Celebrant (50 page)

Read Celebrant Online

Authors: Michael Cisco

BOOK: Celebrant
9.08Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

The next night, the dead brother’s treacherous in-laws, an aristocratic family, are dining together
...
they are blamed somehow

I forget

by the dead brother for his death
...
loops of wire, so fine as to be invisible, drop from the chandelier
...
the motions of the family as they eat unwittingly mesh them in these wire loops, which then begin to close
...
slicing through arms and necks like a knife through butter
...
a head topples into the punch bowl

no, he’d cut that (ha ha so to speak), too obvious
...
the flower setting blazes scarlet with blood as the chandelier begins to sputter so brilliant and hot that it melts, dripping brass onto the roast
...

The next night, the head of a rival family
...
having observed the escalation of this supernatural vendetta he trembles in dread of his life and seals himself away
...
at his gate
...
up his walk
...
toward the threshold of his house it comes
...
a mannikin of pitted iron, black and rough like charcoal
...
it clashes against itself with each heavy step like a knight in armor, the commendatore

magnificent thing, Adrian thinks as he fumbles for his money, wonderful!

crash!
crash!
crash!
the implacable tramp of death!
slow

unhurried

inexorable

the mannikin’s huge, stony face
...
the eyes are open but blank, the same drab black color
...
the hinged mouth suddenly drops the chin down to the chest and stays there, as the word

death

falls leadenly and finally from it
...

Adrian draws close to the city factory.
In the dim light of the stars he can see the transparent whir of the celestials on patrol.

Students!
(he calls through his teeth)

At once his students flutter up about him.
He points, and they move at once to divert the celestials.
Adrian scampers through one of the many apertures in the walls and across the open space beyond into the factory itself.
He puffs out yeasty breath as dry as a jet of spores.
He searches, with exaggerated and unnecessary caution, until he finds a battery, like a huge hollow fruit of heavy tin.
(It has UPHAM & PUTNAM embossed on one side.)
He shakes it, listening speculatively, but there’s no sound.
The battery feels dead.
Retreating behind some cabinets he wavers between a desire to find a way to charge the battery here in the factory, or to escape with his find, which he holds in both hands before his chest.

He imagines hearing voices, footsteps, some harsh and nonchalantly loud noises made by people who have business being here, and thinks of his terror.
Those would be real voices and footsteps, not imaginary ones, real people, the terrifying inner collapse as you are discovered where you don’t belong.
Adrian decides to escape, and simply runs away, thinking he might hear something, some indistinct sound of curiosity or protest
...

Come on my enemy!

The duke, or whatever he was, sealed up behind his walls and ponderous ebony doors

to no avail!
The metronomic step of death will not be an instant delayed!
Cower behind your walls, and by all means invest them with all your hopes!

Charging the battery is no challenge.
He has only to take it in a pair of tongs

no, tie a rope

no, best idea, use a net!
and dip it into the heavy water that flows through the city in heavy marble pipes.
This process takes so long that Adrian sleeps the night away in a corner, hidden by the pipe.
When the egg is palpably vibrating, so that its hum can be felt through the webbing, Adrian sagaciously concludes it is ready.
Now it is a matter of leaving Votu and, if he can’t manage to fulfill a long-cherished desire to bring about a tragedy, he can at least turn life into a cartoon.
Unerringly he makes his way to

deKlend:

 

deKlend turns away to hammer the blade, and a skulking figure bustles up to the forge carrying an egg-shaped metal vessel the size of a human head.
This figure surreptitiously attaches the vessel to a panel on the side of the forge.
The vessel buzzes, snarling to itself like a hive of indignant bees.
Once it is in place, the figure darts back into the shadows, rubbing its hands, then pauses at a safe distance, virtually dancing with glee and watching.

Having noticed nothing, deKlend presently turns back to the forge, lays his sword on it, and as he brings the hammer down the forge explodes like the sun

ghosts of bachelorization energy make burring waterspouts and spinning bends of incandescent vines up through the factory and the machines and ducts and scaffolds and huge wheels stir and roll and gather together and fall apart again like fitful sleepers.
deKlend tumbles head over heels over head over heels in the cold sunburst of the forge, the hammer rings out against the blade with a sound like cheering ice.
A pure, keen note, that is heard in Votu, as if it came from the city factory.
People on the streets of Votu clamp their hands over their ears.

The next thing he knows deKlend is stumbling shellshocked through the debris, the factory a good distance in the background.
Tiny lights, small bubbles, and dust-asterisks are popping around his blankly-staring eyes.
His moustache is sizzled.
The steaming remains of his sword blade spatter the front of his body like a metal apron.
Ringing in the air, a pure, keen note, that is heard

In Votu:

 

Kunty stops in her tracks and claps her hands over her ears.

Phryne hears it, too, as she sits re-wrapping her incest tapes around her forearms, preparing for her regular appointment with the disappointment elementals.
The sound, so unusual for Votu, haunts her as she makes her way, in disguise, through the streets.
People are talking animatedly

about the sound?
They do seem to be gazing at the city factory.
What was it that so startled her about it

not the volume, the shrillness, nor even the abruptness
...

Actually (she thinks) it wasn’t sudden.
I felt it coming.
I thought of Clumsy, and then I began to feel as though I were waiting to hear from him
...

The appointment won’t wait.

Kunty fantasizes about the woman she saw, her arms demurely bound behind her back, in some private place.
Kunty slices her dress open with the edge of her claws, gradually exposing the magnificent abundance of that body.
A full-grown woman!
Even better than Gina!


drenched from head to foot in nowhere’s tears

certainly she isn’t crying.
Her hair hangs down in long fringes, her dress clasps her like a wet rag.
Her face is bare, the transparent lips and eyelids, and the tight, skinny little line that has appeared on either side of the mouth, angling away from the nose, where the skin one day will fold and stay folded.

There’s nothing to see outside but a dull glare.

Now the vision shifts, and Kunty sees the woman standing, towering over her, and she looking up with yearning at the undersides of her breasts.
A tenderer, more reverent emotion, wanting to caress and pet and get caught up in a symphony of little pleasures.

The whole thing with deKlend is dreamlike (she thinks)
Is there anything real there?
And does he know me?
Where is he?
Is he really anybody?
Are we just playing?
Are we really together?
Are we just playing?
What do I want?

I don’t know (the words chant themselves)

Now the memory of that keen sound rises and she re-realizes it has never entirely left her.
It brings with it now an impression of savage attention that conjures her appetite out of its trance.

I want deKlend!
(she thinks)

It isn’t a thought that goes on and on, speaking for a lifetime, but it is the entirety of what she suddenly wants.

He
will come to
me
this time (she thinks)

The city factory, Votu’s rooftops, are visible now through the window and the disappointment elementals have left without her noticing.

Phryne cups her hands around her mouth and shouts out

Phryne notices a cylindrical whistle, covered in felty oxidation, lying on the sill, so she takes it up and polishes the mouthpiece and replaces the buzzer and cleans the fluff out of it puts it to her lips and blows a great blast interrupted by a sneeze but then immediately renewed, whistling out

Phryne takes up a little mallet, turns to the fantastically heavy and ornate platinum bell that hangs within arm’s reach and rings out

Phryne raises both her hands and, laying them on the petticoats of keys ringing the base of the bell she chimes out

deKlend:

 

deKlend’s mind snaps inside out, hauled backward by something like a tug on a line, and that blasted, heavy feeling is instantly transformed into an equally excessive buoyancy.
He doesn’t float up but backwards, trying to reach the ground with his feet he only succeeds in kicking out his heels and driving himself along faster in the opposite direction.
Sailing over heaps of debris now.
He’s got to flip his aching legs up and around to keep them from colliding with junk

now he’s rolling through the air

the factory closes around him again

pivoting backwards he falls into a crashing

This is interesting (he thinks)

His body dances in space unhurt, breathless, confused, nothing to htink ub t a smack flutrt whoddf df ared df a ared crack

flashing framg etnm fments

the bewildering vertigo turning cartwheel on cartwheel on cartwheel on cartwheel on cartwheel on cartwheel on cartwheel on cartwheel in place as the rubbel th sut the rubble kncocks and bagns whacks thdus thuds

Other books

Hacedor de mundos by Domingo Santos
The Tragic Flaw by Che Parker
The Art Whisperer (An Alix London Mystery) by Charlotte Elkins, Aaron Elkins
Rekindle by Ashley Suzanne, Tiffany Fox, Melissa Gill
Ghouls Gone Wild by Victoria Laurie
A Practical Arrangement by Nadja Notariani
School of Deaths by Christopher Mannino