The radiant Swamps painted the undersides of low cloud with silver, a pyrotechnic display enhanced by atmospheric dust. These clouds seemed extraordinarily close. Every detail of their lower surfaces were visible, like maps. To the north, above the Swamps, fainter clouds billowed – dust, grime and smoke, layer upon layer upon layer, moving under the influence of heat and gravity. Subadwan felt dislocated, as if she were in some other city, a city gone quiet, emptied, with a luminary at its heart.
And then all light was switched off. Subadwan’s gaze flicked upwards to the patch of clear sky containing the Spacefish. A multitude of lines and points had appeared, white, blue, purple, a tracery criss-crossing the surface of the Spacefish. And the city was wholly dark.
Cray was black and the Spacefish was illuminated. Another transformation: another abstract journey. The surviving electronic beings of Gwmru had completed their task and left Cray.
Did Tanglanah and Laspetosyne remain? Subadwan struggled in an agony of confusion. The darkness smothered her, pressing down into her mind. Everything was closing down, everything was stopping.
The beings she fought to control held the future of humanity in their abstract hands. A sudden sense of the abyss between them and herself came to Subadwan’s thoughts. How could she persuade them to stay? All she knew was that she must do something.
Ambient light was low but her eyes were adjusting to it. The danger was ochre plague. Subadwan stopped. She needed light but all she possessed was the laser. She thumbed it down to lowest power and aimed it at the sky. A blue beam lit her way. Excepting shadows seen against windows, not one Crayan did she spy on the way. In this meagre light she made it across to Peppermint Street.
Already the Baths seemed different. Vitrification had taken hold. Gingerly, Subadwan pushed open the glittering remains of the door and crept in. A crack, a splinter, and then the double doors shattered all around her.
‘Madam!’ a voice said. ‘Where have you been?’
It was Dwllis.
CHAPTER 23
When the streets of Cray lost their light, Dwllis and Etwe were standing outside the Baths, about to enter.
Dwllis spun around, as if the light had been sucked away and by looking he could discover where it had gone. Darkness lay all about, but to the north something glowed, something vast, brightly kaleidoscopic. From his position in the street he could not make out what it was, but he knew that it must occupy an area of the Swamps. Something had happened – something momentous.
‘Come inside,’ he told Etwe. ‘There is awful danger afoot.’
The Baths were lit by glow-beans in string bags, enabling Dwllis to find his way through the interior of the building. He heard no human voice, no echo of conversation, not even the clink or thud of another footstep. Glass blocks, massive and bowed out under the pressure of glass above, lay all around. Little of marble remained. Frightened, he called out, ‘Is there anybody present?’
Now he heard something above the lapping of the nearby pool. Etwe said, ‘That is a light footfall, I think.’
‘We shall await its owner.’
The owner was Liguilifrey. Dwllis identified Etwe and himself, then said, ‘Is Subadwan of Gaya here? I need to speak with her, most urgently.’
Liguilifrey shook her head. ‘I daren’t think where she is. She’s trying to shoot the aeromorphs, destroy them–’
‘Destroy them? Did she say why?’
‘They’re related to these beings of Gwmru that she’s struggling to control.’
Dwllis, apprehension in his voice, said, ‘But madam Sabadwan is not even in contact with you?’
‘No.’
Dwllis turned to Etwe. ‘Then we have an obstacle in our way. There is only one option. We must go to Tanglanah.’
As they turned to leave Liguilifrey said, ‘But Dwllis, it is this pyuton Tanglanah that she is struggling with.’
‘I see,’ Dwllis said. ‘Etwe, should we wait here? Subadwan may not arrive–’
From nearby came the sound of smashing glass. They waited, silent and apprehensive. Dwllis walked forward a few steps, but then a figure leaped out of the tunnel: Subadwan.
‘Madam,’ Dwllis cried, ‘where have you been?’
‘Stay calm,’ she reassured them, hurrying over.
‘But what have you been doing?’ Dwllis asked.
In a tumble of words Subadwan replied, ‘The aeromorphs are bodily houses for Tanglanah’s kin in Gwmru. I infected a few of the aerial ones with the ochre plague, hoping to force the beings to remain in Gwmru and sustain Cray, but I may instead have forced their hand. It might be too late. Dwllis, we have minutes left! Those beings are leaving for ever. They’ve transmitted themselves from Cray to the Spacefish. We’ve got to stop them.’
‘How?’
‘Only Tanglanah and Laspetosyne remain physical. I think they will be trying to reach the Spacefish. We’ve got to keep them here.’
Again Dwllis said, ‘How?’
‘We’ve got to hold them hostage, force the others to stay until human life is secured.’
Dwllis shook his head. ‘Madam, it is surely an impossible task. I believe that an historical event is upon us. But as for Tanglanah and Laspetosyne, their powers are beyond us.’
‘Don’t give up!’ Subadwan said. ‘In Gwmru, Zelenaiid told me that she had imparted a flaw into Cray when it was formed, but that she did not know exactly how the flaw would manifest. Vitrification is part of it. She told me that one of two paths would come to pass. Pikeface is on one of those paths, and you are on the other. I believe Tanglanah is still searching for knowledge of that flaw. She is trapped in Cray with Laspetosyne.’
‘A path,’ Dwllis mused.
Subadwan nodded. ‘That was the point of the gnostician augmentation programme. Zelenaiid initiated it as Seleno. The gnosticians keep ancient memories in their minds.’
‘Then Zelenaiid did not recognise their conscious state,’ Dwllis said. Vainly, he tried to recall Crimson Boney’s description of the legend of Cray. ‘The gnosticians mimic old events with their rituals,’ he explained. ‘The split fish represents the physical origin of Cray. What was it that he said? There was a fire in the night sky. A fish jumped out of the sea and split into two, one half on each side of the river.’
Etwe concluded, ‘The head-giblets flopped into the river.’
‘The Swamps!’ Dwllis exclaimed. ‘That is where the street lights coalesced. Hedalgwadey thought it to be a great bioprocessor – the brain of the fish in the symbolic gnostician story. Of course! I see it now. The Swamps are the source of the flaw, and doubtless they are the source of the luminophages, and thus the glass plague. And from the Swamps Pikeface emerged, like the corporeal manifestation of that place.’
‘Zelenaiid guessed some of this,’ Subadwan said.
‘Who then is the key to the flaw?’ said Dwllis. ‘That even I do not understand.’
Subadwan replied, ‘It must be you or Pikeface. You must go to the Reeve’s chamber and confront him.’
Dwllis shook his head. ‘You are asking too much of me.’
‘What about your green fishtail?’ Etwe began.
There was a smashing of glass from above.
Everybody ducked, then ran from the fall of shards. Dwllis bumped into a wall. In the gloom he saw two figures alight upon the floor as though they had jumped from the domed roof above. With superhuman effort they leaped upright, their arms circling in flourishes as if they had performed a gymnastic feat, before they stood upright by the side of the pool.
Tanglanah and Laspetosyne.
Instinctively Dwllis ran, Etwe alongside him, as the tinkling cacophony smashed around them. From the corner of his eye he saw Subadwan flee. Liguilifrey stayed put, crouching head bowed on the floor.
‘Halt!’ Tanglanah cried.
Shards had hit Dwllis. Both arms were bloodied, and blood ran into his eyes. His jacket sleeves and tails were shredded. ‘What do you want of me?’ he called out across the pool.
‘Remain motionless. We have come for you.’
Dwllis looked about him. Much of the wall around him was glass – dull, gleaming glass. The nearby exit had sagged and cracked, making escape impossible. Before him, the perfectly calm surface of the pool lay.
From both sides the pyutons approached. Dwllis said, ‘What do you know of me? What do you want of me?’
‘We heard all we need to know,’ said Tanglanah, indicating the roof. ‘Either you or Pikeface is the key to Zelenaiid’s method.’
They were closing. Dwllis looked wildly about him. Under his feet glass cracked, making him jump. The Baths were collapsing. Fault lines sprang out.
‘Stay put,’ Tanglanah said.
‘It is dangerous,’ Dwllis replied, temporising.
They were just yards away. Dwllis panicked. He feared those deadly eyes, those beatific expressions. Holding his nose he leaped into the water.
Glass smashed all around him. The surface of the pool had vitrified, forming a crust like ice on a frozen pond. Arms windmilling, he trod water, trying to keep his head in the air, conscious of the swathes of blood billowing around him. He gasped for air, but he knew he must not swallow water, replete as it was with a myriad glass splinters. Tossed by water currents, the flickering fragments reflected gleaming light through crimson clouds as they sank to the bottom.
Less than a minute passed before he surrendered to the impassive pyutons. They hauled him from the pool like children recovering a broken doll. He collapsed to the fractured floor.
Tanglanah pulled him to his feet. ‘You will come with us. Do not resist.’
She dragged him away while Laspetosyne instructed Etwe not to follow. They did not tend to his wounds, rather they clouted him when he tripped, searched his clothes and confiscated the green fishtail. Then they tied his hands behind his back and put a bag over his head. Bleeding from many cuts, Dwllis tottered through the streets until his whole body began to sting and throb. The metallic taste of blood filled his mouth. His breath came hoarse. The chilly air made it worse.
The torment continued for some time, stopping only when they entered a building. Bootsteps echoed. Smoke made him cough. He was forced onward, until Tanglanah said, ‘Stop here. I will see whether he is in.’
A door was hammered open with a single blow. Dwllis was thrust forward.
Sound told him that he was inside a large chamber. Released, he stood silent, tense, waiting.
Then Pikeface spoke. ‘What business have you with me?’
‘This is our moment, Pikeface,’ Tanglanah replied.
‘Who is that man?’ Pikeface answered.
‘You do not know?’
Pikeface did not reply. But neither did Tanglanah. Dwllis felt a surge of hope. It was as if everybody in the room knew nothing of the future: nobody, perhaps not even Tanglanah, knew what to do.
‘You do not fool me,’ Tanglanah said. ‘Laspetosyne, take the bindings and the sack off.’
Laspetosyne obliged, caring nothing for Dwllis’s wounds. He gasped as the ropes rasped his stinging flesh. When the bag was removed he found that he was inside a spherical chamber of two hemispheres, below his feet a mass of rotting, broken vegetation, around and above a mass of broken equipment. Only one pyuter showed indicator lights. Four people stood in the chamber.
‘My kin,’ Pikeface said to him.
Tanglanah turned to Dwllis. ‘Pikeface knows you are his brother.’
Dwllis felt a surge of disgust. ‘How could that beast be my kin? The word means nothing to him. Pikeface is as ignorant as yourself. Face the truth, Tanglanah. You are lost here and you know not what to do.’
Tanglanah confronted him. ‘All I lack is the method. Zelenaiid tried to ruin our plans, and she failed. How can one such as you stop us?’
‘I am unable to stop you,’ Dwllis agreed. ‘So, Tanglanah, if you wish to leave, then leave. Or can you not?’
Tanglanah turned again to Pikeface. ‘It is only the method I lack, only the method. Pikeface, I know a vehicle lies somewhere.’
‘I do not know, and I have looked. I am but the Reeve, condemned to remain inside this chamber.’
Dwllis felt passion upon him. ‘You have ascended to become Reeve and you have no city to rule. That is the truth of all this, is it not, Pikeface? Our futures were deliberately tinkered with. Yet it is you who has attempted most and lost the most, for here you stand, the ruler of nothing. And that is tragic.’
Tanglanah turned to Pikeface. Dwllis, gasping for breath, saw – or thought he saw – the confusion in her stance.
Silence. The four stood in silence.
Then Tanglanah said, in tones lacking all human warmth, ‘I will have my way. No human will stop me, nor will Zelenaiid’s dead hand.’
Dwllis scoffed, the elation of his superiority loosening his tongue. ‘Fools! You pyutons are half dead by virtue of not being human. What can you tell me of death?’
Tanglanah stared at Dwllis. He shrank back, wondering what he had said. ‘That is the answer,’ Tanglanah softly said. ‘It is not a matter of being led. Here we have the two actual creations. One is human, one is not – the eternal opposition of this city. Laspetosyne, we are free at last!’
Dwllis swallowed, to ease his aching throat. Tanglanah took out the green fishtail and, walking over to Dwllis, slapped it into his right hand, saying, ‘This is yours.’ Dwllis stared at the thing.
‘What is that?’ Pikeface immediately asked.
‘It is mine,’ Dwllis answered, studying the fishtail, giving little attention to Pikeface. Glinting in pale light, it seemed undamaged.
Tanglanah had moved to the door, there to shut it.
‘Hand that fishtail over,’ Pikeface demanded.
Dwllis looked up. ‘lt was a gift to me.’
‘I will have it.’
Pikeface strode over. Dwllis stepped backwards. Tanglanah barred the exit, forcing him to run to the edge of the chamber. Dwllis knew that the moment Pikeface laid a hand upon him he was a dead man. He must run.
Pikeface showed a good turn of speed. Dwllis ran round the edge, Pikeface closing, ever closing, trying to cut him off.
It was hopeless. Dwllis stopped, held the fishtail fins outwards, threatening Pikeface.
Pikeface stopped a yard away. He turned to Tanglanah and said, ‘Nobody thwarts me. Tanglanah, you have failed.’
Dwllis saw the broad back before him. Just that broad back. He stabbed forward. The fishtail slid like a dagger into his opponent.
Pikeface uttered a deafening cry. He fell to the ground.
Transformation followed.
First, Pikeface’s legs merged, forming one limb a yard in diameter, leggings ripped off by twisting flesh, torn by razor protrusions that grew out of his ankles and knees. These protrusions softened, becoming flukes, not unlike the aerial flukes of the aeromorphs. Then Pikeface’s piscine head thrashed and doubled over, becoming a blunt dome coloured pink, inlaid with designs of red and yellow.
He expanded. At ten feet tall he flipped up upon his lower limb and stood upright. His arms shrank, then disappeared. Every item of armour and clothing was now torn asunder, revealing prickly flesh here and there turning black. No trace of Pikeface remained: this was a thing, a device, still transforming, becoming blacker, its head expanding and turning green.
Now the body was becoming slimmer, while the base was thickening. Dwllis saw before him a pillar twelve feet tall, slim waisted, black rooted, pink topped, its body marked with spirals, dots, curls, dimples and pimples.
With form set, it expanded further, emitting a chorus of creaks and groans, and when its bulging top hit the roof there was a cracking, and dust fell. Dwllis ran for the door. Tanglanah opened it but stopped him leaving, holding him firm with one hand. Laspetosyne stood near.
The chamber began to collapse as the thing expanded still further. Tanglanah dragged the struggling Dwllis away, but stayed as near as she could to the transforming object. Dwllis peered upwards. It must now be twenty, m
aybe thirty feet tall. The black roots at its base were thick, metallic, and the top was ovoid, green-shrouded, but pink tipped.
To Laspetosyne, Tanglanah said, ‘Do you see that bud on the lower root? Pluck it off.’
Laspetosyne, dodging falling rubble, did as she was told. She returned holding a lump of plastic the size of a pyuter.
Dwllis stared at the still-expanding object. ‘What is this thing?’ he asked.
Tanglanah ignored him at first, muttering to herself, ‘Of course, of course, a throwback. Of course!’ Then she answered Dwllis’s question. ‘It is a flower.’
‘A flower?’
‘It is an astromorph,’ Tanglanah replied, ‘akin to the aeromorphs, though distantly related. Zelenaiid, desiring humans to travel with us, created an astromorph for them. In this and in others like it she hoped a journey could be made – against my wishes.’
Tanglanah held the lump of plastic in front of Dwllis. ‘With this, another astromorph could be made, and another, and another, and another. But I must halt that process. Only two may depart this wretched planet.’
Dwllis frowned. ‘Flowering plants?’
Tanglanah threw the bud to the floor and made to stamp upon it.
‘Stop!’
The voice was loud. Everybody swung around to see Subadwan, a laser rifle in one hand, a black tube in the other.
CHAPTER 24
When Tanglanah and Laspetosyne entered the Archive of Noct, Subadwan shivered. There was nobody else about. She hesitated over entering and following, having been incarcerated here so recently. But she forced herself to proceed. She dared not lose the pyutons.
She followed tracks of soot and dust, guessing, as she passed through the central chamber, that they were making for the Reeve’s chamber. She was correct.
From behind a pillar she saw Tanglanah and Laspetosyne, Pikeface and Dwllis, all four of them engaged in conversation. She heard the debate, saw the deeds. Pikeface’s transformation into an astromorph she watched. She saw the roof collapse, and she saw Laspetosyne breaking something off the transformed Pikeface. She heard the ensuing conversation. A little more became clear in her mind.
Glass Page 27