XV
Where did you go?' she asked later, curled up next to me. We were a tiny island on a steel sea, a bare bump of bone and flesh. We lay together because two were warmer than one and because there was no distance between us anymore. Until the container was opened, we existed outside of time and the world. We both knew it wouldn't last.
'A lot of places. Canada, the Southwest, back East. I saw a lot of Europe. China. Indonesia. Africa. I spent a year in Finland and two years in Paris.'
Her fingers moved across my collarbone and touched the braid of hair around my throat. 'And this?'
'Finland.'
She tried to hook her finger under the braid and discovered that it wasn't separate from my skin. 'What is it?'
'It's a gift from someone I-She helped me through the first year, showed me magick.' Reija had named them; more than just a label, her binding had given them definition, and in doing so, had made them controllable. She had tried to teach me strength. 'It's her hair.'
'A forget-me-not?' Nearly a teasing note in Kat's voice.
'Yes, but not like that.'
She quietly traced the course of the braid. The Chorus boiled at her touch. While their
'I quit all the magick stuff for three or four years after the ceremony that night,' she said eventually. As the Chorus stopped raising goose bumps on my skin, her finger idly drifted along the slope of my body, charting the twists and knots of the last decade. 'The group dissolved after the raid and we all lost touch. Adrift. .'
Her memories of the ceremonial initiation had flowed into me when I had attacked her earlier, filling the holes that had been torn in my history. Now, I could remember the chaos of the Forest Service raid, the uniformed men with flashlights who had interrupted the nocturnal rite. Kat's group at that time had been pagan Gaia worshippers, attempting to link their Western Druidic heritage with the animist spirits of the natural world, and they had returned one too many times to the same spot outside of Rockport. The solemn ceremony had been splintered by the sudden presence of Forest Service rangers and Sheriff's deputies. The acolytes panicked, abandoning all pretense of ceremonial unity, and the torch-lit glade had dissolved into a scene of medieval chaos. Myself and the two other neophytes had been left behind, wide-eyed babes abandoned in the woods. Left to face our panic on our own.
I shifted my leg, sliding my foot between her calves. She parted easily, effortlessly, and unconsciously, and then closed again around me. 'But you came back to the Work.'
She nodded. 'I did.' She seemed on the cusp of telling me more and I said nothing, letting the silence draw it out of her. 'I traveled too. I did the Grand Tour of Italy: Rome, Venice, Florence, a few other places.' I felt her cheek move against my skin-a brush of warm flesh-and I knew why the memories caused such a flush in her. Venice was a haunted city. Its filigreed buildings, its burnished glass, and its emerald canals still inflamed the romantic idealist. I hadn't been immune myself, and gotten involved in an affair that had taught me some different things than I had come to find.
'When I came back, I found some of the old group. They had become Hollow Men, though they used another name back then. 'Technomancers,' I think. Or 'Argent Lords of the Dawn.' ' She shook her head, her hair brushing against my chin. 'They went through quite a few names before 'Hollow Men.' They had become city-bound, neo- industrialists, and they were scattered along the coast in Portland and Seattle. Urban chaos magicians without any real focus.'
Doug and his friends. The white-haired magus. 'But they found a focus in psychoanimism, didn't they?'
She nodded. 'Yes, manipulating the soul, independent of the flesh. Shortly after I came back, they became involved with a couple of magi who had recently completed pilgrimages to India and were heavily into Vedic meditation. They had a handful of prayers they claimed were from the
'Your friends found gurus.'
'Yes,' she admitted. 'I was still on the fringe, not completely privy to the thoughts of the inner circle. I wasn't part of the decision to bind the group to these men.'
'What was the lure? It had to be more than scraps from the
'They claimed to have found a synthesis between these rituals and the Work described in an eighth-century Persian alchemical text. They were working from the Latin translation-fourteenth or fifteenth century, I think-and they had made a purification rite. A unified expression of being and not-being. It was complicated: two days of fasting and meditation before another twelve hours of ceremonial magick. Lots of sigils, lots of mantras.'
Her finger traced the pitted circle of one of two bullet scars. I had taken a couple of small caliber rounds in the chest-high on the right side-a few years ago. An art negotiation gone wrong in a no-name Bangkok bar had left me with holes, one clean through and one puncturing the upper portion of my right lung. The wound in my lung had threatened to be a problem but the shooter, having had an instant to regret his aim, was taken by the Chorus and used to repair the damage. The enduring legacy of my
'I had been tracing the history of pagan Goddess worship in Italy,' she said, her fingers wandering between the scars on my chest. 'I found some old ceremonies belonging to Demeter, one of which was the practice of tuning spirit fields.' Her hand paused and her head moved, her breath touching my skin. 'A harmonic resonance between souls.'
I touched her shoulder, felt her hair under my fingers. 'Synching energy vibrations,' I said. My knowledge of the matter was vague, and based on what I gleaned from Doug's head, I could hazard a few guesses.
'The Hollow Men ritual culminates in a spiritual readiness-a sartorial condition where the initiate is etherically disengaged. The body is alive, but in a state of suspension, and the soul should be able to release itself freely from its anchors.
'But when they tried to put it into practice, they couldn't do it. They couldn't complete the process of separation. They knew what they needed-some sort of final release that would silence the self-but they couldn't do it. They couldn't do it for themselves.'
I made the connection. 'And this is where you came in.'
'The ceremony of Demeter gave me the tools to become a co-participant in their ritual. I could tune their vibrations. I could focus their bodies and dissolve their active minds.'
'Sex Magick,' I said. 'The old-fashioned way.'
'There's nothing old-fashioned about it.' She sounded slightly defensive, even though my tone had been light. 'You know how oblivious we are to ourselves in that moment of rapture. Sex Magick is just as viable as any other style of theurgy.'
'I know,' I told her. 'There are aged generations of Thelemites who are still trying to live up to Crowley's interpretations.
'Crowley gets it all wrong because he never Saw beyond the end of his dick.' She shook her head, her hair moving through my fingers. 'It isn't just about reaching orgasm and seeing that white light of nothingness. When I give them that release, they are submissive to me. I am their Whore-Goddess; I am the fertile earth in which they bury themselves so that their spirits may be freed. We re-create the burial of the vegetable god. It is this symbolic harmony that allows them to pass into simultaneous Being and Nothingness.'
The vegetable ritual, the oldest example of the Hermetic truism.
I had been bound by this cycle as well. The Chorus had tapped that proto-historical model, that ingrained psychic belief structure, and had bent me around it. We seek death and rebirth as often as the sun rises. We seek