Imajica: Annotated Edition

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Imajica: Annotated Edition Page 45

by Clive Barker


  Whatever the arguments about its origins, however, nobody had ever contested the power that it had accrued standing at the center of the Dominions. Lines of thought had passed across the Kwem for centuries, carrying a freight of force which the Pivot had drawn to itself with a magnetism that was virtually irresistible. By the time the Autarch came into the Third Dominion, having already established his particular brand of dictatorship in Yzordderrex, the Pivot was the single most powerful object in the Imajica. He laid his plans for it brilliantly, returning to the palace he was still building in Yzordderrex and adding several features, though their purpose did not become apparent until almost two years later, when, acting with the kind of speed that usually attends a coup, he had the Pivot toppled, transported, and set in a tower in his palace before the blood of those who might have raised objections to this sacrilege was dry.

  Overnight, the geography of the Imajica was transformed. Yzordderrex became the heart of the Dominions. Thereafter, there would be no power, either secular or sacred, that did not originate in that city; there would be no crossroads sign in any of the Reconciled Dominions that did not carry its name, nor any highway that did not have upon it somewhere a petitioner or penitent who’d turned his eyes towards Yzordderrex in hope of salvation. Prayers were still uttered in the name of the Unbeheld, and blessings murmured in the forbidden names of the Goddesses, but Yzordderrex was the true Lord now, the Autarch its mind and the Pivot its phallus.

  One hundred and seventy-nine years had passed since the day the Kwem had lost its great wonder, but the Autarch still made pilgrimages into the wastes when he felt the need for solitude. Some years after the removal of the Pivot he’d had a small palace built close to the place where it had stood, spartan by comparison with the architectural excesses of the folly that crowned Yzordderrex. This was his retreat in confounding times, where he could meditate upon the sorrows of absolute power, leaving his Military High Command, the generals who ruled the Dominions on his behalf, to do so under the eye of his once-beloved Queen, Quaisoir. Lately she had developed a taste for repression that was waning in him, and he’d several times thought of retiring to the palace in the Kwem permanently and leaving her to rule in his stead, given that she took so much more pleasure from it than he. But such dreams were an indulgence, and he knew it. Though he ruled the Imajica invisibly—not one soul, outside the circleof twenty or so who dealt with him daily, would have known him from any other white man with good taste in clothes—his vision had shaped the rise of Yzordderrex, and no other would ever competently replace it.

  On days like this, however, with the cold air off the Lenten Way whining in the spires of the Kwem Palace, he wished he could send the mirror he met in the morning back to Yzordderrex in his place and let his reflection rule. Then he could stay here and think about the distant past: England in midsummer. The streets of London bright with rain when he woke, the fields outside the city peaceful and buzzing with bees. Scenes he pictured longingly when he was in elegiac mood. Such moods seldom lasted long, however. He was too much of a realist, and he demanded truth from his memory. Yes, there had been rain, but it had come with such venom it had bruised every fruit it hadn’t beaten from the bough. And the hush of those fields had been a battlefield’s hush, the murmur not trees but flies, come to find laying places.

  His life had begun that summer, and his early days had been filled with signs not of love and fruitfulness but of Apocalypse. There wasn’t a preacher in the park who didn’t have Revelation by heart that year, nor a whore in Drury Lane who wouldn’t have told you she’d seen the Devil dancing on the midnight roofs. How could those days not have influenced him: filled him with a horror of imminent destruction, given him an appetite for order, for law, for Empire? He was a child of his times, and if they’d made him cruel in his pursuit of system, was that his fault or that of the age?

  The tragedy lay not in the suffering that was an inevitable consequence of any social movement, but in the fact that his achievements were now in jeopardy from forces that—if they won the day—would return the Imajica to the chaos from which he had brought it, undoing his work in a fraction of the time it had taken for it to be achieved. If he was to suppress these subversive elements he had a limited number of options, and after the events in Patashoqua, and the uncovering of plots against him, he had retreated to the quiet of the Kwem Palace to decide between them. He could continue to treat the rebellions, strikes, and uprisings as minor irritations, limiting his reprisals to small but eloquent acts of suppression, such as the burning of the village of Beatrix and the trials and executions at Vanaeph. This route had two significant disadvantages. The most recent attempt upon his life, though still inept, was too close for comfort, and until every last radical and revolutionary had been silenced ordissuaded, he would be in danger. Furthermore, when his whole reign had been dotted with episodes that had required some measured brutalities, would this new spate of purges and suppressions make any significant mark? Perhaps it was time for a more ambitious vision: cities put under martial law, tetrarchs imprisoned so that their corruptions could be exposed in the name of a just Yzordderrex, governments toppled, and resistance met with the full might of the Second Dominion’s armies. Maybe Patashoqua would have to burn the way Beatrix had. Or L’Himby and its wretched temples.

  If such a route were followed successfully, the slate would be wiped clean. If not—if his advisers had underestimated the scale of unrest or the quality of leaders among the rabble—he might find the circle closing and the Apocalypse into which he’d been born that faraway summer coming around again, here in the heart of his promised land.

  What then, if Yzordderrex burned instead of Patashoqua? Where would he go for comfort? Back to England, perhaps? Did the house in Clerkenwell still stand, he wondered, and if so were its rooms still sacred to the workings of desire, or had the Maestro’s undoing scoured them to the last board and nail? The questions tantalized him. As he sat and pondered them he found a curiosity in his core—no, more than curiosity, an appetite—to discover what the Unreconciled Dominion was like almost two centuries after his creation.

  His musings were interrupted by Rosengarten, a name he’d bequeathed to the man in the spirit of irony, for a more infertile thing never walked. Piebald from a disease caught in the swamps of Loquiot in the throes of which he had unmanned himself, Rosengarten lived for duty. Among the generals, he was the only one who didn’t sin with some excess against the austerity of these rooms. He spoke and moved quietly; he didn’t stink of perfumes; he never drank; he never ate kreauchee. He was a perfect emptiness, and the only man the Autarch completely trusted.

  He had come with news and told it plainly. The asylum on the Cradle of Chzercemit had been the scene of a rebellion. Almost all the garrison had been killed, under circumstances which were still under investigation, and the bulk of the prisoners had escaped, led by an individual called Scopique.

  “How many were there?” the Autarch asked.

  “I have a list, sir,” Rosengarten replied, opening the file he’d brought with him. “There are fifty-one individuals unaccounted for, most of them religious dissidents.”

  “Women?”

  “None.”

  “We should have had them executed, not locked them away.”

  “Several of them would have welcomed martyrdom, sir. The decision to incarcerate them was taken with that in mind.”

  “So now they’ll return to their flocks and preach revolution all over again. This we must stop. How many of them were active in Yzordderrex?”

  “Nine. Including Father Athanasius.”

  “Athanasius? Who was he?”

  “The Dearther who claimed he was the Christos. He had a congregation near the harbor.”

  “Then that’s where he’ll return, presumably.”

  “It seems likely.”

  “All of them’ll go back to their flocks, sooner or later. We must be ready for them. No arrests. No trials. Just have them quietly dispatched.”


  “Yes, sir.”

  “I don’t want Quaisoir informed of this.”

  “I think she already knows, sir.”

  “Then she must be prevented from anything showy.”

  “I understand.”

  “Let’s do this discreetly.”

  “There is something else, sir.”

  “What’s that?”

  “There were two other individuals on the island before the rebellion—”

  “What about them?”

  “It’s difficult to know exactly what to make of the report. One of them appears to have been a mystif. The description of the other may be of interest.”

  He passed the report to the Autarch, who scanned it quickly at first, then more intently.

  “How reliable is this?” he asked Rosengarten.

  “At this juncture I don’t know. The descriptions were corroborated, but I haven’t interrogated the men personally.”

  “Do so.”

  “Yes, sir.”

  He handed the report back to Rosengarten. “How many people have seen this?”

  “I had all other copies destroyed as soon as I read it. I believe only the interrogating officers, their commander, and myself have been party to this information.”

  “I want every one of the survivors from the garrison silenced. Court-martial them all and throw away the key. The officers and the commander must be instructed that they will be held accountable for any leakage of this information, from any source. Such leakage to be punishable by death.”

  “Yes, sir.”

  “As for the mystif and the stranger, we must assume they’re making way to the Second Dominion. First Beatrix, now the Cradle. Their destination must be Yzordderrex. How many days since this uprising?”

  “Eleven, sir.”

  “Then they’ll be in Yzordderrex in a matter of days, even if they’re traveling on foot. Track them. I’d like to know as much about them as I can.”

  He looked out the window at the wastes of the Kwem.

  “They probably took the Lenten Way. Probably passed within a few miles of here.” There was a subtle agitation in his voice. “That’s twice now our paths have come close to crossing. And now the witnesses, describing him so well. What does it mean, Rosengarten? What does it mean?”

  When the commander had no answers, as now, he kept his silence: an admirable trait.

  “I don’t know either,” the Autarch said. “Perhaps I should go out and take the air. I feel old today.”

  The hole from which the Pivot had been uprooted was still visible, though the driving winds of the region had almost healed the scar. Standing on the lips of the hole was a fine place to meditate on absence, the Autarch had discovered. He tried to do so now, his face swathed in silk to keep the stinging gust from his mouth and nostrils, his long fur coat closely buttoned, and his gloved hands driven into his pockets. But the calm he’d always derived from such meditations escaped him now. Absence was a fine discipline for the spirit when the world’s bounty was a step away, and boundless. Not so now. Now it reminded him of an emptiness that he both feared and feared to be filled, like the haunted place at the shoulder of a twin who’d lost its other in the womb. However high he built his fortress walls, however tightly he sealed his soul, there was one who would always have access, and that thought brought palpitations. This other knew him as well as he knew himself: his frailties, his desires, hishighest ambition. Their business together—most of it bloody—had remained unrevealed and unrevenged for two centuries, but he had never persuaded himself that it would remain so forever. It would be finished at last, and soon.

  Though the cold could not reach his flesh through his coat, the Autarch shuddered at the prospect. He had lived for so long like a man who walks perpetually in the noonday sun, his shadow falling neither in front of him nor behind. Prophets could not predict him, nor accusers catch his crimes. He was inviolate. But that would change now. When he and his shadow met—as they inevitably would—the weight of a thousand prophecies and accusations would fall upon them both.

  He pulled the silk from his face and let the eroding wind assault him. There was no purpose in staying here any longer. By the time the wind had remade his features he would have lost Yzordderrex, and even though that seemed like a small forfeit now, in the space of hours it might be the only prize he’d be able to preserve from destruction.

  II

  If the divine engineers who had raised the Jokalaylau had one night set their most ambitious peak between a desert and an ocean, and returned the next night and for a century of nights thereafter to carve its steeps and sheers from foothills to clouded heights with lowly habitations and magnificent plazas, with streets, bastions, and pavilions—and if, having carved, they had set in the core of that mountain a fire that smoldered but never burned—then their handiwork, when filled to overflowing with every manner of life, might have deserved comparison with Yzordderrex. But given that no such masterwork had ever been devised, the city stood without parallel throughout the Imajica.

  The travelers’ first sight of it came as they crossed the causeway that skipped like a well-aimed stone across the delta of the River Noy, rushing in twelve white torrents to meet the sea. It was early morning when they arrived, the fog off the river conspiring with the uneasy light of dawn to keep the city from sight until they were so close to it that when the fog was snatched the sky was barely visible, the desert and the sea no more than marginal, and all the world was suddenly Yzordderrex.

  As they’d walked the Lenten Way, passing from the Third Dominion into the Second, Huzzah had recited all she’d read about the city from her father’s books. One of the writers had described Yzordderrex as a god, she reported, a notion Gentle had thought ludicrous until he set eyes upon it. Then he understood what the urban theologian had been about, deifying this termite hill. Yzordderrex was worthy of worship; and millions were daily performing the ultimate act of veneration, living on or within the body of their Lord. Their dwellings clung like a million panicked climbers to the cliffs above the harbor and teetered on the plateaus that rose, tier on tier, towards the summit, many so crammed with houses that those closest to the edge had to be buttressed from below, the buttresses in turn encrusted with nests of life, winged, perhaps, or else suicidal. Everywhere, the mountain teemed, its streets of steps, lethally precipitous, leading the eye from one brimming shelf to another: from leaflessboulevards lined with fine mansions to gates that let onto shadowy arcades, then up to the city’s six summits, on the highest of which stood the palace of the Autarch of the Imajica. There was an abundance of a different order here, for the palace had more domes and towers than Rome, their obsessive elaboration visible even at this distance. Rising above them all was the Pivot Tower, as plain as its fellows were baroque. And high above that again, hanging in the white sky above the city, the comet that brought the Dominion’s long days and languid dusks: Yzordderrex’s star, called Giess, the Witherer.

  They stood for only a minute or so to admire the sight. The daily traffic of workers who, having found no place of residence on the back or in the bowels of the city, commuted in and out daily, had begun, and by the time the newcomers reached the other end of the causeway they were lost in a dusty throng of vehicles, bicycles, rickshaws, and pedestrians all making their way into Yzordderrex. Three among tens of thousands: a scrawny young girl wearing a wide smile; a white man, perhaps once handsome but sickly now, his pale face half lost behind a ragged brown beard; and a Eurhetemec mystif, its eyes, like so many of its breed, barely concealing a private grief. The crowd bore them forward, and they went unresisting where countless multitudes had gone before: into the belly of the city-god Yzordderrex.

  Thirty

  I

  WHEN DOWD BROUGHT JUDITH back to Godolphin’s house after the murder of Clara Leash, it was not as a free agent but as a prisoner. She was confined to the bedroom she’d first occupied, and there she waited for Oscar’s return. When he came in to see her it was
after a half-hour conversation with Dowd (she heard the murmur of their exchange, but not its substance), and he told her as soon as he appeared that he had no wish to debate what had happened. She’d acted against his best interests, which were finally—did she not realize this yet?—against her own too, and he would need time to think about the consequences for them both.

  “I trusted you,” he said, “more than I’ve ever trusted any woman in my life. You betrayed me, exactly the way Dowd predicted you would. I feel foolish, and I feel hurt.”

  “Let me explain,” she said.

  He raised his hands to hush her. “I don’t want to hear,” he said. “Maybe in a few days we’ll talk, but not now.”

  Her sense of loss at his retreat was almost overwhelmed by the anger she felt at his dismissal of her. Did he believe her feelings for him were so trivial she’d not concerned herself with the consequences of her actions on them both? Or worse: had Dowd convinced him that she’d been planning to betray him from the outset, and she’d calculated everything—the seduction, the confessions of devotion—in order to weaken him? This latter scenario was the likelier of the two, but it didn’t clear Oscar of guilt. He had still failed to give her a chance to justify herself.

  She didn’t see him for three days. Her food was served in her room by Dowd, and there she waited, hearing Oscar come and go, and on occasion hints of conversation on the stairs, enough to gather the impression that the Tabula Rasa’s purge was reaching a critical point. More than once she contemplated the possibility that what she’d been up to with Clara Leash made her a potential victim, and that day by day Dowd was eroding Oscar’s reluctance to dispatch her. Paranoia, perhaps; but if he had any scrap of feeling for her why didn’t he come and see her? Didn’t he pine, the way she did? Didn’t he want her in his bed, for the animal comfort of it if nothing else? Several times she asked Dowd to tell Oscar she needed to speak with him, and Dowd—who affected the detachment of a jailer with a thousand other such prisoners to deal with daily—had said he’d do his best, but he doubted that Mr. Godolphin would want to have any dealings with her. Whether the messagewas communicated or not, Oscar left her solitary in her confinement, and she realized that unless she took more forcible action she might never see daylight again.

 

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