hell wants C Group brains? What are they good for? We can’t understand them and they can’t be bothered with us. They’re useless. What’s the good of a nuclear power plant to people who have just discovered
   fire? T hat’s about the right comparison.’
   Quite so. Super-intelligence has no place in our world. We need intellects only slightly advanced over our best, brains that can still exchange ideas with us rather than reduce both sides to ill-tempered bafflement. Groups A and B are about the best we can accommodate,
   and about the best that can tolerate us as a hum an ambience
   ‘So what do you w^ant M r Armstrong?’
   Since a deal has Finally to be founded on at least partial truth, he
   was willing to allow me a small curiosity. ‘The same as your Mob
   wants. Power. I may live another hundred years, longer if the techniques continue to improve. I want to make use of life. Given the knowledge that can produce exactly calculated intelligence of a
   specific type — not brains past comprehension but mathematicians,
   psychologists, pure logicians, even some kinds of artists — given that,
   On the nursery floor
   191
   what is impossible to the man who controls them?’
   Controls. There it is, naked and unashamed and stupid. He aspires
   to control a gaggle of assorted geniuses! The great problem of power
   has always been that the wielders of it learn to think themselves infallible. Hitler, Napoleon, the M ah’dis and Ayatollahs . . . make your own list. This intelligent idiot thought to control genius. He could only
   misuse and destroy it.
   ‘Your Mob wants power,’ he said, ‘and I want power. There will be
   enough to share.’ Until the shootout, I thought; there’s always a
   shootout to really finalise the deal. ‘The country?’ he asked, musing.
   ‘Why not the world, in good time?’
   Good time was now; I let the little electrodes slide forward through
   my fingertips. I was only three metres from him now, but he was alert
   and watchful.
   ‘The Mob,’ I said, ‘doesn’t want power. It wants knowledge. T hat’s
   all it wants.’ His expression asked: W hat’s this, some new angle?
   He said, laying down the philosophy, ‘Nobody wants knowledge for
   its own sake. He wants the rewards of knowledge.’
   ‘Not the dedicated genius. Not the created brains you still think you
   understand. The Mob is A Group.’
   He sat quite silent and still, revolving the information, deciding if
   and how it altered the situation. I offered a distracting crumb: ‘Like
   Mayflower, the A Group boys have done some sexual slumming. One
   of them is my father and you can believe that he has never forgiven
   you for a childhood on the Project site.’
   Armstrong said, like a man keeping his tongue busy while he
   thinks, ‘He passed no genius on to you.’
   ‘Indeed, no. He bred for relief, not for brains.’
   Before the last word I was moving and his action showed that his experience did not include physical attack. Instead of pressing the button he obeyed the protective insinct, raising his hands to ward me off.
   With my fingertips on his wrist I discharged the power pack in a single
   bolt. He died with the faintest of grunts.
   From the door of the protected room I gave a servile, ‘Thank you
   for your kindness, M r Armstrong,’ for the benefit of any who lurked
   or listened, and closed it behind me — and walked out of the house.
   I had to take the lifts out of my shoes, deflate the artificial waistline,
   remove the coloured contact lenses, wash the colour out of hair and
   skin and correct the little hop-skip limp of six months misdirection,
   192
   George lurner
   or Dad would not have known me. More importantly, the door flunkey would not know me either.
   Dad’s questions were searching rather than sympathetic; his
   urgency was only to get back to the other three to study the huge 3D
   blowup of Mayflower’s painting which — monitored and reproduced
   while I examined it — already occupied the end walls of the store
   room.
   Now they needed a physicist-mathematician better than themselves
   to solve the problems that held them up, but not so much better as to
   be unwilling to communicate . . . and a gene surgeon to implement
   the answer . . . then, aside from waiting for their bright child to grow
   up, there was the possibility that the brat would show no interest in
   that particular problem . . .
   Genius has a hard life.
   But — has my Mob some unspoken goal which is not simply the pursuit of knowledge? It isn’t the sort of thing they would tell their messenger boy. I would not deal with them as easily as the brash Armstrong . . . aside from the emotional problem (yes, there is one)
   of having to kill my father.
   From first fascination I have declined steadily to distrust of the
   Frankenstein game. Call me conservative, but I think we should be
   very careful about the contents of the nursery. Despite what I did to
   Armstrong, I become queasy at blood sports.
   Cave Am antem
   ©
   CARMEL BIRD
   The girl is burying the body in the hollow. She has wrapped it in a
   scarlet cloak. In the hollow beneath the sweet pines, she is burying
   the body which she has wrapped in the cloak. She scatters sweet
   herbs across the dead one who is folded and parcelled in scarlet.
   The girl scatters herbs and wild (lowers, pine needles, pebbles.
   There is a patter of pebbles; there is a rustle of leaves.
   Tears. There are tears in her eyes, on her fingers, lightly falling
   sometimes, upon the brush of greenery veiling the body in its cloth.
   H er pale eyes are filled with tears. Tears glisten on the leaves. In the
   hollow, the girl is burying the body, as her tears slide down the
   leaves, beading the green. Tears, rolling across rocks, shiver and
   settle between pebbles. They make no stain on the scarlet cloth, for
   the cloth is grimy, tattered at the edges, toggled with mud. It shows
   through the leaves and flowers, now dull red, now brown, and
   sometimes, on the edge of a wrinkle, vivid blood. Somewhere, the
   girl has gathered twigs of rosemary. She sprinkles the leaves of her
   rosemary across the body in the hollow.
   In the hollow between the rocks, beneath the sweet pines, in the
   heart of the silence of the forest, the girl is burying the body. Her
   fingernails, like claws, damaged, stained, scratch at the earth which
   she drops, crumbles, on top of the garlands of greenery. Stones,
   small rocks, and crumbs of earth, Moist and rotting leaves.
   It has taken her all day. In the castle, whole save for the roof, she
   wrapped the body in her cloak and carried it and dragged it to the
   193
   194
   Carmel Bird
   hollow. She placed it on the rotting floor of the sweet pine forest,
   and covered it with leaves and earth. H er arms were strong; she
   carried rocks; she marked the place with rocks. She wept when she
   buried the body of the wolf.
   Isabella had a terrible reputation. She used to go up to the old
   castle — there is no roof — with just about anyone. Soldiers, musicians, cripples, foreigners, old men and boys. She was reasonably pretty, in a sly sort of way. Oh, but there was the devil in her eyes.
<
br />   Light eyes, too light for hereabouts. Black hair, light eyes —
   Isabella was always a strange one. Pretty enough, you know, but
   strange.
   Well, none of the decent young men of the village would have
   very much to do with her. Everybody thought she would never find
   a husband. But she didn’t care very much about that. She lived
   with her grandmother, and she knew she would inherit the house
   when the old lady died. Inherit the house and the pigs and the hens
   and the few poor olive trees and the little herb garden. The old lady
   sold herbs. And she was so good and respectable and proud. There
   she was at Mass every day of her life; on feast days she wore a m antilla given to her long ago by the old Count. That is, the father of the present Count. She kept her house as clean as a convent with
   white walls and bright blue doors — even on the cupboards. I used
   to go there often — the chairs were made from bent withies; the
   table was blue. I would collect the eggs and stop for a gossip. Lace,
   there was lace, pure white. The grandmother-made lace. Oh, she
   was an industrious old woman. And pious. There she was at Mass,
   as I said, every morning, with her beads and her proud eyes and
   her prayers.
   She prayed, that old woman, for a husband for Isabella. W hat a
   joke! But she did. And she prayed as she swept the flagstones of her
   parlour, as she scrubbed the wooden staircase. She was making a
   wedding dress for Isabella, you know. Linen and lace and the sheets
   and all the household linens. She made the dress for my daughter
   Caterina when she married the Count’s nephew. She was known for
   miles around for her beautiful wedding gowns. But she couldn’t do
   a thing with Isabella.
   Nobody could do anything with Isabella. She always went her
   own way. The nuns did their best to tame her, and then they just
   gave up and prayed for her. The candles that have been lit for that
   Cave Amantem
   195
   girl! The old grandmother was far too weak. What Isabella needed,
   I say, was a father and half a dozen brothers to straighten her out.
   And that red cloak — she always wore that cloak. You could see
   her coming for miles. O f course, her grandm other made it for her.
   It would have been fine for a princess on a white horse. But there it
   was on Isabella as she ran from one end of the village to the other,
   often barefoot, meeting soldiers and travelling musicians and so on
   in the forest.
   So the grandmother swept the floor and she prayed and she
   made lace pillow covers and she prayed and she prayed for a husband for her beautiful Isabella. Everyone felt very sorry for her, the poor old woman. While Isabella roamed round like a gipsy, just like
   a gipsy in her red velvet cloak. H er skin was white, you know, just
   touched with apricot. The grandmother was like an old walnut,
   and she seemed to be made from the roots of trees. Yes, she looked
   like the roots of trees, the grandmother, the walnut. The granddaughter was the ripe fruit. Oh, she was a juicy apricot.
   My son was half in love with her — half the time. He knew it was
   madness. He knew not to go near her. But he liked the idea of
   inheriting the poor little farm, and he did like the idea of going with
   Isabella. I warned him that if he did, I would beat him within an
   inch of his life. He laughed and said he would put me down the well
   — ah, but he knew that I meant what I said. And he knew that I
   was right, in the end.
   He has since m arried the niece of a distant relative of the bishop,
   and stands to inherit a flock of sheep and a wide pasture-land. But I
   don’t mind telling you that he did plan to marry Isabella.
   My son was the answer to the grandm other’s prayers. Heaven
   saw the candles she lit; the M other of Sorrows heard the litanies she
   mumbled; and my son was to be, he thought, the answer to it all.
   He is very pleased now, naturally, that I stepped in. I knew what I
   was doing, as far as both families were concerned. They would have
   been no good for each other, Isabella and Luis. And our family has
   always been very respectable, with scarcely a breath of scandal,
   ever. My nephew is an idiot — but that is a different story. And for
   all that Isabella was a whore, she was really rather simple.
   I went to her, that afternoon, and I said I had an errand for her.
   Well, she trusted me. I think now that perhaps she trusted everybody, and that was the funny thing about her. She wanted to please me, because I was the mother of Luis. I asked her to take a basket of
   cakes to my sister. Little sugared cakes — to my sister who lives on
   196
   Carmel Bird
   the other side of the forest. The great pine forest you see out there.
   She, that is, my sister, was giving a party for the nuns. So I packed a
   basket with the cakes — I am well known around here for my little
   sugared cakes — and the tiny glasses — so delicately cut — the ones
   that my sister always likes to use — I sometimes wish that she
   would get some of her own — and I called Isabella over, and I asked
   her to take the basket of things to my sister. I said she could be back
   by sundown — and indeed so she could, if she hurried. But Isabella
   was one to dawdle, you know. I knew that she had an arrangement
   to meet Luis at the old castle at sundown. He was there; she wasn’t.
   I know that he must have heard the wolves, but he has never spoken
   of it.
   They found my basket and the tiny glasses, so delicately cut, all
   of them broken, and some of the little sugared cakes, strewn across
   the forest floor. I have replaced the glasses. It was not so difficult.
   I told them I had asked her to do the errand. O f course I told
   them. I will never be able to forgive myself. Everyone knew that I
   was only trying to be friendly, and to include her in some useful
   way in a family celebration. With Luis so besotted with her. The
   big fool. Yes, I admitted it was my basket — my best — my glasses,
   my cakes. My errand. My errand sent her to her doom in the
   forest. How can I ever forgive myself? Luis has forgiven me now.
   He is married, as I said, to one of the relatives of the bishop. They
   will have a son in the spring.
   No, they never found a trace of Isabella. Not even a piece of her
   grandm other’s lace. H er grandm other waited. She waited for a
   year for that girl to come back. The old lady spoke to nobody but
   the priest. And then, one night, she died. O f grief. She died with
   quiet dignity, of grief. Oh, and old age, of course. She was a twisted
   tree root, and she died — of old age. And of grief.
   She loved Isabella. She really loved Isabella. The wedding dress
   was on the bed, I believe. It was the finest lacework the nuns have
   ever seen. I have not seen it myself — but the nuns said it was the
   finest spiderweb of lace — and white — so white. Shiny. With
   teardrops of crystal. A dress for the M adonna. So they put it on the
   statue in the convent. It seemed the only thing to do.
   They never found Isabella’s body. If they had found it, they
   would have buried her in the dress. Naturally.
 But Isabella was
   never found. The men went out searching through the forest, every
   night, every day for months. It became an obsession with them.
   Whenever a stranger appeared in the village, they would tell him
   Cave Amantem
   197
   the story of Isabella, and get up a hunting party to go out after the
   wolves. But in all the two years since it happened, they never got
   one. Until two nights ago.
   Two nights ago, some soldiers from the north said they injured a
   wolf, the leader. The Devil with the fires of Hell in his eyes, they
   said. Well, maybe they got the animal. But Isabella, they never
   found.
   I had a long talk to the priest about my part in the tragedy. He
   said that I was not to know, and that I must never dwell on the idea
   that I sent the girl into the forest to her doom. She went, after all, of
   her own free will. I was not to know. But what a fate, what a punishment! To be eaten by wolves. It’s the grandmother I feel most sorry for. Because, you know, she never really knew who that girl was.
   Her son brought the baby home from France. Said she was his
   daughter, and that the mother had died. Then he — a soldier he
   was — died of a fever, and the grandmother brought the girl up.
   She did her best, but I knew it would never work out. Everybody
   knew that it would never work out. And it didn’t. Not a trace they
   found of her. Not a trace. Nothing.
   The girl in the tattered lace dress is burying the body. Toggled with
   mud, the cloak parcels the dead. In the sweet pine forest, the girl
   has wrapped the wolf in her scarlet cloak. With tears and ceremony,
   herbs and stones, she is burying him in the hollow. She is silent.
   There is a bitter smell; there is a sweet smell; he is dead.
   She is burying him in the forest.
   Jagging
   ©
   A N T H O N Y PEACEY
   I needed to get to Otzapoc; I was on Greenball, a hundred and
   sixty iightyears of dark silent lovely nothing lay between, dreaming
   its ancient inscrutable dreams. I lacked the cred for a ticket but this
   bothered me no particle.
   
 
 Strange Attractors (1985) Page 27