heel.
LeavingLake alone in his frog mask, which had become uncomfortably hot and scratchy. It smelled of a familiar cologne — Merri must have worn it since the festival and not cleaned it out.
Claustrophobia battled with a pleasing sense of anonymity. Behind the mask he felt as if he would be capable of actions forbidden to the arrogant but staidMartinLake. Very well, then, the newMartinLake would undertake an examination of the room for more clues as to his host’s taste — or lack thereof.
A bust of Trillian stared back at him from a far table, its white marble infiltrated by veins of some cerise stone. Also on this table lay a book entitled The Architect of
Lakesat back, content. Who would have thought to find such refinement in the midst of such desolation?
It appeared Raffe had been right: some wealthy patron wished to commission him, perhaps even to collect his art. He began to work out in his head an asking price that would be high enough, even if eventually knocked down by hard bargaining, to satisfy him. He could buy new canvases, replace his old, weary brushes, per haps even convince an important gallery to carry his work.
Gradually, however, as if the opening notes of a music so subtle that the listener could not at first hear it, a tap-tap-tapping intruded upon his pleasant daydream. It traveled around the room and into his ears with an apologetic urgency.
He sat up and tried to identify the source. It came neither from the walls nor the door. But it definitely originated from
He listened carefully — and a smile lit his face. Why, it was coming from the table in front of him!
Someone or something was
A frenzied rapping and
Lakerose with an “Uh!” of horror — and at that moment, the Stork returned, accompanied by two other men.
The Stork’s companions were both of considerable weight and height, and from a certain weakness underlying the ponderous nature of their movements, which he remembered from his days of sketching models, Lake realized both were of advancing years. Both wore dark suits identical to that worn by the Stork, but the resemblance ended there. The larger of the two men — not fat but merely broad — wore a resplendent raven’s head over his own, the glossy black feathers plucked from a real raven (there was no mistaking the distinctive sheen). The eyes shone sharp and hard and heavy. The beak, made of a silvery metal, caught the subdued light and glimmered like a distant reflection in a pool of still water.
The third man wore a mask that replicated both the doorknocker and the seal onLake ’s invitation: the owl, brown-gold feathers once again genuine, the curved beak a dull gray, the human eyes peering out from the shadow of the fabricated orbits. Unfortunately, the Owl’s extreme girth extended to his neck and the owl mask was a tight fit, covering his chins, but constricting the flesh around the neck into a jowly collar. This last detail made him hideous beyond belief, for it looked as if he had been denuded of feathers, revealing the plucked skin beneath.
The three stood oppositeLake across the coffin — the top of which had begun to shudder upwards as whatever was inside smashed itself against the lid.
“What… what is in there?”Lake asked. “Is this part of the masquerade? Is this a joke? Did Merrimount send you?”
The Owl said, “A very nice disguise,” and still staring atLake, rapped his fist so hard against the coffin lid that black paint rubbed off on his white glove. The thrashing inside the coffin subsided. “A good disguise for this masquerade. The frog, who is equally at home on land as in the water.” The Owl’s voice, like that of the Stork, came out distorted, as if the man had stuffed cotton or pebbles in his mouth.
“What,”Lake said again, pointing a tremulous finger at the coffi n, “is in there?”
The Owl laughed — a horrid coughing sound. “Our other guest will be released shortly, but first we must discuss your commission.”
“My commission?” A thought flashed across his mind like heat lightning, leaving no impression behind: Raffe
“It is an unusual commission and before I give you the details, you must resign yourself to it with all your heart. You have no choice. Now that you are here, you are our instrument.”
Raffe had never suggested that he must
“Sirs,”Lake said, standing, “I think there has been a misunderstanding. I am a painter and a painter only —”
“A painter,” the Owl echoed, as if it were an irrelevant detail.
“—and I am going to leave now. Please forgive me. I mean no offense.”
He began to sidle out from behind the coffin, but stopped when the Raven blocked his path, a long gutting knife held in one gloved hand. It shone like the twin to the Raven’s beak. The sight of it paralyzedLake. Slowly, he sidled back to the middle of the couch, the coffin between him and these predators. His hands shook. The frog mask was awash in sweat.
“What do you want?”Lake said, guarding unsuccessfully against the quaver in his voice.
The Owl rubbed his hands together and cocked his head to regardLake with one steel-gray eye.
“Simply put, your commission shall be its own reward. We shall not pay you, unless you consider allowing you to live payment. Once you have left this house, your life will be as before, except that you shall be a hero: the anonymous citizen of the city who righted a grievous wrong.”
“What do you want?”Lake asked again, more terror-stricken than before.
“A murder,” croaked the Raven.
“An execution,” corrected the Stork.
“A beheading,” specified the Owl.
“A murder?”Lake shouted. “A murder! Are you mad?”
The Owl ruffl ed its feathers, said, “Let me tell you what your response will be, and then perhaps you can move past it to your destiny all the quicker. First, you will moan. You will shriek. You will even try to escape. You will say ‘No!’ emphatically even after we subdue you. We will threaten you. You will weaken. Then you will say ‘No’ again, but this time we will be able to tell from the questioning tone of your voice that you are closer to the reality, closer to the deed. And then the cycle will repeat itself. And then, finally, whether it takes an hour or a week, you will find yourself carrying out your task, because even the most wretched dog wants to feel the sun on its face one more day.
“It would save us all some time if you just accepted the situation without all the attendant fuss.”
“I will not.”
“Open the coffin.”
“No!”
Lake, his leg encumbering him, leapt over the coffin table. He made it as far as the bust of Trillian before the Stork and the Raven knocked him to the floor. He twisted and kicked in their grasp, but his leg was as supple as a wooden club and they were much too strong. They wrestled him back to the coffin. The Stork held him face-down on the couch, the frog mask cutting so painfully into his mouth that he could hardly draw breath. The Raven yanked his head up and held the knife to his throat. In such a position, his eyeholes askew, he could see only the interior of