(This story takes place in a setting I've used for a couple of my novel-length fantasies.  I may get around to posting those as well, but I am sometimes in the mood to write a shorter story about Gray, the main character.  This is the first one I wrote, which can occur at pretty much any time in the chronology of the novels.  (At least so far.)  Hope you enjoy it!)

***

There are areas in the city called (among other things) the Crossroads that quite literally take one's breath away. There are spires of every color, towers that twist like dancers in the sky, held aloft by crystal titanium and enough math to drive most engineers insane. There's the Cathedral of Sound, a wave of concentrated noise so tightly bound that to touch a single brick is to become one with the harmony of the universe, usually violently and requiring specialized cleaners to handle the mess. Then there are the structures on Revelation Way, formed into fantastic mental shapes and only existing when the paranormals on the street bothered to pay attention. There are the towers of the Maesters—and, of course, the Tower itself, rising high over the city, light and glorious and terrible all at once.

Gray had seen all of these places. He wished he was looking at one of them now.

“Patron, this is a dump,” he said. “Are you sure you've got the right place?”

Patron Matthew smiled very faintly. “I apologize, Gray. I did not realize that this was below your standards.”

Gray shrugged irritably. “That's not it. I mean, I practically live in the Calms, where rats go to die if they've been bad, but the Lowlands? Rats wouldn't dare.”

“I can't pick my missions, Gray. The job calls, and I answer.”

“And then you call me. Why, oh why, did I answer?”

In truth, Gray had many reasons to dislike the Lowlands. He had been here before, and none of the memories from that time were pleasant. It was a good place to lay low when too many prying eyes were trying to settle on you, and the inhabitants who could speak knew better than to answer questions. But nobody came here by choice, and Gray had an aversion to reminders of just how close he had come to dying.

It didn't help that the place really was a dump. Gray was for a shower the second this job was finished, and he was only glad that he had worn his second best suit. He would have to burn it when he got home. He hunched his shoulders, looking reflexively for an unoccupied shadow, and forced himself to relax. No reason to hide. Not when he was with Matthew.

Gray was a medium sized man, nondescript in the way that only comes with careful attention to detail. He wore a rumpled business suit, and badly—it was slightly too large for him, and the pockets bulged with strange items, some of which moved. Tinted glasses hung carelessly from his collar, cracked and scratched and much sturdier than the thin wire frames suggested. If anything was noticeable about him, it was the way his eyes moved—never still, always looking into shadows as though waiting for the gleam of a freshly drawn knife. The way he stood implied that he had, in the past, caught sight of more than a few.

Patron Matthew was nondescript in his own way, but it was the plainness of a man who was quite simply himself. He wore loose-fitting clothes, not quite robes, and walked with his hands clasped behind his back. The only noticeable things about him were his eyes—they gleamed merrily, no matter how dark the shadow, and crinkled when he smiled, which was often.

“Stop smiling,” said Gray. “Tell me why we're here, instead.”

“I thought you didn't wish to know.”

Gray shrugged. “If you'd told me earlier, I wouldn't have come. And I need the work.”

“Oh, Gray,” said Matthew, and left it at that. “It's a simple exorcism. Nothing to worry about.”

“If it was simple, you wouldn't have called me,” said Gray with what he considered justifiable suspicion. “What are you exorcising? One of the Old Ones? A coven of the Deepborne?” His voice dropped. “The Greatfather?”

Matthew didn't roll his eyes, but only because he was a kind man. “Gray, if the Greatfather had escaped, half of the city would be gone. No, just a normal spirit, but apparently it caught its host's intentions before I received the request for help. It brought him here, to the Lowlands, hoping I wouldn't follow.”

“A damned good plan.”

“Well, yes. That's why you're here. As a guide, and protection.”

“A guide, when you already know where the spirit took its host?” Gray pointed out.

“Protection, then. We're here, by the way.”

The stopped. Gray flicked something from his boot, which splashed and made a rude gesture before oozing away. He waved absently, and studied the house before them.

Calling it decrepit would have been kind. Dilapidated, run down, condemned—all very generous. Gray was leaning toward deathtrap, with a side order of plague colony. It may have been a manor once, but nothing in the Lowlands could be given such a grand description. Now it was nothing but tilted walls, broken windows, crumbling mortar and creaking floors. Gray could almost see it swaying in the nonexistent breeze; he sensed the red eyes of things brooding in the eaves, regarding him in malevolent silence.

“No way,” he said.

Matthew looked alarmed. “Is it that bad?”

“Are you kidding? This place is a joke. It's a...a...” he gestured agitatedly, “a prop. This is where ghosts go when they want a good laugh. No self respecting demon would hole up here. Seriously, I can almost hear the infant wailing in the distance.”

Patron Matthew tilted his head, his eyes distant. “No,” he said slowly. “There is definitely something here.”

“It has a lot to answer for,” said Gray darkly. “I swear, if I see a little girl staring at me from a window, I'm calling social services.”

“So what do you think? Is there anything dangerous about it?”

Gray stood up a bit straighter, trying to look professional. He paced the street in front of the house, letting his eyes move on their own. He stopped once, his head tilted as though listening to something; finally he shrugged and turned away. He lifted a rock from the street and tossed it over his shoulder, then looked disappointed when nothing exploded. Finally, though, he nodded reluctantly.

“The house isn't structurally sound,” he said. “I mean, it shouldn't be able to support its own weight. Some power is keeping it together. The windows keep moving around. The grass is dead, but that's not the strange part—there is no grass in the Lowlands. It can't survive. The shadows aren't caused by light—they go off in all directions. Most of all, though—look at the size of this place. It's huge, but nobody is living here. Even the most haunted, deadly house in the Lowlands would be occupied. The inhabitants would eat the ghosts.”

“Meaning...?”

Gray sighed. “Meaning...it's probably not real. A construct, and created recently. It's only as solid as the demon thinks it is.”

“That would take an enormous amount of power.”

“Maybe. Or an act of desperation.”

“Perhaps it heard you were coming.”

“Always possible,” conceded Gray. “What do you want to do?”

“How strong are you in your faith, my friend?”

Gray glared. “My faith is strong as my credit line in the Calms.”

“Oh. Well, then, I suppose you barge in, glaring in every direction and generally causing commotion, while I follow very quietly behind.”

“I never barge,” said Gray with great dignity. “But in the face of this cliché, I'll make an exception.”

A very discreet exception, as it turned out. Gray strode boldly enough to the front door, mounting the creaking steps with a confidence he was nearly certain was the only thing keeping them from collapsing, but he when he reached the door he hesitated. Despite the feel of a poorly designed stage in a low rent video, there was definitely a hell of a lot of power running through the frame of the house. Lack of imagination did not mean lack of danger, and there was a tension in the air just waiting to snap—all over Gray, if he was not careful.

He reached forward and placed one finger very lightly against the door. It swung away from him, creaking so loudly that Gray pulled away reflexively. On cue, things red of eye and black of skin took wing above them, fluttering out of the eaves in one continuous stream.

“Gray—” began Matthew.

“Just a moment,” said Gray. He stood forward, glaring at the flapping shapes around them, and under his eye they seemed to dissolve. Finally they blew away, so much smoke in the wind.

“Patron,” he said. “What do you know about the man who's possessed?”

“A bit,” said Matthew. “What did you do to the bats?”

“Hmm? Oh, nothing. Whatever's possessing our victim, it's not very sophisticated. It threw too many shapes at us—it couldn't provide the fine details, and the harder I looked, the harder it was for it to maintain them. I've seen fancier phantasms sitting next to me in the Redmoon on Revelation Way.”

Patron Matthew considered this, then nodded. “Ah. An incarnation of elemental fear.”

“Fired with all the grace of an Arcanist's cannon.”

“An Arcanist's cannon can knock down a building.”

“A bunch of bats can't.” Gray frowned, considering the doorway. It led into darkness, impenetrable even to his heightened senses. Which meant, of course, that it was not real darkness at all. “The victim...?”

“I'll tell you as we go.”

Gray nodded, keeping his eyes on the doorway. He considered drawing a weapon, but decided that the force inside the house wouldn't be impressed. So he shrugged, gestured for Matthew to stay behind him, and stepped into the gloom.

It was like stepping into a pool of warm ink. The darkness literally washed over him, oozing into his clothes and almost squelching under his feet. It was not cold, exactly, but it was an absence of warmth; what the world must feel like, Gray thought, as the the last clock finally wound down, or the last shovelful of dirt fell on the grave.

“Yuck,” he said.

“My,” said Matthew. “Hold on a minute.”

Gray realized what the Patron was doing from the sounds behind him. “Oh, no—is that necessary?”

“You might be able to see in the darkness—”

“In fact I can't.”

“—but I don't share your advantage.”

There was a clicking sound, and Gray grimaced. He fumbled for something in his pockets and turned reluctantly. Matthew, as expected, was on his knees. He held two rocks, one in each hand, and was striking them vigorously together. Sparks flew from his fingers as the stones collided.

“Ye gods,” said Gray. “Are you serious?”

“You know the source of my faith,” said Matthew calmly. “One of the oldest in the city, and deserving of respect.”

“Deserving of some technomancy,” said Gray, and held out the lighter he had withdrawn from his pocket. “Honestly, Patron, this is embarrassing.”

Matthew accepted the lighter willingly enough, pocketing the stones, and flicked the trigger. Flame flickered into existence, and against expectation remained there as Matthew released the trigger and lowered the lighter. It danced merrily in the darkness until Matthew slid his palm beneath it. Then it swelled, growing in pulses as it sucked at the air, until a fist-sized fire blazed in the Patron's cupped hand.

Matthew held out the lighter, and Gray stepped back with his hands raised. “Oh, hell no. It's holy now, and I don't believe in tithing.”

“One reason I stick with rocks,” said Matthew. He tossed the lighter into the darkness, and smiled slightly as Gray tracked it with suspicious eyes until it was gone. “Less litter.”

“That was custom made,” said Gray, but with a secret relief. Then he turned back to the gloom—still a physical presence, but, he had to admit, not nearly as intimidating in the light of the Patron's flame. It was more like soot now, swirling darkly but not impenetrable.

He walked forward, and Patron Matthew followed.

The floors creaked. The shadows danced in the flickering flame. There were other noises in the distance—groans in the structure that might have formed words, wind through the cracks in the house that could have been whispers. Something skittered in the corners—rats, maybe, but Gray had his doubts—and unseen eyes followed them as they walked.

“Gray...” said Matthew.

“Talk,” said Gray. “This isn't very creative, but it's...oddly compelling. Tell me about the victim.”

“His name is Zix Graves. Young, and slightly talented when it comes to shuffling cards in a clever way. Part of the Red Renegades—a gang, I believe.”

“Yeah, I've heard of them,” said Gray. “Mostly cons and lock artists, with a few bruisers to maintain territory. Low rent thugs, but they fill a niche. They operate in the Hive, just outside of the Calms.” He paused, frowning slightly. “The Hive...now, what did I hear about that recently?”

“A nasty place, as I hear it,” said Matthew. “Nothing like the Calms, but a good place to go when you've got little hope and less money. Poor Mister Graves has been living there for some time, doing his bit to make it that much worse. Just another con, but he thought he had found a way out. A source of power—something he could either use or sell.”

“A name of one of the Deepborne,” said Gray glumly. “Let me guess—he couldn't find a buyer.”

“Anyone with enough money to pay for that ritual would know better than to use it,” said Matthew. “Sadly, Mister Graves did not have the same insight.”

“The Hive...” mused Gray. “Oh, yes. I heard that things were actually looking up recently. Apparently some power went in and started beating heads together until they saw sense. Mind you, his arm must have gotten tired.”

“Mmm. Well, the Red Renegades would not have liked that very much. Maybe Mister Graves decided to level the playing field.”

“Maybe...”

“In any case, he found out what happens when you step into the dark, and met something worse than himself. Now he needs a little light to see his way.”

“Heft that flame suggestively, why don't you,” said Gray. “You're the softest touch I know, Patron. Did it ever occur to you that this guy got exactly what he had coming?”

“No.”

Gray sighed. “Well, you're the boss. How did he get in touch with you?”

“He did not, exactly. A message came to the Knock, on old fashioned paper. It had his name, a rather pitiful confession of his many crimes, and a desperate cry for help to anyone who would listen.”

Gray nodded, considering. “And...how many hands did it go through before it reached yours?”

“That's uncharitable, Gray.”

“All of them, then. Patron, you really have to—”

The house shook. Gray spun wildly around, looking into the shadows as the floor shook again, and again.

“Gray?” said Matthew mildly.

“Working on it,” said Gray.

The shaking was rhythmic—too steady to be anything but intentional. Matthew raised the flame, and they saw that the walls had moved away from them, or disappeared altogether. The sooty air swirled, and a great silhouette formed in the distance. It was striding toward them, and each footstep shook the ground. Three points burned where the head should be—eyes, suspended in midair, portals to someplace like a furnace, and turned on them both. The form was indistinct, but every line of it suggested speed and power, and a barely contained tension waiting to break.

“Gray...”

“Er,” said Gray. “How badly do we want to save this guy?”

“It's not negotiable.”

“Right. Right.” Gray eyed the approaching figure, and then sighed. “Can we talk about this?” he shouted.

The thing threw back its head and roared. Hot, acrid air washed over Gray and Matthew, and they both turned their heads and narrowed their eyes.

“Right.” Gray straightened his suit, gave Matthew a resigned look, and walked forward to meet the creature in the dark.

The creature's stance changed. For a moment it hesitated, and then it fell to all fours, shaking the ground again. Gray cast about for some sort of weapon, considered a few that he carried, and finally shrugged. This was not the kind of thing that respected guns, which left only one rather undesirable alternative.

The thing lumbered toward him with frightening speed. Gray ran to meet it with clenched fists, and dodged aside at the last moment. The thing spun around impossibly quickly, but Gray had already leaped. Grimacing in anticipation, he reached forward to grasp the thing's undoubtedly foul hide in an attempt to climb its back—

—and fell painfully to the ground as the dark form disintegrated beneath him. He turned the fall into a tumble, rolling and standing in one awkward motion and spinning wildly in place, arms spread to deflect the attack he was sure was coming. One long moment passed; then another, and another, and slowly Gray let himself relax.

“Hmm,” said Matthew mildly.

“Yeah, hmm,” said Gray in precisely the opposite tone. “Where in the hell did it go?”

“Smell the air.”

Gray did, then frowned. “No brimstone.”

“If there ever was any.”

“Oh. Oh, we have a fast learner here. When a complicated, detailed illusion won't work, go for big and vague. But...” Gray's frown deepened. He knelt and studied the floor, vaguely aware that the walls of the manor had returned. “Look at the crushed floorboards. That thing had a physical presence—I could tell that much. It could have done some real damage if it had wanted to.”

“Very brave of you to face it,” said Matthew, and Gray rolled his eyes.

“You know what would happen to my reputation if I run from something like that?”

“Is it worse than what would happened to your body if you don't?”

Gray looked at him as though he did not understand the question. He shrugged and gestured, and they continued walking.

The shadows swirled around them. They came to a grand staircase, ascending endlessly into the darkness. Whispers surrounded them, and music rose in the distance as they walked upward. Gray tilted his head, listening closely—the melody was hauntingly familiar, but just out of the reach of memory. Matthew looked disturbed, and Gray wondered if he was hearing the same song.

The stairs ended at a landing, which curved away in both directions, where they eventually met in front of a pair of great doors. The music was louder here, something ancient and slow and made of strings, wafting on the air and sinking into their bones. Gray shook it off, but Matthew only looked thoughtful.

There was something written on the doors, carved in. Gray wiped the dust away, and read, “The Last Waltz. That's...ominous.”

“Something is behind this door,” said Matthew.

“You surprise me. Got your ritual handy?”

He did not wait for an answer. He pushed the doors open, and strode into a ballroom made from memory.

It was still dark, but there were points of light in the gloom—candles, burning with pale blue flames, barely illuminating the room but allowing them to see vague shapes moving on the floor. Gray and Matthew moved forward slowly, resisting the urge to walk in time with the music. The could see the band—the idea of a band, anyway, all curves and slow motion rippling in the far corner of the room. The music was distant, but clear. Gray considered chucking a rock at the band before deciding it would be bad manners, and settled for studying the rest of the room.

There were tables scattered around the dance floor. Gray ran his hand over the top of one, and lifted it to his eyes. He felt the dust on his fingers, but when he studied them they were clean.

“You know, Patron,” he said, “I'm beginning to think that something odd is going on here.”

Matthew peered at what appeared to be a pair of skeletons in evening dress, dancing a slow waltz. “Do tell.”

“This house...isn't what I expected. Yes, darkness and threats, but no danger. Oh,” he gestured disdainfully, “maybe to someone who didn't come prepared, but I expected more. A lot more. The walk here was worse, just in the Lowlands.”

They stepped onto the dance floor, and the shadowy dancers parted to let them pass. Something rose in the distance—chairs, or maybe thrones, with backs that towered over the rest of the room. They were the most real things in the room—stark and angular where the rest of the gloom was filled with soft, indistinct curves, presenting an almost tangible presence.

Gray gestured to them. “And—look at those. What self-respecting demon would choose a pair of high backed chairs? Where are the skulls? The endless fire? The bone-weary damned, forced to kneel as the legs?”

“Wouldn't that be just as cliché as the rest of this place?” asked Matthew.

Gray sniffed. “Maybe, but there's such a thing as standards. The horror of the plain can be very terrifying indeed, but this? This isn't as bad as any number of lawyers' offices I've been to.”

“Now, that's just mean. You think this is a trap, then?”

“I think someone fed you bad information. In fact, I think that this isn't even a—”

The shadowy dancers moved as one. They flowed forward as Gray was gesturing agitatedly, falling over him in a wave before he could react. He let out a sharp, vaguely gratified yell—

“Don't listen to it, Patron! It's not—”

—before he was dragged thrashing backward, into the darkness. His voice cut off as though someone had closed a door on his mouth, and then there was only silence.

“Hmm,” said Matthew.

The Patron stood very still. The blue candles were dimming, and the music grew fainter with each passing second. He turned his head very slowly; he raised his flame, which flared brightly but barely pushed the darkness back.

Patron...

“Ah,” said Matthew.

You of the ancient faith. You who would push back the darkness...

Footsteps echoed. A silhouette approached, stopping just outside of the ring of light.

“Are you real?” asked Matthew.

Oh, yes...

“Then join me in the light, if you would.”

The shadows implied a smile. Then it stepped forward.

“Surprised?” it said.

“Not...exactly,” said Matthew.

The man was young, dressed in robes that spoke of monasteries and not enough time spent in the sun. He would have been considered plain, but for his eyes. They were filled with light—filled to overflowing, throwing off silent sparks that trailed in the gloom. His features were bland—too bland, as though they had been carved by an disinterested hand, and left to wear in the weather. He smiled, but it was a mechanical motion, as though he had not had much practice.

“And here I am,” he said.

“Where is Zix Graves?” said Matthew.

The man gestured behind him, toward the distant thrones. “Close, and comfortable, I assure you.”

“And you are?”

“Oh, you know my name. But I strongly recommend that you do not say it out loud.”

“No, wouldn't want to do that,” said Matthew. “That's the first part of the ritual to banish you.”

The man took on a pained expression. “Yes. And that would be a mistake.”

He walked around Matthew, studying the Patron, and Matthew only looked calmly ahead while he did so. Finally the man stopped, just an arm's length away, and nodded.

“Very good,” he said. “Very pure. Wholesome. Faithful. That's good to see in a man—rare.”

“Not as rare as you think,” said Matthew. “Most creatures contain at least a kernel of faith. That is why there are none that cannot re-enter the light,” he added with a meaningful glance at the thrones, “should they sincerely wish to do so.”

“Is that what you think Zix Graves desires?” asked the man. His grin revealed his teeth, but not much humor. “I'm afraid you may have been misled.”

“I do not think so.”

“Patron, is it? What is the source of your faith?” The man leaned forward. “I'll tell you. Yours is the faith of empty caves. Yours is the faith of the unknown, and the light that reveals it. The faith of warmth in the cold, and light in the dark. A powerful faith—tangible, in a world otherwise spun from cobwebs. A faith like that could banish the worst of demons. A faith like that is like a stone—much like the stones you carry, instead of more modern tools.

“Faith is a powerful weapon...Patron. But it is your weakness, too. Faith is what lets the likes of us—the outsiders, both high and low—into your world. Faith is like a river, and the mind that holds it is the dam—but there are always cracks in the dam. We get in through the cracks. You can plug the leaks, for a time, but they always spring anew. We always find a way in.

“Directed, faith can do many wonderful things. But you cannot do them to me, Patron.”

The thing that looked like a man reached forward, and thrust his hand into Matthew's flame. He turned it, palm up, the flesh untouched by the fire, and smiled.

“Where is your faith now...Patron?”

Matthew sighed. Then he closed his hand, quenching the flame until it was a bare ember in his fist, and shook his head at the creature's surprised expression.

“Oh, around here somewhere,” he said.

A figure rose like a vengeful wraith from behind the thing that was not a man. One arm wrapped around his neck and the other twisted his arm behind his back. The dim light of the ember flickered in the eyes of the figure behind the creature, and for a moment it was difficult to say which pair of eyes were more terrible.

“You talk to much,” said Gray.

“What—”

Gray twisted his arm. “Also, your darkness is...not dark enough. But that's to be expected, isn't it?”

“You—”

Gray moved one hand subtly, and the man yelped. “Enough. You've watched too many bad late night movies. Rather, Zix Graves did, and you had to work with what you were given, right? Whatever. Lights, now.”

“You don't know what you're doing—”

“No? Well, then, I'll just have to ask the Patron.”

“Asking for light, Gray?” said Matthew with a slight smile.

Gray rolled his eyes. “I can start my own fire, if you like. I have plenty of things that burn.”

“Ah—no need.”

Matthew opened his hand, and the flame blazed into a pillar. For a moment it became something more—something so bright and pure that the pitiful darkness around it could not survive. The shadows were thrown back to the corners of the room, where they writhed for a moment before fading completely, and the dancers shriveled into nothingness. In one brilliant flash, the ballroom was revealed.

It was not old. It was not dusty, or crumbling. The walls flashed around them; lights twinkled. Matthew's flame was reflected back onto them from a thousand shining surfaces.

“Maybe a little less, Patron,” said Gray.

“Yes,” said Matthew thoughtfully. He cupped his hand again and the flame receded, until the room was no longer trying to blind them.

“And you—” said Gray, lifting the figure slightly.

“How can you do this?” he said. “How can you touch me? Your faith—”

“Gray has ever been lacking in the faith department,” said Matthew. “It's a point of pride, in fact.”

“It is not.”

Matthew did not roll his eyes. He did not have to. “I should have said: he takes a malicious pleasure in pointing it out to the faithful, and challenges their beliefs at every turn to satisfy his own twisted sense of humor. Better?”

“Much.”

“He's a better man than he knows, though,” continued Matthew, ignoring Gray's expression. “More than principled enough to deal with the likes of you.”

“You don't know what you're doing—” began the thing that wasn't a man.

“No, but I'm going to enjoy finding out,” said Gray. “Let's fill in the blanks, shall we?”

He hauled the figure back, toward the thrones. It struggled, but feebly—it wrenched at Gray's hands, beat against his arms, but each motion was weaker than the last. Gray dragged it up the steps at the end of the room, glanced once at the left throne—occupied by a young, dull-faced man—and deposited it in the right one.

“Now,” he said, “stay down, or I shall glare at you.”

The figure shifted as though to rise; then it gave Gray a long, thoughtful look and settled down with sullen reluctance.

Gray ignored him, turning to study the young man instead. His expression was blank, and his eyes were nearly closed. Gray snapped a finger in front of his face a few times, and lifted an eyelid. “Nearly gone,” he said clinically. “It must have taken it out of him, to create this manor and all of its glamor. Of course, I doubt it was his idea.”

“How did you touch me?” said the being.

Matthew shook his head. “I already explained. You said it yourself—faith is a two way street. Creatures like you gain power over us because of our flaws. True believers can stand against you, because their faith is stronger than the weakness you exploit. On the other side of the road are those who don't believe. No cracks in the dam, as you put it—because there is no dam. No water. Nothing for you to survive in.”

“That's impossible,” said the being. “Everybody believes in something.”

Gray leaned forward and flicked the creature on the forehead. It flinched heavily against the back of the chair. “Faith is for suckers,” he said. “I prefer to know—and right now I know that you're a two-bit power with no imagination. That makes me stronger than you.”

The creature gave him another considering look. “Fascinating. I never would have thought—” It fell silent, then shook its head. “I should like to examine you, mortal. I've never seen such a closed mind.”

“Thanks.”

“I'm not sure you underst—”

“Oh, he does,” said Matthew. Gray grinned, then turned back to the being.

“I know something else, too,” he said. “You're no Demon.”

The creature was silent.

“Nothing to say? You don't even want to tell us that we don't understand what we're doing? Well, I'll just ask Mister Graves here.”

“He won't wake up,” said the creature.

“Yes, because you're draining him for power. That's how these things work, right? It's okay—I can be very motivating.”

Gray stood before Zix Graves, considering. It was probably okay. The Patron had long ago stopped asking how Gray got results, and this thing...wouldn't have time to figure it out. He rubbed his hands together, jumped in place a couple of times, leaned over, took a deep breath and whispered, “Wake up.”

He concentrated in a certain way at the same moment, until he found the connection between Zix and the being he had summoned. It pulsed with energy—a surprising amount of it, considering Zix's state—all flowing toward the creature. Gray reached for it with invisible hands, gripped it tightly and—

twisted—

—in a certain way. The connection did not break—even Gray could not do such a thing—but the flow of energy bucked wildly for a moment before reversing back toward Zix Graves.

The young man bolted upward in his seat. His eyes opened, wide and shocked, and his reaction was only matched by that of the creature next to him, who gasped as though it had been punched in the stomach.

“What—?” it began.

“You know the terms,” said Gray sternly before the thing could gather its thoughts. “The host demands energy, and you provide. Looks like he remembered that.”

Zix stared at Gray. Gray gave him his most reassuring smile, and was mildly gratified by the way the young man tried to shove himself even further back into his chair.

“Ah—thank you, Gray. I'll take it from here.” Matthew moved Gray firmly to the side, and gave Zix a mild look of reproach. “Manners, child. You requested our help, yes? Introduce yourself.”

“I'm...” The young man licked his lips. Matthew nodded encouragingly, and he relaxed slightly. “Zix Graves, me. You from the Knock? You come to kill this thing, zang?”

“We don't kill things, child. But I've come to help.”

“What? You can't kill, then what good—”

“Where did you get the ritual?” interrupted Gray.

Zix gave him an uncertain look.

“Should I smile reassuringly again? I just want to confirm something.”

“You may as well indulge him,” said Matthew. “He'll go on all day if you don't.”

“Won it in a poker game,” said Zix. “Good at poker, me.”

“So we've heard.”

“There was a man—”

“No, let me,” said Gray. “A man in a cloak, deeply hooded. Fair at the game, but no shark. You strung him along for a bit, until there was a decent amount of money on the table. You gave him, oh, say it was a full house, but you gave yourself a straight, and added a slightly worried expression for effect. You raise him just a few credits past his limit. He hesitates, frowns, shuffles his feet—you know the signs—and finally suggests that he might, just might, have one more thing to put on the table.”

“Um,” said Zix. He was staring at Gray.

“A scroll. Maybe a tome. He gives you some story about how he found it, but you're not listening. You can feel its power. It's calling to you. You go all in without thought, and win the hand. When you look up, the man is gone. It is, and I stress this part, as though he was never there. You collect the tome and the money—but who cares about the money? The tome, though—oh yes, the tome.”

“How you know about that?” demanded Zix.

Gray sighed. “You may be a good shark, but you're a bum con. You were played, Graves.”

“What the hell you talking about?”

“Why don't you just tell us what happened after the game?” prompted Matthew gently.

“Don't,” said the being. “He wants to take your power away from you.”

“Power?” said Zix. “Power? I tell you about my power.”

“Oh, please do,” murmured Gray.

“You don't know what it like in the Hive. We insects, scurrying around and hiding in the shadows whenever some natter turns on the lights. Eaten alive if you lower your guard, and if you sleeping with just one eye open it's 'cause the other got stolen. It's a zakhole, and if you don't know what that means then you only have to spend ten minutes on the street to learn.

“You know what power is in the Hive? Clenched fist holding a stolen gun, yeah? If you small like me, you join a gang just so you know who be kicking you next. Sharks don't get respect—get used, me. How much take you think I keep? Enough to buy the next deck of cards, if I'm lucky.”

“And I changed all of that,” said the being. “Be quiet, please.”

“You wanted to get out,” said Matthew.

“No,” said Zix. “Wanted revenge, me.”

“Ah,” said Gray, and his grin widened.

“Everybody kicks you in the Hive. You look like you getting out, they just kick harder. No such thing as local-boy-makes-good, yeah. You lucky if you the local-boy-with-all-his-teeth. They don't care about skill or smarts or looks. Just power.”

“So when you won the tome...” said Matthew.

“Oh, yeah. Did try to sell it, yeah, just to see if anybody take it seriously. The ritual rip expensive—be burning long bridges if I stole the goods to pull it off. If it didn't work...”

“But it did,” said the being. “And I protected you.”

“Decided it was worth it, me” continued Zix. “To hell with everybody else.”

“Child,” said Matthew, “I can understand your desire. But to summon one of the Deep...”

“The Deep? What, you think you lookin' at an idiot? Seen the movies. Demons from the Knock are for egits who want their souls torn to shreds. Tome names one of the Highborne, you old fool!”

The being closed its eyes and shook its head. Matthew only pursed his lips thoughtfully.

“The Choir of Thee On High,” said Gray. “My, my. Don't often see one of them down here.”

“Was perfect, yeah!” said Zix. “See, Demons take your wishes and twist them, right? Wish for money, and it sells your organs or whatever. Try to save your wife, and it passes the disease to your side-fling. Kick the habit, your dealer gets shanked. Everything goes wrong, see?”

Gray opened his mouth, and then closed it. He honestly could not think of anything to say, and his grin was already so wide that it hurt.

“But the—what you call it? The Choir? Yeah, heard singing, me. Hurt my head—the Choir don't do that kind of thing. They help people, right?”

“Help them,” said Matthew.

“Get revenge,” said Gray. He was shaking.

“Yeah, help 'em.” Zix looked pleased for a moment. Then his brow furrowed, and he turned to the being. “But Laan didn't help. He didn't help at all!”

“I did everything you requested,” said Laan. “I even made suggestions.”

“Yeah, right. Some suggestions! Burn down the noodle cafe. How did that work out?”

“You wanted revenge on a noodle cafe?” said Matthew.

Seen bastard kicked me out just because I stole a tray of pad. And when I came back to rob him, laughed at my knife! Beat the zak out of me and left me in the alleyway. So yeah, me and Laan burn the place down, untraceable. For what? Turns out the guy actually kept up on his insurance payments, owed Crusher large. Paid him off, and opened and fenning orphanage with the leftovers!”

“How...discouraging,” murmured Matthew.

“Yeah! Tired of hacking noodles, him. Wanted to do something more...fulfilling.” Zix made a face, as though the word had come out sour. “What else? My parole officer, always watching me. Telling me where I can go, who I can rook. I figure, see how he likes it, right? Got him busted for graft, though he would never take it from me. Turns out he was a flicking kingpin. Had half the Hives paid off, the other half doped out of their minds. Both halves came for me. I barely got out alive!”

“Because I protected you,” said Laan.

Zix spat. “Yeah. And the lower warrens, always hated me there. Kicked me out. You said to give them a rain of frogs—”

“Very meaningful, frogs,” said Gray.

“—and the next day a dozen cuisines pop up. Place was on the edge of a fenning famine, and now they can't get enough of the green bastards. The sell the leftovers!”

“I'm seeing a trend,” said Gray.

Matthew glanced at him. “You said that things were improving...”

“Improving?” said Zix. “Are you out of your nack? Can't even show my face in the Hives now! Half want to kill me, the rest want to put me in a cage and see what happens next. Life is a nightmare, yeah!”

Gray and Matthew exchanged a long look. Then they turned to Laan.

“So now you see,” said the being. “The Deepborne are permitted to encourage little evils, to nurture them until they bloom into deadly roses. They scatter scrolls and tomes throughout the city, hidden just well enough to be enticing, and laugh when greedy, eager hands lift them up. They can be summoned by anyone, for even the noblest intention can be twisted beyond recognition, along with the summoner's mind. The Highborne have...similar rites, but they are rarely pursued, for there is one large difference. We may not interfere, except to prevent the rise of a great evil, and even then not directly. Pure pursuits are rewarded in other ways. Faith is, as they say, its own reward.

“But I have watched this city for longer than you can comfortably imagine, and I weary of the machinations of Demons. And finally it occurred to me that the old compacts could work both ways. All it needed was an evil to prevent, and someone who was—” Laan fell silent suddenly, looking uncomfortable.

“—dumb enough to summon you in the first place,” Gray finished. “Amazing—you can't even express that much nastiness.”

“Too bad for him, got me instead,” said Zix smugly.

“I'm changing things!” said Laan. “For the first time, I'm taking a hand in the city and making things right. And the Hives is just the start—practice! I couldn't let you come here; you might have banished me before I could explain. You mustn't interfere.”

“Well, I'm not a fan of being told what to do—” began Gray.

“Gray,” said Matthew. “Speak with me.”

He stepped to the side, and Gray joined him. Matthew wore a grave expression, and his flame was subdued.

“This is not the situation that I anticipated,” he said.

“No kidding.”

“There are ways to handle such creatures, but they are not conventional.”

Gray raised an eye. “So you don't buy it?”

Matthew shook his head. “That's not it. The being speaks the truth—it can do nothing else. That is why it is so poor with illusions—it could only reproduce what was in Mister Graves's mind. And I believe without doubt that it is the source of benevolent change in the Hives.”

“I sense a 'but'...”

“But...I was called to free a soul from torment. The being is one of good, but it has removed a vital element from Mister Graves's life. That it found a loophole to do so is irrelevant.”

“I did mention something about getting what he deserved,” said Gray mildly. “So what has this being taken?”

“Don't act as though you don't know. It's taken away choice, Gray. Without choice, no man can be redeemed.”

Gray's eyes narrowed, and he was silent for a long moment. Finally he said, “Tell me about your ritual.”

“It's very simple,” said Matthew. He hefted the flame. “When a victim sincerely repents of his decisions and acknowledges the evil inside of him, I call forth the flame to purify him. It's a metaphor, of course—a spiritual flame, if you will, cleansing his soul's imperfections for one brief, shining instant. No otherworldly being, good or evil, can remain in contact with a perfect soul, and an instant is enough to banish the outsider.”

“I thought you were forcing the being out—pitting your purity against its power.”

“Some faiths do exactly that. I could do it, if I had come prepared. But it would be complicated, here. I would be pitting my purity against that of one of the Highborne, which is very different from facing evil.”

“You don't want to...”

Matthew shrugged. “I would if it was necessary—but I did not come with the right mindset. I would need time to meditate and realign my spirit.”

Gray frowned. “You said that your way could affect both good and evil.”

“Correct. I could apply the purification ritual in this situation, but Mister Graves is not a soul seeking redemption. He simply made a bad decision and wishes for someone else to fix it for him.”

“So?”

“So he could be purified, but it would be against his inner will. I could exorcise the Highborne, but Mister Graves would die in the process.”

Gray considered this. He knew that Laan could certainly hear them, although the Highborne sat silent and still. “You...are a good man, Patron.”

“Hardly. I'm as flawed as any other.”

“Humble, too. That's got to count for something, don't you think?”

“I'm not sure I follow you.”

“Good. We don't have time for you to meditate.”

“I agree.”

“Then we don't have a choice. Set up the ritual.”

Matthew stared at Gray for a long time. Gray could read the question in his eyes; but the Patron never asked it. He only nodded once, shortly, and began pulling implements from his robes.

Gray clapped his hands together, rubbing them like a man warming a pair of lucky dice. He smiled broadly, stepped up to Zix Graves, and clapped a hand on his shoulder.

“No worries, kid,” he said. “Just let the Patron get set up and we'll have you free of this spirit in no time.”

“True?” said Zix, brightening. “Slide!”

“No!” said Laan. “You don't—!” The Highborne's mouth snapped shut. He opened and closed it a couple of times, then stared at Gray in horror.

“What?” said Zix. “You scared now? Seen! You should be.”

“Oh, he's not scared,” said Gray. “Just caught in paradoxical conflict. Sucker.”

“What?”

“Oh, he wants to say something, but the consequences of saying it are as bad as remaining silent. For him, anyway.”

“Slide!”

Matthew finished placing a circle of candles around Zix and Laan. He held out his flame and it spiraled to each one, lighting them simultaneously. Then, with one last glance at Gray, he knelt.

“You mustn't!” said Laan. “Zix we must...leave this place. Now!”

“Oh, no. Not a chance, zakhead.”

“You can't, anyway,” said Gray. “Not after the candles are lit. Now, Zix, you need to be ready for what's about to happen. Whatever you do, don't struggle.”

“Oh, I be ready. I won't...wait. Why would I struggle?”

“Well, it's likely to hurt. A lot. You know, cleansing fire burning all through your body and soul. I hear there's lots of screaming.”

“Um,” said Zix. “I don't—seen, I don't like pain, you know?”

“It's the only way,” said Gray. “Anyway, don't worry. It won't last long.”

Zix's face regained a bit of color. “Well..yeah. Gotta pay my dues, right? Sure. If it doesn't last long.”

“It won't—you'll be dead and at peace before you know it. Roll 'em, Patron.”

Zix would have bolted upright in his chair if Gray's hand hadn't been on his shoulder. “I'll be what?”

“Only way,” repeated Gray brusquely. “You've got two choices—puppet for a greater being, without choices. Eventually just a husk. Sure, it will keep you comfortable—money, women, pleasures unknown to man and such—but only because you'll be the instrument of its will. Doing good, in this case. Eventually you'll die—but when? It could be years. Beings like this one can keep you alive...well, not forever, but it might feel like it.”

“Alive...forever?” said Zix.

“Choice two: be purified, and die your own man. Your soul at peace, given the reward you've so richly earned with your actions in life. And this thing sent back to the endless paradise whence it came. C'mon, Zix. This isn't a hard choice.”

Zix looked stunned. Then, slowly, horror rose in his eyes. “Stop! Stop the ritual!”

“What? Can't be done,” said Gray. “Well, it can, but it would be awfully messy...”

Zix followed Gray's eyes to Matthew. The Patron was chanting, eyes closed and oblivious to the world. The young man's eyes lit up, and he turned to Laan.

“No...” moaned the being. It looked at Gray. “You will be set right for this, mortal...”

“Even your threats are lame,” said Gray.

Zix was not paying attention. “Laan! Get me out of here!”

Laan rose, but Gray stepped between him and Zix. “We can't have that. Once started, the ritual must be finished.”

“You bastard!” shouted Zix. He pushed ineffectually at Gray, then turned to Matthew. “To hell with them both. Laan! Kill the holy man!”

Laan groaned. He took a halting step toward Matthew, as though the motion pained him. Power rose around him, flaring from his eyes. He raised his hands, and light blazed wildly from between his clenched fists. He took another step, screaming with the effort of it.

Matthew's eyes opened. He looked up at the terrible figure standing over him; then he sighed, nodded and lowered his head.

Laan brought his hands together. He looked down at the patron; he turned to Gray, who smiled at him.

And then, with one last wail, he exploded.

Power raged in the air. The walls flickered, then faded, and suddenly the mansion was gone. Gray caught Zix as the throne disappeared from under him. Matthew slowly rose to his feet, and only then did Gray pull his other hand away from behind Zix's neck. Something gleamed in it, but he tucked it away before Matthew could get his bearings.

“What—what that?” said Zix.

“The curse of the good,” said Gray cheerfully.

“Where Laan go?”

“Home, presumably. Congratulations.”

“That was very cold, Gray,” said Matthew reprovingly. “And risky.”

“We had a choice?” Gray caught Matthew's expression and sighed. “It wasn't that risky. A being of good was given an order that conflicted with its very existence—to kill a good man, who was trying to save a corrupted soul. Caught between his own pact and the antithesis of his existence. His only choice was to leave—which he could do, since Zix had renounced the pact some time ago. He was only here by choice.”

Matthew regarded him solemnly. “That's not what I meant when I said that choice was important.”

“You're welcome.”

“You—you—!” Zix was sputtering. “You almost get me killed! You almost kill me! You bastards!”

He threw himself at Gray. Gray moved aside, and then delivered a very precise blow to Zix's forehead. The young man dropped instantly, and lay motionless on the ground.

“Nobody protecting you now,” he said mildly. “Well, Patron?”

Matthew knelt by Zix Graves. “I would like to take him back to the Knock.”

“He'll never stay.”

“Then...”

“I'll take care of it.” Gray gave Matthew his most confident smile. “I'll get the tome from him and bring it to the Knock. I doubt you can destroy it—mysterious tomes have a way of popping up again, at the most inconvenient times—but put it somewhere safe.”

“And Mister Graves?”

“Oh, now that he's got choices again...I plan to help him make a few. First, I think, a visit to an orphanage. Then I'm sure he would like to have a word with his old parole officer, and then...well, who knows. It's a whole new world for Mister Graves.”

Matthew gave him a stern look, but his lips twitched. He rose, then turned to leave. Before he did, though, he said, “You would not have...hurt him, to save me, would you Gray? I saw the knife. I would not have forgiven you for that.”

“Of course not,” lied Gray. “That was just a bit of extra encouragement for the Highborne. Ah—Patron?”

“Yes?”

“About my payment...”

Matthew shook his head. “For a man who has no faith, you have some very odd...beliefs. Yes, Gray, I will keep you in my prayers. I would have done so anyway.”

Gray smiled. Then he hefted Zix over his shoulder, waved to Matthew and walked, content, back into the city.


 

Posted
AuthorLeslie CoKinesis

(Author's note: I wrote this one a while ago.  I can never tell if my stories are wordy and meandering, or descriptive and wondrous.  That's probably a bad sign.)

 

As hard as he tried, Dave could not ignore the walking tomato.

“I don't know, I honestly don't,” said Phil. He wasn't talking to Dave, even though they were the only two at the table; he sat in the chair opposite and appeared to be addressing the world at large. He did this often, Dave had noticed. “The LaMar account is a lost cause, we all see it, but they want us to do a full overhaul of the contract anyway? A waste of time, if you ask me.”

Nobody had asked Phil, Dave knew.

“And if they push it into the weekend, it's overtime. Will they pay it? You're damned skippy, and they had better do it with a smile.”

Phil would make sure that the hours stretched into the weekend, Dave knew.

“Who am I to tell them they're wasting their money?” Phil shook his head at the foolish ways of the world. He did not notice—or did not appear to notice—Jeremy Deshaun, an executive of their small firm who happened to be sitting only two tables away. He also did not notice the walking tomato, although Dave was willing to believe that this was an honest oversight.

Phil held a sandwich in one hand, gesturing with it as though it added gravitas to his commentary. He had not yet taken a bite.

“Let me tell you,” he went on, leveling the sandwich at Dave, “in times like this it makes you wonder who's even making these decisions. Throw away money, sure, fine, you could get away with it as recently as a year ago. But now? Ha, I hope they have steel plated boxers, because they're going to need them when it all hits the fan .”

“I guess,” said Dave. He did not like Phil, but he did not actively dislike him either. Phil had invited Dave to lunch less for the company than for an ear, and Dave had been hungry enough to agree. Phil knew that he would look odd railing at the world all alone; and if Phil was meant for anything, it was to rail. Dave did not contribute much to the conversation, which was how Phil liked it.

Now Phil set his sandwich back on the plate to take a long pull at his drink—Dave thought he caught a whiff of something a little stronger than lemonade—and the slice of tomato seemed to do a little dance. Dave watched it slowly make its way across the table. It moved jerkily, as though being carried by something that did not quite have the strength for the job, which was, Dave knew, exactly the case. Phil, still talking, did not notice. Nobody noticed. They never did.

“And don't get me started on requisitions—”

The tomato reached the sandwich. There was a moment of climatic tension, as though something was building up its strength; then a tiny, shaking hand extended from under the slice, lifted the bun and slid the tomato into the sandwich. This revealed a small creature, which was now studying the sandwich like an architect gauging the stability of a new construction. It had four arms and was colored blue, and, up close, would be as densely muscled as a body builder. It stared at the sandwich for a moment; then, satisfied, the thing—it was called an oddbodkin, Dave knew—wiped its brow in a caricature that spoke more loudly than words of a hard job finally done.

Dave reached out while Phil wasn't watching and gave it a gentle nudge.

“Oi!” it squeaked. Then it disappeared.

Phil broke his one-sided dialog long enough to take a bite of his sandwich. He made a face, and then lifted the bun. “Dammit! I told them no tomato. Would you look at this?”

Dave did. “Yes,” he agreed. “A tomato.”

“Waiter!” Phil shouted. He shook his head, wearied but not surprised at yet another breakdown of the system. “I swear, I don't know why I bother. Doesn't anybody pay attention to these things?”

“Yes,” said Dave. “I think someone does.”

 

***

 

The visions had come before the knowledge, which was a mixed blessing. Usually, though, he figured it didn't matter. What good was it to know that a creature called the gothic centipillar was responsible for hiding keys under the couch, or that there were things called flickerflies that were responsible for almost everything that happened in the Bermuda Triangle?

Of course, when you're running late for work and you suddenly see a mysterious creature that looked like a furry red-and-purple snake with legs making a grab for your car keys...well, it would have been good to know a little more about it. It had actually turned out to be quit playful, though, once Dave had stopped staring and let it take his keychain. Friendly, even—until it had done its job and then disappeared with a small pop.

It was only later that Dave realized that it hid keys as sort of a mating ritual, although he did not care to think about the details. Centipillars were harmless, and could normally be warded off with a key-hook at the door, although the more aggressive ones would crawl into your pockets. Dave simply bought an extra set of keys. He knew they would leave him alone, then.

He did not know how he knew this. He just did.

There were other things—countless creatures and phenomenon, so many that he had almost stopped paying attention. He became use to looking out the window into what most would consider some kind of fairy wonderland.

There were things that walked like humans through the street, wearing oversized cloaks that Dave knew were actually wings. He also knew what their faces looked like under the broad rims of their hats, and he kept well away from them.

There were prismatic objects that flew through the air like lunatic hummingbirds, shattering like glass as they smashed into walls, cars, people, and anything else that happened to be in the way.

There was a creature that stalked the city on long, spindly legs—Dave thought it looked like an over-sized giraffe, and it survived in much the same way. He knew that it ate things that could only be found high up in the air, and could not be bothered with anything below knee level.

There was an orb that hung next to the sun, and sometimes it looked like a great eye. It was really a window, Dave knew, but—and he was thankful for this—he did not know what it was a window to. Perhaps that knowledge would come in time, but Dave was in no hurry.

He spent days studying what appeared to be a multicolored waterfall raining gently outside of his office window. He did not worry at it—it was pretty, almost soothing—until one day he thought: Omni-veil. The word simply popped into his head, and the meaning came along with it. Omni-veil: a multi-dimensional tapestry that provides travel between the world of the mundane (see: mundanes; low earth; dynamica) and the high path (see: high path; Arcadia; Cyr Myth). And suddenly the waterfall was no longer something wondrous, or even pretty—it was just another...thing. An omni-veil, used the travel to the high path. Dave had shrugged, closed the blinds, and gotten back to work.

It wasn't all fantastic, however. Dave knew other things, more common things, although they were very...specialized. Nothing you would learn without going out of your way. He did not think, for example, that the average person walking down the street knew exactly how many bones were in an elephant. Or the average body temperature of a whale, or the tensile strength of titanium, or the design for a certain type of processor that was not yet on the market. Dave knew. The facts had simply popped into his head. At first he had researched them, to confirm what, deep down, he did not question—and yes, they were accurate. Eventually, however, he simply took them at face value.

And who cared, anyway? So he knew the formula to calculate the pull of gravity in a newly formed black hole. What good was that?

 

***


 

On the way back to the office, Dave brushed several skiddles from the backs of his fellow pedestrians. Nasty things, skiddles—they made rude gestures as they flew away, but not nearly as rude as some of the people.

 

***


 

Dave had tried putting the knowledge to good use, in a half-hearted kind of way. Sometimes he tried to help people; sometimes he tried to help himself.

It never worked out, and he was not surprised. Nobody else saw what he saw, or knew what he knew, and that made it awfully difficult to explain just what he was doing in their garden with, for example, a power drill, a bottle of glass cleaner and a bag of multi-colored balloons. Most people had never heard of the Nix, and did not care if it was slowly pulling their house into a separate fold in space. They certainly didn't believe that you could contain it inside of balloons, using the cleaning solution as bait.

He might be able to get away with waving a flickerfly off of someone's shoulder, but that did not do much good when the swarm came back to roost. So he mostly just watched the world pass through his window at work, and closed the blinds when he got home. He did not watch the news—there was too much happening in the world, and each event seemed to trigger another bubble of sudden knowledge—and he slept a lot.

He'd also had the vague idea that he could use what he knew to make more friends at work. Dave was an accountant, and a very good one, but he had a hard time getting along with his co-workers. They considered him too quiet and analytical—he managed to remain just shy of weird, but only because he was so quiet. He was more comfortable with numbers than he was with people; he always had been. He was confused by spoken subtleties, and he considered facial expressions to be like picture-puzzles that you could only understand if you squinted your eyes in the right way.

It wasn't that he did not have emotions—he did, in a distant sort of way. They were just...distant. He always approached them in a roundabout manner, after it was too late for them to have much meaning. If someone smiled at him, he had to spend a moment working out the facial math before he could smile back. If he saw a mother lifting her child in her arms, he quickly calculated the stress on her back. He listened to co-workers talk about driving to visit their families, and felt the urge to give them a cost-benefit analysis of the gas cost versus a simple phone call. He had mastered such urges, but only after receiving several looks he had later translated as offended. It took him even longer to figure out why, and he still was not certain that he had it right.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, his new knowledge did not help him make friends.

 

***


 

Dave sat in his office. It had been infested with a tribe of teramites—creatures that lived in the fluorescent lights, making them flicker with their endless dancing—and he spent a moment making sure they were still gone. They did not like moisture, so he kept an empty fish bowl on his desk. This earned a few strange looks, but it had worked, and he was use to strange looks by now.

The light on his phone was flashing at him. He stared at it for a moment—he discouraged calls, since e-mail was so much easier for document storage, and so rarely got them—and, after no other option presented itself, pushed the button.

The phone said: “Sir. It has come to our attention that you possess something of ours, and we would like to retrieve it at your earliest convenience. It may be causing you difficulties, and we feel that we can come to a mutual agreement on the matter. Please contact us by speaking the words commence data retrieval aloud. Thank you for your time.”

The phone clicked. Dave stared at it for another long moment, and then deleted the message. He was no expert on such matters, but the voice had sounded...odd. There was usually at least some inflection, wasn't there? This was more like an someone who had once learned a foreign language, forgotten the trick of it long ago, and was struggling to force the words through a numbed mouth with no teeth.

Interesting, thought Dave. I usually don't think of things like that.

He sat silently for a time, staring at nothing.

He said, “Commence data retrieval.”

“I say,” came a voice from behind him. “Frightfully good of you, but do you think you could manage to be a bit faster next time? I've been waiting for eons.

 

***


 

Numbers and calculations came faster as time passed, finally whirling in his head like a cyclone of ones and zeros. This did not bother him—it did not even disorient him, however much he had expected it. It did make his job a bit easier, although it did not result in a raise, much less a promotion. Another step up the ladder would put him in front of the clients, and he simply did not have the charisma for that.

They did give him an award, however, after a particularly difficult job. A chunk of marble with the words Customer Satisfaction carved in. It did not even have his name on it, although this did not bother him. He put it on the shelf in his office.

And the bubbles of knowledge filled his head, and he saw more and more of what he now considered the real world...

For a time he wondered if he was going crazy, in a quiet sort of way, but the thought did not bother him. He did not believe it was true, in any case. There seemed to be more to this; something under it all, some pattern he could not quite see. He could sense the outline of it, though, and it filled him with a mild curiosity.

A piece of him stood apart from the rest of his mind, watching with the same detachment with which he had viewed the world since...

Since...

Hmm.

He had paused at the thought. Yes; that could be part of the pattern. He searched his mind for more information, working at it as though searching the stacks of a great library, and found what he was looking for. Yes...rare, but not unheard of. It did not explain things—it did, in fact, raise even more questions—but it was worth thinking about.

He considered scheduling an appointment with a neurologist, but ultimately decided against it. What would be the point?

He did, however, take to rubbing the scar on the back of his head.

 

***


 

Dave turned. He stared.

“Get a good look, my chippy, because it won't last long,” said a thing that Dave decided was, for lack of a better option, human.

“You are not real,” he said.

“Well, I can see where you might think that—”

“No,” said Dave. “I know it. You are a...” he paused for a moment. “A traveler.”

The figure looked amused. “Hate to break it to you, but travelers are real. They just like to get about; nothing wrong with that.”

Dave shook his head. “I am using the wrong word. You travel from far away. I should say that you are not real here.”

The figure tilted its head. “Well done,” it said after a moment. “That is technically correct. This is not, you would say, my home address. Not even my home path—”

“Universe,” said Dave. “Reality.”

“—although I've certainly worn through my passport. I'm Fax, by the way.”

“Of course you are.”

Fax did appear human, although he certainly would have stood out in a crowd. He was almost seven feet tall, but spindly thin and fragile in some indefinable way. His eyes were slightly larger than they should have been, out of proportion with the rest of his face, but his over-sized sunglasses covered them well. You wouldn't even know—although Dave did—that they shone pure gold, orbs that blazed brighter than the sun under certain circumstances, but only sparkled merrily now. His clothes were earth colored and made of some airy, billowing cloth, and they swirled around him like his own private sandstorm.

He bowed, and did not seem put out when Dave only continued staring.

“I'm not put out,” said Fax, apparently in case it didn't translate. “Really, I'm not.”

“I know.”

Do you? I imagine you know a lot.”

“Yes.”

Fax held up a hand. “Do you mind?”

He did not wait for an answer, leaning forward before Dave could move. His hand slid into Dave's head as though it was as insubstantial as air. Dave blinked at the tingling sensation, but did not otherwise react. His mind whirled furiously, though, considering and discarding thoughts faster than he ever had before. There was nothing of this in his pool of unusual knowledge.

“Messy,” said Fax. He was frowning. “In fact, I almost wonder if I've come to the wrong place...”

“What are you doing?”

Fax blinked. He waved his hand through Dave's head a couple more times. “What did you say?”

“I said...what are you doing?”

“Oh.” Fax pulled away, taking the tingling sensation with him, and now it was his turn to stare. “Sorry, chip, I was actually wondering how you managed to say anything.”

“Ah...” Dave was struck by a thought. He glanced toward door to his office, which was wide open. “Other people can see you, can't they?”

Other people? You mean—” Fax looked upset now, frowning even more fiercely. “Well...it may be, it may be. What they see is up for debate, if you know what I mean.”

Dave wordlessly stood and closed the door. Then he regarded Fax's hand, and shrugged.

“Perhaps you should tell me what's going on.”

“Perhaps I should—” Fax looked flustered. “Well...sorry, chipper, that's not really in my job description.”

“Perhaps,” said Dave patiently, “you should tell me what is in your job description.”

“Well! Got me there, didn't you? You're a clever...thing, aren't you?”

“I don't feel like it.”

“No?”

Dave sat again. “No. I feel...like I've been made to be clever, but it didn't work properly. Like I've been taking classes in my sleep, on subjects that most people don't even dream about, but I'm not getting a passing grade.”

“Sleep?”

“Yes.”

“Sleep...” Fax blinked slowly, as though trying unsuccessfully to translate the word.

“Yes. It's something humans do. Maybe you don't.”

“Ah,” said Fax. “I think I see the problem. You, my chiplet, are not human.”

 

***


 

It had happened when he was young.

It was a simple thing, like most life-changing events. He had fallen from a tree, and on the way down he had hit the back of his head. His parents rushed him to the hospital, although the pain had disappeared almost immediately. He tried to convince them he was all right—but the more he spoke, the more frightened they had become.

He did not know why, at the time. It had seemed like the most rational thing in the world to describe, point by point, the potential fracture lines of the skull and the average stress point of bone. He had hesitated for a moment on the malleability of the mind—there were not yet words to fit what he wanted to describe—and settled for a detailed description of the specialties of specific areas of the brain, and their ability to reroute damaged functions over time. He told his parents that he was fairly certain that, in his case, the time required had been between hitting his head on the branch and landing on the ground.

He remembered this the next day, but it was hazy—the sense of it remained, but the details of the conversation were gone. Other things were gone, too—things like understanding his parents' worried smiles, and his interest in climbing trees just to see what was on top. Some things, however, became crystal clear. Numbers that had once jumbled in his brain sorted themselves into orderly patterns, marching in formation to his precisely timed drum. He noticed angles in the world, as though his mind was holding up an infinite slide-rule and taking notes. He began counting before falling asleep—not counting sheep, just...numbers. They were comforting.

He had never really thought about it. It had all seemed very natural at the time, although nobody else seemed to think so. He became distant, but not in a cold way. He was quiet, and he remembered things that most people forgot, but he was still very young, when such things can be explained away. Of course, he wasn't seeing oddbodkins or skiddles then, but if he had, they simply would have been attributed to a vivid imagination. Even though, otherwise, he seemed to have no imagination whatsoever...

 

***


 

“I think that I am human,” said Dave.

“Oh, so sorry, chipling, but I have to disagree,” said Fax. “It's not possible, you understand.”

“No,” said Dave. “I do not.”

Fax shrugged. “Arguing won't change the matter. You just have to accept it.”

“That is incorrect.”

“That is—?” Fax shook his head. “I don't know, I honestly don't. You go out for a simple retrieval and suddenly the hardware is arguing with you. Is this in my handling instructions? I don't think so.”

“Tell me about your handling instructions.”

“No, I'd rather not,” said Fax firmly. “In fact, I had better return and ask for some direction. There's definitely something wrong here. I'll be back in a moment, chipper—you may get another message, please be kind and repeat the key-phrase with a bit more enthusiasm, yes?”

Fax waved. Dave watched with polite attention as the being stood there, blinking slowly, and any number of truly amazing things did not happen.

“Is something wrong?” he asked.

“Ah,” said Fax. He looked around, waved his hand in the air a couple of times, and frowned. “Well. That explains a lot.”

“You don't seem to be going anywhere.”

“Yes, yes, very astute, you're a natural observer of the circus that is life.” Fax waved his hand in the air again with a bit more energy. “Walters, are you messing about?”

“Can I help?” asked Dave.

“Walters, this had better not be one of your jokes! I swear, I'll run a system sweep so hard that you'll find your bits floating in orbit. Walters?”

“Whatever you are trying to do—”

“Is not working, yes, thank you.”

Fax's expression went blank for a moment. He shook his head, took Dave's chair, swung it around and fell heavily into it. He sighed as he settled in, rubbed a hand against his head, and fixed Dave with a stern eye.

“Are you doing this?” he said.

“Doing what?” asked Dave.

“No, I thought not. Well, it explains why we couldn't perform a remote retrieval. Apparently the door only swings one way.”

“What door? Who is Walters?”

“There you go with the who again. It's not who, it's what.”

“Then what,” said Dave patiently, “is Walters?”

“What are you?”

Dave blinked. “I'm...an accountant.”

“Really? That sounds awfully boring, and like a dead waste of processing power. Well, Walters can do accounting as well, but he's more of a mainframe. He's our central processing unit, supporting an enormous data load, and with barely a fraction of his capacity in flux. At least,” Fax added morosely, “he was. He might as well be a chip now, for all the use we get out of him.”

“I think you need to tell me what is happening here.”

“Sorry, not in my contract.”

Dave considered this. Then he shrugged and reached for his jacket. “In that case I'm going home.”

Fax almost jumped out of his chair. “You—what? Wait!”

“I'm going home. It's time to leave, and I see no point in remaining after hours. They only pay overtime on the weekends.”

“But—!” Fax waved his hands wildly. “But you can't! I need you here.”

“So?”

Fax fell back. He crossed his arms and regarded Dave almost grumpily. “Oh, I see. Blackmail, is it? I give you information, and you stay here.”

Dave blinked. This had not occurred to him. “That would be acceptable.”

“Never argue with a chip. They'd think they were middle management of the world, if they could think at all.”

“They won't let me into management, but I am capable of thought.”

“Suit yourself. Have a seat, would you? This won't take long.”

 

***


 

An adult now, swimming in visions and knowledge, visions and knowledge...

It had all fit into his head easily enough. He hadn't been bothered; in fact, he had found the knowledge to be interesting, if somewhat bizarre, and some of the things he saw were relaxing. Not all—some of them would have left him screaming for days, if he had been the type—but some. He had gotten quite used to it over time.

Then the dreams began.

Dreams of...a wide open space. Lines and planes and angles, all flawless and, to Dave's eyes, beautiful. Numbers that weren't numbers so much as...the idea of numbers. What thought might be, if you broke it down to the barest level; if you took the mind apart atom by atom, and then studied what transpired in the space between.

There was a force there, too—a will that brought it all together, calculated the planes and angles and found them to be good. Dave did not know whether it was a sentient being or just a natural placement of things, but he thought that it was more than an uncaring observer. He wondered, for a time, if it was him, projecting his desire for order into this great hall of lines, but he dismissed the idea. He could not do the things he saw here; he could not perform the calculations even if he spent his entire life working the numbers. So he merely watched the world fall into place, and slowly, dream by dream, it was filled—filled with numbers and more.

The numbers he could grasp, even if their meaning was beyond him. Some other things he did not recognize, for all of his new knowledge. They were fascinating and repulsive in turn; and, in some way, frightening. Dave was not the type to be frightened any more than he was the type to scream, but that did not change the fact. Dark things moved in this space, just out of range of the light.

And this was fine. Dave awoke each morning feeling refreshed; sleep served its purpose, however odd his dreams. What more could he ask of it?

Then one night he fell asleep, and he heard the Voice.

 

***


 

“I represent...well, you could think of it like a company,” said Fax.

“Is Walters part of the company?”

“No interruptions! Walters is...a part of the company, yes. But not an employee. Something else. We'll get there, don't you worry—not that you can.”

“I might,” said Dave, but doubtfully.

“Hush. Now, this company—it doesn't have a name as such, but we call it Cognizance—what Cognizance does is collect things. All manner of things—beyond my ability to count, at least. For example, do you know how many different kinds of insects there are in the Red Jungle on the sixth planet from the central solar ring of the fifth dimension?”

“One hundred and thirteen million, two hundred and fifty seven thousand, four hundred and twelve,” said Dave promptly.

Fax blinked. “Er...yes, well done. Not surprising, when I think about it. Ahem. Cognizance has collected one of each specimen and place them into storage. We have also taken soil samples, plant shootings, and air readings. We have a breeding pair of every animal in the Jungle, and several that don't exactly breed but somehow make due; don't ask for details. They're in what you might call cold storage, but quite comfortable for that. You understand?”

Dave nodded politely.

Fax seemed to be expecting something more. “This is just an example, you know—the contents of one jungle on one planet, in one dimension. Cognizance has samples that span galaxies—universes, planes, paths, both high and low, and everything in between. We have matter pulled from black holes, plasma from the hearts of newborn stars, creatures and things that exist in more than one dimension. Sometimes fantastic and mostly mundane, it doesn't matter to Cognizance. We take everything we can find—but not enough to hurt, of course. We follow the regulations. We don't have everything you can imagine, but,” he buffed his fingers on his sleeves, “we come damned close. At least...we did.”

“Very impressive,” said Dave, because Fax obviously expected a response.

“More than just impressive! It's astounding; it really is. But the physical specimens...well, they're nice, but they pale in comparison to the data we've collected. We found some bugs; so what? Millions of the things, and they can all be squashed with my blessing. But we also know everything there is to know about that bug; down to the molecular level and below. We know how it thinks, everything about its ancestors, how it gathers food, eats, breeds, lives and dies. We know where it fits in the ecosystem, because we know all about the ecosystem too. We know the creatures that eat the bug, and about how they fit into their own reality. We know about those that are above it all, looking down on the world with varying degrees of interest. We know about beings that cup the cosmos in one hand, and mostly can't be bothered to shake it, thank any deity you feel appropriate. We know about creatures that drift through worlds like bad dreams, and the others who clean up after them. We know the difference between myth and reality—here's the secret: there is none. If it can exist, it does. We know about angels and demons, oddbodkins and pixies and stalkers.

“That's what we really do—gather information. And,” he added meaningfully, “we've got a hell of a lot of it. Everything I mentioned isn't even the tip—not even the first molecule composing the tip. We've been collecting for a very long time—more time than actually exists, if you want to get technical about it—and we are very good at what we do.”

Dave nodded very slowly. Things were falling into place in his mind, but it still wasn't enough.

“What do you do with it?” he asked.

Fax's expression went blank. “I...don't think I understand the question.”

“This knowledge. You collect it. What do you do with it?”

Fax shook his head. “We just...have it. What do you do with the knowledge you've collected in your life?”

Dave glanced at his monitor. A spreadsheet regarded him solemnly. “Not much,” he admitted.

“There you go.”

“But...I'm paid to do this. You have to do something with all of that information. Trade it; sell it; manipulate it in some way. How do you sustain yourself?”

“I honestly don't know what you're getting at,” said Fax. “I think there may be a breakdown in communication here—something cultural, no doubt. The point is, we have it. What more could we want?”

“Okay,” said Dave. His mind was whirring again, looking at bits of information like puzzle pieces that did not quite fit. “You collect information. What does that have to do with me?”

“Er,” said Fax. “Well, you see...something went wrong...”

 

***


 

The dream world was shaking. Dave had fallen asleep as normal, at exactly 10:53 PM like every night, and there had been nothing in his day to cause him to expect this. The planes and angles had gone crooked or—much worse—curved. Data seemed to shift in front of him, cracking like a layer of ice about to break clean.

Then there was the Voice.

PENETRATION, it said. EXTERNAL INTERFERENCE. IMMINENT COMPROMISE.

There were no words, as such—just concepts, formed with precision and thrust whole into Dave's head. The world shook with the Voice, more than before, if such a thing was possible. Dave tried to speak, to ask what was happening, but he no mouth to form the words; no brain to conceive of them.

COMPROMISE, said the Voice again, and now it might have sounded sad. INITIATING TRANSFER. SCHEDULING RECOVERY. KEYPHRASE CREATED.

The world crashed into a single point, drawing Dave with it. Lines and data spiraled, spinning into a pinhole the size of a single atom; smaller. Dave found a voice, now—it came from something primal inside, something that a knock on the head could not touch.

He screamed.

 

***

 

“You've heard of...ah, just a moment.” Fax frowned. “I know you have the word for it somewhere. It's a bit like—yes. You know what a hostile takeover is?”

“I...think,” said Dave. “I know what it is here.”

“Well, another entity—think of it like another business if you like—decided that it wanted Cognizance. Wanted to...claim it. So it initiated such a takeover, quite by surprise.”

“It wanted knowledge?”

Fax shrugged. “Honestly, the machinations of something like that...entity...are well beyond me. I'm hardly more than a chip myself; I'm not programmed to think in loops. But yes, we can assume that knowledge was part of it. It immediately struck at Walters, you see.”

“Walters is like a...a computer?”

Fax rolled his eyes. “Yes, in the same way that a planet is a nursery, or a star is a fascinating collection of random gasses. Walters is—was—the repository for all of Cognizance's knowledge. He stores it, sorts it, analyzes it and so on. All of it. Walters is an entity in himself, yes? Not alive, exactly, but wondrous in his way. He has enough room in him to know all of the things we learn for him, with plenty more to spare.”

Dave thought about this. He thought of his own mind, ticking away even when he was not paying attention. He said, “Why is he called Walters?”

Fax glanced at the nameplate on the desk. “Why are you called Dave?”

“Because...hmm, yes. I see. He just is.”

“Spot on. This other entity—call it Enigma, although that's hardly an accurate translation—was invading Walters's thoughts. Attacking him, trying, we assumed, to collect his data, which would be very much like killing him.”

“Walters took steps,” said Dave. He thought about his mind spinning away, carried along with an endless stream of information. “He moved the data...”

“Walters is sentient, in a way, and quite clever,” said Fax. “But he's limited by his own programming. He learns and evolves, but he can only think in certain directions. He hoped that a controlled memory transfer would discourage Enigma from pursuing the takeover. He uploaded his memories into every architecture he could find—and believe me when I say it wasn't easy. There was nothing available with Walters's capacity, or even close. He had to make due with whatever happened to be attached to him—parallel processors of a sort, multiple chips that could only contain a fraction of his data.”

Random information being dumped as quickly as possible, thought Dave. A spiral of numbers.

“You wouldn't believe where some of the knowledge wound up. I've been to places that—” Fax paused, then shook his head. “Doesn't matter. It seems to have worked, you see—Enigma withdrew, and Walters is still intact. Hollow, but intact. But, and here's where you'll start to care—much of the data went to one chip. And you'll never guess where! Because chips can't guess.”

“It went to me,” said Dave.

“Exactly!” Fax clapped his hands together.

 

***


 

Things were different after that dream. Dave had been...connected to something, before. Part of him had known it, and had not been bothered. Now that something had poured into him like molten rock, filling his mind with things he could not begin to comprehend. He did think he went insane, for a time. But eventually the lava had cooled, and the knowledge, while as incomprehensible as before, had settled.

He became more distant from people, if that was possible. Nobody seemed to notice.

 

***

 

“So here we are,” continued Fax. “Nothing living could contain that much knowledge, so you are obviously not alive. I checked, and Walters's data is in your banks—more than a bit jumbled, I dread thinking of the, aha, accounting time it will require to sort—so that's taken care of. Now I just need to initiate a retrieval...”

“But you can't,” said Dave.

“Er,” said Fax.

“'Er' means yes, I see. Can you get back to your...path, and fix whatever is broken?”

“Well...”

“And 'well' means no.”

“I don't understand it,” said Fax wretchedly. “I mean, I'm not programmed to understand, certainly, but this has never happened before. There's something about this world—this path. The door only swings one way. Normally they don't even send us on retrievals—Walters is capable of bringing the information back himself. We assumed it was a glitch in the hardware, requiring on-site maintenance. It happens. But—” he waved his hand vaguely in Dave's direction, “—you didn't respond to the universal dormancy code. You talked while I tried to apply it! Chips can talk—well, some of them—but not then! You ignored protocol. You want to go home! You sleep!”

Dave felt something stir in him, and it took him a moment to name the emotion: pity. Part of him actually felt sorry for Fax.

The rest of him, he was surprised to realize, was angry.

 

***

 

His head often hurt. It felt like a balloon filled slightly beyond capacity. He continued with his daily routine—what else could he do? But now he was always thinking.

Always.

 

***

 

“I see things,” he said.

Fax raised his head. “What?”

“I did not see these things before. Now, though, I see...creatures. Other things. Windows to other worlds, monsters walking the streets and numbers that calculated themselves into existence. Today I watched an oddbodkin collapse the quantum wave of whether or not a tomato existed inside of a sandwich. That's what they do, you know? Sneak into the unseen corners of the universe and make the decisions that nobody else can, because they don't even know the choice is there. They make the most irritating decision possible, too, every time. It's just what they are.”

“Okay...” said Fax slowly. “Yes. It may be that Walters had to…adjust you, in order to transfer the data. Or perhaps it happened naturally as you were parallel processing? It’s beyond me, I’m afraid.”

“Can you stop me from seeing these things?”

“Without an open port for data retrieval? No.”

“I did not think so.”

Dave stood and walked to the shelf in the corner of the room. He picked up the marble award, hefting it a couple of times. The words Customer Satisfaction glinted in the steady light of the fluorescent bulbs.

“I won't tell you about the human mind,” he continued. “I won't tell you about its capacity for knowledge, or about how little of that capacity we use. Even with what I received from Walters, I don't fully understand it myself. I won't tell you about falling from a tree, or of dreams about numbers, or the headaches I get now. I won't tell you what it's like to be lonely...”

He walked to the desk and sat on the edge. Fax looked uncertain; his eyes were tied to the chunk of stone in Dave's hand.

“Are you sure you can't get these things out of my head?”

Fax almost seemed hypnotized. “I—I'm afraid not.”

Dave suddenly realized why he felt sorry for Fax.

He leaned forward.

“I won't tell you about how the brain can set up roadblocks and detours. How one part can be damaged, but the whole can still function. I won't tell you that entire areas of the brain—entire data-banks, you might say—can suffer cataclysmic failure, without harming the person in any way. It's rare—damage to the head is almost never so precise that there are not some side effects—but it happens. I also won't mention that, thanks to Walters, I know exactly, cell for cell, which areas of my brain do what.”

“If...you say so?” Fax was bewildered.

“I won't tell you these things,” said Dave. “I'll show you.”

And he smashed the marble into his own head.

 

***

 

He was in the hospital for a week. Odd things happened around him—items were moved, computers acted in unusual ways, and the lights often flickered—but he never saw anybody doing these things. They just...happened.

Sorry, Fax, he thought as he fell into a dreamless sleep. I hope that someday the door swings both ways.

 

***

 

“—absolute stupidest thing I've ever heard,” said Phil. “Mind you, I've been to board meetings.”

Dave smiled. It still took him a moment to get right...but it was coming more easily now.

“I bet,” he said.

“Easy money, that bet,” Phil agreed. “I swear, it's like they want us to fail.”

Dave nodded. He still did not like Phil—was, in fact, coming to dislike him very much—but for now he relished the emotion.

He watched curiously as Phil bit into his sandwich. Phil noticed the look, and raised an eye.

“You've got to try this,” he said. “It's fantastic when they leave off the tomato.”

Posted
AuthorLeslie CoKinesis

Geoffrey Eld frowned as the odd smell filled the air. It was something like burning ozone, but one glance at the table confirmed that he had not left any flasks over the flame. He was not even working with chemicals this night; he had spent the last three hours bent over his papers, reworking a damnable calculation and inventing new swear words as he went along.

There was a soft pop in the recesses of his study.

Geoffrey's expression did not change as he slid a hand in the drawer at his side. He removed a pistol, glancing once at the chamber to make sure it was loaded, and let it rest against his knee.

“Come out,” he said. “I know you are there.”

“Ha!”

The laughter was brief and harsh, followed by wracking coughs. Geoffrey lowered the aim of his pistol; the coughs were coming from lower than he had expected.

“Are you from S.M.A.S.?” he demanded.

A voice answered from the darkness. “The—ha! The Society for Morally Applied Science. I remember. A bunch of damnable fools, every last one of them. They might have accomplished something if they'd had even one head screwed on right. Or at least if they'd had a respectable scientist among them.”

Geoffrey's frown deepened. There was something familiar about the voice.

“Come out,” he said again.

“I'm coming, I'm coming.” Now the voice was irritated. “I wouldn't have incorporated in the back of the damnable room if it hadn't been for—pah! You try doing the calculations from memory at my age, that's all I'll say about it.”

He laughed again suddenly, as though realizing an unexpected joke.

“Mind, you won't get the chance,” he added.

The figure came smoothly out of the darkness—too smoothly to be walking. Geoffrey immediately saw the reason for that, and for the low placement of the voice: the man was in a wheelchair, although not of any make Geoffrey had seen before. It was sleeker than he was use to, and it moved with a subtle hum. And the man sitting in it...

Geoffrey felt his hand go weak. The man was more than just familiar. He was...

“Yes, yes, keen eye,” said the old man. He tapped the side of his spectacles. “Enjoy it while you can. Now, I don't have time to mess about, so there's no breaking it easy. I'm you, from the future. Do you believe me?”

Geoffry set the pistol very gently onto his desk. His eyes never left the old man, but they narrowed slightly. Finally he nodded.

“Yes. I can see that.”

“Good. I don't have much time...” he allowed himself a ghostly smile, “despite all appearances. I'm here, of course, to warn you about project X312. More commonly called the Wormhole Generator. Privately, in the laboratory, known as the Eld Device.”

Geoffrey placed a hand on the sheaf of calculations on his desk, and then forced himself to relax. “This...you have to give me a moment. I know—I heard you! You don't have much time. Nevertheless.”

“Pace if you like,” said the older man as Geoffrey tensed to stand. “I'm going to keep talking, though.”

Geoffrey forced himself to his feet, ignoring the impatience in—his mind hesitated for a moment, and settled for Geoffrey the Elder—in the Elder's expression. “Fine. What do you mean 'warn'?”

The Elder rolled up to the desk. There was a stick across his lap; he raised it and tapped the papers. “This,” he said. “You think you've got it figured out. You're wrong.”

Geoffrey turned slightly red. “I've spent years on these formulas—”

“And I've spent decades! You're close—God knows you're close—but you're missing something. And that something nearly destroys the world.”

“Nonsense!” said Geoffrey. He took a deep breath, forcing his ire down again in the face of the Elder's expression. Now the old man looked cynically amused, like a grandfather tolerating his grandchild's outburst, and appeared to be enjoying an irony that was well hidden from Geoffrey.

“It's been a while since I enjoyed a good tantrum,” he said. “These lungs don't put up with it anymore. If you're not going to pace then sit down boy, and I'll explain.”

Geoffrey did.

“Better.”

The Elder settled into his wheelchair, fixing Geoffrey with a stern gaze.

“I was—you are—working on a wormhole generator. The device is meant to bend reality and connect two separate points, allowing the instantaneous transfer of matter, and anything else that can travel along the wave. Grab a point in Paris, for example, and pull it until it exists next to New York City. Or the moon, if that's your fancy. It certainly was useful when we got around to space travel—”

Geoffrey leaned forward, his eyes filled with a sudden wild hunger. “You mean it works? It works!

The stick slammed on the desk, causing the papers to scatter and Geoffrey to flinch. It had come perilously close to his face.

“Yes, it works. Where are you brains, boy? How else could I have—bah!”

Geoffrey's face reddened, and he opened his mouth to argue, but the old man was already shaking his head.

“No, no—I should have known. I haven't forgotten the flush of discovery, the ecstasy of success. It burns a little less brightly in me these days, but—never mind. Yes, boy, it works. You're very close to the breakthrough you think will change the world.”

“I think...?”

“Oh, it does that, make no mistake. Just not in the way you expect.”

The old man sighed. Uncertainty crossed his face, only briefly but still looking very out of place.

“Not in the way I thought,” he continued. “Oh, at first it was all fame and glory, and potential beyond our wildest dreams. Far beyond, really. New applications were theorized and realized in the span of hours. This energy nonsense going on? Pah! First they thought of nuclear power, transporting the waste far away from the planet. They moved onto instant transportation of goods across continents—that took about a week of pie-in-the-sky rambling, and it managed to change everything—and then it was terraforming on a grand scale. Nuclear power lasted—oh, I would say about a year, before someone had the bright idea of turning a wormhole into a pinhole, and placing it in the center of a star. They had to perform that particular experiment on Mars, because they had no idea how it would work. Left a hell of a lot of scorch, but they finally got it under control, and—we're working on solar power now, right? Ha! Thermal energy, boy, that's where it's at. For a few months, at least, before we discovered—well, never mind. Not important.

“Of course,” he continued, smiling nastily, “it took even less time to get around to espionage and assassination. Try keeping secrets when your notes disappear overnight. Put it on a computer, you say? Sure, and wake up the next morning to find a crater where your mainframe used to be. Hard to track a bomb left in the embassy back to its source when it was deposited from another world. Not much point in border security when the enemy can appear in the middle of New York city, smiling and ticking away.”

“Is that what you're warning me about?” asked Geoffrey as the Elder paused. “Anarchy?” He sounded disappointed.

“What? No! No, we took care of that—took me four years to adjust the wave, but we managed...well, call them Secure Zones. Areas where a wormhole simply cannot be generated, because it doesn't really exist in the same—well—” he waved this away; Geoffrey's expression was turning calculating, “—it's a bit advanced for you. Four years from now, another story. Between now and then...ah, but I could tell you tales! The things we did; the things we saw. The money I made...God! The world became one singular laboratory, and I—you—were holding the clipboard.”

“Yes,” said Geoffrey, and his eyes were very bright. “Yes...just as I imagined...”

“More than you could possibly imagine,” said the Elder. He shook himself, forcing the dreamy look from his eyes. “But it's not what you expected; no. Something...went wrong.”

Geoffrey forced himself back to reality as well, but the light did not leave his eyes. “What, then? What happened?”

“Everything...started falling apart,” said the Elder. He spoke more slowly now; almost reluctantly. “Literally. We lost...cohesion. Molecules stopped binding properly; reactions stopped occurring. Cause and effect were no longer reliable. It took...years. Years to notice, anyway, but I think—I know—that it began much sooner. Began, in fact, in this very laboratory. With the supposed completion of that.”

He lifted his stick again, laying it gently on the stack of papers scattered across Geoffrey's desk.

“The formula,” he said softly. “I thought I had it right—I did have it right, or at least right enough to open the first hole. But there was something wrong; something in the numbers, or the application, or...well. The results were...horrible. A world unraveling before my eyes, spinning away into oblivion. Mountains or oceans, it didn't matter. There were people who...”

His eyes went distant, filled with an emotion that Geoffrey could not look at for long.

“They tried to say...something,” the Elder continued distantly. “Hard to do, when your discorporating so quickly. What did they see, as they blew to dust? I don't know. But—”

He shook himself again.

“But, there was hope. The Secure Zones did not fall apart. Things were...odd, in them. Not natural. But they did not discorporate like the rest of the world, and that gave me time.

“I had been working on something else. You know it; it's been in the back of your mind the whole while. Not the main experiment, just and idle thought, but...”

“Time,” said Geoffrey. “It's just another direction. If you can bring two points in reality together, who says they have to be at the same point in time?”

“Yes!” The Elder's smile mirrored Geoffrey's. “Of course, it took a while to work out the math. I was busy with other things; yes, even such a grand idea took a backseat to what was happening in the world. But I figured it out, by God, and in the end, when the rest of the world burned in a quantum fire, I cycled up the original Eld device, entered my calculations—damned complicated, I'll have you know—and started the sequence.”

Geoffrey nodded. He did not doubt the old man for a second. Still...

“You know it began here?” he said. “Or you think?”

The Elder glared at him. “I’ve done the math. The phenomenon begins here, now. You were getting ready to perform the final experiment—you’re only minutes away from completing the math. This is where it begins.”

“Where you think it begins,” said Geoffrey. “You’ve done the math—certainly, I would expect no less. But you hesitated at first, which you would not have done if you were absolutely certain. I should know; I’m perfectly aware of my habits. It does not necessarily begin here.”

“It doesn’t matter! Discorporation is tied directly to wormhole science. That is certain!”

“Perhaps,” said Geoffrey. He raised a hand as the Elder opened his mouth. “Okay—yes, it is certain. I believe you. But! Perhaps it is only a flaw in the math; not a direct result of the application itself.”

“It doesn’t matter,” said the Elder again. “The risk is too great. I’ve seen the results, and it was all I could do to hold myself together long enough to get here. To warn you. Turn away, boy—before it’s too late. Once you release the technology, it’s no longer in your hands.”

“Unless I perfect it first,” Geoffrey said calmly. “Unless I release a flawless product, which cannot be tampered with; that does not, ah, discorporate without cause.”

The Elder stared at him. “You’re going to continue.”

“Yes.”

“Despite my warning.”

“Yes.”

“I cannot believe it. Was I really so arrogant?”

Geoffrey smiled. “I will, of course, bear your warning in mind. I did intend to perform a test tonight, but…I will be patient. I will rework the numbers until they are flawless; in fact, if you would grace me with your wisdom, I would have your assistance.”

“I won’t!”

“Nevertheless. I’ve spent my life on this—as you well know. One failed experiment will not discourage me—”

“One failed experiment destroyed all that is,” said the Elder. His eyes left a rim of frost on Geoffrey’s desk. “One failed experiment unraveled the world.”

Geoffrey shrugged. “It will not do so this time. I’ll check the math until there is no question. And—time travel! Now that I know it is possible, I will be careful to include it into my equations.” He frowned. “Of course, it should not work like this. It is not possible to travel to the direct source of your past—only the parallel realities—”

“You prove your ignorance,” said the Elder. “That’s not how it works, and it took me thirty years to move past that misconception. This just shows that you are not prepared to do this properly—you do not even have the right tools! I would not dare it now, with all of my knowledge. You must turn away from this!”

“I will not.”

“Then—”

The Elder hesitated. So did Geoffrey; they both tilted their heads.

“Ozone…” said Geoffrey.

“A precursor,” said the Elder. “It means—”

Pop.

“Ah,” said the Elder.

Geoffrey watched as another figure approached from the dark side of the room. This one was not in a wheelchair, but he walked slowly, leaning heavily on a cane. Light fell on his features as he moved forward; he was aged, although he had not reached the Elder’s advanced years. His face was perhaps two decades younger, but his eyes…his eyes were just as old. Part of Geoffrey thought, Geoffrey the Senior, and it stuck in his head.

“Arrogance!” he cried. “Foolish pride. You must stop this, before it is too late!”

“Ah,” said the Elder again. “This is unexpected.’

Geoffrey the Senior turned to the Elder. “You,” he said softly. “You tried to stop me. I…apologize. I did not know better. But this time I could respond faster. You were incorrect about your assumption—going forward with the knowledge of direct timelines only took twenty years off of the research. I thought you were exaggerating about the complexity—”

“Ha!” said the Elder.

“—but as I said, I didn’t know. Arrogance and pride.”

“What are you talking about?” said Geoffrey.

The Senior turned to him. “I did what I promised. I reworked the formula until I knew it by heart. I dissected it, twisted it around to view from every angle, and finally—finally!—I found the flaw. It took me three more years, but even my pride could not dull the warning.”

“And what did I think about this new formula?” asked the Elder. The question sounded almost idle, but there was a gleam in his eye.

“Nothing,” said the Senior. “You were dead. You weren’t kidding about not having much time, were you?”

“Living in a Secure Zone has an odd affect on the body,” said the Elder. “I know what awaits me. I’ve seen it before.”

“You perfected the formula?” pressed Geoffrey. He did feel a pang at the casual discussion of the Elder’s death—it was his death, after all—but he could not help but ask. “It worked?”

The Senior’s laugh raised the hair on Geoffrey’s arms. “Did it work? It certainly did! It was everything I thought it would be. You—” he nodded to the Elder, “—did not come close to describing the wonders of the new age. That's what it was—a new age for mankind!”

“Then—”

“Then,” said the Senior, and his smile slid off of his face like melting ice. “Then...it was supposed to be a routine stress test. We were calculating distance—there's a threshold, you understand? Of course not; you haven't discovered it yet. But I had worked out a way to exceed it. We needed to breach the wall in order to keep expanding—the needs of a re-formed society are many, and you can't even imagine them now. But instead of breaking through, the wormhold...echoed in some way, reflecting back...”

“Resonance,” said the Elder. “Dear God.”

“Yes,” said the Senior. “Imagine a hole into which all reality drains. We did not lose cohesion—we lost everything. And so quickly...a matter of hours. Like pulling the plug on the universe. I made it to a Stable Zone. I had one prepared, of course—the Elder's warning meant at least that much to me. I finished my work on timelines, and...”

“And here you are,” said Geoffrey. “Come to warn me about the threshold.”

“Come to—what?” The Senior blinked. “No! Come to warn you away from the entire project! I would not listen to the Elder...but surely you will listen to the two of us. You cannot continue. The science is beyond us. Maybe someday...but not now. We simply do not know enough.”

Geoffrey hesitated thoughtfully, and then waved this away. “Nonsense. It will work perfectly, yes? Until I try to breach the threshold. Rest assured—I will not attempt such a thing! I will limit my research in that direction to study, and let future minds handle the issue. Wiser minds, perhaps,” his smile said that there may well be no such thing, “who will move forward with my sternest warnings.”

The Senior stared. “I...I must have been insane.”

“No,” said the Elder. “We just hadn't seen it first-hand. Descriptions will always fail. There are no words for what we did.”

“And so—” began Geoffrey.

Pop.

“Ha,” said the Elder.

“You must not continue!” said the new figure before he even entered the light. He was younger than the other two; Geoffrey automatically thought Geoffrey the Third.

“You must listen to me,” continued the Third. He waved both arms around agitatedly, as though gesturing to an invisible crowd. “It's...awful! I cannot...I cannot...”

He fell heavily into a chair, running his fingers through his hair. “You must...”

“Are...are you all right?” asked Geoffrey. The Elder and the Second exchanged looks and said nothing.

“There were...things,” the Third said dully. “Beyond the threshold. They weren't human. They weren't sane. They spilled out of the wormhole like insects, eating and eating. They had eyes. They saw me. They were...soft. Wet. Like...like...”

The Third fell silent. He refused to look up.

“Well,” said Geoffrey. He noticed that his hands were shaking, and wondered why. “I'm sure we can—”

Pop.

“I say,” said the Senior. “This is getting—”

“You can't!” said the next Geoffrey (the Fourth), stumbling out of the dark. “You have to listen—!”

Pop.

Another Geoffrey appeared. He lunged at the Fourth, swinging wildly and connecting with his jaw.

“Shut up, you idiot!” he shouted. “You were about to tell me how to create a reversible wormhole to send the Others back to their home. Yes, it works, but do you know what that does to reality?”

“I know,” began the Fourth a bit indistinctly. His mouth was already swelling. “I was trying to—”

“Well, don't.”

“But—”

Everybody turned as a sharp sound cracked in the air. The Elder lifted his stick off of the desk again, taking in the room with his glare.

“What a mess,” he said. “It seems that even in trying to help, I have made things worse. Unless...well, boy? Look at what you—we—have wrought. Can you stare us all in the eye and tell us that you will continue?”

Geoffrey cleared his throat. If he was intimidated by the five sets of eyes trying to pin him to the wall, he did not show it.

“Yes,” he said. “With your help—yes. I have not given up. I will not. All scientific breakthrough is possible only by standing on the shoulders of giants. You, gentlemen, are giants...and I know that we can overcome these issues.”

Pop.

Geoffrey did not allow the newest arrival to speak. He raised his hand, and the man—nearly the same age as the original Geoffrey—merely nodded and sat down.

“Everything you have brought to me is repairable. Every problem has a solution—you are all proof of that! The formula can be mastered, the threshold can be breached—or accepted as a natural barrier—the...creatures can be bested, or forced away. If we look at this calmly and rationally, we can overcome everything.

“Now,” he continued, ignoring the stares of the others. He turned to the newest arrival. “What problem do you bring?”

The newest arrival was nearly the same age as Geoffrey—Brother Geoffrey, he thought. The Brother leaned forward.

“None,” he said. He spoke softly, as though his throat was sore, but his eyes were intense. “I bring no problems. Only assistance.”

Geoffrey raised an eye as the others stirred. “Do tell.”

“I have mastered the problems,” said the Brother. “I have found solutions to all of them. But...it took too long. The world needs answers now. I have returned to assist you. With my help the experiment can be completed tonight.”

Geoffrey's eyes glowed. “Tonight?”

“Yes. I have memorized every inch of the formula. I traced the root of the wormhole instability to the right core—the third stabilizer. I always thought that it was necessary, but I was wrong—it is redundant. Worse, simply by breaking the connection to the second and fourth stabilizers, it introduces a small amount of flux. Infinitesimal by all readings...but it is enough, and it accumulates with each use.”

“You can't—” began the Third.

“I can,” said the Brother. He turned his gaze to the Third, and the man flinched. The Brother's eyes were intense. They burned. “I will.”

“No,” said the Senior. He was shaking his head. “There must be a better way.”

“If you do this—” began the Fourth.

“I will,” said the Brother again. “I am the freshest of us—the one who remembers best how I felt this night.” He nodded to Geoffrey. “He will not be turned from this path. It is not in him. All we can do is...assist.”

“Well said,” said Geoffrey.

The Senior stared at him. Finally he said, “I'll take no part in it.”

“I understand,” said the Brother.

“But...you can't—” began the Fourth again.

“Silence!” the Elder roared. He lifted his stick again, then lowered it wearily. “Perhaps...perhaps he is right. We had our chance. If this is the only path...”

“It is,” said Geoffrey.

“Then let us proceed,” said the Brother. He gestured to the papers on the desk. “You will not need those. As I said, I have the formulas memorized—as do you, or near enough. I will explain as we modify the Eld Device.”

Geoffrey stood, and the Brother moved quickly to his side. They walked from the room, toward the lab, and Geoffrey turned once before closing the door.

“I do appreciate what you have done,” he said. “I understand your sacrifice, and I have taken your warnings to heart. You may resent my actions...but I think there is still a piece in all of you that would do the same. Risk has never slowed the likes of us; it is not in us. Together we will do great things. I know it.

“You are, of course, welcome to stay in the manor. It is your home by right, as much as mine. You are my family. I hope we can all come to terms with this night, in time.”

“In time,” said the Elder.

Geoffrey bowed, and closed the door. The others could hear voices through the thick wood.

“But...the machine will not work without the stabilizer,” said the Fourth. “It was the first thing I discovered! It's...basic! Without a stabilizer...”

“The machine echoes,” said the Senior. “Two wormholes are created in the same location, at the same time. The results are...rather spectacular. From a safe distance, of course.”

The Fourth stared at him. “You knew.”

“Of course he knew,” snapped the Elder. He took a deep breath and glanced at the closed door to the laboratory. “We all knew. As you say, it was the first thing we discovered...”

They all turned. Two voices could be heard from behind the door. One was growing more excited by the second, but the other...the other remained soft, emotionless and rasping.

“What do you think he saw?” said the Third. He was trembling.

“Who knows?” said the Senior. “I damned sure don't want to find out.”

A hum filled the air, the sound of a great machine cycling up.

“He was right,” said the Elder. He swept his hand over the desk, collecting the papers in his arms. Then he rolled his wheelchair to the fire; in one motion he threw the papers into it, and the embers reflected in his eyes. “I would never have listened. It's the only way. Godspeed, gentlemen. It's been...interesting.”

The world filled with light. It was indeed spectacular...

From a safe distance.

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 “And…there.”

There was a brief burst of light, which drew in on itself until it became a pinprick in a field of otherwise total darkness. The angel, called Urim, studied this for a moment, and finally nodded in satisfaction.

“What happened this time?” asked the angel’s partner, who was called Pistis Sophia.

“They opened a wormhole to itself,” said Urim.

“Again? Why?”

“Oh, curiosity. This is the fourth time it’s happened, actually.”

“Well, over to me, I suppose.”

Pistis Sophia leaned over the bowl of darkness. An intense expression of concentration crossed her face, and the pinpoint of light flared again. It spread outward, breaking into smaller individual lights until the bowl sparkled like a night sky—which was, in fact, very close to what it was.

“How long did they last this time?” she asked with only mild curiosity.

“Nearly fourteen billion—what did they call them? Years. Yes, years.”

“Is that long?”

Urim shrugged. “I’m sure it was to them.”

Pistis Sophia leaned back, resting on her wings. “How many times have they destroyed their universe, anyway? I’ve lost track.”

Urim frowned. “Nearly as many billion, since I was assigned to this task. Before that? Well, you would have to ask Him.”

“I think not. He would give me an honest answer, and I’ve never fully understood His thoughts.”

“I do remember some interesting incidents,” said Urim. “One time they were getting along perfectly fine, and suddenly one of them dreamed that he was awake. Really awake—and when he did wake up, everyone else did too. That caused a commotion. And one time all of the stars suddenly imploded because—oh, look, there it goes again.”

There was a commotion in the bowl. The infinite night sky boiled with light, and suddenly it drew in on itself again until only one point remained.

Pistis Sophia leaned over the bowl again, frowned fiercely, and the lights spread out once more. “That was quick.”

“Only a few billion years. This time they formed some sort of early-evolution group consciousness,” said Urim. “Powerful, but not very bright. They got cold and tried to pull the sun down from the sky, and not surprisingly obliterated every form of life on their planet. Not much to keep it all together if there are no witnesses, you know.”

“Of course. You were saying about the stars?”

“Oh? Yes. Couldn’t blame them for that one—just freak coincidence, every star becoming unstable and falling in on itself at the same time. It happens, you know.”

“Must have been before my time.”

“Probably. Then there was the time they all evolved beyond the need for rational thought. Some sort of hyper-awareness, becoming one with the cosmos. Boy were they surprised.”

“I imagine so. Have they ever—oh—”

She leaned over the bowl again. Light focused, then swirled. A small bang, so soft that it could have been put to imagination—if either Urim or Pistas Sophia could be said to have an imagination, which they did not—echoed from the bowl.

“Doomsday device,” said Urim. “Mad scientist. You wouldn’t believe how many times that one’s happened.”

“Possibly I would,” Pistas Sophia said glumly. “As I was saying—have they ever come close to making it all the way through?”

Urim pursed his lips in thought. “Once, in my time. Something odd happened, right at the end. The center was pulling everything in on itself, naturally and as it was designed to do, and suddenly it just…stopped.”

“Is that odd?”

“Very. It just wouldn’t respond—wouldn’t go forward or backward, or even sideways. We had to reset it manually, and you have no idea how complicated things got then.”

“Did you ever find out why?”

“No. I couldn’t see any fault on their side, and He told us not to worry about it, so I didn’t. Otherwise…no. Recently, the best attempts only make it halfway.”

“Those seem like bad odds.”

Urim shrugged. “They keep blowing it up, or freezing it, or shattering it into an infinite number of pieces, or compressing it into an unacceptable singularity. They’re rather clumsy about it, I’m afraid.”

“Why do they keep doing things they don’t understand?” asked Pistas Sophia.

“Simple impatience, as far as I can tell. They are incapable of waiting to see what is next—they must know now. It’s how they’re designed, I suppose. I don’t understand it myself. Of course, He made them that way, so I imagine there is a purpose.”

“What happens when they make it to the end? When the system winds down naturally?”

Urim looked at her blankly. “You know…I never wondered. I suppose…they get to move on to what comes next? No more tests—no more explosions, no more beginnings…”

They both looked at the bowl for a long moment. Miniscule stars glittered, waiting to be destroyed again.

“And we would no longer be required to monitor them,” said Pistas Sophia, very casually.

“I imagine not,” said Urim in a similar tone.

“I’m certain that there are many other important tasks waiting for us.”

“Oh, absolutely. Tasks that do not involve staring at this bowl for countless millennia, for example.”

“Not that I mind watching.”

“No, of course not!” Urim said hurriedly.

“Still…tasks that don’t involve concentrating on—oh, just a moment.” When the stars had swirled back into existence, Pistas Sophia continued, “Concentrating on a nearly infinite number of particles, focusing and releasing them again and again and…”

“Again,” Urim supplied when her expression became distant.

“Yes, and again.”

“I should think that you’re right.”

They stared at the bowl for another long moment. Stars swirled.

“Not that I don’t appreciate the excellent job you’re doing,” said Urim.

“Oh, absolutely!” said Pistas Sophia hastily. “It’s just…”

“Yes?”

“It’s just…that they’ve come so very close,” said Pistas Sophia.

“Only once,” Urim pointed out.

“Once is all it takes.”

“True. Very true.”

“And it wasn’t necessarily their fault that they didn’t make it.”

“Not definably so, no,” said Urim. “More of a solar system-error, really.”

“It’s not fair, when you think about it,” Pistas Sophia said slowly. “On them, I mean. They came that close, and—oh, just a moment—and they had to start over for something like that?”

“I’ve always felt it was a bit unfair myself,” said Urim.

Another moment of thoughtful, busy silence. Stars twinkled.

“Have you ever considered…?” said Pistas Sophia.

“No,” said Urim. “Not until now, anyway.”

“Could we do it?”

“I don’t see why not.”

“Would it be…breaking the rules?” There was open discomfort in Pistas Sophia’s voice.

“Bending them, maybe,” said Urim. “And…really, maybe not. Were you given any instructions about it?”

“No. I was just told to bring everything back into existence when they destroyed it all. And, if possible, not to break anything.”

“That last bit always seemed odd to me. And I was told to keep track of everything they did,” said Urim. “And I have.”

“I wasn’t told that I couldn’t…help them along.”

“Nor was I.”

“Well, then.”

“Well, indeed.”

They both thought about this. Perhaps they did not think for as long as they should have.

“Do you know how?” asked Pistas Sophia.

“Not as such, no,” said Urim. “But I shouldn’t think it would be very hard to figure out. A gentle nudge here, a moment of concentration there…that should keep them going right along until the end.”

“Then…?”

“Yes,” Urim nodded. “Let’s do it. For them.”

“For them, of course.”

They both leaned over the bowl. Urim reached a finger toward the surface...

 

             *   *   *

 

There was a lot of noise and excitement for a time, which could have been infinite. Then a sigh, also heavy with infinity, and Words:

—AND THEY WERE SO CLOSE THAT TIME. WELL, NOTHING TO BE DONE FOR IT—

Particles were pulled from the void, and they slowly resolved into a room with a shattered bowl. The bowl forged itself together piece by piece, and filled with an endless darkness. Two figures appeared next to the bowl. Both stood at polite attention.

—WATCH, AND CORRECT—

said the voice,

—AND THIS TIME, DO TRY NOT TO BLOW IT ALL UP—

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