She put his hand on her face. It was cool. Then she bent down and kissed him, and somewhere at the back of his skull he remembered this happening before; his lying on the ground, and her giving him love.
‘I’ll be here,’ he said.
She nodded. ‘You’d better be,’ she replied, and crossed to the door of the Temple.
This time, he did not let his eyes close. Whatever dream waited beyond life, he would postpone its pleasure ‘til he saw her face again.
III
THE MIRACLE OF THE LOOM
utside the Temple, the quake tremors were worsening. Inside, however, an uneasy peace reigned. Suzanna started to advance down the darkened corridors, the itching in her body subdued now that she was out of the turbulence, in this, the eye of the hurricane. There was light ahead. She turned a corner, and another, and finding a door in the wall, slipped through into a second passageway, as spartan as the one she’d left. The light was still tantalizingly out of reach. Around the next comer, it promised; just a little further, a little further.
The menstruum was quiet inside her, as though it feared to show itself. Was that the natural respect one miracle paid to a greater? If so, the raptures here were hiding their faces with no little skill; there was nothing about these corridors suggestive of revelation or power: just bare brick. Except for the light. That coaxed her still, through another door and along further passageways. The building, she now realized, was built on the principle of a Russian doll, one within another.
Around the very next corner she had her answer, or at least part of it, as a shadow was thrown up against the wall and she heard somebody shouting:
For the first time since setting foot here, she felt the ground vibrate. There was a fall of brick dust from the ceiling.
‘Shadwell,’ she said.
As she spoke it seemed she could see the two syllables –
The shadow on the wall shifted, and suddenly the Salesman was standing in front of her. All trace of the Prophet had gone. The face revealed beneath was bloated and pale; the face of a beached fish.
‘Gone,’ he said.
He was shaking from head to foot. Sweat droplets decorated his face like pearls.
‘It’s all gone.’
Any fear she might once have had of this man had disappeared. He was here unmasked as ludicrous. But his words made her wonder.
‘It was
‘I did nothing.’
‘Oh yes –’
As she came within a yard of him he reached for her, his clammy hands suddenly about her neck.
His grip intended harm, but the menstruum didn’t rise to her aid. She was left with only muscle power to disengage him, and it was not enough.
‘You want to see?’ he screamed into her face. ‘You want to see how I’ve been cheated?
He dragged her towards the door, and pitched her through into the room at the heart of the Temple: the inner sanctum in which the miracles of the Gyre had been generated; the powerhouse which had held the many worlds of the Fugue together for so long.
It was a room some fifteen feet square, built of the same naked brick as the rest of the Temple, and high. She looked up to see that the roof had a skylight of sorts, open to the heavens. The clouds that swirled around the Temple roof shed a milky brightness down, as if the lightning from the Gyre was being kindled in the womb of troubled air above. The clouds were not the only movement overhead, however. As she gazed up she caught sight of a form in the corner of the roof. Before her gaze could focus on it. Shadwell was approaching her.
‘Where is it?’ he demanded. ‘Where’s the Loom?’
She looked around the sanctum, and discovered now that it was not entirely bare. In each of the four corners a figure was sitting, gazing towards the centre of the room. Her spine twitched. Though they sat bolt upright on their high-backed chairs, the quartet were long dead, their flesh like stained paper on their bones, their clothes hanging in rotted rags.
Had these guardians been murdered where they sat, so that thieves could remove the Loom unchallenged? So it seemed. Yet there was nothing in their posture that suggested a violent death; nor could she believe that this charmed place would have sanctioned bloodshed. No; something else had happened here –
He was still muttering to himself, his voice a decaying spiral of complaint. She was only half-listening; she was far more interested in the object she now saw lying in the middle of the floor. There it lay, the kitchen knife Cal had brought into the Auction Room all those months ago; the commonplace domestic tool which the look between them had somehow drawn into the Weave, to this very spot, the absolute centre of the Fugue.
Seeing it, pieces of the riddle began to slot together in her head. Here, where the glances of the sentinels intersected, lay the knife that
‘You were the one,’ he growled. ‘You knew all along.’
She ignored his accusations, a new thought forming. If the magic
As she shaped the question Shadwell’s fury drove him to attack.
His assault caught her unawares, and she was flung back against the wall. The breath went out of her in a rush, and before she could defend herself his thumbs were at her throat, his bulk trapping her.
‘Thieving bitch,’ he said. ‘You cheated me!’
She raised her hands to beat him off, but she was already growing weak. She struggled to draw breath, desperate for a mouthful of air even if it was the flatulent breath he was expelling, but his grip on her throat prevented so much as a mouthful reaching her. I’m going to die, she thought; I’m going to die looking into this curdled face.
And then her upturned eyes caught a glimpse of movement in the roof, and a voice said:
‘The Loom is here.’
Shadwell’s grip on Suzanna relaxed. He turned, and looked up at the speaker.
Immacolata, her arms spread out like a parachutist in free-fall, was hovering above them.
‘Do you remember me?’ she asked Shadwell.
‘Jesus Christ.’
‘I missed you, Shadwell. Though you were unkind.’
‘Where’s the Loom?’ he said. ‘Tell me.’
‘There is no Loom,’ she replied.
‘But you just said –’
‘The Loom is here.’