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"There's no time," Gentle said. "Tell him, Pie! We have to go now or not at all. Pie? Are you with us?"
"Yes..."
"Then stop dreaming and let's get going."
Still protesting that they couldn't leave the rest under lock and key, Scopique led the quintet up by a back way into the night air. They came out not onto the parapet but onto bare rock.
"Which way now?" Gentle asked.
There was already a proliferation of shouts from below. N'ashap had doubtless been liberated and would be ordering a full alert.
"We have to head for the nearest landfall."
"That's the peninsula," Scopique said, redirecting Gentle's gaze across the Cradle towards an arm of low-lying land that was barely discernible in the murk of the night.
That murk was their best ally now. If they moved fast enough it would cloak them before their pursuers even knew which direction they'd headed in. There was a beetling pathway down the island's face to the sh.o.r.e, and Gentle led the way, aware that every one of the four who were following was a liability: Huzzah a child, her father still racked by guilt, Scopique casting backwards glances, and Pie still dazed by the bloodshed. This last was odd in a creature he'd first encountered in the guise of a.s.sa.s.sin, but then this journey had changed them both.
As they reached the sh.o.r.e, Scopique said, "I'm sorry, I can't go. You all head on. I'm going to try and get back in and let the others out."
Gentle didn't attempt to persuade him otherwise. "If that's what you want to do, good luck," he said. "We have to go."
"Of course you do! Pie, I'm sorry, my friend, but I couldn't live with myself if I turned my back on the others. We've suffered too long together." He took the mystifs hand. "Before you say it, I'll stay alive. I know my duty, and I'll be ready when the time comes."
"I know you will," the mystif replied, drawing the handshake into an embrace.
"It will be soon," Scopique said.
"Sooner than I'd wish," Pie replied; then, leaving Scopique to head back up the cliff face, the mystif joined Gentle, Huzzah, and Aping, who were already ten yards from the sh.o.r.e.
The exchange between Pie and Scopique-with its intimation of a shared agenda hitherto kept secret-had not gone unnoted by Gentle; nor would it go unquestioned. But this was not the time. They had at least half a dozen miles to travel before they reached the peninsula, and there was already a swell of noise from behind them, signaling pursuit. Torch beams raked the sh.o.r.e as the first of N'ashap's troops emerged to give chase, and from within the walls of the asylum rose the din of the prisoners, finally giving voice to their rage. That, like the murk, might confound the hounds, but not for long.
The torches had found Scopique, and the beams now scanned the sh.o.r.e he'd been ascending from, each sweep wider than the one that preceded it. Aping was carrying Huzzah, which speeded their progress somewhat, and Gentle was just beginning to think that they might stand a chance of survival when one of the torches caught them. It was weak at such a distance, but strong enough that its light picked them out. Gunfire followed immediately. They were difficult targets, however, and the bullets went well wide.
"They'll catch us now," Aping gasped. "We should surrender." He set his daughter down and threw his gun to the ground, turning to spit his accusations in Gentle's face. "Why did I ever listen to you? I was crazy crazy."
"If we stay here they'll shoot us on the spot," Gentle replied. "Huzzah as well. Do you want that?"
"They won't shoot us," he said, taking hold of Huzzah with one hand and raising the other to catch the beams. "Don't shoot!" he yelled. "Don't shoot! Captain? Captain! Sir! We surrender!"
"f.u.c.k this," Gentle said, and reached to haul Huzzah from her father's grip.
She went into Gentle's arms readily, but Aping wasn't about to relinquish her so easily. He turned to s.n.a.t.c.h her back, and as he did so a bullet struck the ice at their feet. He let Huzzah go and turned to attempt a second appeal. Two shots cut him short, the first striking his leg, the second his chest. Huzzah let out a shriek and wrenched herself from Gentle's hold, dropping to the ground at her father's head.
The seconds they'd lost in Aping's surrender and death were the difference between the slimmest hope of escape and none. Any one of the twenty or so troops advancing upon them now could pick them off at this distance. Even N'ashap, who was leading the group, his walk still unsteady, could scarcely have failed to bring them down. "What now?" said Pie.
"We have to stand our ground," Gentle replied. "We've got no choice."
That very ground, however, was no steadier than N'ashap's walk. Though this Dominion's suns were in another hemisphere and there was only midnight from horizon to horizon, a tremor was moving through the frozen sea that both Pie and Gentle recognized from almost fatal experience. Huzzah felt it too. She raised her head, her sobs quieting.
"The Lady," she murmured. "What about her?" said Gentle. "She's near us."
Gentle put out his hand, and Huzzah took it. As she got up she scanned the ground. So did he. His heart had started to pound furiously, as the memories of the Cradle's liquefaction flooded back.
"Can you stop her?" he murmured to Huzzah. "She's not come for us," the girl said, and her gaze went from the still solid ground beneath their feet to the group that N'ashap was still leading in their direction. "Oh, G.o.ddess..." Gentle said.
A cry of alarm was rising from the middle of the approaching pack. One of the torch beams went wild, then another, and another, as one by one the soldiers realized their jeopardy. N'ashap let out a shout himself: a demand for order among his troops that went un.o.beyed. It was difficult to see precisely what was going on, but Gentle could imagine it well enough. The ground was softening, and the Cradle's silver waters were bubbling up around their feet. One of the men fired into the air as the sea's sh.e.l.l broke beneath him; another two or three started back towards the island, only to find their panic excited a quicker dissolution. They went down as if s.n.a.t.c.hed by sharks, silver spume fountaining where they'd stood. N'ashap was still attempting to preserve some measure of command, but it was a lost cause. Realizing this, he began to fire towards the trio, but with the ground rocking beneath him, and the beams no longer trained on his targets, he was virtually shooting blind.
"We should get out of here," Gentle said, but Huzzah had better advice.
"She won't hurt us if we're not afraid," she said. Gentle was half tempted to reply that he was indeed afraid, but he kept his silence and his place, despite the fact that the evidence of his eyes suggested the G.o.ddess had no patience with dividing the bad from the misguided or the unrepentant from the prayerful. All but four of their pursuers-N'ashap numbered among them-had already been claimed by the sea, some gone beneath the tide entirely, others still struggling to reach some solid place. Gentle saw one man scrambling up out of the water, only to have the ground he was crawling upon liquefy beneath him with such speed the Cradle had closed over him before he had time to scream. Another went down shouting at the water that was bubbling up around him, the last sight of him his gun, held high and still firing.
All the torch carriers had succ.u.mbed now, and the only illumination was from the cliff top, where soldiers who'd had the luck to be left behind were training their beams on the ma.s.sacre, throwing into silhouette the figures of N'ashap and the other three survivors, one of whom was making an attempt to race towards the solid ground where Gentle, Pie, and Huzzah stood. His panic undid him. He'd only run five strides when silvery foam bubbled up in front of him. He turned to retrace his steps, but the route had already gone to seething silver. In desperation he flung away his weapons and attempted to leap to safety, but fell short and went from sight in an instant.
One of the remaining trio, an Oethac, had fallen to his knees to pray, which merely brought him closer to his executioner, who drew him down in the throes of his imprecation, giving him time only to s.n.a.t.c.h at his comrade's leg and pull him down at the same time. The place where they'd vanished did not cease to seethe but redoubled its fury now. N'ashap, the last alive, turned to face it, and as he did so the sea rose up like a fountain, until it was half his height again.
"Lady," Huzzah said.
It was. Carved in water, a breasted body, and a face dancing with glints and glimmers: the G.o.ddess, or her image, made of her native stuff, then gone the same instant as it broke and dropped upon N'ashap. He was borne down so quickly, and the Cradle left rocking so placidly the instant after, it was as though his mother had never made him.
Slowly, Huzzah turned to Gentle. Though her father was dead at her feet, she was smiling in the gloom, the first open smile Gentle had seen on her face.
"The Cradle Lady came," she said.
They waited awhile, but there were no further visitations. What the G.o.ddess had done-whether it was to save the child, as Huzzah would always believe, or because circ.u.mstance had put within her reach the forces that had tainted Her Cradle with their cruelty-She had done with an economy She wasn't about to spoil with gloating or sentiment. She closed the sea with the same efficiency She'd employed to open it, leaving the place unmarked.
There was no further attempt at pursuit from the guards left on the cliff, though they kept their places, torches piercing the murk.
"We've got a lot of sea to cross before dawn," Pie said.
"We don't want the suns coming up before we reach the peninsula."
Huzzah took Gentle's hand. "Did Papa ever tell you where we're going in Yzordderrex?"
"No," he said. "But we'll find the house." She didn't look back at her father's body, but fixed her eyes on the gray bulk of the distant headland and went without complaint, sometimes smiling to herself, as she remembered that the night had brought her a glimpse of a parent that would never again desert her.
29
The territory that lay between the sh.o.r.es of the Cradle and the limits of the Third Dominion had been, until the Autarch's intervention, the site of a natural wonder universally held to mark the center of the Imajica: a column of perfectly hewn and polished rock to which as many names and powers had been ascribed as there were shamans, poets, and storytellers to be moved by it. There was no community within the Reconciled Dominions that had not enshrined it in their mythology and found an epithet to mark it as their own. But its truest name was also perhaps its plainest: the Pivot. Controversy had raged for centuries about whether the Unbeheld had set it down in the smoky wastes of the Kwem to mark the midpoint between the perimeters of the Imajica, or whether a forest of such columns had once stood in the area, and some later hand (moved, perhaps, by Hapexamendios' wisdom) had leveled all but this one.
Whatever the arguments about its origins, however, n.o.body had ever contested the power that it had accrued standing at the center of the Dominions. Lines of thought had pa.s.sed across the Kwem for centuries, carrying a freight of force which the Pivot had drawn to itself with a magnetism that was virtually irresistible. By the time the Autarch came into the Third Dominion, having already established his particular brand of dictators.h.i.+p in Yzordderrex, the Pivot was the single most powerful object in the Imajica. He laid his plans for it brilliantly, returning to the palace he was still building in Yzordderrex and adding several features, though their purpose did not become apparent until almost two years later, when, acting with the kind of speed that usually attends a coup, he had the Pivot toppled, transported, and set in a tower in his palace before the blood of those who might have raised objections to this sacrilege was dry.
Overnight, the geography of the Imajica was transformed. Yzordderrex became the heart of the Dominions. Thereafter, there would be no power, either secular or sacred, that did not originate in that city; there would be no crossroads sign in any of the Reconciled Dominions that did not carry its name, nor any highway that did not have upon it somewhere a pet.i.tioner or penitent who'd turned his eyes towards Yzordderrex in hope of salvation. Prayers were still uttered in the name of the Unbeheld, and blessings murmured in the forbidden names of the G.o.ddesses, but Yzordderrex was the true Lord now, the Autarch its mind and the Pivot its phallus.
One hundred and seventy-nine years had pa.s.sed since the day the Kwem had lost its great wonder, but the Autarch still made pilgrimages into the wastes when he felt the need for solitude. Some years after the removal of the Pivot he'd had a small palace built close to the place where it had stood, spartan by comparison with the architectural excesses of the folly that crowned Yzordderrex. This was his retreat in confounding times, where he could meditate upon the sorrows of absolute power, leaving his Military High Command, the generals who ruled the Dominions on his behalf, to do so under the eye of his once-beloved Queen, Quaisoir. Lately she had developed a taste for repression that was waning in him, and he'd several times thought of retiring to the palace in the Kwem permanently and leaving her to rule in his stead, given that she took so much more pleasure from it than he. But such dreams were an indulgence, and he knew it. Though he ruled the Imajica invisibly-not one soul, outside the circle of twenty or so who dealt with him daily, would have known him from any other white man with good taste in clothes-his vision had shaped the rise of Yzordderrex, and no other would ever competently replace it.
On days like this, however, with the cold air off the Lenten Way whining in the spires of the Kwem Palace, he wished he could send the mirror he met in the morning back to Yzordderrex in his place and let his reflection rule. Then he could stay here and think about the distant past: England in midsummer. The streets of London bright with rain when he woke, the fields outside the city peaceful and buzzing with bees. Scenes he pictured longingly when he was in elegiac mood. Such moods seldom lasted long, however. He was too much of a realist, and he demanded truth from his memory. Yes, there had been rain, but it had come with such venom it had bruised every fruit it hadn't beaten from the bough. And the hush of those fields had been a battlefield's hush, the murmur not trees but flies, come to find laying places.
His life had begun that summer, and his early days had been filled with signs not of love and fruitfulness but of Apocalypse. There wasn't a preacher in the park who didn't have Revelation by heart that year, nor a wh.o.r.e in Drury Lane who wouldn't have told you she'd seen the Devil dancing on the midnight roofs. How could those days not have influenced him: filled him with a horror of imminent destruction, given him an appet.i.te for order, for law, for Empire Empire? He was a child of his times, and if they'd made him cruel in his pursuit of system, was that his his fault or that of the fault or that of the age age?
The tragedy lay not in the suffering that was an inevitable consequence of any social movement, but in the fact that his achievements were now in jeopardy from forces that-if they won the day-would return the Imajica to the chaos from which he had brought it, undoing his work in a fraction of the time it had taken for it to be achieved. If he was to suppress these subversive elements he had a limited number of options, and after the events in Patashoqua, and the uncovering of plots against him, he had retreated to the quiet of the Kwem Palace to decide between them. He could continue to treat the rebellions, strikes, and uprisings as minor irritations, limiting his reprisals to small but eloquent acts of suppression, such as the burning of the village of Beatrix and the trials and executions at Vanaeph. This route had two significant disadvantages. The most recent attempt upon his life, though still inept, was too close for comfort, and until every last radical and revolutionary had been silenced or dissuaded, he would be in danger. Furthermore, when his whole reign had been dotted with episodes that had required some measured brutalities, would this new spate of purges and suppressions make any significant mark? Perhaps it was time for a more ambitious vision: cities put under martial law; Tetrarchs imprisoned so that their corruptions could be exposed in the name of a just Yzordderrex, governments toppled, and resistance met with the full might of the Second Dominion's armies. Maybe Patashoqua would have to burn the way Beatrix had. Or L'Himby and its wretched temples.
If such a route were followed successfully, the slate would be wiped clean. If not-if his advisers had underestimated the scale of unrest or the quality of leaders among the rabble-he might find the circle closing and the Apocalypse into which he'd been born that faraway summer coming around again, here in the heart of his promised land.
What then, if Yzordderrex burned instead of Patashoqua? Where would he go for comfort? Back to England, perhaps? Did the house in Clerkenwell still stand, he wondered, and if so were its rooms still sacred to the workings of desire, or had the Maestro's undoing scoured them to the last board and nail? The questions tantalized him. As he sat and pondered them he found a curiosity in his core-no, more than curiosity, an appet.i.te-to discover what the Unreconciled Dominion was like almost two centuries after his creation.
His musings were interrupted by Rosengarten, a name he'd bequeathed to the man in the spirit of irony, for a more infertile thing never walked. Piebald from a disease caught in the swamps of Loquiot in the throes of which he had unmanned himself, Rosengarten lived for duty. Among the generals, he was the only one who didn't sin with some excess against the austerity of these rooms. He spoke and moved quietly; he didn't stink of perfumes; he never drank; he never ate kreauchee. He was a perfect emptiness, and the only man the Autarch completely trusted.
He had come with news and told it plainly. The asylum on the Cradle of Chzercemit had been the scene of a rebellion. Almost all the garrison had been killed, under circ.u.mstances which were still under investigation, and the bulk of the prisoners had escaped, led by an individual called Scopique.
"How many were there?" the Autarch asked.
"I have a list, sir," Rosengarten replied, opening the file he'd brought with him. "There are fifty-one individuals unaccounted for, most of them religious dissidents."
"Women?"
"None."
"We should have had them executed, not locked them away."
"Several of them would have welcomed martyrdom, sir. The decision to incarcerate them was taken with that in mind."
"So now they'll return to their flocks and preach revolution all over again. This we must stop. How many of them were active in Yzordderrex?"
"Nine. Including Father Athanasius."
"Athanasius? Who was he?"
"The Dearther who claimed he was the Christos. He had a congregation near the harbor."
"Then that's where he'll return, presumably."
"It seems likely."
"All of them'll go back to their flocks, sooner or later.
We must be ready for them. No arrests. No trials. Just have them quietly dispatched."
"Yes, sir."
"I don't want Quaisoir informed of this."
"I think she already knows, sir."
"Then she must be prevented from anything showy."
"I understand."
"Let's do this discreetly."
"There is is something else, sir." something else, sir."
"What's that?"
"There were two other individuals on the island before the rebellion-"
"What about them?"
"It's difficult to know exactly what to make of the report. One of them appears to have been a mystif. The description of the other may be of interest."
He pa.s.sed the report to the Autarch, who scanned it quickly at first, then more intently.
"How reliable is this?" he asked Rosengarten.
"At this juncture I don't know. The descriptions were corroborated, but I haven't interrogated the men personally."
"Do so."
"Yes, sir."
He handed the report back to Rosengarten. "How many people have seen this?"
"I had all other copies destroyed as soon as I read it. I believe only the interrogating officers, their commander, and myself have been party to this information."
"I want every one of the survivors from the garrison silenced. Court-martial them all and throw away the key. The officers and the commander must be instructed that they will be held accountable for any leakage of this information, from any source. Such leakage to be punishable by death."
"Yes, sir."
"As for the mystif and the stranger, we must a.s.sume they're making way to the Second Dominion. First Beatrix, now the Cradle. Their destination must be Yzordderrex. How many days since this uprising?"
"Eleven, sir."
"Then they'll be in Yzordderrex in a matter of days, even if they're travelling on foot. Track them. I'd like to know as much about them as I can."
He looked out the window at the wastes of the Kwem.
"They probably took the Lenten Way. Probably pa.s.sed within a few miles of here." There was a subtle agitation in his voice. "That's twice now our paths have come close to crossing. And now the witnesses, describing him so well. What does it mean, Rosengarten? What does it mean?"
When the commander had no answers, as now, he kept his silence: an admirable trait.
"I don't know either," the Autarch said. "Perhaps I should go out and take the air. I feel old today."