The
Signal
The ship, which from below had appeared to
rest upon the structure of the tower itself, did not. Rather it
seemed to float half a chain or more above us—too high to provide
much shelter from the lashing rain that made the smooth curve of
its hull gleam like black nacre. As I stared up at it, I could not
help but speculate on the sails such a vessel might spread to catch
the winds that blow between the worlds; and then, just as I was
wondering if the crew did not ever peer down to see us, the mermen,
the strange, uncouth beings who for a time walked the bottom below
their hull, one of them indeed came down, head foremost like a
squirrel, wreathed in orange light and clinging to the hull with
hands and feet, though it was wet as any stone in a river and
polished like the blade of Terminus Est. He
wore such a mask as I have often described, but I now knew it to be
one. When he saw Ossipago, Barbatus, and Famulimus below, he
descended no farther, and in a moment a slender line, glowing
orange too so that it seemed a thread of light, was cast down from
somewhere above.
“Now we must go,” Ossipago told
Baldanders, and he handed him the Claw. “Think well on all the
things we have not told you, and remember what you have not been
shown.”
“I will,” Baldanders said, his voice as
grim as I was ever to hear it.
Then Ossipago caught the line and slid
up it until it bent around the curve of the hull and he disappeared
from sight. But it somehow seemed that he did not in fact slide up,
but down, as if that ship were a world itself and drew everything
belonging to it to itself with a blind hunger, as Urth does; or
perhaps it was only that he was to become lighter than our air,
like a sailor who dives from his ship into the sea, and rose as I
had risen after I leaped from the hetman’s boat.
However that may be, Barbatus and
Famulimus followed him. Famulimus waved just as the swell of the
hull blocked her from view; no doubt the doctor and Baldanders
thought she bade them farewell; but I knew she had waved to me. A
sheet of rain struck my face, blinding my eyes despite my
hood.
Slowly at first, then faster and
faster, the ship lifted and receded, vanishing
not upwards or to the north or the south or the east or west, but
dwindling into a direction to which I could no longer point when it
was gone.
Baldanders turned to me. “You heard
them.”
I did not understand, and said, “I
spoke with them, yes. Dr. Talos invited me to when he opened the
door in the wall for me.”
“They told me nothing. They have shown
me nothing.”
“To have seen their ship,” I said, “and
to have spoken to them—surely those things are not
nothing.”
“They are driving me forward. Always
forward. They drive me as an ox to slaughter.”
He went to the battlement and stared
out over the vast expanse of the lake, whose rain-churned waters
made it seem a sea of milk. The merlons were several spans higher
than my head, but he put his hands on them as upon a railing, and I
saw the blue gleam of the Claw in one closed fist. Dr. Talos pulled
at my cloak, murmuring that it would be better if we were to go
inside out of the storm, but I would not leave.
“It began long before you were born. At
first they helped me, though it was only by suggesting thoughts,
asking questions. Now they only hint. Now they only let slip enough
to tell me a certain thing may be done. Tonight there was not even
that.”
Wanting to urge that he no longer take
the islanders for his experiments, but without knowing how to do
so, I said that I had seen his explosive bullets, which were surely
very wonderful, a very great achievement.
“Natrium,” he said, and turned to face
me, his huge head lifted to the dark sky. “You know nothing.
Natrium is a mere elemental substance spawned by the sea in endless
profusion. Do you think I’d have given it to the fishermen if it
were more than a toy? No, I am my own great work. And I am my only
great work!”
Dr. Talos whispered, “Look about
you—don’t you recognize this? It is just as he says!”
“What do you mean?” I whispered in
return.
“The castle? The monster? The man of
learning? I only just thought of it. Surely you know that just as
the momentous events of the past cast their shadows down the ages,
so now, when the sun is drawing toward the dark, our own shadows
race into the past to trouble mankind’s dreams.”
“You’re mad,” I said. “Or
joking.”
“Mad?” Baldanders rumbled. “You are mad. You with your fantasies of theurgy. How
they must be laughing at us. They think all of us barbarians … I,
who have labored three lifetimes.”
He extended his arm and opened his
hand. The Claw blazed for him now. I reached for it, and with a
sudden motion he threw it. How it flashed in the rain-swept dark!
It was as if bright Skuld herself had fallen from the night
sky.
I heard the yell, then, of the lake
people who waited outside the wall. I had given them no signal; yet
the signal had been given by the only act, save perhaps for an
attack on my person, that could have induced me to give it.
Terminus Est left her sheath while the wind
still carried their battle cry. I lifted her to strike, but before
I could close with the giant, Dr. Talos sprang between us. I
thought the weapon he raised to parry was only his cane; if my
heart had not been torn by the loss of the Claw, I would have
laughed as I hewed it. My blade rang on steel, and though it drove
his own back upon himself he was able to contain the blow.
Baldanders rushed past me before I could recover and dashed me
against the parapet.
I could not dodge the doctor’s thrust,
but he was deceived, I think, by my fuligin cloak, and though his
point grazed my ribs, it rattled on stone. I clubbed him with the
hilt and sent him reeling.
Baldanders was nowhere to be seen.
After a moment I realized that his headlong charge must have been
for the door behind me, and the blow he had given me no more than
an afterthought, as a man intent on other things may snuff a candle
before he leaves the room.
The doctor sprawled on the stone
pavement that was the roof of the tower—stones that were, perhaps,
merely gray in sunlight, but now appeared a rain-drowned black. His
red hair and beard were visible still, permitting me to see that he
lay belly down, his head twisted to one side. It had not seemed to
me that I had struck him so hard, though it may be I am stronger
than I know, as others have sometimes said. Still I felt that
beneath all his cocksure strutting Dr. Talos had been weaker than
any of us except Baldanders would have guessed. I could have slain
him easily then, swinging Terminus Est so
the corner of her blade would bury itself in his
skull.
Instead I picked up his weapon, the
faint line of silver that had fallen from his hand. It was a
single-edged blade about as wide as my forefinger, very sharp—as
befitted a surgeon’s sword. After a moment I realized that the grip
was only the handle of his walking stick, which I had seen so
often; it was a sword cane, like the sword Vodalus had drawn in our
necropolis once, and I smiled there in the rain to think of the
doctor carrying his sword thus for so many leagues, unknown to me,
who had labored along with my own slung over my back. The tip had
shattered on the stones when he thrust at me; I flung the broken
blade over the parapet, as Baldanders had flung the Claw, and went
down into his tower to kill him.
When we had climbed the stair, I had been too
deep in conversation with Famulimus to pay much heed to the rooms
through which we passed. The uppermost I recalled only as a place
where it seemed that everything was draped in scarlet cloth. Now I
saw red globes, lamps that burned without a flame like the silver
flowers that sprouted from the ceiling of the wide room where I had
met the three beings I could no longer call cacogens. These globes
stood on ivory pedestals that seemed as light and slender as the
bones of birds, rising from a floor that was no floor but only a
sea of fabrics, all red, but of varying shades and textures. Over
this room stretched a canopy supported by atlantes. It was scarlet,
but sewn with a thousand plates of silver, so well polished that
they were mirrors nearly as perfect as the armor of the Autarch’s
praetorians.
I had nearly descended the height of
the stair before I understood that what I saw was no more than the
giant’s bedchamber, the bed itself, five times the expanse of a
normal one, being sunk level with the floor, and its cerise and
carmine coverings scattered about upon the crimson carpet. Just
then, I saw a face among these twisted bedclothes. I lifted my
sword and the face vanished, but I left the stair to drag away one
of the downy cloths. The catamite beneath (if catamite he was) rose
and faced me with the boldness small children sometimes show.
Indeed he was a small child, though he stood nearly as tall as I, a
naked boy so fat his distended paunch obscured his tiny generative
organs. His arms were like pink pillows bound with cords of gold,
and his ears had been pierced for golden hoops strung with tiny
bells. His hair was golden too, and curled; beneath it he looked at
me with the wide, blue eyes of an infant.
Large though he was, I have never been
able to believe that Baldanders practiced pederasty as that term is
usually understood, though it may well be that he had hoped to do
so when the boy grew larger still. Certainly it must have been that
just as he held his own growth in check, permitting only as much as
needed to save his mountainous body from the ravages of the years,
so he had accelerated the growth of this poor boy in so far as was
possible to his anthroposophic knowledge. I say that because it
seemed certain that he had not had him under his control until some
time after he and Dr. Talos had parted from Dorcas and
me.
(I left this boy where I had found him,
and to this day I have no notion of what may have become of him. It
is likely enough that he perished; but it is possible also that the
lake men may have preserved and nourished him, or that the hetman
and his people finding him at a somewhat later time, did so.
)
I had no sooner descended to the floor
below than what I saw there wiped all thought of the boy from my
mind. This room was as wreathed in mist (which I am certain had not
been present when I had passed through before) as the other had
been in red cloth; it was a living vapor that seethed as I might
have imagined the logos to writhe as it left the mouth of the
Pancreator. While I watched it, a man of fog, white as a grave
worm, rose before me brandishing a barbed spear. Before I realized
he was a mere phantom, the blade of my sword went through his wrist
as it might have penetrated a column of smoke. At once he began to
shrink, the fog seeming to fall in upon itself, until he stood
hardly higher than my waist.
I went forward, down more steps, until
I stood in the cold, roiling whiteness. Then there came bounding
across its surface a hideous creature formed, like the man, of the
fog itself. In dwarfs I have seen, the head and torso are of normal
size or larger, but the limbs, however muscled, remain childlike;
this was the reverse of such a dwarf, with arms and legs larger
than my own issuing from a twisted, stunted body.
The anti-dwarf brandished an estoc, and
opening its mouth in a soundless cry, it thrust its weapon into the
man’s neck, utterly heedless of his spear, which was plunged into
its own chest.
I heard a laugh then, and though I had
seldom heard him merry, I knew whose laugh it was.
“Baldanders!” I called.
His head rose from the mist, just as I
have seen the mountaintops lifted above it at dawn.