by Clive Barker
“Who?” Jude asked.
“Sartori,” said Monday.
“Is he somewhere in the vicinity?”
Gentle’s silence was reply enough.
“And you think a few locks are going to keep him out?”
“Won’t they?” said Hoi-Polloi.
“Not if he wants to get in,” Jude said.
“He won’t,” Gentle replied. “When the Reconciliation begins, there’s going to be a flow of power through this house . . . my Father’s power.”
The thought was as distasteful to Jude as Gentle assumed it would be to Sartori, but her response was subtler than revulsion.
“He’s your brother,” she reminded him. “Don’t be so sure he won’t want a taste of what’s in here. And if he does, he’ll come and get it.”
He stared hard at her.
“Are we talking about power, here, or you?”
Jude took a moment before replying. Then she said, “Both.”
Gentle shrugged. “If that happens, you’ll make your decision,” he said. “You’ve made them before, and you’ve been wrong. Maybe it’s time to have a little faith, Jude.” He stood up. “Share what the rest of us already know,” he said.
“And what’s that?”
“That in a few hours we’ll be standing in a legendary place.”
Monday softly said, “Yeah,” and Gentle smiled.
“Take care down here, all of you,” he said, and headed to the door.
Jude reached for Clem, and with his help hauled herself to her feet. By the time she reached the door Gentle was already on the stairs.
She didn’t say his name. He simply stopped for a moment and, without turning, said, “I don’t want to hear.”
Then he continued his ascent, and she knew by the slope of his shoulders and the weight of his tread that for all his prophetic talk there was a little worm of doubt in him just as there was in her, and he was afraid that if he turned and saw her, it would fatten on their look and choke him.
The scent of sap was waiting for him on the threshold, and as he’d hoped it masked the sourer smell from the darkened streets outside. Otherwise his room, in which he’d lounged and laughed and debated the conundrums of the cosmos, offered no solace. It suddenly seemed to him a stagnant place, too well feited and swayed for its own good: the last place on earth to perform his work. But then hadn’t he berated Jude, just moments ago, for not having sufficient faith? There was no great power in geography. It was all rooted in the Maestro’s faith in the miraculous, and in the will that sprang from that faith.
In preparation for the work ahead, he undressed. Once naked, he crossed to the mantelpiece, intending to fetch the candles off it and set them around the circle. But the sight of their flames in flickering array made him think instead of worship, and he dropped to his knees in front of the empty grate to pray. The Lord’s Prayer came most readily to his lips, and he recited it aloud. Its sentiments had never been apter, of course. But after tonight it would be a museum piece, a relic of a time before the Lord’s Kingdom had come and His will been done, on Earth and in Heaven.
A touch on the back of his neck brought this recitation to a halt. He opened his eyes, raised his head, turned. The room was empty, but his nape still tingled where the touch had come. This wasn’t memory, he knew. It was something more delicate than that, a reminder of the other prize that lay at the end of this night’s work. Not glory, not the gratitude of the Dominions: Pie ‘oh’ pah. He looked up at the stained wall above the mantelpiece and seemed for a moment to see the mystif’s face there, changing with each flicker of the candlelight. Athanasius had called the love he felt for the mystif profane. He hadn’t believed it then, and he didn’t now. The purpose that was in him as Reconciler and the desire he felt for reunion were part of the same plan.
The prayer was gone from his tongue. No matter, he thought; I’m its executor now. He got up, took one of the candles from the mantelpiece, and, smiling, stepped over the perimeters of the circle, not as a simple traveler but as a Maestro, ready to use its engine to miraculous end.
II
Lying on the cushions in the lounge below, Jude felt the flow of energies start. They ached in her chest and belly, like mild dyspepsia. She rubbed her stomach, in the hope of soothing the discomfort, but it did little good, so she got to her feet and hobbled out, leaving Monday to entertain Hoi-Polloi with his chatter and his handiwork. He’d taken to drawing on the walls with the smoke from one of the candles, enhancing the marks with his chalks. Hoi-Polloi was much impressed, and her laughter, the first Jude had ever heard from the girl, followed her out into the hallway, where she found Clem standing guard beside the locked front door.
They stared at each other in the candlelight for several seconds before she said, “Do you feel it too?”
“Yep. It’s not very pleasant, is it?”
“I thought it was only me,” she said.
“Why only you?”
“I don’t know, some kind of punishment. . . .”
“You still think he’s got some secret agenda, don’t you?”
“No,” Jude said, glancing up the stairs. “I think he’s doing what he believes is best. In fact I know it. Uma Umagammagi got inside his head—”
“God, he hated that.”
“She gave him a good report, whether he hated it or not.”
“So?”
“So there’s still a conspiracy somewhere.”
“Sartori?”
“No. It’s something to do with their Father and this damn Reconciliation.” She winced as the discomfort in her belly became more severe. “I’m not afraid of Sartori. It’s what’s going on in this house”—she gritted her teeth as another wave of pain passed through her system—“that I can’t quite trust.”
She looked back at Clem and knew that, as ever, he’d listen as a loving friend, but she could expect no support from him. He and Tay were the angels of the Reconciliation, and if she pressed them to decide between her welfare and that of the working, she’d be the loser.
The sound of Hoi-Polloi’s laughter came again, not as feathery as before, but with an undertow of mischief Jude knew was sexual. She turned her back on the sound and on Clem, and her gaze came to rest on the door of the one room in this house she’d never entered. It stood a little ajar, and she could see that candles were burning inside. Of all the company to seek out when she was in need of comfort, Celestine’s was the least promising, but all other avenues were closed to her. She crossed to the door and pushed it open. The mattress was empty, and the candle beside it was burning low. The room was too large to be illuminated by such a fitful flame, and she had to study the darkness until she found its occupant. Celestine was standing against the far wall.
“I’m surprised you came back,” she said.
Jude had heard many exquisite speakers since she’d last heard Celestine, but there was still something extraordinary in the way the woman mingled voices: one running beneath the other, as though the part of her touched by divinity had never entirely married with a baser self.
“Why surprised?”
“Because I thought you’d stay with the Goddesses.”
“I was tempted,” Jude replied.
“But finally you had to come back. For him.”
“I was a messenger, that’s all. I’ve got no claims on Gentle now.”
“I didn’t mean Gentle.”
“I see.”
“I meant—”
“I know who you meant.”
“Can’t you bear to have his name spoken?”
Celestine had been staring at the candle flame, but now she looked up at Jude.
“What will you do when he’s dead?” she asked. “He will die, you realize that? He has to. Gentle’ll want to be magnanimous, the way victors are supposed to be; he’ll want to forgive all his brother’s trespasses. But there’ll be too many demands for his head.”
Until now Jude hadn’t contemplated the possibility of Sartori’s
demise. Even in the tower, knowing Gentle had gone in pursuit of his brother intending to stop his malice, she’d never believed he’d die. But what Celestine said was undoubtedly true. There were countless claims upon his head, both secular and divine. Even if Gentle was forgiving, Jokalaylau wouldn’t be; nor would the Unbeheld.
“You’re very alike, you know, you and he,” Celestine said. “Both copies of a finer original.”
“You never knew Quaisoir,” Jude replied. “You don’t know whether she was finer or not.”
“Copies are always coarser. It’s their nature. But at least your instinct’s good. You and he belong together. That’s what you’re pining for, isn’t it? Why don’t you admit it?”
“Why should I pour out my heart to you?”
“Isn’t that what you came in here to do? You won’t get any sympathy out there.”
“Listening by the door now?”
“I’ve heard everything that’s gone on in this house since I was brought here. And what I haven’t heard, I’ve felt. And what I haven’t felt, I’ve predicted.”
“Like what?”
“Well, for one thing that child Monday will end up coupling with the little virgin you brought back from Yzordderrex.”
“That scarcely takes an oracle.”
“And the Oviate isn’t long for this world.”
“The Oviate?”
“It calls itself Little Ease. The beast you had under your heel. It asked the Maestro to bless it a little while ago. It’ll murder itself before daybreak.”
“Why would it do that?”
“It knows when Sartori perishes it’ll be forfeit too, however much allegiance it’s sworn to the winning side. It’s sensible. It wants to choose its moment.”
“Am I supposed to find some lesson in that?”
“I don’t think you’re capable of suicide,” Celestine said.
“You’re right. I’ve got too much to live for.”
“Motherhood?”
“And the future. There’s going to be a change in this city. I’ve seen it in Yzordderrex already. The waters will rise—”
“—and the great sisterhood will dispense love from on high.”
“Why not? Clem told me what happened when the Goddess came. You were in ecstasies, so don’t try and deny it.”
“Maybe I was. But do you imagine that’s going to make you and me sisters? What have we got in common, besides our sex?”
The question was meant to sting, but its plainness made Jude see the questioner with fresh eyes. Why was Celestine so eager to deny any other link between them but womanhood? Because another such link existed, and it was at the very heart of their enmity. Nor, now that Celestine’s contempt had freed Jude from reverence, was it difficult to see where their stories intersected. From the beginning, Celestine had marked Jude out as a woman who stank of coitus. Why? Because she too stank of coitus. And this business with the child, which came up again and again: that had the same root. Celestine had also borne a baby for this dynasty of Gods and demigods. She too had been used and had never quite come to terms with the fact. When she raged against Jude, the tainted woman who would not concede her error in being sexual, in being fecund, she was raging against some fault in herself.
And the nature of that fault? It wasn’t difficult to guess, or to put words to. Celestine had asked a plain question. Now it was Jude’s turn.
“Was it really rape?” she said.
Celestine glanced up, her look venomous. The denial that followed, however, was measured. “I’m afraid I don’t know what you mean,” she said.
“Well, now,” Jude replied, “how else can I put it?” She paused. “Did Sartori’s Father take you against your will?”
The other woman now put on a show of comprehension, followed by one of shock.
“Of course He did,” she said. “How could you ask such a thing?”
“But you knew where you were going, didn’t you? I realize Dowd drugged you at the start, but you weren’t in a coma all the way across the Dominions. You knew something extraordinary was waiting at the end of the trip.”
“I don’t—”
“Remember? Yes, you do. You remember every mile of it. And I don’t think Dowd kept his mouth shut all those weeks. He was pimping for God, and he was proud of it. Wasn’t he?”
Celestine offered no riposte. She simply stared at Jude, daring her to go on, which Jude was happy to do.
“So he told you what lay ahead, didn’t he? He said that you were going to the Holy City and you were going to see the Unbeheld Himself. Not just see Him but be loved by Him. And you were flattered.”
“It wasn’t like that.”
“How was it then? Did He have His angels hold you down while He did the deed? No, I don’t think so. You lay there and you let Him do what the hell He wanted, because it was going to make you into the bride of God and the mother of Christ—”
“Stop!”
“If I’m wrong, tell me how it was. Tell me you screamed and fought and tried to tear out His eyes.”
Celestine continued to stare, but said nothing.
“That’s why you despise me, isn’t it?” Jude went on. “That’s why I’m the woman who stinks of coitus. Because I lay down with a piece of the same God that you did, and you don’t like to be reminded of the fact.”
“Don’t judge me, woman!” Celestine suddenly shouted.
“Then don’t you judge me! Woman. I did what I wanted with the man I wanted, and I’m carrying the consequences. You did the same. I’m not ashamed of it. You are. That’s why we’re not sisters, Celestine.”
She’d said her piece, and she wasn’t much interested in a further round of insults and denials, so she turned her back and had her hand on the door when Celestine spoke. There were no denials. She spoke softly, half lost to memory.
“It was a city of iniquities,” she said. “But how was I to know that? I thought I was blessed among women, to have been chosen. To be God’s—”
“Bride?” Jude said, turning back from the door.
“That’s a kind word,” Celestine said. “Yes. Bride.” She drew a deep breath. “I never even saw my husband.”
“What did you see?”
“Nobody. The city was full, I know it was full, I saw shadows at the window, I saw them close up the doors when I passed, but nobody showed their faces.”
“Were you afraid?”
“No. It was too beautiful. The stones were full of light, and the houses were so high you could barely see the sky. It was like nothing I’d ever seen. And I walked, and I walked, and I kept thinking, He’ll send an angel for me soon, and I’ll be carried to His palace. But there were no angels. There was just the city, going on and on in every direction, and I got tired after a time. I sat down, just to rest for a few minutes, and I fell asleep.”
“You fell asleep?”
“Yes. Imagine! I was in the City of God, and I fell asleep. And I dreamed I was back at Tyburn, where Dowd had found me. I was watching a man being hanged, and I dug through the crowd until I was standing under the gallows.” She raised her head. “I remember looking up at him, kicking at the end of his rope. His breeches were unbuttoned, and his rod was poking out.”
The look on her face was all disgust, but she drove herself on to finish the story.
“And I lay down under him. I lay down in the dirt in front of all these people, with him kicking, and his rod getting redder and redder. And as he died he spilled his seed. I wanted to get up before it touched me, but my legs were open, and it was too late. Down it came. Not much. Just a few spurts. But I felt every drop inside me like a little fire, and I wanted to cry out. But I didn’t, because that was when I heard the voice.”
“What voice?”
“It was in the ground underneath me. Whispering.”
“What did it say?”
“The same thing, over and over again: Nisi Nirvana. Nisi Nirvana. Nisi . . . Nirvana.”
In the process of repeating the wor
ds, tears began to flow copiously. She made no attempt to stem them, but the repetition faltered.
“Was it Hapexamendios talking to you?” Jude asked.
Celestine shook her head. “Why should He speak to me? He had what He needed. I’d lain down and dreamed while He dropped His seed. He was already gone, back to His angels.”
“So who was it?”
“I don’t know. I’ve thought about it over and over. I even made it into a story, to tell the child, so that when I’d gone he’d have the mystery for himself. But I don’t think I ever really wanted to know. I was afraid my heart would burst if I ever knew the answer. I was afraid the heart of the world would burst.”
She looked up at Jude.
“So now you know my shame,” she said.
“I know your story,” said Jude. “But I don’t see any reason for shame.”
Her own tears, which she’d been holding back since Celestine had begun to share this horror with her, fell now, flowing a little for the pain she felt and a little for the doubt that still churned in her, but mostly for the smile that came onto Celestine’s face when she heard Jude’s reply, and for the sight of the other woman opening her arms and crossing the room, to embrace her like a loved one who’d been lost and found again before some final fire.
Twenty-three
I
IF COMING TO THE moment of Reconciliation had been for Gentle a series of rememberings, leading him back to himself, then the greatest of those rememberings, and the one he was least prepared for, was the Reconciliation itself.
Though he’d performed the working before, the circumstances had been radically different. For one, there’d been all the hoopla of a grand event. He’d gone into the circle like a prizefighter, with an air of congratulation hanging around his head before he’d even worked up a sweat, his patrons and admirers a cheering throng at the sidelines. This time he was alone. For another, he’d had his eyes on what the world would shower on him when the work was done: what women would fall to him, what wealth and glory would come. This time, the prize in sight was a different thing entirely, and wouldn’t be counted in stained sheets and coinage. He was the instrument of a higher and wiser power.