Sacrament

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Sacrament Page 12

by Clive Barker


  “By Jacob?” Sherwood breathed.

  “Yes.” She flipped over a few more pages and finally came to a picture. It was an insect—a beetle of some kind, she thought—and like the writing on the preceding pages it had been set down exquisitely, every detail of its head and legs and iridescent wings so meticulously painted it looked uncannily lifelike in the watery light, as though it might have risen whirring from the paper had she touched it.

  “I know I shouldn’t have taken the book,” Sherwood said, “but now I don’t want to give it back, ’cause I don’t want to see him again.”

  “You won’t have to,” Frannie reassured him.

  “You promise?”

  “I promise. There’s nothing to be afraid of, Sher. We’re safe here, with mom and dad to look after us.” Sherwood had put his arm through hers. She could feel his thin body quivering against her own. “But they won’t be here always, will they?” he said, his voice eerily flat, as though this most terrible of possibilities could not be expressed unless stripped of all emphasis.

  “No,” she said. “They won’t.”

  “What will happen to us then?” he said.

  “I’ll be here to look after you,” Frannie replied.

  “You promise?”

  “I promise. Now, it’s time you were back in bed.” She took her brother by the hand and they both tiptoed out along the landing to his room. There she settled him back in his bed and told him not to think about the book or the Courthouse or what had happened tonight anymore, but to go back to sleep.

  Her duty done she returned to her own bedroom, closed the door and the curtains, and put the book in the cupboard under her sweaters. There was no lock on the cupboard door, but if there had been she would have certainly turned the key. Then she climbed between the now chilly sheets and put on the bedside light, just in case the beetle in the book came clicking across the floor to find her before dawn, which possibility, after the evening’s escapades, she could not entirely consign to the realm of the impossible.

  IV

  i

  Will consumed his soup like a dutiful patient, and then, once Adele had taken his temperature, collected his tray, and gone back downstairs, quickly got up and dressed. It was by now the middle of the afternoon and the sleety day was already losing its light, but he had no intention of putting his journey off until tomorrow.

  The television had been turned on in the living room—he could hear the calm, even tones of a newscaster, and then, as his mother changed channels, applause and laughter. He was glad of the sound. It covered the occasional squeak of a stair as he descended to the hallway. There, as he donned scarf, anorak, gloves, and boots, he came within a breath of discovery, as his father called out from his study demanding to know from Adele where his tea had got to. Was she picking the leaves herself, for Christ’s sake? Adele did not reply, and his father stormed into the kitchen to get an answer. He did not notice his son in the unlit hallway, however, and while he withered on to Adele about how slow she was, Will opened the front door and, slipping through the narrowest crack he could make so as not to have a draft alert them to his going, was out on his night journey.

  ii

  Rosa didn’t conceal the satisfaction she felt at the absence of the book. It had burned up in the fire and that was all there was to say in the matter. “So you’ve lost one of your precious journals,” she said. “Perhaps you’ll be a little more sympathetic in the future when I get weepy about the children.”

  “There’s no comparison,” Steep said, still searching the ashes in the antechamber. His desk was little more than seared timbers, his pens and brushes gone, his box of watercolors barely recognizable, his inks boiled away. His bag containing the earlier journals had been beyond the scope of the fire, so all was not lost But the work-in-progress, his account of the last eighteen years of his vast labor, had gone. And Rosa’s attempt to equate his loss with what she felt when one of her brats had to be put out of its misery made him sick to his stomach. “This is the labor of my life,” he pointed out.

  “Then it’s pitiful,” she said. “Making books! It’s pitiful.” She leaned toward him. “Who’d you think you’re making them for? Not me. I’m not interested. I’m not remotely interested.”

  “You know why I’m making them,” Jacob said sullenly. “To be a witness. When God comes and demands we tell Him what we’ve wrought, chapter and verse, we must have an account. Every detail. Only then will we be . . . Jesus! why do I bother explaining it to you?”

  “You can say the word. Go on, say it! Say forgiven. That’s what you used to say all the time. We’d be forgiven.” She approached him now. “But you don’t really believe that anymore do you?” She gently reached up and put her hands to his face.

  “Be honest, my love,” she said, suddenly soft.

  “I still . . . I still believe there’s purpose in our lives,” Jacob replied. “I have to believe that.”

  “Well I don’t,” Rosa said plainly. “I realized after our fumblings this afternoon, I have no healthy desires left in me. None at all. There won’t be any more children. There won’t be any hearth and home. And there won’t be a day of forgiveness, Jacob. That’s certain. We’re alone, with the power to do whatever we want.” She smiled. “That boy—”

  “Will?”

  “No. The younger one, Sherwood. I had him at my titties, sucking away, and I thought: It’s a sickness to take pleasure in this, but Lord, you know that made it all the more pleasurable? And I began to think, when the child had gone, what else would give me pleasure? What’s the worst I could do?”

  “And?”

  “My mind fairly began to spin at the possibilities,” she said with a smile. “It really did. If we’re not going to be forgiven, why try to be something I’m not?” She was staring hard into his face.

  “Why should I waste my breath hoping for something we’ll never have?”

  Jacob pulled his face from her hands. “You won’t tempt me,” he said. “So stop wasting your time. I have my plans laid—”

  “The book’s burned,” Rosa snapped.

  “I’ll make another.”

  “And if that burns?”

  “Another! And another! I’ll be the stronger for this loss.”

  “Oh, so will I,” Rosa said, her features draining of warmth, so that her beauty seemed, for all its perfection, almost cadaverous. “I will be a different woman from now on. I will have pleasure whenever I can take it, by whatever means amuse me. And if someone or something gets a child upon me I’ll fetch it out of m’self with a sharpened stick.” This notion pleased her.

  Laughing raucously, she turned her back on Jacob, and spat into the ashes. “There’s for your book,” she said. She spat again.

  “And there’s for forgiveness.” Again she spat “And there’s for God. He’ll have nothing more from me.” She said no more. Without looking to see what effect she’d had upon her companion (she would have been disappointed; he was stony-faced), she strode out. Only when she’d gone did Jacob let himself weep. Manly tears, the tears of a commander before a broken army or a father at his son’s grave. He didn’t simply grieve for the book—though that added to the sum—but for himself. After this, he would be alone. Rosa—his once beloved Rosa, with whom he’d shared his most cherished ambitions—would go her hedonistic way, and he would take his own road, with his knife and his pen and a new journal full of empty pages.

  Oh, that would be hard after so many years together and the work before him still so monumental and the sky so wide.

  Then an unbidden thought: Why not kill her? There would be satisfaction in that right now, no question about it. A quick slice across her pulsing throat and down she’d go, like a felled cow. He’d comfort her in her final moments; tell her how much he had loved her, in his way; how he would dedicate his labors to her until they were finished. Every nest he rifled, every burrow he purified, he would say: This is for you, my Rosa, and this and this, until his hands, bloodied and yol
ked, were done with their weary work.

  He pulled his knife from his belt, already imagining the sound of its swoop across her neck, the hiss of her breath from her throat, the fizz of her blood. Then he went after her, back toward the courtroom.

  She was waiting for him, turned to face him with her pet ropes—what she liked to call her rosaries—cavorting around her arms like vipers. One leaped as he approached her, finding his wrist with the speed of her will and catching it so tight he gasped at the sensation.

  “How dare you?” she said. A second rope leaped from her hand and, wrapping itself around his neck, caught hold of his knife hand from behind him. She flicked her eye and it pulled tight, wrenching the blade back toward his face. “You would have murdered me.”

  “I would have tried.”

  “I’m no use to you as a womb, so I may as well be crow bait, is that it?”

  “No. I just . . . I wanted to simplify things.”

  “That’s a fresh excuse,” she said, almost admiringly.

  “Which eye is it to be?”

  “What?”

  “I’m going to puncture one of your eyes, Jacob. With this little knife of yours—” She willed the ropes to tighten. They creaked a little. “Which is it to be?”

  “If you harm me, it’ll be war between us.”

  “And war’s for men, so I would lose? Is that the inference?”

  “You know you would.”

  “I don’t know a thing about myself, Jacob, any more than you do. I learned it all watching women do as women do.

  Perhaps I’d be a very fine soldier. Perhaps we’d have such a war, you and me, that it would be like love, only bloodier.” She cocked her head.

  “Which eye is it to be?”

  “Neither,” Jacob said, a tremor in his voice now. “I need both my eyes, Rosa, to do my work. Put one of them out and you may as well take my life with it.”

  “I want recompense!” she said, through her perfect teeth. “I want you to suffer for what you just tried to do.”

  “Anything but an eye.”

  “Anything?”

  “Yes.”

  “Unbutton yourself.”

  “What?”

  “You heard me. Unbutton yourself.”

  “No, Rosa.”

  “I want one of your balls, Jacob. It’s that or an eye. Make up your mind.”

  “Stop this,” he said softly.

  “Am I supposed to melt now?” she replied. “Get weak with compassion?” She shook her head. “Unbutton yourself,” she said.

  His free hand went to his groin.

  “You can do it yourself, if that’ll make you feel any better. Well? Would it?”

  He nodded. She let the ropes about his wrist relax a little.

  “I won’t even watch,” she said. “How’s that? Then if you lose your courage for a bit nobody’s going to know but you.” The ropes loosed his hand completely now. They returned to Rosa and looped themselves around her neck.

  “Go to it.”

  “Rosa . . . ?”

  “Jacob?”

  “If I do this—?”

  “Yes.”

  “You’ll never talk about it to anybody?”

  “Talk about what?”

  “That I’m not . . . complete.”

  Rosa shrugged. “Who’d care?” she said.

  “Just agree.”

  “I agree.” She turned her back to him. “Make it the left,” she said. “It hangs a little lower, so it’s probably the riper of the two.”

  He stood in the passage when she’d gone and felt the heft of the knife in his hand. He had commissioned it in Damascus, a year after the death of Thomas Simeon, and had used it innumerable times since. Though there had been nothing supernatural about its maker, some authority had been conferred upon it over the years, for it grew sharper, he thought, with every life it took. He would be able to scoop out what the bitch demanded without much trouble, and after all, what did he care? He had no use for what he now cupped in his palm. Two eggs in a nest of skin; that’s all they were. He put the tip of the blade to his flesh and drew a deep breath. In the courtroom, down the passage, Rosa was singing one of her wretched lullabies. He waited for a high note, then cut.

  V

  Will didn’t attempt a shortcut back to the Courthouse, but took the road down to the village. At the intersection there was a telephone box, and he thought: I should say goodbye to Frannie. It wasn’t so much for friendship’s sake as for the pleasure of the boast. To be able to say: I’m going, just as I said I would. I’m going away forever.

  He stepped into the box, fumbled for some change, then fumbled again (his fingers chilled, even through his gloves) to find the Cunninghams’s number in the out-of-date directory. It was there. He dialed and prepared to disguise his voice if Frannie’s father came on the line. Her mother answered, however, and with a hint of frostiness brought her daughter to the phone. Will got straight to the point: He swore Frannie to secrecy then told her he was leaving.

  “With them?” she said, her voice barely more than a whisper.

  He told her it was none of her business. He was simply going away.

  “Well I’ve got something that belongs to Steep,” she said.

  “What?”

  “It’s none of your business,” she countered.

  “All right,” Will said. “Yes, I’m going with them.” There was no doubt in his feverish head that this was so. “Now . . . what have you got?”

  “You mustn’t say anything. I don’t want them to come looking.”

  “They won’t.”

  She paused a moment. Then she said, “Sherwood found a book I think it belongs to Steep.”

  “Is that all?” he said. A book? Who cared about a book? But he supposed she needed some memento of this adventure, however petty.

  “It’s not just any book,” she insisted. “It’s—” But Will was already done with the conversation. “I have to go,” he said.

  “Wait, Will—”

  “I haven’t got time. ’Bye, Frannie. Say ’bye to Sherwood, will you?”

  He put the receiver down, feeling thoroughly pleased with himself. Then he left the relative comfort of the telephone box, and set out on the track to Bartholomeus’s Courthouse.

  The fallen snow had frozen and formed a glittering skin on the road ahead, upon which a new layer of snow was being deposited as the storm intensified. Its beauty was his to appreciate, and his alone. The people of Burnt Yarley were at home tonight, beside their fires, their cattle gathered into sheds and byres, their chickens fed and locked up in their coops for the night.

  The mounting blizzard soon turned the scene ahead of him into a white blur, but he had sufficient wits about him to watch for the place in the hedge where he’d previously gained access to the field and, spotting it, dug his way through. The Courthouse was not visible, of course, but he knew that if he trudged directly across the meadow he’d reach its steps in due course. It was harder going than the road, and his body, for all his determination, was showing signs of surrender. His limbs felt jittery, and the urge to sink down in the snow for a while and rest grew stronger with every step. But he saw the Courthouse now, coming out of the blizzard. Jubilant, he wiped the snow from his numbed face, so that the blaze in him—in his eyes, in his skin—would be readily seen. Then he started up the step. Only when he reached the top did he realize that Jacob was in the doorway, silhouetted against a fire burning in the vestibule. This was not a puffing blaze like the one Will had fed: It was a bonfire. And he did not doubt for a moment it had living fuel. He could not see what, exactly, nor did he much care. It was his idol he wanted to see, and be seen by—more than seen, embraced. But Jacob did not move, and a terror came upon Will that he’d misunderstood everything, that he was no more wanted here than at the house he’d left. He stopped one step shy of the top and waited for judgment. It did not come. He was not even certain Jacob had even seen him.

  And then, out of the shadowed face
, a soft, raw voice.

  “I came out here without even knowing why. Now I see.” Will dared a syllable. “Me?”

  Jacob nodded. “I was looking for you,” he said, and opened his arms.

  Will would have gone into them happily, but his body was too weak to get him there. As he climbed the final step he stumbled, his outstretched hands moving too slowly to protect his head from striking the cold stone. He heard Jacob let out a little shout as he fell, then the sound of the man’s boots crunching on the frost as he came to help.

  “Are you all right?” he asked.

  Will thought he answered, but he wasn’t certain. He felt Steep’s arms beneath him, however, lifting him up, and the warmth of the man’s breath on his frozen face. I’m home, he thought, and passed out.

  VI

  i

  Thursday’s evening meal in the Cunningham house was in winter a hearty lamb stew, mashed potatoes, and buttered carrots, preceded always by the prayer that the family recited before every meal: “For what we are about to receive may the Lord make us truly thankful.” There was very little talk around the table tonight, but that was not unusual: George Cunningham was a great believer in things having their proper time and place. The dinner table was for dining, not for talking. There was only one exchange of any length, which took place when George, observing Frannie toying with her food, told her sharply to eat up.

  “I’m not really hungry,” Frannie replied.

  “Are you sickening for something?” he said. “I wouldn’t be surprised after yesterday.”

  “George,” his wife said, casting a fretful glance at Sherwood, who was also not showing much of an appetite.

  “Well look at the pair of you,” George said, his tone warming. “You look like a pair of drowned pups, you do.” He patted his daughter’s hand. “A mistake’s a mistake, and you made one, but that’s the end of it as far as your mom and I are concerned. As long as you learned your lesson. Now you eat up. And give your dad a smile.” Frannie tried. “Is that the best you can do?” Her father chuckled. “Well, you’ll brighten up after a good night’s sleep. Have you got a lot of homework?”

 

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