his throat: he badly wanted to retreat. But she beckoned.
‘Look,’ she instructed him, staring off into the darkness. ‘Our assassin came. This is the Rake.’
Shadwell could see nothing at first. Then a shred of fugitive energy skittered up the wall and upon contact with the ceiling threw down a wash of cankered light.
By it, he saw the thing she called the Rake.
Had this once been a man? It was difficult to believe. The Surgeons Immacolata had spoken of had re- invented his anatomy. He hung in the air like a slashed coat left on a hook, his body somehow drawn out to superhuman height. Then, as though a breeze had gusted up from the earth, the body moved, swelling and rising. Its upper limbs – pieces of what might once have been human tissue held in an uneasy alliance by threads of mercurial cartilage – were raised, as if it were about to be crucified. The gesture unwound the matter that blinded its head. They fell away, and Shadwell could not prevent a cry from escaping him, as he understood what surgery had been performed upon the Rake.
They’d filleted him. They’d taken every bone from his body and left a thing more fit for the ocean-bed than the breathing world, a wretched echo of humanity, fuelled by the raptures the sisters had devised to bring it from Limbo. It swayed and swelled, its skull-less head taking on a dozen shapes as Shadwell watched. One moment it was all bulging eyes, the next only a maw, which howled its displeasure at waking to this condition.
The Rake shuddered and its arms grew longer, as if it wanted to kill the woman that had done this to it. But it fell silent nevertheless.
‘Domville,’ Immacolata said. ‘You once professed love for me.’
It threw back its head then, as if despairing of what desire had brought it to.
‘Are you afraid, my Rake?’
It looked at her, its eyes like blood blisters close to bursting.
‘We’ve given you a little life,’ she said. ‘And enough power to turn these streets upside down. I want you to use it.’
The sight of the thing made Shadwell nervous.
‘Is he in control of himself?’ he whispered. ‘Suppose he goes berserk?’
‘Let him,’ she said. ‘I hate this city. Let him burn it up. As long as he kills the Seerkind, I don’t care what he does. He knows he won’t be allowed to rest until he’s done as I ask. And Death’s the best promise he’s ever had.’
The blisters were still fixed on Immacolata, and the look in them confirmed her words.
‘Very well,’ Shadwell said, and turned away, heading back into the adjoining room. There was only so much of this magic a man could take.
The sisters had an appetite for it. They liked to immerse themselves in these rites. For himself, he was content to be human.
Well,
V
FROM THE MOUTHS OF BABES
1
awn crept over Liverpool cautiously, as if fearful of what it would find. Cal watched the light uncover the city, and it seemed to him it was grey from gutter to chimney stack.
He’d lived here all his life; this had been his world. The television and the glossy magazines had shown him different vistas on occasion, but somehow he’d never quite believed in them. They were as remote from his experience, or indeed from what he hoped to know in his seventy years, as the stars that were winking out above his head.
But the Fugue had been different. It had seemed, for a short, sweet time, a place he might truly belong. He’d been too optimistic. The land might want him, but its people didn’t. As far as they were concerned he was contemptibly human.
He loitered on the streets for an hour or so, watching another Liverpool Monday morning get started.
Were they so bad, these Cuckoos whose tribe he shared? They smiled as they welcomed their cats in from a night of philandering; they hugged their children as they departed for the day; their radios played love-songs at the breakfast table. As he watched them he became fiercely defensive. Damn it, he’d go back and tell the Seerkind what bigots they were.
As he approached the house he saw that the front door was wide open, and that a young woman he recognized as a local. but didn’t know by name, was standing at the top of the path staring into the house. It was only as he came within a couple of paces of the front gate that he set eyes on Nimrod. He was standing on the welcome mat, wearing a pair of sunglasses that he’d filched from beside Cal’s bed, and a toga made from one of Cal’s shirts.
‘Is that your kid?’ the woman asked Cal, as he opened the gate.
‘In a manner of speaking.’
‘He started banging on the window when I went past. Isn’t there anyone to look after him?’
‘There is now,’ said Cal.
He looked down at the child, remembering what Freddy had said about Nimrod only
‘What are you doing?’ he whispered to the child.
‘Bussteds!’ Nimrod replied. He was having some difficulty mastering the infantile palate. ‘El killum.’
‘Who?’
But as Nimrod went to answer, the woman, who’d come down the path and was standing half a yard from the door, spoke:
‘He’s adorable,’ she cooed.
Before Cal could make his excuses and close the door, the child raised his arms and reached towards her, a stage-managed gurgle in his throat.
‘Oh –’ said the woman, ‘– sweet thing –’
and she’d claimed Nimrod from Cal before he could prevent her.
Cal caught a gleam in Nimrod’s eyes as he was pressed to the woman’s ample bosom.
‘Where’s his mother?’ she asked.
‘She’ll be back in a while,’ said Cal, making an attempt to claim Nimrod from his luxury. He didn’t want to go. He was beaming as he was rocked, his pudgy fingers grappling with the woman’s breasts. As soon as Cal laid hands on him he began to bawl.
The woman hushed him, pressing him closer to her, at which Nimrod began to toy with her nipples through the thin fabric of her blouse.
‘Will you excuse us?’ said Cal, braving Nimrod’s fists and taking the babe from his pillows before he began to suckle.
‘Shouldn’t leave him alone,’ the woman said, absent-mindedly touching her breast where Nimrod had fondled her.
Cal thanked her for her concern.
‘Bye bye, beautiful,’ she said to the child.
Nimrod blew a kiss at her. A flash of confusion crossed her face, then she backed away towards the gate, the smile she’d offered the child sliding from her lips.
2
‘What a damn fool thing to do.’