“I’ll send a man up to town tomorrow.”
Atwood’s plan extended no further than Mars. He seemed convinced that if he could achieve that goal—if he could plant his flag on Mars—then he would be guaranteed victory. He would prove his pre-eminence among magicians. From the vantage point of Mars, all the world and its secrets would be laid bare before him; his enemies would acknowledge his greatness and scatter. Arthur’s own plans extended no further than finding Josephine. After that, he supposed they’d flee London together. South America, perhaps. He didn’t know. He’d started hoarding money, skimming from the expenses of the Engine, saving for a disaster that he was certain would soon materialise.
After a long silence, Atwood said, “Is she…?”
After another long silence, Arthur said, “The same as ever.”
“Ah. Well.”
“Well.”
“Ever onwards, Shaw.”
“Ever onwards, Atwood.”
Arthur hung up.
He arranged for a messenger to take the Engine’s latest calculations into town; but the unfortunate fellow was lost when his train derailed, along with a briefcase full of important papers and a dozen of his fellow passengers.
* * *
The work continued for more than another month. There were unforeseen difficulties, as anyone might have foreseen there would be.
* * *
Arthur spent the Christmas of 1894 alone in his little house on the edge of the woods at the foot of Rudder Hill. He had a fire to keep him warm, cold ham, a bottle of wine, and plenty to keep him busy. He spent two hours in the morning on his exercises. In the afternoon, he had calculations to work through for the Engine—problems of organization and the efficient flow of numbers through the great machine. He worked until the numbers danced in front of his eyes.
At midnight, he put down his pen, lit a lantern, and went out into the garden. He followed a path through the woods and half-way up Rudder Hill, to a place where he could blow out the candle, sit and watch the stars, and wish Josephine a merry Christmas.
Chapter Twenty-six
The Company of the Spheres came together towards the end of March 1895, at an evening hour governed by the Sphere of Mercury, to embark on what was expected to be—God willing—the expedition that would at last cross the void and touch the face of Mars itself. A first tentative exploration. A proof, God willing, that the thing was possible, that it wasn’t madness.
They met in a warehouse in Deptford, not far from where Gracewell’s second Engine had once stood. The floor was painted with star-maps, and the windows were full of candles to ward off the prying eyes of the Company’s enemies. Mr Dimmick had hired some toughs, just in case, to be look-outs on the street outside. Two of them halted Arthur as he approached, stepping from the shadows and giving him quite a fright. He snarled ill-temperedly at them, shoved past, daring them to lay hands on him. They thought better of it.
He was already on edge, and late. In fact, his train had been so severely delayed and so slow, and the staff at the station so rude to him, that he’d begun to suspect the hand of the enemy at work. He was also tremendously anxious about Josephine. He’d left her behind that morning in the care of a nurse, having made arrangements with a lawyer to see to her in the event that—well, it was better not to dwell on what might go wrong. The expedition was not expected to take more than a matter of hours, but of course one never knew. He’d told the lawyer and the nurse he was travelling to Switzerland to consult with a specialist in the treatment of sleeping sickness.
As he entered the gloom of the warehouse he had a moment of panic and considered turning, running, and booking a journey to Switzerland after all. Mountain air, cold springs, and rest cures might be precisely what she needed …
“Shaw!” Jupiter’s voice, echoes booming from the rafters, dispelled all thoughts of Switzerland. “Come in. You’re late.”
“Trains,” he said, folding his coat on a shelf by the door.
“The spheres won’t wait for the trains, Shaw. The hour is almost upon us.”
Inside the warehouse, preparations were under way. Thérèse Didot was striding around placing and lighting paraffin lamps. Sun, his sleeves rolled up, was painting a great complicated magic circle on the floor, while Jupiter consulted the calculations and barked instructions. Atwood was meditating. A number of men Arthur didn’t recognise were talking, smoking, and bustling about, moving boxes. There was a great deal of fussing, as there might be backstage before an opening night at the theatre, or the launch of a luxurious sort of ship. Nobody knew exactly what to expect, so they prepared for all manner of conditions.
Nine men would go on the expedition. Atwood insisted that—should they reach Mars itself—the dangers and privations that the expedition was likely to face were so great that it would be disgraceful even to consider sending women, especially after what had happened to Josephine. In fact, Atwood had confessed to Arthur that he and Jupiter had adopted this policy mainly in order to justify excluding Mrs Archer, whom they both mistrusted—and, in Atwood’s case, at least, loathed. The policy had quickly taken on a life of its own, and had come to seem a very important moral principle.
Having by this somewhat accidental method convinced themselves that the expedition to Mars was essentially a military one, Jupiter and Atwood had gone out and hired ex-soldiers and sailors. The soldiers’ names were Frank, Payne, and Ashton; they were hard men, weathered by travel to remote and unfriendly corners of the Empire and prepared for danger. They joked and cursed and lounged against the wall, and only the methodical way they smoked betrayed, perhaps, a touch of anxiety. Ashton shook Arthur’s hand and said, apropos of nothing in particular, that all this pagan bloody magic didn’t scare him these days, not after some of the things he’d seen and done in Afghanistan. Then he walked off without further explanation, pacing the circle’s bounds anxiously, as if checking it for leaks.
Atwood’s brief attempt to exclude Sun had failed. He had never been able to offer any sort of argument for this position, other than some mumblings about the necessity for someone to stay behind to prosecute the war, in case they were gone longer than expected; but that was a role that Jupiter and Miss Didot and Mrs Archer considered themselves more than capable of fulfilling. It was hard not to suspect that Atwood was merely jealous of Sun’s place in the history books; that he did not want to share the first exploration of Mars with any other magicians whom posterity might mistake for his equal. In any case, he had been resoundingly outvoted. Atwood and Sun were to lead the ritual, to navigate the expedition’s course through the aether. Equally importantly, they were to perform the ritual that would—after a brief reconnoiter of their point of arrival—bring them back home. They had both been practicing their parts for a month.
Arthur was to join them. No objection from Atwood. His motives were pure, His Lordship had said; let bygones be bygones. His place in the circle was marked out on the floor, a dense knot where several lines of painted power converged. Dimmick was going too, over Arthur’s strenuous objections—just in case, Atwood had said, just in case a firm hand was called for. And Archer’s son was to join them—though Atwood didn’t like it, it was the price of Mrs Archer’s assistance. The son sat silently on the floor in a corner of the room, eyes half-closed, apparently entirely unperturbed, while his mother fussed over him.
Lastly, there was a dark young man at the far side of the room, with a bent nose and a thin beard, smoking and watching the proceedings with an air of amused disbelief.
“Our ninth,” Atwood said, rising from his meditations. “A former employee of Gracewell’s—he has some small magical talent, and comes recommended by Dimmick, who says he has a fighting spirit. More importantly, he’s a sailor, used to long voy—”
“Good Lord.”
“Good Lord what?”
“It’s Vaz—as I live and breathe, it’s Mr Vaz!”
Arthur almost ran across the circle—Payne snapped at him to watch out!—to take Mr
Vaz’s hand and shake it, while Vaz, equally astonished, let his cigarette fall from his lip.
“Good Lord, Mr Vaz. Good Lord. I thought you were dead. I thought you’d died in the fire.”
“I thought you were dead, Mr Shaw! That was a terrible night, wasn’t it? It was. It was! I had not thought to see a friendly face here.”
“Good,” Atwood said. “Good. A good omen, no doubt. The closing of a circle. Do you see, my dear? Do you see?” He walked over to Jupiter.
“I see, Atwood.”
To Arthur’s surprise, Atwood took Jupiter’s hand and kissed it tenderly, then they embraced as if they were husband and wife and Atwood were about to go off to war.
“Places,” Jupiter said, extricating herself and clapping her hands. “Places, gentlemen.” She checked her watch. “The hour will soon be upon us.”
* * *
The members of the expedition arranged themselves in the positions that Sun had marked for them on the floor: a complicated nine-pointed star. Thérèse Didot lit incense, and soon the room was filled with a dizzying sickly sweet haze.
In the centre of the circle there was a heap of boxes, packs, sacks, ropes. The paraphernalia of a polar expedition, heaped up like a Pharaoh’s grave—the treasures of this world, waiting to be translated into the next. This was a precaution. Not knowing quite what to expect, or in what form they might arrive on Mars, Atwood had insisted that they be prepared for anything.
The chanting began, and it went on for some time. They rehearsed, over and over, Atwood or Sun or Jupiter stopping them again and again. The music of the chanting rose and fell. Archer’s voice was the loudest, harsh and rasping. The words didn’t matter, not in Arthur’s opinion; it was the sound, the rhythm, the state of mind they created. But Archer saw things differently, and who knew what Atwood or Jupiter really thought.
Outside, night winds battered at the eaves and shadows passed across the windows. The warehouse was lit by paraffin lamps and a large number of candles, some of which dripped wax from the rafters. Atwood owned the warehouse, and it crossed Arthur’s mind to wonder if he was insured against fire. Then he put those thoughts out of his mind, sat on the floor, and performed the meditations assigned to him. The hexagram. The red plains. Sand. The sword. Josephine’s face appeared unbidden before him. He dismissed it.
Rehearsals bled imperceptibly into the real thing. The big show. The chant rose and fell, around and around. It revolved towards a dizzying peak. It was hard to remember precisely when it had begun. Smoke and incense filled the room, so that Arthur could hardly see Payne, the man next to him. Vaz was nothing but a smudge in the distance. Archer and Jupiter, walking around the circle and chanting, were strange monsters in the smoke—the coloured lamps they carried like eyes, like moons.
Sun was the first to go. He swayed and his chin fell on his chest and he slumped over sideways. Arthur’s heart leapt. If all had gone well, Sun would soon be opening his eyes in another world. A translation, a transformation, a transmigration of the soul, perhaps not unlike death.
Atwood went just a moment later, falling elegantly backwards as if in a faint. Payne went shortly afterwards, with rather more of a thud.
Five minutes later—it felt like hours—Archer’s son went. He grunted and dropped his enormous head and swayed. He grunted again, and shuddered all over, then opened his mouth and roared. Black mud poured from his nose. He clenched his fists and tore at his thin black hair. Archer stopped chanting and screamed, No, no, my boy, my boy, what’s happening to you, what have they done, what have they done? His shoulders quaked. His eyes were bloodshot. He appeared to be having a seizure. Archer dropped her lamp and screamed, her hands to her mouth. Something in her eyes suggested that she had made a terrible mistake. As her son fell forward, blood streaming from his nose, she threw herself upon him, sobbing and shaking him.
Arthur had no idea what had happened or why. An error in the calculations? Something they’d failed to consider? The cause hardly mattered now. Archer’s son appeared to be dead. That was a disaster. The ritual, all of Gracewell’s calculations, assumed nine.
Jupiter and Miss Didot glanced at each other, then continued their pacing and chanting, stepping over Archer as she sobbed and wailed. Vaz tried to stand, but Dimmick seized his hand and pulled him down again.
It was too late to run. If Arthur quit now, leaving the thing undone, then anything might happen. Atwood and Sun might be stranded—the whole thing might fall apart.
Arthur sat and furiously strained for calm, for patience, for the dream-like peace that was conducive to projection. His head spun. Archer sobbed. Wind and rain beat against the windows. Jupiter chanted the names of the planets. Miss Didot chanted the names of devils and angels, the ninety-nine gates, Agares and Vassago and Marbas and Valefor. Vaz and Frank slumped over on the floor—dead? Sleeping? Successfully voyaging through the aether? He didn’t know.
Arthur sat on the floor. It seemed to him that he also stood, swaying. He was in two places at once. His head was now very far from his feet, as if he’d stretched, like Alice, as if he were rising up through the roof of the warehouse. Beneath him, Jupiter’s and Thérèse Didot’s lights revolved through the gloom. Archer’s dropped paraffin lamp had started a blaze on the floor—the flames licking at the great heap of provisions in the middle of the circle, which threatened to burst into a pyre, and at the shoes of the recumbent body in a tweed jacket that he recognised, before the lights dimmed, as his own. But now there were lights above him, too, and he rose towards them. He held in his mind the images of the ritual: the hexagram, the sword, blood and sand. There would be ninety-nine gates to pass through. It seemed to him that the warehouse below him was full of swirling red sand, swallowing the lights. And was it his imagination, or had he glimpsed, at the edge of vision, a dozen strange men creeping through the alleys towards the warehouse, moving with sinister intent—Germans, perhaps, or Podmore’s men, or possibly the Americans Atwood dreaded? Well, it was too late to warn Jupiter now. That was her problem. He could hardly hear the chanting now. There was nothing to guide him but his own will. Ninety-nine gates; he had committed the signs and names to memory. He passed through a hexagram of red light and became a ray of black light, streaming into the void. The gate named Apep was a ring of angels that shouted as he passed. Rising up and falling at the same time. Faster and faster, hotter and hotter; colder and darker and deeper. He faltered, almost, at the ninety-second gate, Da’ath, which took the form of a great revolving pentagram of ice; and at the ninety-ninth gate, which Atwood had named Yaldabaoth—the shape of it was indescribable. He closed his eyes in horror and it was only his will and his memory that carried him through, deeper and deeper into utter darkness.
Wind buffeted him. He stood firm.
Sand. Sand and dust tickled his face, blew about him, getting into his mouth and his nose.
He coughed, spat out dust. He opened his eyes.
A red plain stretched before him.
A jumble of images assaulted his vision. Inkblots—no, clouds of violet dust on the horizon. Rocks underfoot. Cold wind. A vast sky. Alien light. Some of the clouds were mountains, impossibly tall and thin.
No Josephine. Of course not, of course not, of course not. No smile, no welcome at all—in fact nothing, nothing as far as the eye could see. A dead world, an empty world.
Somewhere behind him, someone was saying, It exists, it exists. It sounded like Atwood. It exists!
He rubbed at his eyes.
His eyes! His hands, for that matter!
He patted at his arms, his chest. Solid. Flesh and bone. He was still wearing his tweed jacket. He didn’t know quite why the jacket should seem so extraordinary to him, but it did.
His head spun. He swayed and stumbled. Atwood’s voice called out Look out there! and Vaz called out something that sounded like Hey! It had hurt when he landed, knocked the breath right out of him. His breath! Arthur laughed. He lay on his back and looked up into an impossible sky, a deep dark i
nky starless violet, shifting and turbulent with dust-clouds. The moon—no, two moons, one red and one the other marble-pink—it was dizzying to think of them—two moons chasing each other around and around that sky—a sky that was a thousand times wider and darker and wilder than any sky that was ever seen over London—a vastness as huge and as terrifying as the face of God.
THE
SEVENTH
DEGREE
{Angel and Abyss}
Chapter Twenty-seven
If there had been newspapers in the ivory city, they would have been utterly preoccupied with the Earthwoman Question. One day there would have been editorials urging that she be investigated, the next that she be deported; demanding that she be vivisected, or given the keys to the city, or exhibited on stage, or hauled before the courts, or condemned by the Church, or prohibited by Act of Parliament, or sent off on a tour of the provinces. She’d have been mocked in cartoons. (How does one caricature a invisible ghost? They’d have found a way.) All the experts would have weighed in; and even the common Martian in the street would have had his say, writing letters calling for Something to Be Done. Or, at least, that was how it all seemed to Josephine. What was certain was that the Martians of the lunar city were fascinated and horrified in equal measure by the news that they had a ghost in their midst, a spectral interloper from the mysterious Blue Sphere.
Now that old Piccadilly had shown her how, she couldn’t help but hear their thoughts. There were so many of them, and they were so loud, like a swarm of crickets. She sensed emotions, images, longings, fears. She couldn’t help but try to communicate, sending images of the Earth and London to and fro across the city, causing confusion, ecstasy, panic, and sometimes fits of agitated swarming that might be what passed for riots on the white moon.
The Revolutions Page 28