He lounged back and smiled.
He looked at his watch. Midnight seemed as good a time as any.
The idea seemed kind of . . . neat.
Every so often, a fish would break the surface and flip. Schools of smaller fish seemed to spiral into one another and form fascinating shapes. When Gerold stared up at the coming twilight, birds roved silently across the water. Not once today had another boat come near him. Just after the sun sank, crickets began to throb en
Gerold drifted in and out of sleep.
He dreamed of walking, of being with women, of pursuing his goals and succeeding. He dreamed of all the things he’d lost . . .
Something like a grating sound in his head dragged him awake. His eyes fluttered open, and what he noticed first was how the pulsing cricket sounds had ceased, leaving the lake completely absent of all noise. It was full dark now . . .
A hard crackle, like static.
Then a voice: “Hon? You there? Aw, jeez—”
Her Florida drawl crackled over the line. “Oh, gracious, thank God. I thought . . . well, you didn’t answer so’s I thought somethin’ happened, hon.”
“Sorry. I fell asleep. But I’ve had great luck catching crayfish,” Gerold said. “They’re delicious—” Something cut off the rest of his words. He sniffed.
“Is everything . . . all right out there? You notice anything . . . out of kilter?” the woman asked next.
“Now that you mention it . . . My ears are clogged up, and . . . I smell something.” The faintly metallic odor seemed just as faintly familiar.
“Like an electric motor sort’a thing?” she asked.
“Yeah! That’s it. Ozone, I think it is. Like before an electrical storm—”
A long pause drew over the line.
“Hey, are you okay?” Gerold asked.
“Well, hon, I feel like a horse’s heiny but, well, I’m kind of . . . scared.”
“What’s wrong?”
“I ain’t sure but—and this’ll sound nutty—but all my hair’s standin’ right on end, like it’s floatin’ up off my head—”
—were standing on end. Then he slowly raised his hand and discovered that all the hair on his head was sticking up, too.
“This is weird but the same thing’s happening to me,” he told her.
“Must be a ’lectrical storm comin’—”
“But that’s impossible,” he replied. Overhead stretched a cloudless expanse of flickering stars, deep twilight, and a radiant white sickle moon. “The sky’s clear.”
The woman’s voice quavered nervously. “Then it’s heat lighting or somethin’, hon—I don’t know! Somethin’ don’t feel right in my gut. I’d feel a whole lot better if ya’d come in—”
“Oh, thank you, sweetie! Somethin’ just don’t feel right, and I am beside myself with the jitters.”
“Just hang tight, I’ll be there in a few minutes,” Gerold said. He signed off, then pulled the crayfish trap again and found it empty.
No matter.
Gerold grabbed the oars and began to row. It felt good being needed, though. Paralysis notwithstanding, the woman was scared and didn’t want to be alone.
He estimated that it would take him about twenty minutes to row back in to the dock, but what he
(II)
Krilid glided the Nectoport high over the green-black clouds. Watching the immense Sputum Storm had been something.
But the storm’s moving off made his own job easier.
A moment of directional thought in his warped head collapsed the distance of over a thousand miles and—
Sssssssssssssssss-ONK!
—in an indivisible sliver of a second, he’d relocated the Nectoport high over the Pol Pot District. This second part of his mission, he knew, would be much more difficult to pull off, if indeed it could even
How many Trolls, Imps, Demons, Humans—whatever!—got to see the Mephistopolis from this high up?
Krilid supposed this fact made him either very unselfish or very stupid.
He took no chances of being detected, slipping the Nectoport in and out of clouds. All of the scaffolding around the Demonculus had been taken down, and he spotted very few Balloon Skiffs floating about the unliving thing’s colossal body.
However, there were a few more things for Krilid to do as well, before he could hope to pull this off.
He pulled the Nectoport off with a simple thought, and then found himself hovering high above one of the Torturaries in the Pogrom Park District. This particular compound specialized in Cage Roasting as its mode of slow torture, and it exclusively housed Human Damned who—like Krilid—had defected to Ezoriel’s Contumacy or some other anti-Satanic sect. From this range, the compound looked like a typical prison yard, with towers manned by armed Conscripts, and a nearly impenetrable Blood-Brick fence resistant to not only impact but also Breech Spells. The rolls and rolls of “barbed” wire did not sport barbs but instead invisible needle-teeth from exterminated