the mask and a portion of the maroon-gold leaf ceiling.
From somewhere above him, the Owl said, with almost sensual sloth, “Accept the commission, my dear frog, or we shall kill you and choose another citizen.”
The Stork, sitting onLake, jabbed his kidneys, then punched in the same spot — hard.Lake grunted with pain. The Raven bentLake ’s left arm back behind him until it felt as if his bones would break.
He shrieked. Suddenly, they were both off of him. He flipped over on his back, adjusted his mask, and looked up — to find all three men staring down at him.
“What is your answer?” the Owl asked. “We must have your answer now.”
Lakegroaned and rolled over onto his side.
“Answer!”
What did a word mean? Did a single word really mean… anything? Could it exile whole worlds of action, of possibility?
“Yes,” he said, and the word sounded like a death rattle in his throat.
“Good,” said the Owl. “Now open the coffin.”
They moved back so that he would have enough space. He sat up on the couch, his leg throbbing. He grappled with the locks on the side of the coffin, determined to speed up the nightmare, that it might end all the more swiftly.
Finally, the latches came free. With a grunt, he opened the lid… and stared down at familiar, unmistakably patrician features. The famous shock of gray hair disheveled, the sharp cheekbones bruised violet, the intelligent blue eyes bulging with fear, the fine mouth, the sensual lips, obstructed by a red cloth gag that cut into the face and left a line of blood. Blood trickled from his hairline where he had banged his head against the coffi n lid. Strange symbols had been carved into his arms as if he were an offering to some cruel god.
Lakestaggered backward, fell against the edge of the couch, unable to face this final, dislocating revelation — unable to comprehend that in deed the Greens were right:
For his part, Bender tried to get up as soon as he saw Lake, even bound as he was in coils of rope that must cruelly constrict his circulation, then thrashed about again when it became clearLake would not help him.
The Raven stuck his head into Bender’s field of vision and caw, caw, cawed like his namesake. The action sent Bender into a hysterical spasm of fear. The Raven dealt him a cracking blow across the face.
Bender slumped back down into the coffin. His eyelids fluttered; the smell of urine came from the coffin.Lake couldn’t tear his gaze away. This was Voss Bender, savior and destroyer of careers, politicians, theaters. Voss Bender, who had been dead for two days.
“Why? Why have you done this to him?”Lake said, though he had not meant to speak.
The Stork sneered, said, “He did it to himself. He brought everything on himself.”
“He’s no good,” the Raven said.
“He is,” the Owl added, “the very epitome of Evil.”
Voss Bender moved a little. The eyes under the imperious gray eyebrows opened wide. Bender wasn’t deaf or stupid — Lakehad never thought him stupid — and the man followed their conversation with an intense if weary interest. Those eyes demanded thatLake save him.Lake looked away.
“The Raven here will give you his knife,” the Owl said, “but do not think that just because you have a weapon you can escape.” As if to prove this, the Owl produced a
The Raven held out his knife.
Senses stretched and redefined,Lake glanced at Voss Bender, then at the knife. A thin line of light played over the metal and the grainy whorls of the hilt. He could read the words etched into the blade, the name of the knife’s maker: Hoegbotton & Sons. That the knife should have a history, a pedigree, that he should know more about the knife than about the three men struck him as absurd, as horrible. As he stared at the blade, at the words engraved there, the full, terrible weight of the deed struck him. To take a life. To snuff out a life, and with it a vast network of love and admiration. To create a hole in the world. It was no small thing to take a life, no small thing at all. He saw his father smiling at him, palms opened up to reveal the shiny, sleek bodies of dead insects.
“For God’s sake, don’t make me kill him!”
The burst of laughter from the Owl, the Raven, the Stork, surprised him so much that he laughed with them. He shook with laughter, his jaw, his shoulders, relaxed in anticipation of the revelation that it was all a joke… before he understood that their laughter was throaty, fey, cruel. Slowly, his laughter turned to sobs.
The Raven’s hilarity subsided before that of the Owl and the Stork. He said toLake, “He is already dead. The whole city
Voss Bender began to moan, and redoubled his efforts to break free of his bonds. The three men ignored him.
“I won’t do it. I won’t do it.” His words sounded weak, susceptible to influence. He knew that faced with his own extinction he would do
The Owl said, with remorseless precision, “Then we will flay your face until it is only strips of flesh hanging from your head. We will lop off your fingers, your toes, as if they were carrots for the pot. You, sir, will become a bloody red riddle for some dog to solve in an alley somewhere. And Bender will still be dead.”
Lakestared at the Owl and the Owl stared back, the owl mask betraying not a hint of weakness.
The eyes were cold wrinkled stones, implacable and ancient.
When the Raven offeredLake the knife, he took it. the lacquered wooden hilt had a satisfying weight to it, a smoothness that spoke of practiced ease in the arts of killing.
“A swift stroke across the throat and it will be done,” the Raven said, while the Stork took a white length of cloth and tucked it over Bender’s body, leaving exposed only his head and neck. How many times had he drawn his brush across a painted throat, the model before him fatally disinterested? He wished he had not taken so many anatomy classes. He found himself counting and naming the muscles in Bender’s neck, cataloging arteries and veins, bones and tendons.
The Raven and the Stork withdrew to beyond the coffin. The divide between them andLake was enormous, the knife cold and heavy in his hand.Lake could see that tiny flakes of rust had infected the center of each engraved letter of
He looked down at Voss Bender. Bender’s eyes bulged, bloodshot, watery. The man pleaded with Lake through his gag, wordsLake could only half understand.
Voss Bender began to thrash about and, as if the movement had bro ken a spell,Lake ’s sense of triumph turned to disgust, buttressed by nausea. He let out a broken little laugh.
“I can’t do it. I
Lake tried to drop the knife, but the Raven’s hand covered his and, turning into a fist, forced his own hand into a fist that guided the knife down into the coffin, makingLake stoop as it turned toward Bender’s throat. The Stork held Bender’s head straight, caressing the doomed man’s temples with an odd gentleness. The Owl stood aloof, watching as an owl will the passion play beneath its perch.Lake grunted, struggling against the Raven’s inexorable downward pressure. Just when it seemed he must succumb, he went limp. The knife descended at a hopeless angle, aided by Bender’s mighty flinch. The blade did only half the job — laying open a flap of skin to the left of the jugular. Blood welled up truculently.
As if the stroke had been a signal, the Raven and the Stork stood back, breathing heavily. Bender made a choking gurgle; he sounded as if he might suffocate in his own blood.
Lakerocked back and forth on his knees.
The Owl said to his companions, “You lost your heads. Do you want his blood on our hands?”
Lakestared at the knife and at Voss Bender’s incompetently cut throat, and back at the knife.