by Clive Barker
There was a noise accompanying every tremor now: a mingling of tortured wood and cracking plaster, all underscored by a guttural boiling, the source of which she didn’t comprehend until she reached the edge of the circle. The darkness beneath them was indeed a void—the In Ovo, opened by Gentle’s breaking of the circle—and in it, already woken by Sartori’s dabblings, the prisoners that connived and suppurated there, rising at the scent of escape.
At the door, the gek-a-gek set up a clamor of anticipation, sensing the release of their fellows. But for all their power they’d have few of the spoils in the coming massacre. There were forms appearing below that made them look kittenish: entities of such elaboration neither Jude’s eyes nor wits could encompass them. The sight terrified her, but if this was the only way to halt the Reconciliation, then so be it. History would repeat itself, and the Maestro be twice damned.
He’d seen the Oviates’ ascent as clearly as she and was frozen by the sight. Determined to prevent him from reestablishing the status quo at all costs, she reached to snatch the stone from his hand, so as to pitch it through the window. But before her fingers could grasp it he looked up at her. The anguish went from his face, and rage replaced it.
“Throw the stone away!” she yelled.
His eyes weren’t on her, however. They were on a sight at her shoulder. Sartori! She threw herself aside as the knives came down and, clutching the mantelpiece, turned back to see the brothers face to face, one armed with blades, the other with the stone.
Sartori’s glance had gone to Jude as she leapt, and before he could return it to his enemy Gentle brought the stone down with a two-handed blow, striking sparks from one of the blades as he dashed it from his brother’s fingers. While the advantage was his, Gentle went after the second blade, but Sartori had it out of range before the stone could connect, so Gentle swung at the empty hand, the cracking of his brother’s bones audible through the din of Oviates and boards and cracking walls.
Sartori made a pitiful yell and raised his fractured hand in front of his brother, as if to win remorse for the hurt. But as Gentle’s eyes went to Sartori’s broken hand, the other, whole and sharp, came at his flank. He glimpsed the blade and half turned to avoid it, but it found his arm, opening it to the bone from wrist to elbow. He dropped the stone, a rain of blood coming after, and as his palm went up to stem the flow Sartori entered the circle, slashing back and forth as he came.
Defenseless, Gentle retreated before the blade and, arching back to avoid the cuts, lost his footing and went down beneath his attacker. One stab would have finished him there and then. But Sartori wanted intimacy. He straddled his brother’s body and squatted down upon it, slashing at Gentle’s arms as he attempted to ward off the coup de grace.
Jude scoured the unsolid boards for the fallen knife, her gaze distracted by the malignant forms that were everywhere turning their faces to freedom. The blade, if she could find it, would be of no use against them, but it might still dispatch Sartori. He’d planned to take his own life with one of these knives. She could still turn it to such work, if she could only find it.
But before she could do so, she heard a sob from the circle and, glancing back, saw Gentle sprawled beneath his brother’s weight, horrendously wounded, his chest sliced open, his jaw, cheeks, and temples slashed, his hands and arms crisscrossed with cuts. The sob wasn’t his, but Sartori’s. He’d raised the knife and was uttering this last cry before he plunged the blade into his brother’s heart.
His grief was premature. As the knife came down, Gentle found the strength to thrash one final time, and instead of finding his heart the blade entered his upper chest below his clavicle. Slickened, the handle slipped through Sartori’s fingers. But he had no need to reclaim it. Gentle’s rally was over as suddenly as it had begun. His body uncurled, its spasms ceased, and he lay still.
Sartori rose from his seat on his brother’s belly and looked down at the body for a time, then turned to survey the spectacle of the void. Though the Oviates were close to the surface now, he didn’t hurry to act or retreat, but surveyed the whole panorama at the center of which he stood, his eyes finally coming to rest on Jude.
“Oh, love,” he said softly. “Look what you’ve done. You’ve given me to my Heavenly Father.”
Then he stooped and reached out of the circle to take hold of the stone that Gentle had removed and, with the finesse of a painter laying down a final stroke, put it back in place.
The status quo wasn’t instantly restored. The forms below continued to rise, seething with frustration as they sensed that their route into the Fifth had been sealed. The fire in the stone began to go out, but before their last gutterings Sartori murmured an order to the gek-a-gek and they sloped from their places at the door, their flat heads skimming the ground. Jude thought at first they were coming for her, but it was Gentle they’d been ordered to collect. They divided around the circle and reached over its perimeter, taking hold of the body almost tenderly and lifting it out of their Maestro’s way.
“Down the stairs,” he told them, and they retreated to the door with their burden, leaving the circle in Sartori’s sole possession.
A terrible calm had descended. The last glimpses of the In Ovo had disappeared; the light in the stones was all but gone. In the gathering darkness she saw Sartori find his place at the center of the circle and sit.
“Don’t do this,” she murmured to him.
He raised his head and made a little grunt, as though he was surprised she was still in the room.
“It’s already done,” he said. “All I have to do is hold the circle till midnight.”
She heard a moan from below, as Clem saw what the Oviates had brought to the top of the stairs. Then came the thump, thump, thump as the body was thrown down the flight. There could only be seconds before they came back for her, seconds to coax him from the circle. She knew only one way, and if it failed there could be no further appeal.
“I love you,” she said.
It was too dark to see him, but she felt his eyes.
“I know,” he said, without feeling. “But my Heavenly Father will love me more. It’s in His hands now.”
She heard the Oviates moving behind her, their breaths chilly on her neck.
“I don’t ever want to see you again,” Sartori said.
“Please call them off,” she begged him, remembering the way Clem had been apprehended by these beasts, his arms half swallowed.
“Leave of your volition, and they won’t touch you,” he said. “I am about my Father’s business.”
“He doesn’t love you. . . .”
“Leave.”
“He’s incapable. . . .”
“Leave.”
She got to her feet. There was nothing left to say or do. As she turned her back on the circle the Oviates pressed their cold flanks against her legs and kept her trapped between them until she reached the threshold, to be certain she made no last attempt on their summoner’s life. Then she was allowed to go unescorted onto the landing. Clem was halfway up the stairs, bludgeon in hand, but she instructed him to stay where he was, fearful that the gek-a-gek would claw him to shreds if he climbed another step.
The door to the Meditation Room slammed behind her, and she glanced back to confirm what she’d already guessed: that the Oviates had followed her out and were now standing guard at the threshold. Still nervous that they’d land some last blow, she crossed to the top of the flight as though she were walking on eggs and only picked up her speed once she was on the stairs.
There was light below, but the scene it illuminated was as grim as anything above. Gentle was lying at the bottom of the stairs, his head laid on Celestine’s lap. The sheet she’d worn had fallen from her shoulders, and her breasts were bare, bloodied where she’d held her son’s face to her skin.
“Is he dead?” Jude murmured to Clem.
He shook his head. “He’s holding on.”
She didn’t have to ask what for. The front door was o
pen, hanging half demolished from its hinges, and through it she could hear the first stroke of midnight from a distant steeple.
“The circle’s complete,” she said.
“What circle?” Clem asked her.
She didn’t reply. What did it matter now? But Celestine had looked up from her meditation on Gentle’s face, and the same question was in her eyes as on Clem’s lips, so Jude answered them as plainly as she could.
“The Imajica’s a circle,” she said.
“How do you know?” Clem asked.
“The Goddesses told me.”
She was almost at the bottom of the stairs, and now that she was closer to mother and son she could see that Gentle was literally holding on to life, clutching at Celestine’s arm and staring up into her face. Only when Jude sank down onto the bottom stair did Gentle’s eyes go to her.
“I . . . never knew,” he said.
“I know,” she replied, thinking he was speaking of Hapexamendios’ plot. “I didn’t want to believe it either.”
Gentle shook his head. “I mean the circle,” he said. “I never knew it was a circle. . . .”
“It was the Goddesses’ secret,” Jude said.
Now Celestine spoke, her voice as soft as the flames that lit her lips. “Doesn’t Hapexamendios know?”
Jude shook her head.
“So whatever fire he sends,” Celestine murmured, “will burn its way around the circle.”
Jude studied her face, knowing there was some profit in this knowledge but too exhausted to make sense of it. Celestine looked down at Gentle’s face.
“Child?” she said.
“Yes, Mama.”
“Go to Him,” she said. “Take your spirit into the First and find your Father.”
The effort of breathing seemed almost too much for Gentle, never mind a journey. But what his body was incapable of, maybe his spirit could achieve. He lifted his fingers towards his mother’s face. She caught hold of them.
“What are you going to do?” Gentle said.
“Call His fire,” Celestine said.
Jude looked towards Clem to see if this exchange made any more sense to him than it did to her, but he looked completely perplexed. What was the use of inviting death when it was going to come anyway, and all too quickly?
“Delay Him,” Celestine was telling Gentle. “Go to Him as a loving son, and hold His attention for as long as you can. Flatter Him. Tell Him how much you want to see His face. Can you do that for me?”
“Of course, Mama.”
“Good.”
Content that her child would do as he was charged, Celestine laid Gentle’s hand back upon his chest and slid her knees out from beneath his head, lowering it tenderly to the boards. She had one last instruction for him.
“When you go into the First, go through the Dominions. He mustn’t know that there’s another way, do you understand?”
“Yes, Mama.”
“And when you get there, child, listen for the voice. It’s in the ground. You’ll hear it, if you listen carefully. It says—”
“Nisi Nirvana.”
“That’s right.”
“I remember,” Gentle said. “Nisi Nirvana.”
As if the name were a blessing and would protect him as he went on his way, he closed his eyes and took his leave.
Celestine didn’t indulge in sentiment but rose, pulling the sheet up around her as she crossed to the bottom of the stairs. “Now I have to speak to Sartori.”
“That’s going to be difficult,” Jude said. “The door’s locked and guarded.”
“He’s my son,” Celestine replied, looking up the flight. “He’ll open it for me.”
And so saying, she ascended.
Twenty-four
I
GENTLE’S SPIRIT WENT FROM the house, thinking not of the Father that awaited him in the First Dominion but of the mother he was leaving behind. In the hours since his return from the Tabula Rasa’s tower they’d shared all too brief a time together. He’d knelt beside her bed for a few minutes while she told the story of Nisi Nirvana. He’d held on to her in the Goddesses’ rain, ashamed of the desire he felt but unable to deny it. And finally, moments ago, he’d lain in her arms while the blood seeped out of him. Child; lover; cadaver. There was the arc of a little life there, and they’d have to be content with it.
He didn’t entirely comprehend her purpose in sending him from her, but he was too confounded to do anything but obey. She had her reasons, and he had to trust them, now that the work he’d labored to achieve had soured. That too he didn’t entirely comprehend. It had happened too fast. One moment he’d been so remote from his body he was almost ready to forget it entirely; the next he was back in the Meditation Room, with Jude’s grip earning his screams, and his brother mounting the stairs behind her, his knives gleaming. He’d known then, seeing death in his brother’s face, why the mystif had torn itself to shreds in order to make him seek Sartori out. Their Father was there in that face, in that despairing certainty, and had been all along, no doubt. But he’d never seen it. All he’d ever seen was his own beauty, twisted out of true, and told himself how fine it was to be Heaven to his other’s Hell. What a mockery that was! He’d been his Father’s dupe—His agent, His fool—and he might never have realized it if Jude hadn’t dragged him raw from the Ana and showed him in terrible particulars the destroyer in the mirror.
But the recognition had come so late, and he was so ill equipped to undo the damage he’d done. He could only hope that his mother understood better than he where the little hope left to them lay. In pursuit of it, he’d be her agent now and go into the First to do whatever he could at her behest.
He went the long way round, as she’d instructed, his path taking him back over the territories he’d traveled when he’d sought out the Synod, and though he longed to swoop out of the air and pass the time of a new day with the others, he knew he couldn’t linger.
He glimpsed them as he went, however, and saw that they’d survived the last hectic minutes in the Ana and were back in their Dominions, beaming with their triumph. On the Mount of Lipper Bayak, Tick Raw was howling to the heavens like a lunatic, waking every sleeper in Vanaeph and stirring the guards in the watch-towers of Patashoqua. In the Kwem, Scopique was clambering up the slope of the Pivot pit where he’d sat to do his part, tears of joy in his eyes as he turned them skyward. In Yzordderrex, Athanasius was on his knees in the street outside the Eurhetemec Kesparate, bathing his hands in a spring that was leaping up at his wounded face like a dog that wanted to lick him well. And on the borders of the First, where Gentle’s spirit slowed, Chicka Jackeen was watching the Erasure, waiting for the blank wall to dissolve and give him a glimpse of Hapexamendios’ Dominion.
His gaze left the sight, however, when he felt Gentle’s presence. “Maestro?” he said.
More than any of the others, Gentle wanted to share something of what was afoot with Jackeen, but he dared not. Any exchange this close to the Erasure might be monitored by the God behind it, and he knew he’d not be able to converse with this man, who’d shown him such devotion, without offering some word of warning, so he didn’t tempt himself. Instead he commanded his spirit on, hearing Jackeen call his name again as he went. But before the appeal could come a third time he passed through the Erasure and into the Dominion beyond. In the blind moments before the First appeared, his mother’s voice echoed in his head.
“She went into a city of iniquities,” he heard her saying, “where no ghost was holy, and no flesh was whole.”
Then the Erasure was behind him, and he was hovering on the perimeters of the City of God.
No wonder his brother had been an architect, he thought. Here was enough inspiration for a nation of prodigies, a labor of ages, raised by a power for whom an age was the measure of a breath. Its majesty spread in every direction but the one behind, the streets wider than the Patashoquan Highway and so straight they only disappeared at their vanishing point, the buildings so monumen
tal the sky was barely visible between their eaves. But whatever suns or satellites hung in the heavens of this Dominion, the city had no need of their illumination. Cords of light ran through the paving stones, and through the bricks and slabs of the great houses, their ubiquity ensuring that all but the most vapid shadows were banished from the streets and plazas.
He moved slowly at first, expecting soon to encounter one of the city’s inhabitants, but after passing over half a dozen intersections and finding no soul on the streets, he began to pick up his speed, slowing only when he glimpsed some sign of life behind the façades. He wasn’t nimble enough to catch a face, nor was he so presumptuous as to enter uninvited, but he several times saw curtains moving, as though some shy but curious citizen was retiring from the sill before he could return the scrutiny. Nor was this the only sign of such presences. Carpets left hanging over balustrades still shook, as if their beaters had just retired from their patios; vines dropped their leaves down as fruit gatherers fled for the safety of their rooms.
It seemed that however fast he traveled—and he was moving faster than any vehicle—he couldn’t overtake the rumor that drove the populace into hiding. They left nothing behind: no pet, no child, no scrap of litter, no stroke of graffiti. Each was a model citizen and kept his or her life out of sight behind the drapes and the closed doors.
Such emptiness in a metropolis so clearly built to teem might have seemed melancholy had it not been for the structures themselves, which were built of materials so diverse in texture and color, and were lent such vitality by the light that ran in them, that, even though they were deserted, the streets and plazas had a life of their own. The builders had banished gray and brown from their palette and in its place had found slate, stone, paving, and tiles of every conceivable hue and nuance, mingling their colors with an audacity no architect of the Fifth would have dared. Street after street presented a spectacle of glorious color: façades of lilac and amber, colonnades of brilliant purples, squares laid out in ocher and blue. And everywhere, amid the riot, scarlet of eye-pricking intensity; and a white as perfect; and here and there, used more sparingly still, flicks and snippets of black: a tile, a brick, a seam in a slab.