by Clive Barker
“Only that the mystif isn’t here simply charged with spying, ma’am. In denying its people the benefits of its birthright, it committed a grievous crime against us.”
“I don’t doubt that,” Culus said. “And it frankly sickens me to look on something so tainted that once had perfectibility within its grasp. But, may I remind you, Thes ‘reh’ ot, how few we are? The tribe is diminished to almost nothing. And this mystif, whose breed was always rare, is the last of its line.”
“The last?” said Pie.
“Yes, the last!” Culus replied, her voice trembling as it rose. “While you were at play in the Fifth Dominion our people have been systematically decimated. There are now fewer than fifty souls here in the city. The rest are either dead or scattered. Your own line is destroyed, Pie ‘oh’ pah. Every last one of your clan is murdered or dead of grief.”
The mystif covered its face with its hands, but Culus didn’t spare it the rest of her report.
“Two other mystifs survived the purges,” she went on, “until just a year ago. One was murdered here in the chiancula, while it was healing a child. The other went into the desert—the Dearth are there, at the edge of the First, and the Autarch’s troops don’t like to go so near to the Erasure—but they caught up with it before it reached the tents. They brought its body back and hung it on the gates.”
She stepped down from her chair and approached Pie, who was sobbing now.
“So you see, it may be that you did the right thing for the wrong reasons. If you’d stayed you’d be dead by now.”
“Ma’am, I protest,” Thes ‘reh’ ot said.
“What would you prefer I did?” Culus said. “Add this foolish creature’s blood to the sea already spilt? No. Better we try and turn its taint to our advantage.”
Pie looked up, puzzled.
“Perhaps we’ve been too pure. Too predictable. Our stratagems foreseen, our plots easily uncovered. But you’re from another world, mystif, and maybe that makes you potent.” She paused for breath. Then she said, “This is my judgment. Take whomsoever you can find among our number and use your tainted ways to murder our enemy. If none will go with you, go alone. But don’t return here, mystif, while the Autarch is still breathing.”
Thes ‘reh’ ot let out a laugh that rang around the chamber. “Perfect!” he said. “Perfect!”
“I’m glad my judgment amuses you,” Culus replied. “Remove yourself, Thes ‘reh’ ot.” He made to protest but she brought forth such a shout he flinched as if struck. “I said, remove yourself!”
The laughter fell from his face. He made a small formal bow, murmuring some chilly words of parting as he did so, and left the chamber. She watched him go.
“We have all become cruel,” she said. “You in your way. Us in ours.” She looked back at Pie ‘oh’ pah. “Do you know why he laughed, mystif?”
“Because he thinks your judgment is execution by another name?”
“Yes, that’s precisely what he thinks. And, who knows, perhaps that’s what it is. But this may be the last night of the Dominion, and last things have power tonight they never had before.”
“And I’m a last thing.”
“Yes, you are.”
The mystif nodded. “I understand,” it said. “And it seems just.”
“Good,” she said. Though the trial was over, neither moved. “You have a question?” Culus asked.
“Yes, I do.”
“Better ask it now.”
“Do you know if a shaman called Arae ‘ke’ gei is still alive?”
Culus made a little smile. “I wondered when you’d get to him,” she said. “He was one of the survivors of the Reconciliation, wasn’t he?”
“Yes.”
“I didn’t know him that well, but I heard him speak of you. He held on to life long after most people would have given up, because he said you’d come back eventually. He didn’t realize you were bound to your Maestro, of course.”
She said all this disingenuously, but there was a penetrating look in her rheumy eyes throughout.
“Why didn’t you come back, mystif?” she said. “And don’t spin me some story about jurisdiction. You could have slipped your bondage if you’d put your mind to it, especially in the confusion after the failure of the Reconciliation. But you didn’t. You chose to stay with your wretched Sartori, even though members of your own tribe had been victims of his ineptitude.”
“He was a broken man. And I was more than his familiar, I was his friend. How could I leave him?”
“That’s not all,” Culus said. She’d been a judge too long to let such simplifications pass unchallenged. “What else, mystif? This is the night of last things, remember. Tell it now or run the risk of not telling it at all.”
“Very well,” said Pie. “I always nurtured the hope that there would be another attempt at Reconciliation. And I wasn’t the only one who nurtured such a hope.”
“Arae ‘ke’ gei indulged it too, huh?”
“Yes, he did.”
“So that’s why he kept your name alive. And himself too, waiting for you to come back.” She shook her head. “Why do you wallow in these fantasies? There’ll be no Reconciliation. If anything, it’ll be the other way about. The Imajica’ll come apart at the seams, and every Dominion will be sealed up in its own little misery.”
“That’s a grim vision.”
“It’s an honest one. And a rational one.”
“There are still people in every Dominion willing to try again. They’ve waited two hundred years, and they’re not going to let go of their hope now.”
“Arae ‘ke’ gei let go,” Culus said. “He died two years ago.”
“I was . . . prepared for that eventuality,” Pie said. “He was old when I knew him last.”
“If it’s any comfort, your name was on his lips at the very end. He never gave up believing.”
“There are others who can perform the ceremonies in his place.”
“I was right,” Culus said. “You are a fool, mystif.” She started towards the door. “Do you do this in memory of your Maestro?”
Pie went with her, opening the door and stepping out into a twilight sharp with smoke. “Why would I do that?” Pie said.
“Because you loved him,” Culus said, her gaze accusatory. “And that’s the real reason why you never came back here. You loved him more than your own people.”
“Perhaps that’s true,” Pie said. “But why would I do anything in memory of the living?”
“The living?”
The mystif smiled, bowing to its judge as it retreated from the light at the door, fading into the gloom like a phantom. “I told you Sartori was a broken man, not a dead one,” it said as it went. “The dream is still alive, Culus ‘su’ erai. And so is my Maestro.”
II
Quaisoir was waiting behind the veils when Seidux came in. The windows were open, and within the warm dusk came a din aphrodisiacal to a soldier like Seidux. He peered at the veils, trying to make out the figure behind them. Was she naked? It seemed so.
“I have an apology to make,” she said to him.
“There’s no need.”
“There’s every need. You were doing your duty, watching me.” She paused. When she spoke again, her voice was sinuous. “I like to be watched, Seidux. . . .”
He murmured, “You do?”
“Certainly. As long as my audience is appreciative.”
“I’m appreciative,” he said, surreptitiously dropping his cigarette and grinding it out beneath the heel of his boot.
“Then why don’t you close the door?” she said to him. “In case we get noisy. Maybe you should tell the guards to go and get drunk?”
He did so. When he returned to the veils he saw that she was kneeling up on the bed, her hand between her legs. And, yes, she was naked. When she moved the veils moved with her, some of them sticking momentarily to the oiled gloss of her skin. He could see how her breasts rode up as she raised her arms, inviting his kisses
there. He put his hand out to part the veils, but they were too abundant, and he could find no break in them, so he simply pressed on towards her, half blinded by their luxury.
Her hand went down once more between her legs, and he couldn’t conceal a moan of anticipation at the thought of replacing it with his own. There was swelling in her fingers, he thought: some device she’d been pleasuring herself with, most likely, anticipating his arrival, easing herself open to accommodate his every inch. Thoughtful, pliant thing that she was, she was even handing it to him now, as though in confession of her little sin; thinking perhaps that he’d want to feel its warmth and wetness. She pushed it through the veils towards him, as he in turn pressed towards her, murmuring as he went a few promises that ladies liked to hear.
Between those promises he caught the sound of tearing fabric, and assuming that she was clawing her way through the veils in her hunger to reach him, began to do the same himself, until he felt a sharp pain in his belly. He looked down through the layers that clung about his face and saw a stain spreading through the weave. He let out a cry and started to disentangle himself, catching sight of her pleasuring device buried deep in him as he wrestled to be out of her way. She withdrew the blade, only to plunge it into him a second time, and a third, leaving it in his heart as he fell backwards, his fingers dragging the veils down with him.
Standing at one of the upper windows of Peccable’s house, watching the fires that raged in every direction, Jude shuddered, and looking down at her hands saw them glistening, wet with blood. The vision lasted only the briefest time, but she had no doubt of what she’d seen, nor what it signified. Quaisoir had committed the crime she’d been plotting.
“It’s quite a sight, isn’t it?” she heard Dowd say, and turned to look at him, momentarily disoriented. Had he seen the blood, too? No, no. He was talking about the fires.
“Yes, it is,” she said.
He came to join her at the glass, which rattled with each fusillade. “The Peccables are almost ready to leave. I suggest we do the same. I’m feeling much renewed.” He had indeed healed with astonishing speed. The wounds on his face were barely visible now.
“Where will we go?” she said.
“Around the other side of the city,” he said. “To where I first trod the boards. According to Peccable the theater is still standing. The Ipse, it’s called. Built by Pluthero Quexos himself. I’d like to see it again.”
“You want to be a tourist on a night like this?”
“The theater may not be standing tomorrow. In fact, the whole of Yzordderrex could be in ruins by daybreak. I thought you were the one who was so hungry to see it.”
“If it’s a sentimental visit,” she said, “maybe you should go alone.”
“Why, have you got some other agenda?” he asked her. “You have, haven’t you?”
“How could I have?” she protested lightly. “I’ve never set foot here before.”
He studied her, his face all suspicion. “But you always wanted to come here, didn’t you? Right from the start. Godolphin used to wonder where you got the obsession from. Now I’m wondering the same.” He followed her gaze through the window. “What’s out there, Judith?”
“You can see for yourself,” she replied. “We’ll probably get killed before we reach the top of the street.”
“No,” he said. “Not us. We’re blessed.”
“Are we?”
“We’re the same, remember? Perfect partners.”
“I remember,” she replied.
“Ten minutes, then we’ll go.”
“I’ll be ready.”
She heard the door close behind her, then looked down at her hands again. All trace of the vision had faded. She glanced back towards the door, to be certain that Dowd had gone, then put her hands to the glass and closed her eyes. She had ten minutes to find the woman who shared her face, ten minutes before she and Dowd were out in the tumult of the streets and all hope of contact would be dashed.
“Quaisoir,” she murmured.
She felt the glass vibrate against her palms and heard the din of the dying across the roofs. She said her double’s name a second time, turning her thoughts to the towers that would have been visible from this very window if the air between hadn’t been so thick with smoke. The image of that smoke filled her head, though she hadn’t consciously conjured it, and she felt her thoughts rise in its clouds, wafted on the heat of destruction.
It was difficult for Quaisoir to find something discreet to wear among garments she had acquired for their immodesty, but by tearing all the decoration from one of her simpler robes she had achieved something like seemliness. Now she left her chambers and prepared for her final journey through the palace. She had already plotted her route once she was out of the gates: back down to the harbor, where she’d first seen the Man of Sorrows, standing on the roof. If He wasn’t there, she would find somebody who knew His whereabouts. He hadn’t come into Yzordderrex simply to disappear again. He would leave trails for His acolytes to follow, and trials, no doubt, for them to endure, proving in their endurance how much they desired to come into His presence. But first, she had to get out of the palace, and to do so she took corridors and stairways that had not been used in decades, familiar only to her, the Autarch, and the masons who’d laid these cold stones, cold themselves now. Only Maestros andtheir mistresses preserved their youth, and doing so was no longer the bliss it had been. She would have liked the years to show on her face when she knelt before the Nazarene, so that He would know that she’d suffered, and that she deserved His forgiveness. But she would have to trust that He would see through the veil of her perfection to the pain beneath.
Her feet were bare, and the chill rose through her soles, so that by the time she reached the humid air outside, her teeth were chattering. She halted for a moment, to orient herself in the maze of courtyards that surrounded the palace, and as she turned her thoughts from the practical to the abstract she met another thought, waiting at the back of her skull for just such a turn. She didn’t doubt its source for a moment. The angel that Seidux had driven from her chamber that afternoon had waited at the threshold all this time, knowing she would come at last, seeking guidance. Tears started to her eyes when she realized she’d not been forsaken. The Son of David knew her agony and sent this messenger to whisper in her head.
Ipse, it said. Ipse.
She knew what the word meant. She’d patronized the Ipse many times, masked, as were all the women of the haut monde when visiting places of moral dubiety. She’d seen all the works of Quexos performed there; and translations of Flotter; even, on occasion, Koppocovi’s farces, crude as they were. That the Man of Sorrows should have chosen such a place was certainly strange, but who was she to question His purposes?
“I hear,” she said aloud.
Even before the voice in her had faded, she was making her way through the courtyards to the gate by which she would be delivered most readily into the Deliquium Kesparate, where Pluthero Quexos had built his shrine to artifice, soon to be reconsecrated in the name of Truth.
Jude took her hands from the window and opened her eyes. There had been none of the clarity she’d experienced when asleep in this contact—in truth she was not even certain she’d made it—but there was no time left to try again. Dowd was calling her, and so were the streets of Yzordderrex, blazing though they were. She’d seen blood spilt from her place by the window; numerous assaults and beatings; troop charges and retreats; civilians warring in rabid packs, and others marching in brigades, armed and ordered. In such a chaos of factions she had no way of judging the legitimacy of any cause; nor, in truth, did she much care. Her mission was seek out her sister in this maelstrom, and hope that she in her turn was seeking out Jude.
Quaisoir would be disappointed, of course, if and when they finally met. Jude was not the messenger of the Lord she was hurrying to find. But then lords divine or secular were not the redeemers and salvers of the world legend made them out to be. They wer
e spoilers; they were destroyers. The evidence of that was out there, in the very streets Jude was about to tread, and if she could only make Quaisoir share and understand that vision, perhaps the promise of sisterhood would not be so unwelcome a gift to bring to this meeting, which she could not help but think of as a reunion.
Thirty-five
I
DEMANDING DIRECTIONS AS HE went, usually from wounded men, Gentle took several hours to get from the hosannas of Lickerish Street to the mystif’s Kesparate, during which period the city’s decline into chaos quickened, so that he went half expecting that the streets of straight houses and blossom-clad trees would be ashes and rubble by the time he arrived. But when he finally came to the city-within-a-city he found it untouched by looters or demolishers, either because they knew there was little of worth to them here or—more likely—because the lingering superstition about a people who’d once occupied the Unbeheld’s Dominion kept them from doing their worst.
Entering, he went first to the chiancula, prepared to do whatever was necessary—threaten, beg, cajole—in order to be returned into the mystif’s company. The chiancula and all the adjacent buildings were deserted, however, so he began a systematic search of the streets. They, like the, chiancula, were empty, and as his desperation grew his discretion fled, until he was shouting Pie’s name to the empty streets like a midnight drunkard.
Eventually, these tactics earned him a response. One of the quartet who’d appeared to offer such chilly welcome when he’d first come here appeared: the mustached young man. His robes were not held between his teeth this time, and when he spoke he deigned to do so in English. But the lethal ribbon still fluttered in his hands, its threat undisguised.
“You came back,” he said.
“Where’s Pie?”
“Where’s the girl child?”
“Dead. Where’s Pie?”
“You seem different.”
“I am. Where’s Pie?”
“Not here.”
“Where then?”