The Graveyard Game (Company)

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The Graveyard Game (Company) Page 13

by Kage Baker


  Pale blue eyes, just as Lewis had always thought, and high color in his face, yes, just as Mendoza had described it. Mendoza! If he could only tell Edward, if he could warn him, as he hadn’t been able to warn Mendoza—

  “I will not be silenced,” Edward said grimly, looking him in the eye. Having said that, he straightened, kept going up and up, lengthening, and he seemed to have stepped back into the facade of a building too. No, he had become part of the facade behind him. For a second Lewis could still make out his face, rigid in stone; then the features faded, and Lewis was staring up at a great Ionic column, one of three holding up the pediment of an enormous neoclassical public building.

  He knew the building, it dated from the early twenty-first century and was a copy of the Temple of Zeus at Lemnos. Lewis looked around in confusion, uncertain whether he had just awakened after a spectacular episode of sleepwalking. Cripples, pigeons, shopkeepers, traffic, all very real, and here was the morning sunlight just creeping over to illuminate the inscription in sedate Roman capitals on the front of the building:

  NEW SYON HOUSE

  2355 BOND STREET

  “Surely, that’s wrong, though,” he found himself saying to his reading lamp. He sat up. He was in his room in the gray morning light.

  And in fact the address proved to be wrong, when he showered, shaved, and went running out into the real morning of London to see; though only in respect to being at No. 205 Bond Street. Every other detail was just as he had seen it in his nightmare. Was that even a suggestion of an aloof face, in the design of the capital on the middle column?

  Lewis murmured a prayer of thanks to Carl Jung. He even did a little skipping dance in his honor as he hurried home, for this was the intuitive leap he had needed to make.

  New Syon House was some sort of government office. You could go in and fill out forms on the ground floor, and the clerk would forward them somewhere for you. Lewis knew, as any other operative of Dr. Zeus knew, that the place was actually a dump for outworn state secrets. It was an archive of documents that had never been declassified but that were now so old, there was nobody left alive who even knew why they had been secrets in the first place or (in the case of some encoded material to which the keys had been lost) what they even were about.

  When the time came to transform moldy sheepskin into magnetic ink, somebody dutifully encrypted everything and shredded the originals. There the secrets hid, to this day, in databanks never accessed from one year’s end to the next, masses of arcane gibberish.

  For an immortal with empty nights to fill after eight hours a day in a grubby little bookshop, and no transfer to a better posting in sight, New Syon House was like one of those old Christmas calendars with twenty-five little windows: a new one to be opened every day, with no idea of what treat might be behind it, while one grew closer and closer to the window with the ultimate treat.

  It took Lewis three months to scan the inventory. It took another month to sort out encryptions dating from the nineteenth century. Two weeks sufficed to break the old-fashioned code; all he had to do then was search for any occurrences of the name Edward Alton Bell-Fairfax.

  The first reference was a list of members of a Redking’s Club for the years 1849 to 1869. The list was profoundly interesting. For a smallish club, Redking’s appeared to have had a disproportionate number of members whose names had made it into history books. There were politicians, there were men of science, there was a writer or two—and a virtual nobody, a retired naval officer on half pay. Lewis marveled. What was Edward doing in company like this? And why was this information classified?

  Lewis found another peculiarity on the members list: the name of one William Fitzwalter Nennys. Lewis remembered this man perfectly, for the simple reason that he was in reality Nennius, an immortal with whom Lewis had worked briefly in the 1830s. Nennius was a Facilitator, and nothing was more likely than that he’d be strategically positioned in an exclusive club whose fellow members were in politics.

  The next reference to Edward turned up when Lewis found a list of members of a Gentlemen’s Speculative Society. Edward Alton Bell-Fairfax was one of their number. So were most of the other members of Redking’s Club, including William Fitzwalter Nennys.

  Lewis frowned as he read. Wasn’t there something disreputable about the Gentlemen’s Speculative Society? A moment’s hasty access of Smith’s History of Esoteric Cults, volumes 1 through 10, brought it back to him:

  In the year 1885 a mortal named David Addison Ramsay held several public lectures, claiming to be a representative of a hitherto secret brotherhood that presently went by the name of the Gentlemen’s Speculative Society. He was unwise enough to mention several prominent statesmen and academics who he claimed were fellow members.

  He said further that their purpose was to advance humanity to a state of perfection through scientific means. This, he claimed, was where similarly well-intentioned secret societies had missed the mark: by clinging to outworn magical and religious rituals.

  Ramsay then displayed what he claimed were inventions that had been suppressed out of religious superstition and ignorance. He apparently got quite a reaction out of his audience with his “thermoluminous globe,” “speaking automaton,” “true philosopher’s stone,” and several other remarkable objects. These inventions, he claimed, were not new; the Gentlemen’s Speculative Society had rescued and collected them from laboratories of persecuted martyrs to the cause of Science. Da Vinci had contributed several, as had Dr. John Dee, who had also been a member of the Society, though in a former time when it bore another name.

  Ramsay concluded by saying that the purpose of this demonstration was not merely to enlighten or entertain, but to enlist uninitiated Britons in the great cause for which he and his fellow Gentlemen labored. He admitted that his brother members did not entirely agree with him that the need for secrecy was past, but he believed that in this age of steam propulsion and industrial capitalism, mankind was ready to understand what science might achieve, if unfettered. He intimated that all the fantastic possibilities of legend were not beyond man’s grasp, even, indeed most particularly, immortality itself.

  All that was wanting was capital. He stood ready to accept the donations that must flow in from the noble Britons in his audience, who surely understood that every rational man must labor in the cause of the perfection and advancement of humanity.

  Ramsay wasn’t quite hooted off the stage, but the papers very nearly murdered him. His inventions were denounced as nothing more than brilliant stage effects. Worse, the powerful individuals he named all stated flatly that they never heard of him, or of the Gentlemen’s Speculative Society to which they supposedly belonged. He was a common charlatan, they said, a humbug, an utter sham.

  Ramsay hotly denied these charges and promised to provide proof. He didn’t; he simply disappeared, along with his inventions.

  This was the sort of thing that professed skeptics liked to giggle over. Even Lewis, himself an immortal being created by the efforts of a cabal of scientists and investors, smiled as he read the account. His smile faded as he considered the fact that he’d just found evidence—in classified documents, no less—that there had been a Gentlemen’s Speculative Society, at least as early as 1849, and that the august persons who denied knowing David Addison Ramsay had been members. And so had Edward Alton Bell-Fairfax.

  And so had William Fitzwalter Nennys, who, like Lewis, was an immortal being created by the efforts of a cabal of scientists and investors . . .

  What on earth had Nennius been doing? What had Edward been doing?

  Lewis followed up his next hunch: searching for other references to the Gentlemen’s Speculative Society in the classified records. He was mildly astonished at what he found.

  It was the Gentlemen’s Speculative Society since 1755; prior to that its members called themselves the Fellowship of the Green Lion, during which time Sir Isaac Newton was one of their number.

  The Fellowship of the Green Lion was rel
iably recorded as having existed as far back as 1660. It seemed to have sprung from a group calling itself the House of Solomon, almost certainly led by Sir Francis Bacon.

  That particular fraternity of scholars previously met under the name of the Servants of the Temple of Albion, an organization that could be traced back through the era of Elizabeth I—persons as disparate as Dr. Dee and Sir Francis Drake were members—to the year 1250, when Roger Bacon was apparently its guiding light. There were intimations that Bacon inherited a tradition that began at an even earlier date.

  All of this in a file the British government had chosen to keep secret, had chosen to keep so secret, it went to the trouble of encrypting it and burying it far from the light of day in New Syon House.

  It was at about this time that Lewis began to feel a creeping sensation of knowing too much for comfort.

  So he turned his attention to the biographical data on William Fitzwalter Nennys.

  Born 1803—ha ha. Lewis knew for a fact that Nennius had come over in a galley at the order of the emperor Claudius; this he learned in the course of a pleasant evening in a coffeehouse back in 1836, during a chat with Nennius about old times. Lewis’s current identification disc gave his own date of birth as the year 2116, when 103 A.D. was nearer the mark. Well, and what had Nennius done with that lifetime?

  Here were the names of parents he never had, followed by a list of schools he never attended; and here the statement that in 1832 he became headmaster of Overton School . . .

  Edward’s school. He’d been Edward’s headmaster.

  Lewis’s gasp in his chilly room puffed out like smoke. Distractedly he got up and turned on the climate-control unit, standing in front of its heating vent while he collected his memories and spread them out to try to make sense of them.

  Nennius had been a headmaster, yes, that was what the meeting at the coffeehouse was all about—Nennius brought a sheaf of inky student papers to deliver to Lewis for the Company archives. Lewis didn’t ask why, Lewis didn’t even read them, just passed them on to the Company courier who came for them the following week. Dr. Zeus was always making off with ephemera like that. Lewis was more interested in the prospect of pumping Nennius for details about the old empire. They sat up late, getting mildly buzzed on drinking chocolate and laughing about how it was impossible to find a decently heated room in Britain since the legions pulled out . . .

  Closing his eyes, Lewis dived back through his visual record. There! There were the papers, he was laughing with Nennius as he opened the leather case, and Nennius was saying:

  “—lad may be somebody someday, but you know how it is with the archivists, they ask for the damnedest trivia—”

  Freeze frame. Part of the top page was visible. What did it say? Enlarge and enhance. There were the slightly uneven letters of a boy not yet perfect in his copperplate hand: Dulce et decorus pro patria mori, which is very true I think if you have got no other way of helping anybody or, for example, stopping the Hindoos from doing things such as burning up their widows. I would like to—

  Reeling slightly, Lewis put a hand to the wall. Compare frame with EASILY AND BEST FORGOTTEN file documents A, B, and C. Points of similarity? Singularity? Statistical likelihood of the same hand?

  Ninety-five percent.

  And though the feeling of impending danger was very, very strong just then, Lewis leaped out into the middle of his room and executed a few shuffling tap steps, finishing on one knee with both arms flung out in triumph.

  Nennius was young Edward’s headmaster. Nennius belonged to the Gentlemen’s Speculative Society and Redking’s Club at the same time his former pupil was a member of them. Coincidence? Or had he sponsored Edward’s admission into those august bodies? Given Edward’s obscure birth and blighted naval career, it seemed likely he had. Why? Unless of course Edward was admitted at the urging of the unknown benefactor who prevented his court-martial and paid for his upbringing. But, then, what did Nennius have to do—?

  Lewis was barely able to sleep that night, but he had no nightmares. Not that night, not any night since the plot began to thicken. And this was why he whistled, today, tapping away at the keyboard in his room.

  He couldn’t remember when he’d been happier, even as his awareness of risk grew. He very nearly got in touch with Nennius (a scan of Company records showed him that Nennius was currently stationed in the Breton Republic), but common sense prevailed. He was contenting himself now with following up Nennius’s subsequent career.

  It appeared that his fellow immortal had worked a very long shift indeed as William Fitzwalter Nennys, finally pretending to die in 1886. All the appliance aging makeup must have been hideously uncomfortable.

  Ah, but not so uncomfortable he hadn’t been able to—what was this? To attend a last meeting of the Gentlemen’s Speculative Society. Yes, and vote with the other members, old and new—and, my, what interesting new members had joined since 1849, George Bernard Shaw and young Herbert George Wells, for example—to change the name of the Gentlemen due to the recent scandal. What did they decide to call themselves this time?

  Lewis read on eagerly and then stopped.

  He got up, made himself a cup of tea, went to the window, and stared down into the street for a while. When he finished the tea, he went to his tiny sink and rinsed out the cup, setting it carefully in the drainer. At last he walked back to his workstation, pulled out his chair, sat down, and looked again at the screen.

  Yes, it really did say that the new name they chose was the Kronos Diversified Stock Company.

  The reason Lewis was having trouble believing what he saw, of course, was that Kronos Diversified was one of the names under which Dr. Zeus, Incorporated, did business throughout the centuries.

  He got up once more and went to his cupboard. Taking out a bottle of gin, he poured himself a small silver cocktail and went to the window again. He half-expected to see Edward Alton Bell-Fairfax looking up at him from the pavement, as the late traffic went by.

  You won’t be silenced. You meant it, didn’t you? thought Lewis. Have you refused to let go, are you haunting me somehow? What does all this mean about the Company, and why have you shown me? Are you trying to tell Mendoza? Can’t you find her, either?

  Fez

  IF THERE’S AN ETERNITY, boy, I wouldn’t mind spending it like this,” said Joseph, drifting gently into the coping at the edge of the pool.

  “Contemplating the eternal stars?” Suleyman leaned back to look up at them where they glittered in the wide square of night sky, framed by the high white walls of the old garden.

  “Floating in your pool with a piña colada, actually.”

  “Ass’s milk, you infidel moron,” jeered Latif. “Do you want to scandalize the servants?”

  “All right, so it’s coconut pineapple asses’ milk with extract of Jamaican sugar cane,” Joseph said. “God forbid I should upset the help, you lousy little squirt.”

  Latif, who had known Joseph since childhood, just sneered at him. He had long since attained his considerable adult height and had the lean and dangerous profile of a North African corsair. Suleyman laughed quietly and thumbed the control that lowered his deck chair into a reclining position so he could view the stars in greater comfort. Suleyman was very dark, with the classical features of Mali, so he didn’t look like a corsair—though he had been one in his time.

  “Isn’t that something, about poor old Polaris?” he mused. “All these tens of centuries it’s been the one thing you could depend on, in this hemisphere, anyway. Byword for constancy, and what does it go and do but slip out of place at last? What will mortals use to navigate, with the North Star gone astray?”

  “Things change,” said Joseph.

  “So they do, little man. So they do.”

  A silence fell, with a shade of meaning in it that the two younger immortals missed. Donal sighed in contentment and switched off his headset, flipping up the televisor.

  “That was that,” he informed the others. “The
Pirates took the match, six to nothing. Not one goal for the Assassins.”

  “The office pool is mine,” said Latif.

  “Yaah,” Joseph said.

  “Yaah yourself, you loser,” Latif told him, grinning white in the darkness. He sprawled backward like a man at his ease, but there was an alertness in the lines of his body. He went on: “So, this vacation thing you’re doing. You actually want to go see a necropolis tomorrow?”

  “That’s what I said, kid.”

  “Well, that’s certainly my idea of a good time. Ride out into the foothills, where it gets hot enough to boil rice on the rocks at noon, and crawl around a bunch of mortal graves all stuccoed over to look like the biggest seagull splash in the world. What’s that phrase, whited sepulchers? What a party guy you turned out to be.”

  “It’s psychological,” Joseph said, pushing away from the coping and rotating slowly in his pool float. “People are designed by nature to need a last resting place. The idea of one, anyway. We immortal guys never get graves. The programming we’re given in school keeps the urge off for the first few millennia, but after a while you find yourself wondering what it would be like to just—lie down in a tomb and stop moving forever. So it helps, see, to go and look at the reality. Bones and dust. Makes you glad to be alive.”

  “Really?” Donal sounded appalled.

  “No, he’s giving us a lot of bullshit as usual,” Latif said.

  “Sounds creepy to me,” Donal went on, shuddering. “I was recruited out of some kind of tunnel or catacomb place. I’d never want to visit one.”

  “I’ll show him the necropolis,” Suleyman said. “I know what he’s talking about, after all. You kids go hang out at the bazaar. Milo Rousseau’s added a third show at Palais Aziz, did I tell you? If you hang around the window and whine, I’ll bet you can get tickets.”

 

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