of the Salon, enter,
and quickly close it behind you. It is very dim inside, and your eyes take
several seconds to adjust. There is a sort of snuffling sound in one corner,
and you start to draw your rapier before you realize it is . . . seductive
breathing. Your eyes adjusted, you see the fabled courtesan Yvette lying on a
couch, her fishnet stockings gleaming against the red plush. She languidly
stretches out one slim arm and beckons to you.
Do you
abandon your mission, shout, “Every man for himself,” and fling yourself upon
her? Go to 67
Allow her
to seduce you, pay her, then resume your search for your true love? Go to 53
Call
on Sir Galahad, the Pure Knight, to help you fight temptation? Go to 71
45You
turn back toward the Southgate. Lightning flashes across the sky. Thunder
resounds throughout the postern tunnel in which you are sheltering from falling
albatrosses. An ancient mariner appears and shoots you with his crossbow. The
last words you hear are the senile old fool saying: “That’s funny. I could have
sworn it was an albatross. Must have been the lightning. . . .” The End.
197 across the
wall
46The
Bittern approaches and circles lazily, just out of reach of your rapier. You
think you’ve got it beat and start to edge across the square. At that precise
second the Bittern strikes, jabbing you savagely in the left buttock.
Shrieking, you run across the square, hand clamped to your backside to guard
against the infamous second strike. Go to 93
47You
slam the door behind you and brace yourself against it as the tremendous bulk
of the eunuch slams against it.
Do you wait
for him to charge again, then let the door fly open? Go to 75
Or
fire your pistol (if you have one) through the door? Go to 87
48You
start sweeping the halberd viciously back and forth like some sort of deranged
lawn mower—but this only makes the giant man angry. His shirt splits up the
back, his eyes and muscles bulge, and he puts on a pair of glasses. You stare
aghast as he grabs the swinging halberd and breaks it into several pieces, then
advances upon you with a particularly sharp splinter, grinning inanely . . .
but this is all a product of your fevered imagination. You shouldn’t swing that
halberd so vigorously! Actually, he ran away as soon as you got the halberd
out. Go to 95
198 Down to the
scum quarter
49Hampered
by the body, the hag fails to intercept you. She howls abuse as you speed
past, through the door, up the stairs, and out. Go to 79
50“Ullo, ullo, ullo,” says the Sergeant of
the Watch. “Wot ’ave we ’ere then, sunshine? Is that an ’alberd sticking up out
of your cloak?” Do you—
Say
“No, it’s a five-pronged fish spear”? Go to 25 Say “Yes, I am going to visit my
mother-in-law”? Go to 72 Say “Take that, garboil!” and attack? Go to 65
51You
lose your grip as you fumble one-handed for the saint, and you begin to fall.
Fortunately, your shining white heroic teeth manage to clench on the sail. You
pray for a miracle (silently), but the effort is too much. You drop the plaster
saint and grab the sail. The saint falls on the hunchback’s head; he looks up
and and activates the windmill again. You descend gracefully, land with elan,
and cross yourself. The hunchback head butts you in a very sensitive region (he
couldn’t reach higher) and drops a pile of plaster shards on your doubled-up
form. You hobble away, groaning. Go to 54
199 across the
wall
52The
Southgate A grim complex of towers, barbicans,
murder holes, and dungeons, the Southgate Fortress was transformed into an
amusement arcade several years ago. Now, from the Wheel of Fortune to the
Headless Ventriloquist, you’ll find fun at the Southgate. Only twenty bezants
for the whole family— forty if you don’t want the kids back at the end of the
day . . . but this is all meaningless hype to you. Your mind is set on rescuing
the fair lady. . . what was her name . . . Oiseaux. You ignore the Southgate,
and go
South (sort
of). Go to 16
Sort of east. Go to 88
53Nice
try, but it’s money up front at the Quay of Scented Rats. As you cannot
possibly have the hundred bezants Yvette demands, she rings a little bell.
Moments later, an enormous eunuch servant appears and escorts you back to the
Main Hall of the bordello. Go to 61
54Quay
of Scented Rats (Landward Side) At last you
have reached the Sleine! You can’t see it through the ramshackle warehouses and
wharves, but that odor of muddy decay and raw sewage could only be the river.
On the other side of the warehouses, you can just see a ramshackle bridge and
the hundred lanterns that spell out
200 Down to the
scum quarter
“S en ed R ts” (there should be a
hundred forty lanterns). Loosening your rapier in its scabbard, you stride on.
Go to 7
55The
guards take your bezants with suspicion, subject them to their beaverlike
teeth, then reluctantly stamp the back of your hand with today’s date and the
scented rat symbol of the bordello. They let you pass onto the rickety bridge,
and warn you not to approach the old troll who lives underneath. You cross the
bridge speedily and enter...the Quay of Scented Rats. Go to 61
56Roll
one die. 1–3 You’re running full tilt when you
realize you can no longer hear the Bittern. You slow, look around, and see that
it has gone into whisper mode, gliding along and changing direction by means of
small puffs of air from its beak. Too late, you start to run again...and it
strikes you savagely in the balls. You can’t believe how lucky that was...you
hardly ever carry tennis balls around in your pockets. Lucky you were planning
to have a game this morning. Relieved, you put on speed. Go to 93
4–6
You cross the square miles ahead of the Bittern— which, in fact, turns out to
be a harmless Tittern. Very similar, but the Tittern’s beak is nonrigid, and
the feathers on the back of its neck are more golden, and have a barred
pattern. Its
201 across the
wall
feeding
habits are also markedly different, particularly on Wednesdays, when the
Tittern is a familiar sight at the kitchen doors of many fashionable
restaurants, pecking at paté de fois gras and trying to get the dregs
out of champagne bottles. It is here that the
Tittern’s remarkable flexible beak comes into its own. A Tittern found trapped
in a bottle of Pom Derryong ’47 had a beak seven inches long (extended), and
three inches long when rolled up on top of its head . . . but you have no time
for ornithological observations. On to 93
57You approach the hulking giant. Close
up, you see that he has a greenish tinge—but then the smell of this place is
enough to make anyone sick. “Excuse me, peasant,” you say nicely. “Point me to
the River Sleine and be damned quick about it.” He growls, burps, and raises his
club to attack.
Do
you run back to the Place of Plaice? Go to 83 Calmly fix him with your steely
gaze, poke your tongue
out, and finish him off with a single
lunge? Go to 28 Back off and look for an opening? Go to 38 Get out your halberd
(if you have one) and go for his
kneecaps? Go to 48
58You drop down a long
chute, accelerating through several twists and curves, then explode
202 Down to the
scum quarter
out into a dimly lit room. A cackling
old hag is lifting a body from another chute, a huge, evil-smelling pot is
bubbling on a central stove, there are pastry pie shells laid out on the table,
and a big autographed picture of a nasty-looking barber is in the corner.
Do you run
for the door? Go to 49
Try and
climb back up the chute? Go to 78
Attack the hag with your rapier? Go to
13
59Ma’s
Field Heading north by northwest, you arrive
in Ma’s Field—a small patch of greenery, where many aged women farm market
gardens. At the other end of the field, a resplendent red-and-gold Montgolfier
is drifting along, with a man throwing primitive fertilizer over the side—it is
obviously one of those new-fangled crop-dusting balloons. It drifts closer, and
the occupant seems to take an interest in you.
Do you run
away toward the Carved Heads of Past Emperors? Go to 31
Stand
there like a ninny? Go to 22
60You
hold the piece of paper to the light from the window—or you would, if the
window were there. You stare around the solid, windowless walls, and then back
to the paper. In the dim, unearthly light, you see it is an invitation—an
invitation to “spend the rest of your days
203 across the
wall
in Monsieur
Moorcock’s Mill of Mazes.” You sigh heavily and open the nearest trapdoor. Why,
oh why, you ask yourself, is there a maze in every adventure? Go to 3
61The
Great Hall You enter the Great Hall of the Quay of
Scented Rats and are stricken with awe! The basilica of St. Peter’s, the
Hanging Gardens of Babylon, the Fabled City of Gold—they cannot compare ...as
they are farmore awe-inspiring.But the Great Hall is a splendid exhibition of
bad taste. Purple fur lines the walls and floor, growing like some sort of
fungus between the huge plaster sculptures of Aphrodite and Eros. Glass Cupids
swing on chains of worn silver-plated steel and tangle in the papier-mâché
ferns. Red plush couches line the walls, where gentlemen and lady customers
leaf through the catalogues of men and women of ill repute and an old madam
constantly sprays the lot with gallons of cheap scent from a mammoth atomizer.
Do you
stride through the Hall and out the door at the other end? Go to 44
Or
stride through the Hall and out the door at the other end, feeling as if your
life is somehow being manipulated by unearthly powers? Go to 44
62You
draw your rapier, expecting certain death at the monstrously skilled hands of a
Cleaver
204 Down to the
scum quarter
Fu Master.
But the hag is strangely motionless, and you realize that by some quirk of
fate, you will be spared. You edge past the hag and out the door. Go to 79
(Please note: Only one quirk of fate allowed per adventure.)
63You
pass the tiger in an adrenalin-assisted blur. Obviously it was just trying to
lull you into a false sense of security, because it leaps at you, snarling, as
you pass. You wrench the other door open and fall out into the street,
babbling, “Nice Mr. Tiger. Nice Tiger, don’t bite. I give to the World Wildlife
Fund. Sixty bezants every full moon. At least I will. Starting next year.
Honest, Mr. Tiger . . .” You stop babbling as you realize the door has swung
shut behind you. Go to 79
64As
your boat makes its closest approach to the houseboat, you leap from its prow!
Roll one die. 1–2 Splosh! You manage to perform one
and a half somersaults before entering the Sleine at an obtuse angle. Various
courtesans, gigolos, and guests come to the rail of the houseboat and laugh as
you are dragged away by the current, thrashing and cursing. Mortally
embarrassed, you decide to sink to the bottom of the Sleine and end it all.
However, when you do sink to the bottom, it is so disgusting that you change
your mind and swim ashore. Go to 7
205 across the
wall
3–5 As you
leap, you wisely decide to dispense with the somersaults, and your leap carries
you to the prow of the houseboat, where you cling for dear life. You prepare
for another leap onto the deck, but that last one really took it out of you, so
you slither under the rails and crawl across the deck instead. Go to 44
6
You hurtle eighteen feet into the air, do three full somersaults, flourish
your hat, and land on the deck in front of several guests of the
establishment. Astounded, they can merely gasp as you calmly light a cigarillo
and stride toward the Salon door. Go to 44
65As
you struggle to get the halberd out from under your cloak, the Sergeant steps
back, and all four Watchmen lower their blunderbusses and fire.
Your
last thought before you shuffle off this mortal coil is whether you left the
mulled wine on the fire. Maybe it’s boiled dry....The End.
66You
treacherous
little worm! Okay—leave
Lady
Oiseaux to the tender mercies of a desert chieftain. Don’t sample the delights
of the Quay of Scented Rats or . . . or . . . words fail me. I hope you get a
part as Minotaur bait in “Theseus Does Knossos: Choose Your Own Adventure 288.”
And you can leave the El Superbeau cognac behind.
206 Down to the
scum quarter
67You
fling yourself toward the lovely Yvette, only to be met by an upraised knee.
You bounce back, whimpering, and she calmly rings a little bell. An enormous
eunuch servant enters, giggles, and picks you up. “A new recruit for uth,
Mithtreth,” he lisps. She smiles, and you are carried away, still whimpering.
Go to 90
68Failure!
You go for the trip, but the eunuch isn’t as slow as he looks! In the blink of
an eye, he has you in a half nelson! You struggle uselessly in the eunuch’s
deceptively strong grasp. The doctor snaps open his gladstone bag, pulls out a
pair of shears, and grins evilly. Suddenly, adrenalin you never knew you had
shoots through every muscle in your body, transforming you into someone who makes
Arnie Schwarzenegger look like a wimp. Roaring with berserk fury, you pick the
three-hundred-pound eunuch up over your head and throw him at the doctor,
before smashing through the wall into an adjoining room. Go to 93
69“I
demand twenty bezants for my ruined clothes, you ghastly lump of lard!” you cry
indignantly at the merchant. He rubs his hands together obsequiously, offers
four trillion billion humble pardons, and begins to bargain with you.
Five
minutes later, you leave without the bezants, but with
207 across the
wall
your
clothes replaced by a bright-blue one-piece sealskin body stocking with bronze
buttons, which the merchant assures you will be the perfect disguise for the
riverside slums. You walk toward the Arc de Trihump, glad that you got the
better of the merchant. Go to 99
7 0Could
you really be that stupid? You trip, recover, and just manage to grab hold of
the trapdoor’s iron ring—saving yourself from certain death. Shaking with
relief, you crawl back and pick up the piece of paper. Go to 60
71You
cry out: “Sir Galahad, come to my aid!” Suddenly, a white light fills the room,
there is an explosion of white petals, a miniature snowstorm hurtles past, and
there is the knelling of a great bell. A man appears and bows. He is six feet
six inches tall, incredibly handsome, and has a smile that blinds at thirty
paces. It can only be . . . Sir Galahad! He takes one look at Yvette (who sits
up and puts on her Ray-Bans), and says, “Right! I’ll take care of this one!”
Yvette
says, “Yes please!” and you exit, with the slight suspicion that Galahad might
not be as pure as everyone thought. Then you see him getting his prayer book
out and pointing to a particular illustrated psalm, so you know he will reform
the fallen woman. You open the other door and dash through it, in search of
Lady Oiseaux! Go to 15
208 Down to the
scum quarter
72The
Sergeant raises his eyebrows for a moment, then waves you on. You walk past,
down to the Street of Fishmongers, which marks the beginning of the Scum Quarter.
Behind you, the Watch are discussing halberds and, possibly, mothers-in-law.
“Of course,
you’ve got to get in with an overhand.. . .”
“Nah,
what you do is get one with a six-foot handle.. . .”Go to 41
73There’s
no point beating about the bush on this one. I’ll tell it to you straight,
without circumlocution, shilly-shallying, or avoiding the subject. It’s bad
news, but what isn’t these days? What with the price of El Superbeau up to four
hundred bezants the tun, the king frolicking in orange orchards, the country
going to the dogs . . . it’s all bad news. Oh yes . . . Z——O kills you. Right
through the heart. T h o c k !A n d it’s all over . . . and you were so close
to success. . . . The End.
74You
hear the groans and moans of the eunuch and the doctor on the other side of the
splintered wall. Dimly, you hear your brain telling you this is going to
really hurt later. There is another door.
Do you
wrench open the other door? Go to 80
Or take
advantage of your berserk strength to smash through the adjacent wall? Go to 93
209 across the
wall
75You
hear
the eunuch backing off, then galumphing forward to batter the door. You
fling it open and step aside, as a huge
blubbery mass hurtles past and smashes against the other door. The doctor,
seeing his protector lying unconscious on the floor, begs for mercy.
“Where
are the auction goods?” you ask sternly. Shaking, he points at the door marked
“Not the Auction Goods.” You nod and continue to stare at him. The slight smile
you learned from Clint Eastwood creeps across your face, and you take the
shears from his nerveless fingers and click them twice. He looks aghast and
faints. You use the shears to trim the end of your Van Dyke beard, then go to
the other door, stepping on the unconscious eunuch. Go to 80
76Roll
one die for a highly realistic resolution of this situation. 1–3
He doesn’t start laughing. Your eyes clouded with forced tears, and mind numbed
by the effort of concentrated blubbering, you hardly notice his rapier has cut
you from your guggle to your zatch (don’t ask). You blubber for real . . . then
it is all over. Your last thoughts are of the stupid guidebook that said this
dopey maneuver never failed. The End.
4–6
He guffaws. He nearly chokes with laughter. His eyes pop out of his head.
Before you can even draw your pistol, he’s lying on the ground, kicking his
legs and giggling inanely. You stop blubbering and continue on your way. Go to
52
210 Down to the
scum quarter
77If
you don’t have a fish spear, your head is bashed in by the ex-priest. Tempus
has fugited. The End. That’s it. If you do have a fish spear, roll one die. 1–3
Your spear is longer than the ex-priest’s thurible. He is pronged several times
before retreating.
4–5 You
entangle the thurible’s chain in your prongs and whip it away. Bereft of his
weapon, the defrocked clergyman retires to contemplate the infinite.
6 You trip;
the thuribler hits you with his thurible. It doesn’t hurt that much, but the
incense makes you feel sick. He steals your fish spear.
Unless
you are deceased, you return to the Arc de Trihump. Go to 99
78You
try to climb back up the chute, but it is too steep. From behind you comes the
sound of a body being tipped into the pot. You turn, and the hag is advancing
upon you brandishing a cleaver. Your stomach churns as you realize that she is
wearing the Black Apron of a Master of Cleaver-Fu.
Do
you have two pairs of silk stockings? Go to 32 Or a bottle of Opossum perfume?
Go to 10 Or will you draw your rapier and try and fight your way
past? Go to 62
211 across the
wall
79Once
again, you stand outside the mill. A hunchback looks at you curiously, then wanders
off, muttering, “She gave me water. I ordered wine.. . .”
You may go
north by northwest. Go to 59
Or south by southwest. Go to 54
80You
wrench open the door, and there before you is a great gate of bronze, studded
with rubies and emeralds. In front of the gate stands a mighty Djinn, clutching
a scimitar of mirrored steel in a fist of Herculean proportions . . . oops,
that’s “Down to the Sleazy Sandpits of Samarkand,” Adventure 31 in this series.
Actually...
You wrench
open the door, revealing an antechamber. There is another door, marked
“Secret—The Real Auction Goods.” You step into the room, and the door swings
shut behind you with an audible click that certainly means it is now
automatically locked. A man steps out of the shadows, brandishing a rapier.
You have only a moment to take in his black hat, black mask, black shirt, black
trousers, black boots, black cape, “Z” signet ring, and stupid little mustache
before he cries “En garde!”
Do you
swear at him in Spanish and lug out your own rapier? Go to 24
Whip out
your glove puppet of Cyrano de Bergerac, entrance him with an impromptu display
of puppet swordsmanship, then stick the puppet’s sword up his nose? Go to 19
212 Down to the
scum quarter
Say,
“Violence is the last resort of the incompetent, you childish fellow!” and
attempt to walk past? Go to 86
81This
was originally a brilliant paragraph detailing a combat with an enraged
Purple-Assed Baboon. However, when Adventure 46, “Down to the Chlorophyllic
Jungle,” ran short, it had to go over to it. Also, if you are reading this, you
must be cheating.
82Eighty-two
was also a
brilliant paragraph,
describing
the awesome Slime Serpent that was going to emerge from the Sleine at a
strategic moment. Once again, that paragraph had to go over to “Down to the
Chlorophyllic Jungle.” Honestly, I don’t know how Steve Jackson and Ian
Livingstone do it. They must be good with numbers or something.. . .
83Place
of Plaice This is the upmarket part of the Street
of Fishmongers—a pleasant, open area, strewn with rancid squid carcasses and
buckets of prawns left out in the sun. Smiling merchants offer you slightly
fresher wares.
213 across the
wall
You walk
through haughtily, oblivious to this crass busi-ness—when, without warning, a
fat merchant emerges from behind a crate and knocks you down with his enormous
silk-wound belly!
Do you leap
up and stick the fellow with a convenient garfish? Go to 18
Leap up and
demand twenty bezants for the damage to your clothes? Go to 69
Lie
there and hope he doesn’t tread on you? Go to 98
84You
grab hold of one of the windmill’s sails and are soon lifted high above the
city. It is a somewhat tiring mode of sightseeing, but most educational. You
have never seen the city’s dumps, ruins, broken sewers, and slums laid out in
all their splendor before. As the sail reaches the top of its arc, a hunchback
emerges from the mill below, says, “She gave me water,” and stops the sails.
You are left dangling seventy feet above the ground, and your arms are getting
tired.
Do you have
twenty feet of rope? Go to 8
Or a
plaster saint? Go to 51
If you have neither, Go to 37
85As
you open the door, a fully grown Bengal tiger leaps down from above and
advances, growling.
214 Down to the
scum quarter
Do
you run back through the door? Go to 9 Shoot it with your pistol (if you have
one)? Go to 43 Say “Nice pussums” and head for the door opposite,
marked
EXIT?Goto40
86Z
looks surprised, then a grin slowly spreads across his face. “You are right!”
he exclaims. “But I canot let you pass unless you overmaster me in a contest
of some kind. Mmmm . . . how about a riddle game?”
Reluctantly,
you accept. It’s been a long time since you read The Hobbit, and you never did
know why that stupid chicken crossed the road.
He
asks:
“Take
a span of mortal life, less a score times two Add a number equal to a witch’s
coven thrice Less the year, but not the century, of the most famous gold rush
in America.”
You mutter something
about rhyming, but desist when he absentmindedly cuts the wings from a passing
fly with his rapier. Go to the Answer.
87You
level your pistol at the door and fire point-blank. There is a deafening crash!
Splinters fly
215 across the
wall
everywhere,
smoke billows out, and you curse, cough, and shriek in pain. You pick a few of
the splinters out, then peek through the bullet hole in the door. There is no
sign of the eunuch or the doctor, so you reload, kick the door in, and level
your pistol at every corner of the room, screaming, “Hands up!” But these
histrionics are wasted, as a quick glance out the window reveals the eunuch
and the doctor being carried away by the swift currents of the Sleine, hotly
pursued by the Slime Serpent of paragraph 82. You check out the room, but there
are no other exits, or any sign of Lady Oiseaux. You go down the corridor to
the door marked “Not the Auction Goods.” Go to 80
88The
Windmill In the middle of the city there is a field.
In the middle of the field there is a windmill. There is no reason there should
be a windmill here, except that it comes in handy for hooking people up during
duels.
You
may go north by northwest. Go to 59 Or grab onto one of the sails of the
windmill. Go to 84
89It’s
hard to get a grip on a smooth chin that curves in instead of out. You are
feebly struggling for a handhold when the Montgolfier lands and a
pinstripe-suited man alights. He introduces himself as an agent for “Choose
Your Own Adventures,” and offers you a
216 Down to the
scum quarter
part
as the hero in a “serious” solo adventure.
Do you
accept? Go to 66
Do
you politely refuse? Go to 42
90The
eunuch carries you into a Turkish bath room, which is currently unoccupied. He
dumps you on a bench, and you hear him disappear off into the steam, lisping,
“I’ll jutht fetth the doctor to finith off.”
You
feel that waiting for the doctor would be imprudent, and you are feeling much
better, so you creep back out the door. Go to 15
91Bittern
Square You know the old saying “Once Bittern,
twice as painful the next time”? That saying comes from this square, where
fearsomely accurate seabirds always beak you in the same place.
You try and
creep past, but ...ohno... you’ve trod on a stick near a Bittern’s nest. You
hear the snap! of the twig, and then the fearsome wokkawokkawokkaof a fully
beaked Bittern taking off.
Do you
stand there, waving your rapier over your head? Go to 46
Or
runlikeblazes for thenarrow alley on the other side of the square? Go to 56
217 across the
wall
92Two
women are playing cards around a small table. Two tigers are sleeping nearby.
As you enter, the tigers leap up, growling.
Do you run
back through the door? Go to 9
Or
pull up a chair and say, “Deal me in. What’s the game? Stud, draw, three-up
two-down, écarte, vingt-et-un, snap, canasta, sudden death, gin rummy,
five hundred, strip jack naked?” Go to 29
93Smack!
Crash! Thud! Wallop! Bull-like, you smash through one ...two... three... four
interior walls, leaving a trail of shrieking customers and their chosen
consorts (not to mention splinters, broken furniture, embarrassment, etc.).
This is fun! Smash! Crash! Splash! You fall into the Sleine and, drained by
your berserk fury, dog-paddle ashore. You rest for a moment in the comfortable
slime, moving on when it starts to grow on you. You head back to the main
entrance of the Quay of Scented Rats. Go to 7
94You’ve forgotten the
door is locked. You back against it, knees knocking in fear, and mumble
something about “Wrong room . . . sorry . . . I was looking for . . . ummm . .
. eeerr . . .” He says, “Oh, that’s all right then. Thought you were after the
auction goods. I’ll just
218 Down to the
scum quarter
get the key and let you out.”
He
sheathes his rapier and turns to a cabinet. You leap forward, swinging the
rapier in your mouth, knock him out with the pommel, and make your smile three
quarters of an inch wider. Before he has a chance to recover, you sprint across
the room and open the other door. Go to 100
95That’s
the last of the hulking giant. You compose yourself (bandaging appendages
where necessary), and continue on your way. Soon Fishgut Alley branches into a Y fork.
Do you go
south (that must be south...)?Goto88
Or
south, sort of west a bit? Go to 52
96The dragon
rears back,
its rainbow-scaled
head
writhing in agony as your sword sinks ever deeper into its primary brain. But
the secondary brain still functions, and you see the great tail swinging
around, the venomous sting preparing to punch through you where you stand,
precariously balanced between the creature’s great yellow-centered eyes.
Do you
press the stud that will explode the sword blade into a hundred heat-seeking
flechettes? Go to 426
Or dive off
the creature’s back, trusting that your G-harness battery is not exhausted? Go
to 507
219 across the
wall
97The
tank glimmers with an unearthly light— surely this is the wellspring of the
changelings, the nutrient tank where the Technomancer has been growing the
nervous systems of his hideous creatures. You approach closer, scanning for
search webs and tracksprings. Nothing shows in the visual spectrum, but the
NecroVision™ sight shows stirrings beneath the floor. Forewarned, you spring
back and draw your sword, a .45 caliber emulsion sprayer springing into your
left fist, just as a Mordicant emerges through the flagstones, its gravemold
arms writhing!
Do
you chop at its head? Go to 650 Or fire a pulse of violet emulsion at its brain
stem? Go to 202
Paragraphs
96 and 97 are a blatant advertisement for “Dark Realm of the Technomancer,”
which is at present little more than those two paragraphs. But that’s what
advertising is all about. Order now!
98Aaarghh!
The pain is intense as the fat merchant rests his bulk upon you, in the
mistaken belief that you are a convenient seat. Your screams of agony
disconcert him—he leaps to his feet and hurries off.
You
slowly clamber to your knees and crawl toward the Arc de Trihump (or the other
way). Subtract one from all future combat rolls due to a severely bruised back.
Go to 99 or 91
220 Down to the
scum quarter
99The
Arc de Trihump A huge monument raised to celebrate the
prowess of a long-dead emperor in his personal dealings with camels, the Arc de
Trihump is near the Western Wall of the city.
If
you continue west (or thereabouts): Go to 6 Turn to the broad avenue that heads
south: Go to 21
fling open the velvet-padded
100You
door and strike a commanding pose in the doorway. Your love, the Lady Oiseaux,
is sitting by the mirror, putting on her earrings. She ignores you for a
moment, then says: “If you’re coming in, come in. Ow! And help me with this
earring. What took you so long anyway? You used to rescue me in no time at
all—I guess you’re getting tired of me. No, don’t say you’re not. I know you
are, otherwise you would have been here hours ago (sob).. . .”
You
stride across the room and stop her protests with a passionate kiss, sweep her
into your arms, and leap out the window—onto the deck of a conveniently passing
luxury wide-bodied gondola. The string quartet looks surprised, then breaks
into the theme from Love Story.
The waiter pops the champagne as you and your lady recline into the
lavender-scented pillows, and the gondola gondols away into the setting sun,
long life, and happiness ever after.*
*Hardened
cynics may order the alternative, realistic, nonromantic ending (involving
several hunchbacks, gruesome deeds, tragedy, and despair) by sending $2.00 to
the author.
221
introduction to Heart’s Desire
That pesky Arthurian mythos just
keeps on coming back. Every time it crosses my path, I tell myself I still
dislike it, and every time, I end up writing a story set in the world of
Arthurian legend.
“Heart’s
Desire” was written for an anthology called The
Road to Camelot, edited by Sophie Masson. The basic
premise for the anthology was to write stories about the famous characters of
the Arthurian legends when they were children or teens, or just getting started
on their road to . . . well . . . Camelot.
By
the time I agreed to get involved, most of the better-known characters had
already been snapped up by other authors. Which was just as well, really, since
I didn’t have any ideas about how to write a different and interesting story
about Arthur, or Lancelot, or Merlin. So I started looking at some of the
characters associated with the main players, like Lancelot’s wife, Elaine, or
King Lot, father of the Orkney lads. But I kept coming back to the fact that
the character I was most interested in was Merlin, and in turn Merlin’s relationship
with Nimue (sometimes called Viviane).
Basically,
I never bought the standard-issue version of the Merlin-Nimue story, which
stripped to its essence is that the old Merlin is besotted with Nimue and
entrapped by her. Part of my problem with that story is that Merlin can
actually foretell the future. Older men get besotted by younger women all the
time, and, as they say, “There’s no fool like an old fool.” But not, I would
think, if that older man could accurately tell exactly what was going to
happen.
Unless
there was something about that future that meant he would go along with
whatever was going to happen, which he
223 across the
wall
presumably
wouldn’t if he knew Nimue didn’t really love him at all but just wanted his
power. After all, not only would Merlin find himself entombed, but he would be
abandoning Arthur, who is not only a kind of foster son but in many ways also
Merlin’s life work.
That’s
where “Heart’s Desire” came from: a desire on my part to retell the
Merlin-Nimue story in a different light, with different motivations, while
still staying within the broad boundaries of the best-known versions of the
original story.
224
Heart’s
Desire
“To catch a star,
you must know its secret name and its place in the heavens,” whispered Merlin,
his mouth so close to Nimue’s ear his breath tickled and made her want to
laugh. Only the seriousness of the occasion stopped a giggle. Finally, after
years of apprenticeship, Merlin was about to tell her what she had always
wanted to know, what she had worked toward for seven long years.
“You must
send the name to the sky as a white bird. You must write it in fire upon a
mirror. You must wrap the falling star with your heart’s desire. All this must
be done in the single moment between the end of night and the dawning of the
day.”
“That’s
it?” breathed Nimue. “The final secret?”
“Yes,” said
Merlin slowly. “The final secret. But remember the cost. Your heart’s desire
will be consumed by the star. Only from its ashes will power come.”
“But my
heart’s desire is to have the power!” exclaimed Nimue. “How can I gain it and
lose it at the same time?”
“Even a
magus may not know his own heart,” said Merlin heavily. “And it will be the
whole desire of your heart, from past, present, or future. You will be giving
up something that
225 across the
wall
may yet
come to pass, if you choose not to take a star from the sky.”
Merlin
looked at her as she stared up at the sky, watching the stars. He saw a young
woman, with the dark face and hair of a Pict, her eyes flashing with
excitement. She was not beautiful, or even pretty, but her face was strong and
lively, and every movement hinted at energy barely contained. She wore a plain
white dress, sleeveless but stretching to her ankles, and bracelets of twisted
gold wire and amethysts. Merlin had given her the bracelets, and they were
invested with the many lesser magics that Nimue had learned from him in the
last three years.
There were
other things that Merlin saw, out of memory and with the gift he had taken from
a falling star.
There was
the past, beginning when a headstrong girl no more than fourteen years old
sought him out in his simple house upon the Cornish headland. He had turned her
away, but she had sat on his doorstep for weeks, living off shellfish and
seaweed, until at last he had relented and taken her in. At first he had
refused to teach her magic, but she had won that battle as well. He could not
deny that she had the gift, and he could not deny that he enjoyed the teaching.
Over the years that enjoyment in teaching her had become something else, though
Merlin had never shown it. He was nearly three times her age, and he had spent
many years before Nimue’s arrival preparing himself for the sorrow that must
come. He had not expected it to be as straightforward as simply falling in love
with an impossible girl, but there it was.
There was
the present, the two of them standing upon the black stone with the new sun
shining down upon them.
The future,
so many possible roads stretching out in all
226 heart’s
desire
directions.
If he wished, Merlin could try to steer Nimue toward one future. But he did
not. The choice would be hers.
“My heart’s
desire is to gain full mastery of the Art,” Nimue said slowly. “I can gain that
mastery only by the capture of a star, yet that capture depends upon the
sacrifice of my heart’s desire. An interesting conundrum.”
“You should
stay here and think on it,” said Merlin. He stepped down from the black stone,
the centerpiece of the ring of stones that he had built almost twenty years
before. The black stone had been the most difficult, though it was small and
flat, unlike the standing monoliths of granite. He had drawn it out of the very
depths of the earth, and it had smoked and run like water before he had forced
it into its current shape. “But breakfast calls me and I wish to answer.”
Nimue
smiled and sat cross-legged on the stone. She watched Merlin as he walked away.
As he left the ring of stones, the air shimmered around him, bright shafts of
light weaving and dancing around his head and arms. The light sank into his
hair and skin, and when it finally settled, Merlin’s hair was white and he
appeared to be much older than he really was. It was a magical disguise he had
long assumed, Nimue knew. Age was associated with wisdom, and Merlin had also
found it useful to appear aged and infirm. Nimue expected she would probably do
the same when she came into her power. A crone was always much more convincing
than a maiden.
Not that
she expected to be a maiden too much longer. Nimue had her own plans for that
step from maiden to woman grown. Merlin was part of that plan, though he did
not know it. No village boy or even one of Arthur’s warriors would do for
Nimue. Merlin was the only man she had ever wanted in
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wall
her bed.
There had been some who had tried to influence her choice over the past few
years, against all her discouragement. A few were still around, croaking and
sunning their warty hides down in the reedy margins of the lake. Nimue was surprised
they had lived so long. Most men died from such transformations. Sometimes she
fed them flies, but she never let them touch her, either as toads or men.
Nimue
turned her thoughts from failed suitors back to the conundrum presented by
Merlin. Her heart’s desire was to have the power, yet she would lose her
heart’s desire to gain the power. How could this be?
She
scratched her head and lay down on the rock, letting the heat from the sun fall
upon her. Unconsciously, she turned her palms up to catch the rays. The sun was
a source of power, one she used in many lesser magics. It was good to take in
the sun’s power when the sky was clear, and she no longer needed to even think
about it. Nimue could draw power from many sources: the sun, the earth, the
moving stream, even the spent breath of animals and men.
What had
Merlin lost? Nimue wondered. What was his heart’s desire? He must have wanted
the power as she wanted it. He had gained it, and as far as she could see, he
had lost nothing. He was the pre-eminent wizard of the age. The counsellor and
maker of kings. There was no knowledge he did not have, no spell he did know.
Perhaps
there was nothing to lose, Nimue thought. Or if there was, it would be
something she would never miss. A heart’s desire that could come to pass, but
did not, was no loss. To see the future was not the same as to live it. Perhaps
she would see her heart’s desire in the hearth fire, and would
228
heart’s
desire
know it could never be. How much of a
loss was that?
Nothing,
thought Nimue. Nothing compared to the exhilaration of magic.
“Tonight,”
she whispered, and she curled up on the black stone like a cat resting up in
preparation for extensive wickedness. “Tonight, for everything.”
Merlin was not asleep when she came to
his chamber. He lay on his bed, his eyes open, gleaming in the thin shaft of
moonlight from the tower window. Nimue hesitated at the door, suddenly shy and
afraid. She had chosen to come naked, but with her long dark hair artfully
arranged to both cover and suggest. She had taken a long time to get her hair
exactly right, and it was held in place with charms as well as pins.
“Merlin,”
she whispered.
Merlin did
not respond. Nimue drifted into the room. Her skin seemed to glow with an inner
light, and her smile promised many pleasures. Any man would rise and take her
to his bed in eager haste. But not Merlin.
“Merlin. I
shall go to the black rock before the dawn. But I would go as a woman, who has
known her man. Your woman.”
“No,”
whispered Merlin. He did not move, but lay as still as the chalk carving on the
green of the hill. “There are men aplenty in the village. Two of Arthur’s
knights are visiting tonight. They are both good men, young and unmarried.”
Nimue shook
her head and stepped forward. Her hair fell aside as she knelt by the bed, her
magic dissolving and the pins unable to hold on their own.
“It
is you I want,” she said fiercely. “You! No one else. You
229
across
the wall
want me too! I know it, as well as I
know the ten thousand names of the beasts and the birds that you have taught
me.”
“I do,”
whispered Merlin. “But I am your teacher, and it is not meet that we should lie
together now, unequal in years and power. Go back to your own place.”
Nimue
frowned. Then she rose and stamped her foot, and whirled away, light and
shadows dancing in her wake. At the door she looked back, and her smile shone
through the dark room.
“Tomorrow I
shall be my own mistress and you will not be master,” said Nimue. “I will catch
my star and we can be as man and wife.”
Merlin did
not move or answer. In an instant, Nimue was gone, and the room was silent once
more. The shaft of moonlight slowly crawled over Merlin’s face, and darkness
hid the tears that welled up out of his clear blue eyes. Young man’s eyes,
unclouded by age or glamour.
“Ah well,”
he muttered to himself. “Ah well.”
They were
the words Merlin’s father had said upon his deathbed. Simple words, devoid of
magic, greeting a fate that could not be turned aside.
Nimue did
not go back to her own bed. Instead she put on her best linen dress, that she
herself had dyed blue from isatis bark and stitched with silver thread that she
had spun out of the deep earth.
The
silver thread shone in the moonlight as she slipped out of the house and out
onto the headland. There was a pool at the edge of the western cliff, a pool of
soft water, fed by spring and rain. It was always placid, mirrorlike, in sharp
contrast to the sea that crashed on the rocks only a few paces away, but
230
heart’s
desire
two
hundred feet below. An ancient hawthorn tree leaned over the pool, all shadows
and spiky branches. It had often been mistaken in the dark for a giant, or some
fell creature. Every midwinter night some hapless stranger would seek to use
the power of the pool, only to flee in panic from the hawthorn. Invariably they
found the cliff edge and the pounding sea that would grind their bones to dust.
Nimue stood at the edge
of the pool and hugged herself against the bite of the wind, cold in this early
morning. She whispered to herself, preparing for what must be done:
“To
findthesecretnameofastar, Ask the moonthatsharesthesky. Fix itsplace between
the branchesofthe hawthorn tree. Send the nametotheskyon thewingsof abird.
Burnthenameinfireuponthemirroredwatersofthelake. Wrapthe starwithheart’sdesire
Between thedarknessandthelight. Thenyou shala magusbe....”
Nimue
looked up to the heavens and found the great disk of the moon, yellow as
ancient cheese. She let its light fall upon her face and open hands, and took
in its power. But a yellow moon was not what she sought. She waited, silent,
the hawthorn tree softly groaning in the wind, the surf crashing deep below.
Slowly the moon began
to sink and change. The yellow faded and blue-silver began to spill across its
face. Nimue felt the change and smiled. Soon she would ask it to name her star.
She had already chosen one. A bright star, but not so bright
231
across
the wall
it might overpower her. Not the Evening
Star, which served no one and never would. But a star as bright as Merlin’s,
though not as red. She would be his equal in power, if not in kind.
A bird
called, the sleepy cry of something woken before its time. The wind fell and
the hawthorn stilled. Nimue felt a tremor rush through her. Dawn was only minutes
away. The moon was silver—she must act.
She called
to the moon, a call that no human ears could hear. At first there was no
answer, but she had expected that. She called again, using the power she’d
drawn earlier from the sun. The moon grew a fraction brighter at the call, and
through the void her silver voice came down, quiet and imbued with sadness,
speaking for Nimue alone.
“Jahaliel.”
As the name
formed in her head, Nimue sank to one knee and looked up through the branches
of the hawthorn. There, in the fork where two twisted branches met, she saw her
star, bright between two strands of darkness.
Nimue
splashed her hand in the pool, and the droplets flew into the air to become a
white bird, a dove whose wings made a drumroll as it rose straight up toward
the sky, the name of the star held in its beak where once it would have carried
an olive branch.
The pool
was still before Nimue’s hand had left it, still and shining, reflecting the
woman, the tree, the moon, and sky. With her forefinger and all that was left
of the sun’s power within her, Nimue wrote in fire upon the mirrored water the
three runes that spelled out the name “Ja-hal-iel.”
In
the heavens, a star fell. The moon sank, and the sun rose.
232
heart’s
desire
In the
instant between night and day, Nimue caught her star and bound it forever with
the promise of her heart’s desire.
She felt
something leave her, and tears started in her eyes. But she did not know what
she had lost, and the exultation of power was upon her.
Nimue ran to
the cliff top and threw herself into the air. Like a feather she drifted down,
buffeted this way and that by the wind but taking no harm. Before the cold
water embraced her, she became a dolphin, plunging into a wave, sliding under
the water to spin out the other side, laughing as only a dolphin can.
Nimue had
been a dolphin before, but it was Merlin who had made her so. It was his star’s
power that had given her the shapes of many things, on sea and air and land.
Now she could transform herself at will. She jumped again and between two waves
became a hawk, shooting up above the spray. A merlin, to be exact, and that was
her joke and tribute. On bent-back wings she sped across the headland, past the
pool, toward the rising sun and Merlin.
With sharp
hawk eyes she saw he had already risen and was waiting for her in the ring of
stones. He stood upon the black rock, without a glamour upon him, and Nimue
felt love for him rise in her heart as bright and strong as the rising sun.
She flew
still higher, until she was directly above him and he had to shade his eyes to
look at her. Then she folded her wings and dropped straight down, down into his
open arms.
They
had one kiss, one brief embrace, before the stars they wore pushed them apart,
the air itself wrenching them from each other’s grasp. Nimue shouted and
directed her will upon
233
across
the wall
her newfound power, but to no avail. She
was pushed completely off the black stone, to fall sprawling in the circle.
Merlin did
not shout. He had fallen on his back, and was sinking into the black stone as
if it were not stone at all but some peaty bog that had trapped an unwary
traveler.
He did not
shout, but his voice was loud and clear in Nimue’s ear as she struggled to her
feet.
“You were
my heart’s desire, Nimue, waiting in the future. You were the price I paid for
the art. Love never to be fulfilled. Forgive me.”
His hand
stretched up from the stone. Nimue snatched at it, as if even now she might
somehow pull him back. But her hand closed on empty air, and his disappeared
beneath the surface of the stone.
“Forgive
me, Merlin,” whispered Nimue. She made no effort to stem the tears that fell
upon the stone. A bright star shone in the hollow of her neck, the promise of
power and wisdom beyond anything she had ever dreamed. But she was cold inside,
cold with the knowledge that this power was not her heart’s desire. Her true
heart’s desire lay entombed in dark stone, beyond her reach forever.
Or was he?
Nimue clutched her star and looked up at the sky, so bright above her. If a
star could be plucked from the sky, then surely it could also be made to rise
again? To take its place in the firmament once more, unraveling all the threads
of time that had been woven in its fall. If she could return her star, then
surely Merlin would freely walk the earth, and he in turn could free his star
and regain his heart’s desire.
There were
other powers in the world. Other places to find knowledge. Nimue stretched her
slim arms above her head and in a moment was a bird, wide winged and far
sailing. She rode
234 heart’s
desire
a wind
west, across the open sea, and was gone from Britain.
With her
went all Merlin’s wisdom and power, and all hope for the kingdom of Arthur. The
kingdom that would sink into ruin as Nimue’s heart’s desire had sunk into the
stone.
235
introduction to Hansel’s Eyes
This story was written for A
Wolf at the Door, a collection of retold fairy tales
edited by Ellen Datlow and Terri Windling. I turned to the Brothers Grimm, as
one does, for a story to retell. Despite being attracted to several
lesser-known stories, in the end I wrote a variation on the “Hansel and Gretel”
story, probably because I had an idea about what the witch would be like, and
what she would do, if transferred to a modern setting.
Because I quite like the author’s note I wrote for the
original anthology, I’m going to quote some of it here:
He first encountered Grimm’s fairy tales
when they were read to him at the age of five or six. He spent the next two
years attempting to spin straw into gold, turn pumpkins into carriages, and
find a bearskin to put on—all without success. He chose “Hansel and Gretel” for
retelling as it was always a favorite, probably because his mother made him a
fantastic gingerbread house for his eighth birthday, complete with a witch
made of sweets. He chose to set the retold story in a city because he has
always found being lost in cities much more terrifying than being lost in the
woods—or, in his case, the bush of Australia.
All
true. For those of you wracked with jealousy because my mother made me a
gingerbread house complete with a witch made of sweets, prepare to become even
more green-eyed. For my seventh birthday (or perhaps my ninth), she made
puppets of all
237 across the
wall
the
characters in Tove Jansson’s Moominland
Midwinter, built a puppet theater, and
performed the book as a puppet play. Needless to say, without the influence,
example, and encouragement of my mother (and my father, whose collection of
fantasy and science fiction books supplied me with reading matter for my most
formative years), I would not be the writer I have become, or indeed, a writer
at all.
238
Hansel’s
Eyes
Hansel was ten and
his sister, Gretel, was eleven when their stepmother decided to get rid of
them. They didn’t catch on at first, because the Hagmom (their secret name for
her) had always hated them. So leaving them behind at the supermarket or
forgetting to pick them up after school was no big deal.
It was only
when their father got in on the “disappearing the kids” act that they realized
it was serious. Although he was a weak man, they thought he might still love
them enough to stand up to the Hagmom.
They
realized he didn’t the day he took them out into the woods. Hansel wanted to do
the whole Boy Scout thing and take a water bottle and a pile of other stuff,
but their dad said they wouldn’t need it. It’d only be a short walk.
Then he
dumped them. They’d just gotten out of the car when he took off. They didn’t
try to chase him. They knew the signs. The Hagmom had hypnotized him again or
whatever she did to make him do things.
“Guess
she’s going to get a nasty surprise when we get back,” said Hansel, taking out
the map he’d stuffed down the front of his shirt. Gretel silently handed him
the compass
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wall
she’d
tucked into her sock.
It took
them three hours to get home, first walking, then in a highway patrol cruiser,
and finally in their dad’s car. They were almost back when the Hagmom called on
the cell phone. Hansel and Gretel could hear her screaming. But when they
finally got home, she smiled and kissed the air near their cheeks.
“She’s
planning something,” said Gretel. “Something bad.”
Hansel
agreed, and they both slept in their clothes, with some maps, the compass, and
candy bars stuffed down their shirts.
Gretel
dreamed a terrible dream. She saw the Hagmom creep into their room, quiet as a
cat in her velvet slippers. She had a big yellow sponge in her hand, a sponge
that smelled sweet, but too sweet to be anything but awful. She went to
Hansel’s bunk and pushed the sponge against his nose and face. His arms and
legs thrashed for a second, then he fell back like he was dead.
Gretel
tried and tried to wake from the dream, but when she finally opened her eyes,
there was the yellow sponge and the Hagmom’s smiling face and then the dream
was gone and there was nothing but total, absolute darkness.
When Gretel
did wake up, she wasn’t at home. She was lying in an alley. Her head hurt, and
she could hardly open her eyes because the sun seemed too bright.
“Chloroform,”
whispered Hansel. “The Hagmom drugged us and got Dad to dump us.”
“I feel
sick,” said Gretel. She forced herself to stand and noticed that there was
nothing tucked into her shirt, or Hansel’s, either. The maps, candy bars, and
compass were gone.
240 hansel’s
eyes
“This looks
bad,” said Hansel, shielding his eyes with his hand and taking in the piles of
trash, the broken windows, and the lingering charcoal smell of past fires.
“We’re in the old part of the city that got fenced off after the riots.”
“She must
hope someone will kill us,” said Gretel. She scowled and picked up a jagged
piece of glass, winding an old rag around it so she could use it like a knife.
“Probably,”
agreed Hansel, who wasn’t fooled. He knew Gretel was scared, and so was he.
“Let’s look
around,” Gretel said. Doing something would be better than just standing still,
letting the fear grow inside them.
They walked
in silence, much closer together than usual, their elbows almost bumping. The
alley opened into a wide street that wasn’t any better. The only sign of life
was a flock of pigeons.
But around
the next corner, Hansel backed up so suddenly that Gretel’s glass knife almost
went into his side. She was so upset, she threw it away. The sound of
shattering glass echoed through the empty streets and sent the pigeons flying.
“I almost
stabbed you, you moron!” exclaimed Gretel. “Why did you stop?”
“There’s a
shop,” said Hansel. “A brand-new one.”
“Let me
see,” said Gretel. She looked around the corner for a long time, till Hansel
got impatient and tugged at her collar, cutting off her breath.
“It is a
shop,” she said. “A Sony PlayStation shop. That’s what’s in the windows. Lots
of games.”
“Weird,”
said Hansel. “I mean, there’s nothing here. No one to buy anything.”
Gretel
frowned. Somehow the shop frightened her, but the
241 across the
wall
more she
tried not to think of that, the more scared she got.
“Maybe it
got left by accident,” added Hansel. “You know, when they just fenced the whole
area off after the f i r e s . ”
“Maybe...”
said Gretel.
“Let’s
check it out,” said Hansel. He could sense Gretel’s uneasiness, but to him the
shop seemed like a good sign.
“I don’t
want to,” said Gretel, shaking her head.
“Well, I’m
going,” said Hansel. After he’d gone six or seven steps, Gretel caught up with
him. Hansel smiled to himself. Gretel could never stay behind.
The shop
was strange. The windows were so clear that you could see all the way inside to
the rows of PlayStations all set up ready to go, connected to really big
television screens. There was even a Coke machine and a snack machine at the
back.
Hansel
touched the door with one finger, a bit hesitantly. Half of him wanted it to be
locked, and half of him wanted it to give a little under his hand. But it did
more than that. It slid open automatically, and a cool breeze of
air-conditioned air blew across his face.
He stepped
inside. Gretel reluctantly followed. The door shut behind them, and instantly
all the screens came on and were running games. Then the Coke machine clunked
out a couple of cans of Coke, and the snack machine whirred and hummed and a
whole bunch of candy bars and chocolate piled up outside the slot.
“Excellent!”
exclaimed Hansel happily, and he went over and picked up a Coke. Gretel put out
her hand to stop him, but it was too late.
“Hansel, I
don’t like this,” said Gretel, moving back to the
242 hansel’s
eyes
door. There
was something strange about all this—the flicker of the television screens
reaching out to her, beckoning her to play, trying to draw them both in.. . .
Hansel
ignored her, as if she had ceased to exist. He swigged from the can and started
playing a game. Gretel ran over and tugged at his arm, but his eyes never left
the screen.
“Hansel!”
Gretel screamed. “We have to get out of here!”
“Why?”
asked a soft voice.
Gretel
shivered. The voice sounded human enough, but it instantly gave her the mental
picture of a spider, welcoming flies. Flies it meant to suck dry and hang like
trophies in its web.
She turned
around slowly, telling herself it couldn’t really be a spider, trying to blank
out the image of a hideous eight-legged, fat-bellied, fanged monstrosity.
When she
saw it was only a woman, she didn’t feel any better. A woman in her mid-forties,
maybe, in a plain black dress, showing her bare arms. Long, sinewy arms that
ended in narrow hands and long, grasping fingers. Gretel couldn’t look directly
at her face, just glimpsing bright-red lipstick, a hungry mouth, and the
darkest of sunglasses.
“So you
don’t want to play the games like your brother, Hansel,” said the woman. “But
you can feel their power, can’t you, Gretel?”
Gretel
couldn’t move. Her whole body was filled up with fear, because this woman was a
spider, Gretel thought, a hunting spider in human shape, and she and Hansel
were well and truly caught. Without thinking, she blurted out, “Spider!”
“A spider?”
laughed the woman, her red mouth spreading wide, lips peeling back to reveal
nicotine-stained teeth. “I’m not a spider, Gretel. I’m a shadow against the
moon, a dark
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wall
shape in
the night doorway, a catch-as-catch-can . . . witch!”
“A witch,”
whispered Gretel. “What are you going to do with us?”
“I’m going
to give you a choice that I have never given before,” whispered the witch. “You
have some smattering of power, Gretel. You dream true, and strong enough that
my machines cannot catch you in their dreaming. The seed of a witch lies in
your heart, and I will tend it and make it grow. You will be my apprentice and
learn the secrets of my power, the secrets of the night and the moon, of the
twilight and the dawn. Magic, Gretel, magic! Power and freedom and dominion
over beasts and men!
“Or you can
take the other path,” she continued, leaning in close till her breath washed
into Gretel’s nose, foul breath that smelled of cigarettes and whiskey. “The
path that ends in the end of Gretel. Pulled apart for your heart and lungs and
liver and kidneys. Transplant organs are so in demand, particularly for sick
little children with very rich parents! Strange— they never ask me where the
organs come from.”
“And
Hansel?” whispered Gretel, without thinking of her own danger, or the seed in
her heart that begged to be made a witch. “What about Hansel?”
“Ah, Hansel,”
cried the witch. She clicked her fingers, and Hansel walked over to them like a
zombie, his fingers still twitching from the game.
“I have a
particular plan for Hansel,” crooned the witch. “Hansel with the beautiful,
beautiful blue eyes.”
She tilted
Hansel’s head back so his eyes caught the light, glimmering blue. Then she took
off her sunglasses, and Gretel saw that the witch’s own eyes were shriveled
like raisins and thick with fat white lines like webs.
244 hansel’s
eyes
“Hansel’s
eyes go to a very special customer,” whispered the witch. “And the rest of him?
That depends on Gretel. If she’s a good apprentice, the boy shall live. Better
blind than dead, don’t you think?” She snapped out her arm on the last word and
grabbed Gretel, stopping her movement toward the door.
“You can’t
go without my leave, Gretel,” said the witch. “Not when there’s so much still
for you to see. Ah, to see again, all crisp and clean, with eyes so blue and
bright. Lazarus!”
An animal
padded out from the rear of the shop and came up to the witch’s hand. It was a
cat, of sorts. It stood almost to the witch’s waist, and it was multicolored,
and terribly scarred, lines of bare skin running between patches of
different-colored fur like a horrible jigsaw. Even its ears were different
colors, and its tail seemed to be made of seven quite distinct rings of fur.
Gretel felt sick as she realized it was a patchwork beast, sewn together from
many different cats and given life by the witch’s magic.
Then Gretel
noticed that whenever the witch turned her head, so did Lazarus. If she looked
up, the cat looked up. If she turned her head left, it turned left. Clearly,
the witch saw the world through the cat’s eyes.
With the
cat at her side, the witch pushed Gretel ahead of her and whistled for Hansel
to follow. They went through the back of the shop, then down a long stairway,
deep into the earth. At the bottom, the witch unlocked the door with a key of
polished bone.
Beyond the
door was a huge cave, ill lit by seven soot-darkened lanterns. One side of the
cave was lined with empty cages, each just big enough to house a standing
child.
There was
also an industrial cold room—a shed-size refrigerator that had a row of toothy
icicles hanging from the
245 across the
wall
gutters of
its sloping roof—that dominated the other side of the cave. Next to the cold
room was a slab of marble that served as a table. Behind it, hanging from hooks
in the damp stone of the cave wall, were a dozen knives and cruel-looking
instruments of steel.
“Into the
cage, young Hansel,” commanded the witch, and Hansel did as he was told,
without a word. The patchwork cat slunk after him and shot the bolt home with a
slap of its paw.
“Now,
Gretel,” said the witch. “Will you become a witch or be broken into bits?”
Gretel
looked at Hansel in his cage, and then at the marble slab and the knives. There
seemed to be no choice. At least if she chose the path of witchery, Hansel
would only . . . only . . . lose his eyes. And perhaps they would get a chance
to escape. “I will learn to be a witch,” she said finally. “If you promise to
take no more of Hansel than his eyes.”
The witch
laughed and took Gretel’s hands in a bony grip, ignoring the girl’s shudder.
Then she started to dance, swinging Gretel around and around, with Lazarus
leaping and screeching between them.
As she danced, the witch sang:
“Gretel’s
chosen the witch’s way, And Hansel will be the one to pay. Sister sees more and
brother less— Hansel and Gretel, what a mess!”
Then she
suddenly stopped and let go. Gretel spun across the cave and crashed into the
door of one of the cages.
“You’ll
live down here,” said the witch. “There’s food in the cold room, and a bathroom
in the last cage. I will instruct
246 hansel’s
eyes
you on your
duties each morning. If you try to escape, you will be punished.”
Gretel
nodded, but she couldn’t help looking across at the knives sparkling on the
wall. The witch and Lazarus looked, too, and the witch laughed again. “No steel
can cut me, or rod mark my back,” she said. “But if you wish to test that, it
is Hansel I will punish.”
Then the
witch left, with Lazarus padding alongside her.
Gretel
immediately went to Hansel, but he was still in the grip of the PlayStation
spell, eyes and fingers locked in some phantom game.
Next she
tried the door, but sparks flew up and burned her when she stuck a knife in the
lock. The door to the cold room opened easily enough, though, frosted air and
bright fluorescent light spilling out. It was much colder inside than a normal
refrigerator. One side of the room was stacked high with chiller boxes, each
labeled with a red cross and a bright sticker that said URGENT:
HUMAN TRANSPLANT. Gretel
tried not to look at them, or think about what they contained. The other side
was stacked with all kinds of frozen food. Gretel took some spinach. She hated
it, but spinach was the most opposite food to meat she could imagine. She
didn’t even want to think about eating meat.
The next
day marked the first of many in the cave. The witch gave Gretel chores to do,
mostly cleaning or packing up boxes from the cold room in special messenger
bags the witch brought down. Then the witch would teach Gretel magic, such as
the spell that would keep herself and Hansel warm.
Always,
Gretel lived with the fear that the witch would choose that day to bring down
another child to be cut up on the marble slab, or to take Hansel’s eyes. But
the witch always
247 across the
wall
came alone,
and merely looked at Hansel through Lazarus’s eyes and muttered, “Not ready.”
So Gretel
worked and learned, fed Hansel and whispered to him. She constantly told him
not to get better, to pretend that he was still under the spell. Either Hansel
listened and pretended, even to her, or he really was still entranced.
Days went
by, then weeks, and Gretel realized that she enjoyed learning magic too much.
She looked forward to her lessons, and sometimes she would forget about Hansel
for hours, forget that he would soon lose his eyes.
When she
realized that she might forget Hansel altogether, Gretel decided that she had
to kill the witch. She told Hansel that night, whispering her fears to him and
trying to think of a plan. But nothing came to her, for now Gretel had learned
enough to know the witch really couldn’t be cut by metal or struck down by a
blow.
The next
morning, Hansel spoke in his sleep while the witch was in the cave. Gretel
cried out from where she was scrubbing the floor, to try and cover it up, but
it was too late. The witch came over and glared through the bars.
“So you’ve
been shamming,” she said. “But now I shall take your left eye, for the spell to
graft it to my own socket must be fueled by your fear. And your sister will
help me.”
“No, I
won’t!” cried Gretel. But the witch just laughed and blew on Gretel’s chest.
The breath sank into her heart, and the ember of witchcraft that was there
blazed up and grew, spreading through her body. Higher and higher it rose, till
Gretel grew small inside her own head and could feel herself move around only
at the witch’s whim.
Then the witch
took Hansel from the cage and bound him with red rope. She laid him on the
marble slab, and Lazarus
248 hansel’s
eyes
jumped up
so she could see. Gretel brought her herbs, and the wand of ivory, the wand of
jet, and the wand of horn. Finally, the witch chanted her spell. Gretel’s mind
went away completely then. When she came back to herself, Hansel was in his
cage, one eye bandaged with a thick pad of cobwebs. He looked at Gretel through
his other, tear-filled eye.
“She’s
going to take the other one tomorrow,” he whispered.
“No,” said
Gretel, sobbing. “No.”
“I know it
isn’t really you helping her,” said Hansel. “But what can you do?”
“I don’t
know,” said Gretel. “We have to kill her—but she’ll punish you if we try and we
fail.”
“I wish it
was a dream,” said Hansel. “Dreams end, and you wake up. But I’m not asleep, am
I? It’s too cold, and my eye...it hurts.”
Gretel
opened the cage to hug him and cast the spell that would warm them. But she was
thinking about cold—and the witch. “If we could trap the witch and Lazarus in
the cold room somehow, they might freeze to death,” she said slowly. “But we’d
have to make it much colder, so she wouldn’t have time to cast a spell.”
They went
to look at the cold room and found that it was set as cold as it would go. But
Hansel found a barrel of liquid nitrogen at the back, and that gave him an
idea.
An hour
later, they’d rigged their instant witch-freezing trap. Using one of the
knives, Hansel unscrewed the inside handle of the door so there was no way to
get out. Then they balanced the barrel on top of a pile of boxes, just past the
door. Finally, they poured water everywhere to completely ice up the floor.
Then they
took turns sleeping, till Gretel heard the click of
249 across the
wall
the witch’s
key in the door. She sprang up and went to the cold room. Leaving the door
ajar, she carefully stood on the ice and took the lid off the liquid nitrogen.
Then she stepped back outside, pinching her nose and gasping. “Something’s
wrong, Mistress!” she exclaimed. “Everything’s gone rotten.”
“What!”
cried the witch, dashing across the cave, her one blue eye glittering. Lazarus
ran at her heels from habit, though she no longer needed his sight.
Gretel
stood aside as she ran past, then gave her a hefty push. The witch skidded on
the ice, crashed into the boxes, and fell flat on her back just as the barrel
toppled over. An instant later, her final scream was smothered in a cloud of
freezing vapor.
But
Lazarus, quicker than any normal cat, did a backflip in midair, even as Gretel
slammed the door. Ancient stitches gave way, and the cat started coming apart,
accompanied by an explosion of the magical silver dust that filled it and gave
it life.
Gretel
relaxed for an instant as the dust obscured the beast, then screamed as the
front part of Lazarus jumped out at her, teeth snapping. She kicked at it, but
the cat was too swift, its great jaws meeting around her ankle. Gretel screamed
again, and then Hansel was there, shaking the strange dust out of the broken
body as if he were emptying a vacuum cleaner. In a few seconds there was
nothing left of Lazarus but its head and an empty skin. Even then it wouldn’t
let go, till Hansel forced its mouth open with a broomstick and pushed the
snarling remnant across the floor and into one of the cages.
Gretel
hopped across and watched it biting the bars, its green eyes still filled with
magical life and hatred. “Hansel,” she said, “your own eye is frozen with the
witch. But I think I
250 hansel’s
eyes
can
remember the spell—and there is an eye for the taking here.”
So it was
that when they entered the cold room later to take the key of bone from the
frozen, twisted body of the witch, Hansel saw the world through one eye of blue
and one of green.
Later, when
they found their way home, it was the sight of that green eye that gave the
Hagmom a heart attack and made her die. But their father was still a weak man,
and within a year he thought to marry another woman who had no love for his
children. Only this time the new Hagmom faced a Gretel who was more than half a
witch, and a Hansel who had gained strange powers from his magic cat’s eye.
But that is
all another story.. . .
251
introduction to Hope Chest
I love Western films. Always have,
and I daresay always will. Strangely, I don’t much care for Western fiction in
print, with some notable exceptions, like Larry McMurtry’s L
o n e s o m e Dove. But I love the films and regularly
watch old favorites and try to catch up with the ones I’ve somehow missed along
the way.
As I
said in my original note that accompanied this story when it was first
published in Firebirds (edited by Sharyn November), the origins of Hope
Chest lie in watching too many Westerns,
and I quoted some favorites, such as Winchester
’73; Red
River; The
Good, the Bad and the Ugly; and They
Call Me Trinity. As I have a little more space here,
to that list I would add The Wild Bunch, The Far Country, and the miniseries Lonesome
Dove.
Of
course, I couldn’t write a straightforward Western. I find it very difficult to
write a story of any kind without introducing elements of fantasy or science
fiction. I seem to have a natural tendency to divert from the straight and
narrow of realism. Even writing a Western, as here, I found myself setting it
in a kind of alternate United States, with a supernatural Hitler analogue,
inherited magical powers, and parallel worlds. In retrospect, the latter half
of the story is more Peckinpah than Hawks or Ford, but I do admire the work of
all three in Westerns (and elsewhere).
253
Hope
Chest
One dusty, slow
morning in the summer of 1922, a passenger was
left crying on the platform when the milk train pulled out of Denilburg after
its five-minute stop. No one noticed at first, what with the whistle from the
train and the billowing steam and smoke and the laboring of the steel wheels
upon the rails. The milk carter was busy with the cans, the stationmaster with
the mail. No one else was about, not when the full dawn was still half a cup of
coffee away.
When the
train had rounded the corner, taking its noise with it, the crying could be
clearly heard. Milk carter and stationmaster both looked up from their work and
saw the source of the sound.
A baby,
tightly swaddled in a pink blanket, was precariously balanced on a large
steamer trunk at the very edge of the platform. With every cry and wriggle the
baby was moving closer to the side of the trunk. If she fell, she’d fall not
only from the trunk but from the platform, down to the rails four feet below.
The carter
jumped over his cans, knocking two down, his heels splashing in the spilled
milk. The stationmaster dropped his sack, letters and packets cascading out to
meet the milk.
255 across the
wall
They each got a hand under the baby at
the very second it rolled off the trunk. Both men went over the edge of the
platform, and they trod on each other’s feet as they landed, hard and
painful—but upright. The baby was perfectly balanced between them.
That’s how
Alice May Susan Hopkins came to Denilburg, and that’s how she got two unrelated
uncles with the very same first name, Uncle Bill Carey, the stationmaster, and
Uncle Bill Hoogener, the milk carter.
The first
thing the two Bills noticed when they caught the baby was a note pinned to the
pink blanket. It was on fine ivory paper, the words in blue-black ink that
caught the sun and glinted when you held it just so. It said:
“Alice May
Susan, born on the Summer Solstice, 1921. Look after her and she’ll look after
you.”
It didn’t
take long for the news of Alice May Susan’s arrival to get around the town, and
it wasn’t more than fifteen minutes later that fifty percent of the town’s
grown women were all down at the station, the thirty-eight of them clustering
around that poor baby enough to suffocate her. Fortunately it was only a few
minutes more till Eulalie Falkirk took charge, as she always did, and
established a roster for hugging and kissing and gawking and fussing and
worrying and gossiping over the child.
Over the
next few months that roster changed to include actually looking after little
Alice May Susan. She was handed from one married woman to the next, changing
her surname from month to month as she went from family to family. She was a
dear little girl, everyone said, and Eulalie Falkirk was hard put to decide who
should adopt the child.
Her final
decision came down to one simple thing. While
256 hope chest
all the
womenfolk had been busy with the baby, most of the menfolk had been taking
turns trying to open up that steamer trunk.
The trunk
looked easy enough. It was about six feet long, three feet wide, and two feet
high. It had two leather straps around it and an old brass lock, the kind with
a keyhole big enough to put your whole finger in. Only no one did after
Torrance Yib put his in and it came back with the tip missing, cut off clean as
you please right at the joint.
The straps
wouldn’t come undone either, and whatever they were, it wasn’t any leather
anyone in Denilburg had ever seen. It wouldn’t cut and it wouldn’t tear, and
those straps drove everyone who tried them mad with frustration.
There was
some talk of devilment and foreign magic, till Bill Carey—who knew more about
luggage than the rest of the town put together—pointed out the brass plate on
the underside that read “Made in the U.S.A. Imp. Pat. Pend. Burglar-proof
trunk.” Then everyone was proud and said it was scientific progress and what a
pity it was that the name of the company had been scratched off, for it’d get
some good business in Denilburg if only they knew where to send their orders.
The only
man in the whole town who hadn’t tried to open the trunk was Jake Hopkins, the
druggist, so when Stella Hopkins said they’d like to take baby Alice May Susan
on, Eulalie Falkirk knew it wasn’t because they wanted whatever was in the
trunk.
So Alice
May Susan joined the Hopkins household and grew up with Jake and Stella’s born
daughters, Janice, Jessie, and Jane, who at the time were ten, eight, and four.
The steamer trunk was put in the attic, and Alice May Susan, to all intents and
purposes, became another Hopkins girl. No one
257 across the
wall
out of the
ordinary, just a typical Denilburg girl, the events of her life pretty much
interchangeable with the sisters who had gone before her.
Until the
year she turned sixteen, in 1937.
Of her three
sisters, only Jane was at home that birthday, enjoying a vacation. Janice and
Jessie had married up and left, both of them now living more than twenty miles
away. Jane was different. She’d won a scholarship that had taken her off to
college back east, where she’d got all sorts of ideas. One of them involved
criticizing everything Alice May Susan did or said, and counting the days till
she could get on the train out of town and back to what she called
“civilization.”
“You’d
better study harder so you have a chance to get away from this place,” said
Jane as they sat on the porch eating birthday cake and watching the world go
by. None of it had gone by yet, unless you counted the Prowells’ cat.
“I like it
here,” said Alice May. “Why would I want to leave?”
“Because
there’s nothing here!” protested Jane. “Nothing! No life, no color, no . . .
events! Nothing ever happens. Everyone just gets married and has children, and
it starts all over again. There’s no romance in anything or anyone!”
“Not
everyone gets married,” replied Alice May after a short pause to swallow a
too-large bite of cake.
“Gwennifer
Korben, you mean,” said Jane. “She’s a schoolmistress. Everyone knows they’re
always spinsters. You don’t want to be a schoolmistress.”
“Maybe I
do,” answered Alice May. She spun her cake fork into a silver blur and snatched
it handle first out of the air.
“Do you
really?” asked Jane, momentarily shocked. “A schoolmistress!”
258 hope chest
Alice May
frowned and threw the cake fork into the wall. It stuck, quivering, next to the
tiny holes in the wood that showed several years of practice in the gentle art
of cake-fork throwing.
“I don’t
know,” she said. “I do feel . . . I do feel that I want to be something. I just
don’t know what it is.”
“Study,”
said Jane firmly. “Work hard. Go to college. Education is the only way for a
woman to have her own life.”
Alice May
nodded, to avoid further discussion. It was her birthday, and she felt hot and
bothered rather than happy. The cake was delicious, and they’d had a very
pleasant lunch with her family and some friends from school. But her birthday
somehow felt unfinished and incomplete. There was something that she had to
do, but she didn’t know what it was. Something more immediate than deciding her
future life.
It didn’t
take more than two hours in the rocking chair on the porch to work out what it
was she needed to do, and wait for the right moment to do it.
The steamer
trunk. It had been a long time since she’d even looked at it. Over the years
she’d tried it many times, alone and in company. There had been times when
she’d gone up to the attic every day to test if by some chance it had come
undone. There’d been times when she’d forgotten about it for months. But no
matter what, she always found herself making an attempt to open it on her
birthday.
Even when
she forgot about opening it, the trunk’s brooding presence stayed with her. It
was a reminder that she was not exactly like the other Hopkins girls. Sometimes
that was pleasant, but more often not, particularly as she had got
o l d e r . Alice May sighed and decided
to give it yet another try. It
259 across the
wall
was evening by then, and somewhat
cooler. She picked up her lantern, trimmed the wick down a little, and went
inside.
“Trunk?”
asked her foster father, Jake, as she went through the kitchen. He was
preserving lemons, the careful practice of his drugstore carried over to the
culinary arts. No one else in Denilburg preserved lemons, or would know what to
do with them once they were preserved.
“Trunk?”
asked Stella, who was sewing in the drawing room.
“Trunk?”
asked Jane on the stairs, as Alice May passed her. “Trunk?”
“Of course
the trunk!” snapped Alice May. She pulled down the attic ladder angrily and
climbed up.
It was a
very clean attic, in a very clean house. There was only the trunk in it, up
against the small window that was letting in the last of the hot summer sun. A
red glow shone on the brass lock and the lustrous leather straps.
Alice May
was still angry. She set the lantern down, grabbed a strap, and pulled. When it
came loose, she fell over backward and hit her head on the floor. The sound it
made echoed through the house. There was a noticeable pause, then three voices
carried up in chorus.
“Are you
all right?”
“Yes!” shouted
Alice May, angrier still. She wrenched at the other strap and it came loose
too, though this time she was ready for it. At the same time, the brass lock
went click.It wasn’t the sort of click that was so soft, you could think you
might have imagined it. This was a slow, drawn-out click, as if mighty metal
gears were slowly turning over.
The lid of
the trunk eased up half an inch.
Alice May
whispered, “It’s open.”
260 hope chest
She reached
forward and lifted the lid a little farther. It moved easily, the hinges free,
as if they’d just been oiled.
“It’s
open!” screeched Alice May. “The trunk is open!”
The sound
of a mad scramble below assured her that everyone had heard her this time.
Before they could get there, Alice May pushed the lid completely back. Her brow
furrowed as she looked at what lay within. All her life she had been waiting to
open this trunk, both dreading and hoping that she would find some clue to the
mystery of her birth and arrival in Denilburg. Papers, letters, perhaps a family
Bible.
Nothing of
that kind was obvious. Instead, clipped into the back wall of the trunk there
was a lever-action rifle, an old one, with a deeply polished stock of dark wood
and an octagonal barrel of dark-blue steel chased with silver flowers.
Underneath
it were two holstered revolvers. Big weapons, their barrels were also engraved
in silver with the flower motif, which was repeated on the holsters, though not
in silver but black thread, somber on the leather. A belt with bullet loops was
folded up and pinned between the holsters. More dark leather, more flowers in
black thread.
On the left
side of the trunk there was a teak box with the word ammunition
burned into the lid in slim pokerwork.
On the
right side there was a jewelry case of deep purple velvet plush.
Underneath
the ammunition box and the jewelry case, along the bottom of the trunk, there
was a white dress laid out flat. Alice May stared at the strange combination of
cowgirl outfit and bridal gown, cut from the finest, whitest shot silk, with
the arms and waistcoat—it had a waistcoat—sewn with lines of tiny pearls. It
looked a little big for Alice May, particularly in the region of the bust. It
was also indecently
261 across the
wall
short, for
either wedding dress or cowgirl outfit. It probably wouldn’t go much below her
knees.
“A
Winchester ’73,” said Jake behind her, pointing at the rifle. He didn’t make
any attempt to reach forward and touch them. “And two Colt .45s. Peacemakers, I
think. Like the one my grandfather had above the mantelpiece in the old house.”
“Weird,”
said Jane, pushing her father, so he moved to allow her and Stella up.
“What’s in
the jewelry box?” asked Stella. She spoke in a hushed tone, as if she were in a
temple. Alice May looked around and saw that Jake, Stella, and Jane were all
clustered around the top of the ladder, as if they didn’t want to come any
closer.
Alice May
reached into the trunk and picked up the jewelry case. As she touched the
velvet, she felt a strange, electric thrill pass through her. It wasn’t
unpleasant, and she felt it again as she opened the case: a frisson of
excitement that raced through her whole body, from top to toe.
The case
held a metal star. A sheriff’s badge, or something in the shape of one, anyway,
though there was nothing engraved upon it. The star was shinier than any
lawman’s badge Alice May had ever seen, a bright silver that picked up the last
glow of red sunlight and intensified and purified it, till it seemed that she
held an acetylene light in her hand, a blinding light that forced her to look
away and flip it over.
The light
faded, leaving black spots dancing in front of her eyes. Alice May saw there
was a pin on the back of the star, but again there was nothing engraved where
she had hoped to see a name.
Alice May
put the star back in the case and closed it, letting out the breath she didn’t
know she’d held. A loud exha
262 hope chest
lation from
behind told her that the rest of her family had been holding their breaths as
well.
Next she
slid the rifle from the straps that held it in place. It felt strangely right
in her hands, and without conscious thought she worked the action, checked the
chamber was empty, and dry fired it. A second later she realized that she
didn’t know what she’d done and, at the same time, that she could do it again,
and more. She could load and fire the weapon, and strip and clean it too. It
was all in her head, even though she’d only ever fired one firearm in her life
before, and that was just her uncle Bill’s single-shot squirrel gun.
She put the
rifle back and took down the twin revolvers. They were heavy, but again she
instinctively knew their weight and heft, loaded or unloaded. She put the
revolvers, still holstered, across her lap. The flower pattern on the barrels
seemed to move and flow as she stared at them, and the heringbone cut on the
grips swung from one angle to another. The grips were some sort of bone, Alice
May realized, stained dark. Or perhaps they were ebony and had never been
stained.
She drew
one of the revolvers, and once again her hands moved without conscious thought.
She swung the cylinder out, spun it, checked it was empty, slapped it back
again, cocked and released the hammer under control, and had it back in the
holster almost before her foster family could blink.
Alice May
put the revolvers back. She didn’t even look at the box with the pokerwork ammunition
on it. She closed the trunk firmly. The lock clicked again,
and she rapidly did up the straps. Then she turned to her family.
“Best if we
don’t mention this around . . .” she started to say. Then she saw the way they
were looking at her. A look that was part confusion, part awe, and part fear.
263 across the
wall
“That
star...” said Jake.
“So bright,” said Stella.
“Your
hands...a blur . . .” said Jane.
“I don’t
want it!” burst out Alice May. “I’m not . . . it’s not me! I’m Alice May Susan
Hopkins!”
She pushed
past Jane and almost fell down the ladder in her haste to get away. The others
followed more slowly. Alice May had already run to her room, and they all could
hear her sobbing.
Jake went
back to the kitchen and his preserved lemons. Stella went back to her sewing.
Jane went to Alice May’s door, but turned aside at the last second and went
downstairs to write a letter to a friend about how nothing ever, ever happened
in Denilburg.
When Alice
May came down to breakfast the next morning, after a night of no sleep, the
others were bright and cheerful. When she tentatively tried to talk about what
had happened, it became clear that the others had either no memory of what
they had seen or were actively denying it.
Alice May
did not forget. She saw the silver star shining in her dreams, and often woke
with the feel of the rifle’s stock against her cheek, or the harsh weight of
the holstered revolvers on her thighs.
With the
dreams came a deep sense of dread. Alice May knew that the weapons and the star
were some sort of birthright, and with them came the knowledge that someday
they were to be used. She feared that day, and could not imagine who . . . or
what . . . she was supposed to shoot. Sometimes the notion that she might have
to kill a fellow human being scared her more than anything. At other times she
was more terrified by a strange notion that whatever she would ultimately
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face would
not be human.
A year
passed, and summer came again, hotter and drier than ever before. The spring
planting died in the fields, and with the small seedlings went the hopes of
both the farmers of Denilburg and the townsfolk who depended on the farmers’
making money.
At the same
time, a large number of apparently solid banks went under. It came as a
surprise, particularly since they’d weathered the credit famine of ’30 and the
bursting of the tantalum bubble two years previously. The bank crash was
accompanied by a crisis of confidence in the currency, as the country shifted
from gold and silver to aluminum and copper-nickel coins that had no intrinsic
value.
One of the
banks that failed was the Third National Faith, the bank that held most of the
meager savings of Denilburg residents. Alice May found out about it when she
came home from school, to discover Stella weeping and Jake white-faced in the
kitchen, mechanically chopping what might have once been a pumpkin.
For a while
it looked like they’d lose the drugstore, but Janice’s husband had kept a
highly illegal cache of double eagles, the ones with the Dowager Empress’s head
on them. Selling them to a “licensed coin collector” brought in just enough to
pay the Hopkinses’ debts and keep the store a going concern.
Jane had to
leave college, though. Her scholarship was adversely affected by inflation, and
Jake and Stella couldn’t afford to give her anything. Everyone expected her to
come home, but she didn’t. Instead she wrote to say that she had a job, a good
job with a great future.
It took a
few more months and a few letters before it
265 across the
wall
turned out
that Jane’s job was with a political organization called the Servants of the
State. She sent a tonatype of herself in the black uniform with the firebrand
badges and armband. Jake and Stella didn’t put it up on the mantelpiece with
the shots from her sisters’ lives.
The arrival
of Jane’s tonatype coincided with Alice May— and everyone else—spending a lot
more time thinking about the Servants. They’d seemed a harmless enough group
for many years. Just another right-wing, bigoted, reactionary, pseudomilitary
political organization with a few seats in Congress and a couple of very minor
advisory positions at the Palace.
But by the
time Jane joined the party, things had changed. The Servants had found a new
leader somewhere, a man they called the Master. He looked ordinary enough in
the newspapers, a short man with a peculiar beard, a long forelock, and
staring eyes. He had some resemblance to the kinetocomedian Harry Hopalong, who
favored the same sort of overtrimmed goatee—but the Master wasn’t funny.
The Master
clearly had some charisma that could not be captured by the tonatype process or
reproduced in print. He toured the country constantly, and wherever he
appeared, he swayed local politicians, the important businesspeople, and most
of the ordinary population. Mayors left their political parties and joined the
Servants. Oil and tantalum barons gave large donations. Professors wrote essays
supporting the economic theories of the Master. Crowds thronged to cheer and
worship at the Master’s progress.
Everywhere
the Servants grew in popularity, there were murders and arson. Opponents of the
Servants died. Minorities of every kind were persecuted, particularly the First
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People and
followers of the major heresies. Even orthodox temples whose haruspices did not
agree that fortune favored the Servants were burned to the ground.
Neither
harassment, beatings, murder, arson, or rape were properly investigated when
they were done by, or in the name of, the Servants. Or if they were, matters
never successfully came to trial, in either State or Imperial courts. Local
police left the Servants to their own devices.
The
Emperor, now a very old man roosting in the palace at Washington, did nothing.
People wistfully spoke of his glory days leading hilltop charges and shooting
bears. But that was long ago and he was senile, or close to it, and the Crown
Prince was almost terminally lazy, a genial buffoon who could not be stirred
into any sort of action.
Off in
Denilburg, Alice May was largely insulated from what was going on elsewhere.
But even in that small, sleepy town, she saw the rise of the Servants. The two
shops belonging to what the Servants called Others—pretty much anyone who
wasn’t white and a regular worshiper—had red firebrands painted across their
windows and lost most of their customers. In other towns their owners would
have been beaten or tarred and feathered, but it hadn’t yet come to that in
Denilburg.
People
Alice May had known all her life talked about the International Other
Conspiracy and how it was to blame for the bank failures, the crop failures,
and all other failures— particularly their own failures in the everyday
business of l i f e .
The fact
that something really serious was happening came home to Alice May the day that
her uncle Bill Carey walked past dressed not in his stationmaster’s green and
blue, but the
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Servants’
black and red. Alice May went out into the street to ask him what on earth he
thought he was doing. But when she stopped in front of him, she saw a strange
vacancy in his eyes. This was not the Bill Carey she had known all her life.
Instinctively she knew that something had happened to him, that the adopted
uncle she knew and loved had been changed, his natural humanity driven deep
inside him and overlaid by something horrible and poisonous.
“Praise the
Master,” snapped Bill as Alice May looked at him. His hand crawled up to his
shoulder and then snapped across his chest in the Servants’ knife-chop salute.
He didn’t
say anything else. His strange eyes stared into the distance until Alice May
stepped aside. He strode off as she rushed inside to be sick.
Later she
learned that he had been to Jarawak City, the state capital, the day before. He
had seen the Master speak, out of curiosity, as had a number of other people
from Denilburg. All of them had come back as committed Servants.
Alice May
tried to talk to Jake and Stella about Bill, but they wouldn’t listen. They
were afraid to discuss the Servants, and they would not accept that anything
had been done to Bill. As far as they were concerned, he’d simply decided to
ride with the tide.
“When times
are tough, people’ll believe anything that puts the blame somewhere,” said
Jake. “Bill Carey’s a good man, but his paycheck hasn’t kept up with inflation.
I guess he’s only just been holding on for some time, and that Master gave him
hope, somehow.”
“Hope laced
with hatred,” snapped Alice May. She still felt sick to the very bottom of her
stomach at seeing Bill in his Servants’ uniform. It was even worse than the
tonatype of Jane.
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More real, more immediate. It was wrong,
wrong, wrong.
A knock at
the door stopped the conversation. Jake and Stella exchanged frightened looks.
Alice May frowned, angry that her foster parents could be made afraid by such a
simple thing as a knock at the door. They would never have flinched before. She
went to open it like a whirlwind, rushing down the hall so fast, she knocked
the portrait of Stella’s grandsire onto the floor. Glass shattered and the
frame broke in two.
There was
no one outside, but a notice had been pushed half under the door. Alice May picked
it up, saw the black and red and the flaming torch, and stormed back inside,
slamming the door behind her.
“The
Master’s coming here! This afternoon!” she exclaimed, waving the paper in
front of her. “On a special train. He’s going to speak from it.”
She put her
finger against the bottom line.
“It says,
‘Everyone must attend,’ she said grimly. “As if we don’t have a choice who we
listen to.”
“We’d
better go,” muttered Stella. Jake nodded.
“What!”
screamed Alice May. “He’s only a politician! Stay at home.”
Jake shook
his head. “No. No. I’ve heard about what happens if you don’t go. There’s the
store to think about.”
“And my
grandsire was a Cheveril—an accommodator,” Stella said quietly. She looked down
at the splintered glass and the smashed painting. “We mustn’t give them a
reason to look into the family. We must be there.”
“I’m not
going,” announced Alice May.
“You are
while you live in this house,” snapped Jake, in a rare display of temper. “I’ll
not have all our lives and livelihood risked for some silly girl’s fancies.”
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wall
“I am not
going,” repeated Alice May. She felt strangely calm, obviously much calmer than
Jake, whose face was flushed with sudden heat, or Stella, who had gone deathly
pale.
“Then you’d
better get out altogether,” said Jake fiercely. “Go and find your real
parents.”
Stella
cried out as he spoke, and clutched at his arm, but she didn’t speak.
Alice May
looked at the only parents she had ever known. She felt as if she was in a
kinetoplay, with all of them trapped by the script. There was an inevitability
in Jake’s words, but he seemed as surprised to say them as she was to hear
them. She saw a terror deep in his eyes, and shame. He was already afraid of
what he was becoming, afraid of the place his fears were driving him toward.
“I’ll go
and pack,” she said, her voice dull to her own ears. It was not the real Jake
who had spoken, she knew. He was a timid man. He did not know how to be brave,
and anger was his only escape from acknowledging his cowardice.
Alice May
didn’t pack. She stopped by her room to pick up a pair of riding boots and then
went up to the attic. She opened the trunk, breathing a sigh of relief as the
straps and lock gave no resistance. She took out the box marked ammunition
and set it on the floor, and placed the holstered revolvers
and the belt next to the box.
Then she
stripped down to her underclothes and put on the white dress. It fitted her
perfectly, as she had known it would. She had grown in the year since her first
sight of the dress, enough that two undone shirt buttons could derail the
trains of thought and conversation of most of the boys she knew—and some of the
men.
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This dress
was not low cut, but it hugged her breasts and waist before flaring out, and it
was daringly short at an inch below her knees. The waistcoat that went over it
was also tailored to show off her figure. Strangely, it appeared to be lined
with woven strands of hair. Blond hair that was a shade identical to her own.
The dress,
even with the waistcoat, was cold to the touch, as if it had come out of an ice
chest. The temperature outside had forced the mercury out the top of the old
thermometer by the kitchen door, and it was stifling in the attic. Alice May
wasn’t even warm.
She strapped
on the revolvers next. The gun belt rested on her hips, with the holsters
lower, against her thighs. She found that the silk was double-lined there, to
guard against wear, and there were small ties to fix the snout of each holster
to her dress.
The
ammunition box opened easily. It held a dozen smaller boxes of blue tin. Alice
May was somehow not surprised by the descriptions, which were handwritten on
pasted labels. Six of the boxes were labeled “Colt .45 Fourway Silver Cross”
and six “Winchester .44-40 Silvercutter.”
She opened
a tin of the .45 Fourway Silver Cross. The squat brass cartridges were topped
with lead bullets, but each had four fat lines of silver across the top. Alice
May knew it was real silver. The .44-40 cartridges looked similar, but the
bullets were either solid silver or silver over a core of lead.
Alice May
quickly loaded both revolvers and then the rifle and filled the loops on her
belt with a mixture of both cartridges. Instinctively she knew which ammunition
to use in each weapon, and she put the .45 Silver Cross cartridges only on
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the left of
the eagle buckle and the .44-40 only on the right.
Even with
the rifle temporarily laid on the floor, the revolvers and the laden bullet
belt came to quite a load, heavy on her hips and thighs.
There was
still one thing left in the trunk. Alice May picked up the jewelry case and
opened it. The star was dull till she touched it, but it began to shine as she
pinned it on. It was heavy, too, heavier than it should have been, and her
knees buckled a little as the pin snapped in.
Alice May
stood absolutely still for a moment, breathing slowly, taking the weight that
was as much imagined as real. The light of her star slowly faded with each
breath, till it was no more than a bright piece of metal reflecting the sun.
Everything felt lighter then. Revolvers, belt, star—and her own spirits.
She closed
the trunk, sat on it, and pulled on her boots. Then she picked up the rifle and
climbed down the ladder.
No one was
downstairs. The broken glass and picture frame were still on the floor, in
total contradiction of Stella’s nature and habit. The painting itself was gone.
Alice May
let herself out the back way and quickly crossed the street to her Uncle Bill’s
house. The other Uncle Bill, Bill Hoogener. The milk carter. She wanted to talk
to him before she did... whatever she was going to do.
It was
unusually quiet on the street. A hot breeze blew, throwing up dust devils that
whirled on the fringes of the graveled road. No one was outside. There were no
children playing. No one was out walking, driving, or riding. There was only
the hot wind and Alice May’s boots crunching gravel as she walked the hundred
yards diagonally down the street to the Hoogener house.
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She stopped
at the picket fence. There was a red firebrand splashed across the partly open
door, the paint still wet and dripping. Alice May’s hands worked the lever of
her rifle without conscious thought, and she pushed the door open with the toe
of her boot.
The
coolness of her dress was spreading across her skin, only it was colder now, a
definite chill. Bill, as his surname gave away, was a descendent of Oncers,
even if he wasn’t practicing himself. The Servants reserved a special hatred
for the monotheistic Oncers.
Everything
in the hall had been broken. All of Bill’s paintings of the town and its
people, a lifetime of work, were smashed upon the floor. The wire umbrella
stand had been wrenched apart, and the canes and umbrellas it had contained
used as clubs to pummel the plasterboard. It was full of gaping holes, the
wallpaper flapping around them like torn skin.
There was
blood on the floor. Lots of blood, a great dark ocean of it close by the door,
and then smaller pools leading back into the house. A bloody handprint by the
kitchen door showed where someone—no, not someone, Alice May thought, but Bill,
her uncle Bill—had leaned for support.
She stepped
through the wreckage, colder still, colder than she had ever been. Her eyes
moved slowly from side to side, the rifle barrel with its silver flowers
following her gaze. Her finger was flat and straight against the trigger guard,
an instant away from the trigger, a shot, a death.
Uncle Bill
was in the kitchen. He was sitting with his back against the stove, his skin
pale, almost translucent against the yellow enamel of the oven door. His eyes
were open and impossibly clear, the white whiter than any milk he had ever
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wall
carted, but
his once-bright blue pupils were dulling into black, black as the undersize bow
tie that hung on his chest, the elastic broken.
His mouth
was open, a gaping, formless hole. It took Alice May a moment to realize that
his tongue had been cut
o u t .
From his
waist down, Bill’s usually immaculate whites were black, sodden, totally
saturated with blood. It still dripped from him slowly, into the patch under
his legs. Someone had used that same blood to paint a clumsy firebrand symbol
on the floor, and two words. But the blood had spread and joined in the
letters, so it was impossible to read whatever Bill’s murderers had intended.
The firebrand was enough, in any case, for the death to be claimed by the S e r
v a n t s .
Alice May
stared at her dead uncle, thinking terrible thoughts. There were no strangers
in town. She would know the murderers. She could see it so easily. The men
dressed up in their black and red, drinking whiskey to make themselves brave.
They would have passed the house a dozen times before they finally knocked on
Bill’s door. Perhaps they’d spoken normally for a minute to him, before they
pushed him back inside. Then they’d cut and cut at him as he reeled back down
his own hallway, unable to believe what was happening and unable to resist.
Bill
Hoogener had died at the hands of neighbors, without having any idea of what
was going on.
Alice May
knew what was going on. She knew it deep inside. The Master was a messenger of
evil, a corrupter of souls. The Servants were not Servants of the State, but
slaves to some awful and insidious poison that changed their very
274 hope chest
natures and
made them capable of committing such dreadful crimes as the murder of her uncle
Bill.
She stepped
toward him, toward the pool of blood. An echo answered her, another footfall,
in the yard beyond the kitchen door.
Alice May
stopped where she was, silent, waiting. The footsteps continued, then the
screen door swung open. A man came in, not really looking where he was going.
He wore a Servant’s black coat over his blue bib-and-brace overalls. There was
blood splashed above his knees. There was blood on his hands. His name was
Everett Kale, assistant butcher. He had once walked out with Jane Hopkins and
had given a much younger Alice May a single marigold from the bunch he’d
brought for Jane.
Alice May’s
star flashed bright, and Everett looked up. He saw Alice May, the star, the
leveled rifle. His hand flashed to the bone-handled skinning knife that rattled
in the broad butcher’s scabbard at his side.
The shot
was very loud in the confined space, but Alice May didn’t flinch. She worked
the lever, the action so fast the sound seemed to fall behind it, and then she
put another round into the man who had fallen back through the door. He was
already dead, but she wanted to be sure.
Noise
greeted her as she stepped outside. Shouts and surprised cries. There were
three men in the yard, looking at the dead butcher on the ground. They had got
into Bill’s home brew, and they were all holding bottles of thick, dark beer.
They dropped the bottles as Alice May came out shooting.
They were
armed with slim, new automatic pistols that fit snugly into clipped holsters at
the nipped-in waists of their black tunics. None of them managed to get a
pistol out. T h e y
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wall
were all
dead on the ground within seconds, their blood mixing with black, foaming beer,
their death throes acted out upon a bed of broken glass.
Alice May
looked at them from a weird and forbidding place inside her own head. She knew
them but felt no remorse. Butcher, baker, ne’er-do-well, and ore washer. All
men of the town.
Her hands
had done the killing. Her hands and the rifle. Even now those same hands were
reloading, taking bullets from her belt and slipping them with a satisfying
click into the tubular magazine.
Alice May
realized she had had no conscious control over her hands at all. Somewhere
between opening the front door of Bill’s house and entering the kitchen, she
had become an observer within her own body. But she didn’t feel terrified by
this. It felt right, and she realized she was still in charge of her actions.
She wasn’t a zombie or anything. She would decide where to go next, but her
body—and the weapons—would help her do whatever had to be done when she got
there.
She walked
around the still-twitching bodies and out the back gate. Onto another empty
street with the unforgiving, hot wind and the dust and the complete absence of
people.
There
should have been a crowd, come to see what the shooting was about. The town’s
two lawmen should be riding up on their matching grays. But there was only
Alice May.
She turned
down the street, toward the railway station. Her bootheels crunched on the
gravel. She felt she had never really heard that particular sound before, not
so clear, so loud.
The wind
changed direction and blew against her, stronger and hotter than ever. Dust
blew up, heavy dust that carried chunks of grit. But none hit Alice May, none
got in her eyes.
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Her white dress repelled it, the wind
seeming to divide as it hit her, great currents of dust and grit flying around
on either side.
A door
opened to her left, and she was facing it, her finger on the trigger. A man
half stepped out. Old Mr. Lacker, in his best suit, a Servants of the State
flag in his trembling hand. His left hand.
“Stay
home!” ordered Alice May. Her voice was louder than she expected. It boomed in
her ears, easily cutting through the wind.
Lacker took
another step and raised his flag.
“Stay
home!”
Another
step. Another wave of the flag. Then he reached inside his jacket and pulled
out a tiny pocket pistol, a single-shot Derringer, all ancient, tarnished
brass.
Alice May
pulled the trigger and walked on, as Old Man Lacker’s best suit suddenly
fountained blood from the lapel, a vivid buttonhole of arterial scarlet.
She
reloaded as she walked. Inside she was screaming, but nothing came out. She
hadn’t wanted to kill Mr. Lacker. He was old, harmless, no danger. He couldn’t
have hit her even if she was standing next to him.
But her
hands and the rifle had disagreed.
Alice May
knew where she had to go. The railway station. Where the Master was to arrive
in under an hour. She had to go there and kill him.
It didn’t
seem sensible to walk down the main street, so Alice May cut through the field
behind the schoolhouse. From the top of the cutting beyond the field, she
looked both ways, toward the station and out along the line.
The special
train was already at the platform. One engine,
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a tender,
and a single private car, all painted in black and red. The engine had a shield
placed on the front of the boiler above the cowcatcher. A shield with the
blazing torch of the Servants. The train must have backed up all the way from
Jarawak City, Alice May thought, just so the balcony at the rear of the private
car faced the turning circle at the end of the main street.
There were
a lot of people gathered in that turning circle. All the people whom Alice May
had expected to see in the streets. They’d come down early, to make sure they
weren’t marked as tardies or reluctant supporters. The whole population of the
town had to be there, many of them in Servants’ uniforms, and all of them
waving red-and-black flags.
Alice May
slid down the cutting and walked between the rails. This was the way she’d come
as a baby, all those years ago. But somehow she didn’t think she’d come from
Jarawak City.
All the
attention was at the rear of the train, though it was clear the Master hadn’t
yet appeared. It was too noisy for that, with the crowd cheering and the town band
playing something unrecognizable. The newspapers all made a big thing about the
total silence that fell in any audience as the Master spoke.
Alice May
crossed the line and crept down the far side of the engine. Just as she came to
the tender, an engineer stepped down. He wore denim overalls, topped with a
black Servants’ cap, complete with the badge of the flaming brand.
Alice
May’s hands moved. The butt of the rifle snapped out and the engineer went down
to the rails. He crawled around there for a moment, trying to get up, as Alice
May calmly waited for the crowd to cheer again and the band to
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crescendo
with drums and brass. As they did, she fired a single
shot into the engineer’s head and
stepped over him.
I’m
a murderer, she thought. Many times over.
I wish they’d stay out of my way.
Alice May
stepped up to the private car’s forward balcony. She tried to look inside, but
the window was smoked glass.
Alice May
tried the door. It wasn’t locked. She opened it left-handed, the rifle ready.
She had
expected a small sitting room of some kind, perhaps opulently furnished. What
she saw was an impossibly long corridor, stretching off into the distance, the
end out of sight.
The crowd
suddenly went silent at the other end of the train.
Alice May
stepped into the corridor and shut the door behind her.
It was dark
with the door closed, but her star shone more brightly, lighting the way. Apart
from its length, and the fact that the far end was shrouded in mist or smoke,
the corridor seemed pretty much like any other train corridor Alice May had
ever seen. Polished wood and metal fittings, and every few steps a compartment
door. The only strange thing was that the compartment doors all had smoked
glass windows so you couldn’t see in.
Alice May
was tempted to open a door, but she held out against the temptation. Her
business was with the Master, and he was speaking down at the far end of the
train. Who knew what she would get herself into by opening a door?
She
continued to walk as quietly as she could down the corridor. Every few steps
she would hear a sound and would freeze for a moment, her finger on the
trigger. But the sounds
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were not of
people, or weapons, or danger. They came from behind the compartment doors and
were of the sea, or wind, or falling rain.
Still the
corridor continued, and Alice May seemed no closer to the end. She started to
walk faster, and then began to run. She had to get there before the Master
finished talking, before his poison took her foster parents and everyone she
knew.
Faster and
faster, bootheels drumming, breath rasping, but still cold, cold as ice. She
felt like she was pushing against a barrier, that at any moment it would break
and she would be free of the endless corridor.
It did
break. Alice May burst out into a smoking room, one full of Servants, a long
room packed with black-and-red uniforms.
Alice May’s
hands and eyes started shooting before she even knew where she was. The rifle
was empty in what seemed like only seconds, but each bullet had struck home.
Servants slumped in their chairs, writhed on the ground, dived for cover,
clutched at weapons.
Alice May
flung the rifle aside and drew a revolver, a movement so fast that to the
shocked Servants, the rifle appeared to transform in her hands. Six more
Servants died as their nemesis fanned the hammer with her left hand, the shots
sounding together in one terrible instant.
Alice May
holstered one revolver and drew the other, right hand and left hand in perfect,
opposite motion. But there was no one left to shoot. Gun smoke mixed with cigar
and pipe smoke, swirling up into the ceiling fans. Servants coughed out their
final bloody breaths, and the last screams died away.
So this is
what they mean by a charnel house, thought
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Alice May
as she surveyed the room, calmly watching from somewhere deep inside herself as
some other part of her watched the final shudders and convulsions of dying men
and women, amidst the blood and brains and urine that spread and soaked into
the once-blue carpet.
Her
hands—but not her hands, because surely hers would be shaking—reloaded her
revolvers as she watched. Then they picked up the rifle and reloaded that.
The door
opened at the far end of the smoking room. Alice May caught a brief glimpse of
the Master’s back, caught a few of his shouted words, all of them tinged with
the hint of a scream.
Her rifle
came up as a young woman in black and red entered the room.
It was
Jane. Alice May knew it was Jane, and still her finger tightened around the
trigger.
“Hello,
Alice May,” said Jane. She didn’t look at the newly dead around her, or bother
to step back from the spreading pool of blood. “The Master said you would come.
I’m to stop you, he said, because you won’t shoot your own sister.”
She smiled
and picked up a pistol from the table. Its previous owner had slid underneath,
leaving a wet trail of blood and skin and guts against the back of his chair.
Alice May’s
finger pulled the trigger and she shot Jane. Only a last desperate exertion of
will twitched her aim away from her sister’s chest to her right arm.
“The Master
is always right,” said Jane. Her right arm hung at her side, her black sleeve
torn apart, chips of white bone strewn along it.
“No,” said
Alice May, as Jane stepped across the room
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and picked
up another pistol with her left hand. “The Master’s wrong, Jane. I have shot
you. I will shoot you again. I . . . I can’t help it. Don’t—”
“The Master
is always right,” repeated Jane, with serene confidence. She started to raise
the pistol.
This time,
Alice May wasn’t strong enough to resist the inexorable pull of the rifle. It
swung steadily to point at Jane’s chest, and it could not be turned aside.
The shot
sounded louder than any of the others, and its effect was more terrible. Jane
was knocked off her feet. She was dead before she even joined the piled-up
bodies on the floor.
Alice May
stepped over the corpses and knelt by Jane. Tears slid from her dress like rain
from glass. The white cloth could not be stained. It turned the blood and
broken flesh aside, just as it had the dust.
But her
hands were different, thought Alice May. Her hands would never be clean.
“Nothing
ever happens in Denilburg,” whispered Alice May.
She stood
up and opened the door to the rear balcony. To the gathered town, and the
Master.
He was
shouting as she came out, his arms high above his head, coming down to pound
the railing so hard that it shivered under his fists.
Alice May
didn’t listen to what he said. She pointed her rifle at the back of his head
and pulled the trigger.
A dry,
pathetic click was the only result. Alice May worked the lever. A round
ejected, brass tinkling and rolling off the balcony onto the rails below. She
pulled the trigger again, still with no result.
282 hope chest
The Master
stopped speaking and turned to face her.
Alice May’s
star burst into light. She had to shield her eyes with the rifle so she could
see.
The Master
didn’t look like much, up close. He was shorter than Alice May, and his goatee
was ridiculous. He was just a funny little man. Till you looked into his eyes.
Alice May
wished she hadn’t. His eyes were like the endless corridor, stretching back to
some nameless place, a void where nothing human could possibly exist.
“So you
killed your sister,” said the Master. His voice was almost a purr, the
screaming and shouting gone. There was no doubt that everyone outside the train
could still hear him. He had a voice that carried when he wanted it to, without
effort. “You killed Jane Elizabeth Suky Hopkins. Just like you killed Everett
Kale, Jim Bushby, Rosco O’Faln, Hubert Jenks, and Old Man Lacker. Not to
mention my people inside. You’d kill the whole town to get to me, wouldn’t
you?”
Alice May
didn’t answer, though she heard the crowd shuffle and gasp. She dropped the
rifle and drew a revolver. Or tried to. It stayed stuck fast in its holster.
She tried the left-hand gun, but it was stuck too.
“Not that
easy, is it?” whispered the Master, leaning across to speak to her alone. His
breath smelled like the room she had left behind. Of blood and shit and terror.
“There are rules, you know, between your kind and mine. You can’t draw until I
do. And fast as you are, you can’t be as fast as me. It’ll all be for nothing.
All the deaths. All the blood on your hands.”
Alice May
stepped back to give him room. She didn’t dare look at the crowd, or at the
Master’s eyes again. She looked at his hands instead.
283 across the
wall
“You can
give in, you know,” whispered the Master. “Take your sister’s place, in my
service. Even in my bed. She enjoyed that, you know. You would too.”
The Master
licked his lips. Alice May didn’t look at his long, pointed, leathery tongue.
She watched his hands.
He edged
back a little, still whispering.
“No? This
is your last chance, Alice May. Join me, and everything will turn out for the
best. No one will blame you for killing Jane or the others. Why, I’ll give you
a—”
His hand
flickered. Alice May drew.
Both of
them fired at the same time. Alice May didn’t even know where his gun had come
from. She felt something strike her chest a savage blow and she was rammed back
into the balcony rail. But she kept her revolver trained dead-center on the
Master, and her left hand fanned the hammer as she pulled the trigger
one...two... three... four . . . five times.
Then the
revolver was empty. Alice May let it fall, and she fell herself, clutching her
chest. She couldn’t breathe. Her heart hammered with the knowledge that she’d
been shot, that these were her last few seconds of life.
Something
fell into her hand. It was hot, scorching hot. She gazed at it stupidly as it
burned into her palm. Eventually she saw it was a bullet, a misshapen
projectile that was not lead but some sort of white and pallid stone.
Alice May
dropped it, though not quickly enough to avoid a burn deep enough to scar. She
tried to breathe again, and could, though there was a sharp, stabbing pain in
her lungs.
She looked
at her chest, expecting to see blood. But her waistcoat was as clean as ever,
save for a small round hole on the right-hand side, exactly parallel with the
dimming silver star on the left. Gingerly, Alice May reached in. But her hands
284 hope chest
felt only
the woven hair. There was no hole in her undershirt, and no blood.
Alice May
sat up. The Master was lying on his back on the far side of the balcony. He
looked just like a small, dead man now. The dread that Alice May had felt
before was gone.
She crawled
over, but before she could touch him, his flesh began to quiver and move. It
crawled and shivered, his face changing color from a reddish pink to a dull
silver. Then the Master’s flesh began to liquefy, to become quicksilver in fact
as well as color. The liquid splashed out of his clothes and dribbled across
the floor into a six-spoked bronze drain hole in the corner. Soon there was
nothing left of him but a small automatic pistol, a pile of clothing, and a
pair of empty boots.
Alice May
looked out on the crowd. It was already breaking up. People were taking off their
Servants’ uniforms, even down to their underwear. Others were simply walking
away. All had their heads downcast, and no one was talking.
Alice May
stood up, her hands pressed against her ribs to ease the pain. She looked out
on the crowd for her foster parents, for her surviving uncle Bill.
She saw
them, but like everybody else, they would not look toward her. Their backs were
turned, and they had their eyes set firmly toward the town.
Jake and
Stella held each other tightly and walked down the main street. They did not
look back. Uncle Bill sidled toward the platform. For a moment Alice May
thought he was going to look at her. But he didn’t.
Alice May
watched them walk away and felt them take whoever she had been with them.
The fourth
Hopkins girl, like the third, was dead to Denilburg.
285
Listlessly,
she picked up her rifle and revolver and reloaded them. Her bullet belt was
almost empty now.
She was
surprised when the engine whistled, but only for a moment. She had entered this
life on a train. It seemed only fitting to leave it the same way.
The train
gave a stuttering lurch. Smoke billowed overhead, and the wheels screeched for
a grip. Alice May opened the balcony door and went inside. The smoking room had
disappeared, taking Jane and all the other bodies with it. There was the
endless corridor again, and at her feet the steamer trunk.
Alice May
picked up one end of the trunk, opened the first compartment door she came to,
and dragged it in.
From the
platform Uncle Bill the stationmaster watched the train slowly pull away.
Before its got to the cutting, it veered off to a branch line that wasn’t there
and disappeared into the mouth of a tunnel that faded away as the private car
passed into its darkness.
Bill wiped
a tear from his eye, for a friend who had borne the same name, for a town that
had lost its innocence, and for his almost-daughter, who had paid the price for
saving them all.
286
introduction to My New Really Epic Fantasy Series
This began life as a spoken-word
piece that I wrote for a panel session at the 1999 Worldcon in Melbourne,
Australia. I learned long ago that if possible, it’s best to read something
short and funny to an audience, rather than parts of longer, serious works.
It’s usually best to avoid pieces with lots of dialogue as well, unless you’re
gifted at doing different voices or are a trained actor.
So I
wrote this piece, notionally about the new epic fantasy series I’m going to
write. Given that it would be delivered to extremely well-read fantasy readers,
I thought they would appreciate some gentle fun being poked at some of the
stereotypes and peculiarities of the genre. I took the added precaution of
apologizing in advance to some of the authors whose titles I had playfully
manipulated, just in case any rabid fans took exception. Or the authors
themselves, as at least one was there.
The
piece went over well at Worldcon, so I have repeated it a few times here and
there and eventually put it up on my website. I never expected that this would
prompt a few readers to e-mail me, one suggesting that I shouldn’t write such a
long series of books because it would take too long and I should be writing
more stories set in the Old Kingdom; and another wanting to know when the first
of the forty-seven novels would be coming out as they wanted to know what
happened to the boy with eyes the color of mud who swam with dolphins.
Somehow,
e-mailing to explain that the article is a joke took some of the fun out of it.
I trust I will not need to do so again... .
287
My New Really Epic Fantasy Series
I’m going to read
the prologue from my new forty-seven-book epic fantasy series, which is
currently titled The Garbeliad. The titles of the individual books include:
Book
One: A Time of Wheels Book
Two: A Throne of Games Book
Three: The Dragon Who Died Young Book
Four: The Sorcerer’s Thirty-seven Apprentices Book
Five: The Witch Wardrobe of Lyon Book
Six: The Dark Is Falling Book
Seven: The Seventh Book Book
Eight: The Return of the Mistakenly Purchased
King
To
tell the truth, I’m not entirely sure about the other thirty-nine books yet,
though I’m toying with The Book Whose Title Must Not Be Spoken for Book 26. You
know, to keep the series sort of atmospheric and spooky.
Anyway,
I decided that before I wrote this series, I’d analyze the components of
successful epic fantasy. Like when to
289 across the
wall
have
the ultimate evil first be mentioned and so on—should it be page forty-two or
page sixty-seven? And one thing I discovered pretty early on is that you need
to have a prologue and preferably a prophecy as well. A bird’s-eye view of
something is a bonus, and you can add that in if you like, but it’s not
essential.
So
this is the prologue and prophecy from the first book of my new
fifty-eight-book series—I just decided I’d need another eleven books to do it
properly; forty-seven isn’t enough.
Prologue: From the Secret Ledger
of the Accountant
High above the dusty
plains, an eagle whose wings stretched from side to side soared and soared and
. . . soared. Its eagle eyes focused on the ground below, seeking out tasty
vihar-vihar rabbits.
Then a
glitter caught its eye. Not the glitter of dull viharvihar rabbits. No, this
was metal, not fur.
The eagle
folded the wings that went from side to side and dropped like an eagle that has
stopped flying. Down and down and down it plummeted, until two hundred three
feet and seven inches above the ground its wings snapped out. The eagle stopped
in midair.
When it
recovered from the shock of stopping so suddenly, the great bird of prey, the
raptor of the skies, the lord of the birds, saw that the glitter came from a
metal badge. A metal badge that was fastened to a brim. The brim of a hat. A
290 my new
really epic fantasy series
hat that
was on a head. A head that was connected to a body. The body of a man who was a
traveler. This was not a viharvihar rabbit. This was not food. Still, the
eagle circled in a soaring sort of way, watching and listening. For this eagle
had not always been an eagle. It had once been an egg. But even so, it had the
gift of tongues and could understand human speech. It could speak it too,
though badly. It had a stutter because its beak was bent.
This
is what the eagle heard when the man with the metal badge on the brim of his
hat began to speak to the other men who didn’t have metal badges and thus
didn’t glitter in a way that attracted the attention of eagles that soar.
WHAT THE
MAN WITH THE METAL BADGE ON THE BRIM OF HIS HAT SAID:
Gather
round, unpleasant acquaintances, and partly listen to a tale of our
knuckle-dragging forebears and the battles they ran away from. Our recorded
history goes back some three weeks to the time that Sogren the Extremely Drunk
burned down themuseum. But I remember tales older still...going back almost ten
years, to the time when Amoss the Stupidly Generous gave the Midwinter Party
with the ice-skating accident.
Know that
this is a story before even that—back to the almost legendary but still quite
believable times of twenty years ago. The time when rumor reached the Lower
Kingdoms of a new, dark power growing without aid of fertilizer in the north.
The name of the “Overlord” was spoken softly for the first time in secret and
troubled councils. In many dark corners lips whispered it, and then trembled
with the effort of not laughing.
For the
Overlord’s name was Cecil and he was known to
291 across the
wall
have a
lisp. Naturally enough, he preferred to be referred to as “Overlord,” and
whenever his agents heard his true name spoken, dire retribution would swiftly
follow. No one was safe. The merest innocent mention of the word Cecil would
result in hideous and usually magical destruction of everyone within hearing
distance.
Within days
of the first outbreak, the town of Cecil was completely vaporized, and poor
unfortunates who had been baptized Cecil were forced to change their names to
Ardraven or Belochnazar or other wimpish monikers lacking the macho virility of
their own true names.
How is it
that I dare to mention the word Cecil to you now? I have this amulet, which
magically erases the word Cecilfrom the minds of listeners after ten minutes
have passed. Instead, you will remember a conversation littered with small
chiming sounds where the word Cecil has
been erased.
But I
digress. Where was I? Yes. Frantic messages from the Dwarves went unanswered,
as their messenger service took so long to walk over the mountains that they
weren’t actually received until three years after the dire warnings they contained
were sent. In any case, Falanor and Eminholme were unprepared to send men to
war. Instead, they offered a troop of armored monkeys and the entire population
of a reform school for small children.
This elite
force went into the mountains and never returned alive. However, they did come
back dead, even more horrible than before and in the service of Cecil . . . I
mean the Overlord.
Shocked,
the kingdoms ordered a massive mobilization, and the kings had extra horses
harnessed to their personal escape chariots. Yet even as they extracted the
most valuable items from their treasuries, many feared it would be too late.
292 my new
really epic fantasy series
The forces
of Cecil were on the march. Slowly, it is true, for dead Dwarves march even
slower than live ones. Yet it became clear to the minds of the Wise that within
the next seventeen years something must be done.
But it
seemed that there was no power in the south that could resist the Overlord. For
he was the mightiest sorcerer in his age bracket, the winner of all the gold
medals in the Games of the Seventeenth Magiad. He was also a champion shotputter,
who practiced with the skulls of his enemies filled with lead. And his teams of
goblin synchronized swimmers could cross any moat, could emerge at any time in
private swimming pools, or even infiltrate via the drains, dressed in clown
suits. No one was safe.
It was then
that the Wise remembered the words written on the silver salad bowl they had
been using for official luncheons the last hundred years. It was brought from
the kitchens, and despite the scratches and dents from serving utensils, the
Wise could still make out the runes that said “Sibyl Prophecy Plate. Made in
Swychborgen-orgen-sorgen-lorgen exclusively for aeki.”
The other
side appeared completely blank. But when olive oil was drizzled upon it,
strange runes appeared around the rim. Slowly, letter by letter, the Wise began
to spell it out.
“A
s-a-i-l-o-r w-e-n-t t-o s-e-a s-e-a s-e-a t-o s-e-e w-h-a-t h-e c-o-u-l-d s-e-e
s-e-e s-e-e.”
Days
went by, then weeks, then months, as you would expect. If it was the other way
around, it would be a sign that the Overlord had already triumphed. Finally the
Wise puzzled out the entire prophecy.
A sailor
went to sea sea sea to see what he could see see see
293 But all
that he could see see see
Was the
bottom of the deep blue sea sea sea
The meaning
of this prophecy was immediately clear to the Wise. They knew that somewhere in
the Lower Kingdoms a boy would be born, a sailor who would use the power of the
sea to defeat the Overlord. A boy with eyes as black as the bottom of the deep
blue sea. A boy who might even have vestigial gills and some scales or maybe a
sort of fin along his back.
But the
Wise also knew that the Overlord would know the prophecy too, for his spies
were everywhere, particularly among the waiters at the Wise Club. They knew
that he knew that they knew that he knew.
They all
knew that the Wise must find the boy with the power of the sea at his command
first, and take him somewhere where he could grow up with no knowledge of his
powers or his destiny. They must find him before the Overlord did, for he
would try to turn the boy to the powers of darkness.
But who was
the boy? Where was the boy? Was there a second salad bowl, a second verse to
the prophecy, long lost to the Wise but known to an aged crone in the forest of
Haz-chyllen-boken-woken, close by the sea, where a small boy with eyes the
color of dark mud swam with the dolphins?
Yes, there
was.
294
introduction to Three Roses
I wrote this story the day before I
needed to read something at an event in Melbourne in late 1997. The occasion
was the annual celebration organized by Australian children’s literature
champion Agnes Nieuwenhuizen for librarians, teachers, and book aficionados,
and this one was entitled “An Enchanted Evening.” Half a dozen authors were to
speak, each reading or telling a story about love or in some way related to
love.
I
don’t know why I wrote a story about a dead wife, since at that time I was
single, I had never been married, nor had I ever had a significant partner die.
I also don’t know why it came out as a fable or fairy tale. Part of it was
written on a plane, and part in a hotel room. It wasn’t even typed when I read
it for the first time at “An Enchanted Evening.”
But
it surely was a tale of love, and the evening was indeed enchanted, as I met my
future wife, Anna, there. So perhaps it is the most important story I have ever
written, for the greatest reward.
295
Three
Roses
This is the story
of a gardener who grew the most beautiful single rose the
world had ever seen. It was a black rose, which was unlikely, and it bloomed
the whole year round, which was impossible.
Hearing of
this rose, the King decided to see it for himself. With his entourage, he rode
for seven days to the gardener’s simple cottage. On the morning of the seventh
day, he arrived and saw the rose. It was even more beautiful than the King had
imagined, and he wanted it.
“How did
you come to grow such a beautiful rose?” the King asked the gardener, who was
standing silently by.
“I planted
that rose on the day my wife died,” replied the gardener, looking only at the
flower. “It is a true, deep black, the very color of her hair. The rose grew
from my love of her.”
The King
turned to his servants and said, “Uproot this rosebush and take it to the
palace. It is too beautiful for anyone but me.”
But when
the rosebush was transplanted to the palace, it lasted only a year before it
withered and died. The King, who had gazed upon it every day, angrily decided
that it was the gardener’s fault, and he set out at once to punish him.
297 across the
wall
But when he
arrived at the gardener’s cottage, he was amazed to see a new rosebush growing
there, with a single rose. But this rose was green, and even more beautiful
than the black rose.
The King
once again asked the gardener how he came to grow such a beautiful rose.
“I planted
this rose on the anniversary of my wife’s death,” said the gardener, his eyes
only on the rose. “It is the color of her eyes, which I looked into every
morning. The rose grew from my love of her.”
“Take it!”
commanded the King, and he turned away to ride the seven days back to his
palace. Such a beautiful flower was not fit for a common man.
The green
rose bloomed for two years, and the King looked upon it every day, for it
brought him great contentment. Then, one morning, it was dead, the bush
withered, the petals fallen to the ground. The King picked up the petals and
spoke to no one for two days. Then he said, as if to convince himself, “The
gardener will have another rose.”
So once
again he rode off with his entourage. This time, they took a spade and the
palace jardinier.
Such was
the King’s impatience that they rode for half the nights as well as days, but
there were wrong turns and flooded bridges, and it still took seven days before
he once again rode up to the gardener’s cottage. And there was a new rosebush,
with a single rose. A red rose, so beautiful that the King’s men were struck
silent and the King himself could only stare and gesture to the palace
jardinier to take it away.
Even though
the King didn’t ask, the gardener spoke before the spade broke the earth around
the bush.
“I planted
this rose three years after the death of my wife,”
298 three roses
he said. “It
is the color of her lips, which I first kissed under a harvest moon on the
hottest of summer nights. This rose grew from my love of her.”
The King
seemed not to hear but kept staring at the rose. Finally, he tore his gaze away
and turned his horse for home.
The
jardinier watched him go and stopped digging for a moment.
“Your roses
are the most beautiful I have ever seen,” he said. “They could only grow from a
great love. But why grow them only to have these memories taken from you?”
The
gardener smiled and said, “I need nothing to remind me of my wife. When I walk
alone under the night sky, I see the blackness of her hair. When the light
catches the green glass of a bottle, I see her eyes. When the sun is setting
all red against the hills and the wind touches my cheek, I feel her kiss.
“I grew the
first rose because I was afraid I might forget. When it was gone, I knew that I
had lost nothing. No one can take the memory of my love.”
The
jardinier frowned, and he began to cut again with his spade. Then he asked,
“But why do you keep growing the roses?”
“I grow
them for the King,” said the gardener. “He has no memories of his own, no love.
And after all, they are only flowers.”
299
introduction to Endings
This is one of those odd stories that
come out of nowhere. It was written in one sitting and then revisited numerous
times over several years as I tried to make it work. Finally, when I thought
it did work, I wasn’t sure what I could do with it, as it was very short.
Fortunately, a year or so after I felt it was done, an opportunity arose for it
to be the final story in the anthology Gothic!, edited by Deborah Noyes. As a kind of coda for the whole
collection, it found its place in the world.
I was
particularly pleased (and surprised) that this story also then went on to be
selected for the inaugural volume of The Year’s
Best Science Fiction & Fantasy for Teens,
edited by Jane Yolen and Patrick Nielsen Hayden. It’ll be interesting to see if
they put it at the end, as at the time of this writing I haven’t seen that
book.
If
they do put it at the end, as it is in this book, I can draw all the wrong
conclusions (like a Hollywood studio looking at last summer’s hits) and will
immediately begin work on a story called “Beginnings” and another one called “Middlings,”
in order to maximize my chances of inclusion in future collections.
301
Endings
I have two swords.
One is named Sorrow and the other Joy. These are not their real names. I do not
think there is anyone alive who knows even the letters that are etched into the
blue-black blades.
I know, but
then I am not alive. Yet not dead. Something in between, hovering in the
twilight, betwixt wakefulness and sleep, caught on the boundary, pinned to the
board, unable to go back, unable to go forward.
I do rest,
but it is not sleep and I do not dream. I simply remember, the memories
tumbling over one another, mixing and joining and mingling till I do not know
when or where or how or why, and by nightfall it is unbearable and I rise from
my troubled bed to howl at the moon or pace the corridors. . . .
Or
sit beneath the swords in the old cane chair, waiting for the chance of a
visitor, the chance of change, the chance . . .
I have two daughters. One is named
Sorrow and the other Joy.
These are
not their real names. I do not think even they remember what they were called
in the far-distant days of their youth. Neither they nor I can recall their
mother’s name,
303 across the
wall
though
sometimes in my daytime reveries I catch a glimpse of her face, the feel of her
skin, the taste of her mouth, the swish of a sleeve as she leaves the room and
my memory.
They
are hungrier than I, my daughters, and still have the thirst for blood.
This story has two endings. One is named
Sorrow and the
other Joy.
This is the
first ending:
A great
hero comes to my house without caution, as the sun falls. He is in the prime of
life, tall and strong and arrogant. He meets my daughters in the garden, where
they stand in the shade of the great oak. Two steps away lies the last
sunlight, and he is clever enough to make use of that, and strong. There is
pretended a m o u r on
both sides, and fangs strike true. Yet the hero is swifter with his silvered
knife, and the sun is too close.
Silver
poisons, and fire burns, and that is the finish of Sorrow and the end of Joy.
Weakened,
the hero staggers on, intent on finishing the epic that will be written about
him. He finds me in the cane chair, and above me Sorrow and Joy.
I give him
the choice and tell him the names.
He chooses
Sorrow, not realizing that this is what he chooses for himself, and the blades
are aptly named.
I do not
feel sorrow for him, or for my daughters, but only for myself.
I
do drink his blood. It has been a long time . . . and he was a hero.
This is the second ending: A young man
not yet old enough to be a hero, great or
304 endings
small, comes to my garden with the dawn.
He watches me through the window, and though I delay, at last I must shuffle
out of the cane chair, toward my bed.
There are
bones at my feet, and a skull, the flesh long gone. I do not know whose bones
they are. There are many skulls and bones about this house.
The boy
enters through the window, borne on a shaft of sunlight. I pause in the
shadowed doorway to watch as he examines the swords. His lips move, puzzling
out what is written there, or so I must suppose. Perhaps no alphabet or language
is ever really lost, as long as some of it survives.
He will get
no help from that ancient script, from that ancient life.
I call out
the names I have given the swords, but he does not answer.
I do not
see which weapon he chooses. Already memories rush at me, push at me, buffet
and surround me. I do not know what has happened or will happen or might
happen.
I am in my
bed. The youth stands over me, the point of a sword pricking at my chest.
It is Joy
and, I think, chosen through wisdom, not by luck. Who would have thought it of
a boy not yet old enough to shave?
The steel
is cold. Final. Yet only dust bubbles from the wound.
Then comes
the second blow, to the dry bones of the neck.
I have been
waiting a long time for this ending.
Waiting for
someone to choose for me.
To give me
Joy instead of Sorrow.
305
About
the Author
Garth
Nix grew up in Canberra, Australia. Besides
being a full-time writer, he has worked as a sales rep, publicist, editor,
marketing communications consultant, and part-time literary agent. He is the
author of SABRIEL, LIRAEL,
and ABHORSEN,
the books in The Abhorsen Trilogy, as well as SHADE’S
CHILDREN and THE
RAGWITCH. He now lives in Sydney, a five-minute
walk from Coogee Beach, with his wife, Anna, his sons, Thomas and Edward, and
lots of books.
Don’t miss the next book by your
favorite author. Sign up now for AuthorTracker by visiting
www.AuthorTracker.com.
306
also
by garth nix
Sabriel
Lirael Abhorsen Shade’s Children The Ragwitch
credits
Typography by Robert Hult
Jacket
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Copyrightt
Across the Wall: A Tale of the Abhorsen
and other stories Copyright © 2005 by Garth Nix
“Nicholas Sayre and the Creature in the Case”: Copyright ©
2005 by Garth Nix. First published for World BookDay 2005 by HarperCollins
Publishers, UK.“Under the Lake”: Copyright © 2001 by Garth Nix. First published
in The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction(USA), February 2001,
USA.“Charlie Rabbit”: Copyright © 2005 by Garth Nix. First published in Kids’
Night In, collected for War Child,HarperCollins Publishers, UK and
Australia.“From the Lighthouse”: Copyright © 1996 by Garth Nix. Published in
Fantastic Worlds, edited by Paul Collins,HarperCollins Publishers, Australia,
1998.“The Hill”: Copyright © 2001 by Garth Nix. First published in X-Changes:
Stories for a New Century, Allen &Unwin, Australia.“Lightning Bringer”:
Copyright © 2001 by Garth Nix. First published in Love & Sex, edited by
Michael Cart,Simon & Schuster, USA, and on Salon.com.“Down to the Scum
Quarter”: Copyright © 1987 by Garth Nix. First published in the magazines Myths
andL e g e n d s (1987) and B r e a k o u t ! ( 1 9 8 8 ) .“Heart’s Desire”:
Copyright © 2002 by Garth Nix. First published in The Road to Camelot, edited
by SophieMasson, Random House, Australia, and The Magazine of Fantasy &
Science Fiction, January 2004, USA.“Hansel’s Eyes”: Copyright © 2000 by Garth
Nix. First published in A Wolf at the Door, edited by Ellen Datlowand Terri
Windling, Simon & Schuster, 2000, USA.“Hope Chest”: Copyright © 2003 by
Garth Nix. First published in F i r e b i r d s, edited by Sharyn
November,Penguin 2003, USA.“My New Really Epic Fantasy Series”: Copyright ©
1999 by Garth Nix.“Three Roses”: Copyright © 2000 by Garth Nix. First published
inE i d o l o n,Autumn 2000, Australia.“Endings”: Copyright © 2004 by Garth Nix.
First published in Gothic! Ten Original Dark Tales,edited by Deborah Noyes,
Candlewick Press, USA.
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June 2005 ISBN 0-06-085852-4
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Nix,
Garth. Across the Wall: A tale of the Abhorsen and other stories / Garth Nix. —
1st ed.
p. cm.
Summary: A collection of fantasy short stories plus a novella that is set in
the world of the
Abhorsen
trilogy. ISBN-10: 0-06-074713-7 — ISBN-10: 0-06-074714-5 (lib. bdg.) ISBN-13:
978-0-06-074713-8 — ISBN-13: 978-0-06-074714-5 (lib. bdg.)
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