by Jeffrey Ford
Constable Spencer, no longer the affable purveyor of righteousness, stepped forward with a grim look on his face. “Tonight, at precisely eight thirty, Horace Watt, and those remaining from his expedition to the Beyond, returned to Wenau. With them they brought a corpse and also convincing evidence that you, Misrix, did indeed murder Cley.”
It took a moment for Spencer’s words to register, and even when they did, I was struck dumb by their message. “Impossible,” I finally whispered.
“That will be decided in the court,” said Spencer. “For the time being, you will have to come with us.”
“Where are we going?” I asked.
“Jail,” said Feskin, still unable to make eye contact with me.
My wings lifted, my tail snapped the air threateningly, and the men cocked the hammers on their rifles.
“Wait!” said Feskin, holding up his hands. “He will come peaceably, I know it. Allow him a moment.”
“Will you?” asked Spencer.
Such was my frustration that for a brief moment I had considered tearing off a few heads and slicing the constable down the middle. I knew and they knew they could not have pumped enough bullets into me before I had killed at least half of them. Then I caught myself from falling back into the abyss of my discarded animal nature.
“Yes,” I said. “It is the civilized thing to do.”
“I will help you,” said Feskin.
I nodded to him, then made a move to fetch my papers and pen and ink. Luckily I had already returned the sheer beauty paraphernalia to its hiding place beneath my wing or I’m sure more charges would have been leveled on the spot.
The guards would not let me pass.
“I’m bringing my manuscript with me,” I said.
“What is it worth to you to have him come without incident?” Feskin asked Spencer.
The constable nodded. “Let him gather his things,” he told the guards.
And so, here I am, a prisoner, falsely accused of a crime I did not commit. Feskin accompanied me to the cell and told me he would represent me against the charges. I thanked him but admitted that I had little hope of battling those prejudices that had, in hours, blazed up from a dying ember.
“Conspiracy,” I told him through the bars.
“Not exactly,” he whispered, so that the armed man sitting on the stool down the hallway could not hear him. “Watt has real evidence that could convince a jury. Not only did they find Cley’s remains only two days into the Beyond, but they found a diary, kept in his handwriting, the last entry of which states that he is in mortal fear of you. He writes that you had already made one attempt on his life while he was sleeping, and he believes you will eventually kill him as he suspects you have already done to the missing dog.”
“I don’t recall Cley even keeping a diary,” I said.
“Well, they all know he was a scribbler,” said Feskin. “Think of the two manuscripts he left that recount his history. They have the artifact.”
“A fake,” I said.
“Perhaps something else, but I know Watt. He is not a dissembler. And besides, he just arrived this evening. He had no time to be inculcated into any plot. There are seven other men with him, who all attest to the discovery and its veracity,” said the teacher.
“How could they find Cley in the Beyond?” I asked.
“They took bloodhounds and some of Cley’s possessions from his house. The dogs followed the scent. Listen, Misrix, this looks bad. If I am going to help you, you must assure me that you had no part in Cley’s death,” said Feskin.
“I have proof that I did not kill him,” I said.
“What?” he asked.
“My writings,” I told him.
He shook his head. “I hope that you are right,” he said.
“If I did not believe in my own innocence, then tell me why I am putting up with this charade. You know as well as I know as well as they know that I could bend these bars apart with my hands and fly away from here. Not to mention the fact that I could slay quite a few in the process if I so desired.”
“Yes, I know,” he said. “There is definitely goodness in you. I will do all I can to help.”
Then he left, and I was alone with my torment. Last night lasted almost forever. The first thing I did was slough off the ridiculous clothes. They were uncomfortable to begin with and now they were torturing me with an extra confinement beyond the most obvious one. There were tears and cries of pain, I will admit. There is no anguish worse than being falsely accused and having the entire world believe you are guilty. I paced as well as I could around this mausoleum, banged on the concrete walls, and tested the metal of the bars.
Finally, near dawn, I fell into a fitful sleep in which I was visited by dreams of Cley and me in the Beyond. It was wonderful to be with him again, to speak of books and notions about life. He was recounting for me the story of when he and Calloo and Bataldo had first ventured into the wilderness. He spoke of his old friends with great passion as we sat next to a fire at night, listening with one ear for sounds of predators. Then I dreamt of Wood and how bravely he had fought against the other demons. I tell you it was as if I was there. In the midst of this recollection, though, came sudden bursts of a vision of Cley lying disemboweled beneath me. Three times this scene flashed and as quickly passed, and then I woke up, shivering.
It took me a few minutes to clear my head. At first, I was disoriented by finding myself in the cell when a moment before I had been in the limitless Beyond, but once I had my wits about me, I realized that the ugly, momentary nightmares were a result of unfounded guilt at the false accusations against me and the recent discovery in my writing that Cley had been savagely killed by the Sirimon. Still, the experience had been unnerving.
There was only one thing to do. I did my contortionist act, and retrieved from its hiding place the sheer beauty. It was a comfort to see that I had enough left for at least two more bolus doses. Carefully, I prepared the injection, and the intricacy of the work took my mind off my troubles for a few minutes. I needed fast relief, so I went for a spot under my tongue that I had seen Drachton Below access in times of great stress.
As my luck would have it the guard had just woken up and come down the hall to check on me. He saw what I was doing and his eyes went wide.
“You can’t do that,” he said.
I pulled the needle out and told him, with a partially numb tongue, “Stop me.” I suppose I shouldn’t have smiled in the way I did, as if daring him to take action.
He grew red in the face and went for his keys. I bobbed my tail toward the bars, flexed my arm muscles, and laughed my true laugh, showing every ripping fang in my mouth. As I knew he would, he thought better of it.
As he walked away, he said, “You’ll soon be dead.”
“Likewise,” I told him, knowing he would not tell anyone about my having the drug. If he did, he would have to explain why he did not take it from me.
Some time passed before the beauty began to do its work, but slowly I felt its caress, easing the tension in my back muscles. I had taken quite a bit, and it brought with it colors and memories and far-flung philosophical notions that crowded the anger right out of me.
When I looked up once, I saw my father, Drachton Below, before me. He was inside the cell, sitting on the edge of the bed in the corner. There was a wry smile on his face, and he was shaking his head.
The sight of him brought tears to my eyes, and I feared his anger, as I had when newly born into consciousness.
“Misrix,” he said. “What is this ridiculous turn of events? Haven’t I taught you to comport yourself with more dignity than this?” He closed his eyes as if unable to face his disappointment.
“I’m sorry,” I told him. “But I did nothing wrong.”
“I know you are innocent,” he said. “I know how it feels to be misunderstood. You are a good boy. No,” he smiled, “you are a good man. Think of this—since you have been arrested, since you have been charged with a crime,
since you have decided to argue your case, this is proof of your humanity. Do they arrest beasts? If a horse goes wild and tramples its master, do they bring it to court? These trying times, though regrettable, are conclusive proof of your humanity.”
He stood up from the bed, and his image wavered slightly in the breeze from the window. When he was solidly before me again, I saw that he had opened his arms.
“Come closer, my son,” he said.
I stepped up to him, and I could feel his arms close around me. I could smell the horseradish on his breath as I had when I was a child. He rested his head upon my chest.
“I love you,” he said. “I am proud of you.”
I closed my arms around him too late, for he had vanished at the sudden sound of some commotion in the hallway.
“You can’t go down there,” I heard the guard calling.
“Okay,” said a child’s voice.
I turned, with tears still in my eyes and the beauty coursing through me, to see Emilia standing outside my cell. She, I knew, was real, but the drug had affected my vision so that I saw a faint golden glow around her figure. She was smiling, and for her sake, I smiled back.
“Misrix,” she said, “I know you could never have done what they say. I wanted to tell you.”
The guard stepped up behind her. “Come miss, you cannot be here. It is against the law.”
“Okay,” she said again, but remained where she was. She lifted her arm and put her hand between the bars. In it, she held a stick of candy. The guard tried to pull her away.
“Touch her, and I will kill you,” I shouted.
The man backed off.
“Try not to be afraid,” said Emilia, as I looked at her offering. When I reached down to take the candy, something very peculiar happened. Her hand appeared to be that of a man, and the candy transformed before my eyes into a clear stone, a crystal. My own hand was no longer hairy and clawed, but had somehow changed into a mitt of twisted root and foliage.
As the guard ushered her out of the hallway, a series of events flashed before my eyes in rapid succession. All I could think was, “How will I remember all of this?” But I do. I remember it all. Considering its fantastic nature, I don’t think I will ever forget.
“go to the door.”
The foliate stepped closer to the blue membrane and reached out his leafy hand as if to grab Cley by the wrist but, at the last second, he stopped and looked back at Shkchl, the dweller from the inland ocean. The red-scaled being twisted the very end of his antennae mustache with webbed fingers, stared for a lengthy spell through the portal at Cley’s corpse, then nodded. With this sign, he moved next to Vasthasha and together they grabbed the arm of the dead hunter and pulled his bleeding, wrecked body into the cave.
Once Cley was inside, Vasthasha rolled him over so that his blank eyes stared at the rock ceiling. The foliate got down on his knees next to the body so that he was leaning over the mordant face and began to make quiet choking sounds. Shkchl shook his head.
A long, thin stick, twice thinner than the stem of a rose, was slowly growing straight out of Vasthasha’s mouth. Its end was needle-sharp, and it did not stop until it was as long as a man’s hand. The Water Being averted his gaze as the foliate thrust his head downward, the end of the probe piercing Cley’s left eye to lodge in the brain. The process took less than a second, and then with a quick zip, like the sound of a fly buzzing past your ear, the stick retracted back into Vasthasha’s mouth.
“Do you have it?” asked the Water Being.
The foliate nodded.
“Then go, quickly,” said Shkchl.
But Vasthasha was already gone, out of the cave, running along the trail that wound down around the side of the mountain. Loose blossoms flew off him as he sprinted in the heat of late afternoon. He had to reach his destination before the cold winds of mid-autumn brought snow. His thatched legs were powered by the knowledge that if he stopped to slake his thirst for more than a heartbeat at a time, took the wrong path once, was forced to delay to battle some creature, or even gave himself over to memory too often, he would never arrive. What waited for him at the end of this impossible race, he knew full well, was Death.
Willa walked with Wraith in her arms along the southern side of the lake. Inside the cabin it was sweltering, and she had come to catch the breeze that usually began to blow out of the forest in the afternoon. Wood ran in front of her, blazing a path through the tall meadow grass and flowers, making sure there were no snakes.
She had been trying for the past weeks not to think of Cley, but had found the hunter was always on her mind. Life at Pierce’s cabin was not the hardship she had at first feared it would be. There was plenty of food for their survival and then some, but the loneliness was always with her, an unfriendly spirit that made her talk to herself, stare for long sessions into the small cracked mirror in the bedroom of the cabin, cry at night instead of sleeping.
As she moved along the lakeside, she felt the wind begin to stir. On this day it came not from the south but instead from the opposite direction. She watched the ripples on the water and the rhythmic swaying of yellow flowers that hung in the shapes of bells from a central green stalk. Soft white clouds sailed by in the deep blue above.
She finally called to Wood to return. There was a meal to prepare for herself and the dog, and before she could get to that she knew she must nurse Wraith, who was growing larger by the day. Expecting the dog to dash past her, she waited. A few minutes passed, and he still had not come. Just as she turned to call him again, she heard a haunting noise that momentarily stopped her heart.
Wood was standing by the edge of the lake, his head lowered, his hackles raised, tail straight. She watched as he lifted his head and again howled mournfully with a voice that chilled her. The baby woke and began to cry. Willa clutched the child to her and ran for the house. She did not notice the necklace holding the wooden figurine break, spilling the remaining wooden man onto the ground.
The body scribe, in the village of the Word, made the last, precise jab with the bone needle, completing another blue image on the left buttock of the queen. The figure he had created by covering over the face of Brisden was that of a dog howling. With that final dot of color, the queen herself howled, and the old artisan knew it was time to begin his journey.
Shkchl took the corpse by the legs and pulled it toward the pool in the center of the cave. He slowly backed into the water with a hissing sigh. He had been too long out of his natural medium, and the feel of it upon his scaled flesh was soothing. Slowly, he submerged, and as he did, he dragged Cley’s body beneath the surface with him.
Willa sat before the fireplace in the high-backed chair with Wraith on her lap and the loaded pistol in her left hand. Wood, who had only given up his lament with the fall of night, lay on the floor at her feet. She was singing softly to the baby while watching the flames ripple. Cley had told her once how, at times, he thought he could see things in the fire, and she now searched for signs of him in the orange blaze. Every now and then the dog whimpered and kicked a back leg as though running in his dreams. Suddenly a scorched log dropped, and there was a burst of fire that appeared to carry a portrait of the hunter. She leaned forward and said his name, but he was gone before she realized it.
The foliate dashed through a deep forest of gnarled trees that bore fruit like lanterns. The drooping branches held at their ends large, glowing globes that attracted swarms of insects. A fox darted across his path, and so as not to trip over it, he leaped, flipped in the air, and hit the ground running. Somewhere in the canopy above, the monkeys applauded his performance.
In the murky waters at the bottom of the pool, in a clearing surrounded by huge, black, tuberous flowers that grew on stalks anchored in the sandy bottom, Shkchl went to work on Cley’s corpse. He had all of his instruments handy in valises that were giant oyster shells.
First, he secured the body so it did not float away on the strong current by tying it at the wrists and ankles to l
ong tentacle vines that grew from the bases of the black flowers. Rummaging through his things, he found a hollowed-out fish, wide mouth open, that was used to store a thick, gooey substance that shimmered like quicksilver.
He grimaced as he dipped his webbed hand into the mouth and swiped up a big gob of the stuff. Holding his hand out to the side as if he were carrying excrement, he approached his patient. He covered every inch of Cley’s form so as to prevent decomposition. When a thin film had been applied to the hunter, he took another gob from the fish and crammed half of it into Cley’s open mouth. The other half he used to plug the remaining apertures of the body.
Now came forth the swordfish saws, the fish-bone needles, and other tools that were living organisms: minute, all jaw and fangs, to be used as clamps. There was cutting and bone-breaking, and it was hard to see what was happening because blood spewed forth in billowing red clouds.
Cley was huddled inside a tiny bubble, his legs drawn up, his arms around his knees. There was no room for anything else, save the voice of Pa-ni-ta, which was telling him tales of the history of the wilderness. In his mind, he saw everything vividly, and the ancient sorceress spared no details. The flow of words was infinitely fascinating. It was the very air he was breathing. When she spoke of the will of the Beyond, he lost the story for a moment and remembered Pierce’s cabin by the lake. Images of Willa and Wood and Wraith appeared and disappeared only to reappear against the backdrop of the brutality and grace that was the evolution of the vast territory.
“Am I dead?” he shouted.
“You are waiting for spring,” said the voice.
With this, he pictured Willa sitting in the chair before the fireplace, holding the baby. She was staring directly at him, and her look of sadness and confusion made him want to be with her. Desire became frustration, like an itch that could not be attended to.
“Sleep now,” said Pa-ni-ta.
“Wait,” Cley cried, but just then a fallen tree trunk appeared out of thin air directly in the path of the coursing foliate. Vasthasha tripped over it and fell, the thin stick at the bottom of his throat, at the end of which the bubble of Cley bobbed, hit against the hard vines of his inner vegetable skeleton. The hunter smashed against the boundary that was his prison and lost consciousness.