Authors: Nancy Springer
His door opened, and Volos came in.
“Kid!” With surprise and a jab of dismay Texas discovered who needed who. He felt his eyes prickle with relief. Volos was all rightâand, what was more, Volos had come to him. He wanted to hug this six-foot-six child, this winged stranger.
Volos was not looking at him, but glaring around the room instead. “It is all closed in, like a trap,” he said, appalled. “It is tiny. Even smaller than the other. How can you stand it?”
The angel's lack of greeting gave Texas's eyes and smile a chance to right themselves. “Didn't your mama ever teach you no manners, boy?” he teased.
“Pardon?” Volos looked at him blankly.
The kid didn't understand teasing. Come to think of it, Volos didn't seem to understand joking in general. If they had a sense of humor in heaven, it must have been different than the human sort. “Never mind,” Texas told him. “You want to go outside to talk?”
“No. I will be all right in here for a little while.” Sighing, Volos flipped off his cloak and sat on the bed, his wings half-lifted so that they rested on it behind him, trailing from his shoulders like a sky-blue bridal train.
“How's the wing?”
“Good.”
As Texas could see, it was healing nicely. A few bone-white feathers showed amid the cerulean blue, the ones that had been broken in the fight. If color meant life in Volos's wings, then those feathers had died, but Texas had not wanted to give up on them. He had spent most of an afternoon finding the right glue and mending them, overruling Volos, who had wanted to pluck them out and throw them away.
Texas said, “So what's new? What have you been doing?”
“I have had an erection.”
“A first?”
Volos nodded. “Yes. It felt very good.”
“Congratulations.”
“Thank you.”
“So what's the matter?” Texas could see something was troubling the kid. He looked tired, and physically, Texas now knew, Volos did not get tired. His wings were blue, which meant Volos was blue as well.
The youngster sighed. He said, “I am never satisfied. I wanted more. I thought I was going to do some fucking.”
“You found somebody to help you with that?”
“Yes. But it did not happen.”
“Why not?”
“She wanted to take my wings off.”
“Oh.”
“Then it all went wrong. Texas ⦔ Volos looked down. “I am trying to understand. That first day, when you touched my wings, did something happen to you?”
McCardle found that his mouth had gone dry. He tried not to show it as he said, “I felt something, yeah.”
“Did it hurt?”
“Sort of. No, not exactly. Not then.” Someday, he had a hunch, he would hurt plenty because of this youngster. So what else was new? Life hurt.
“What, then? What did it feel like?”
“I really don't remember, kid.” That was a whopper. Texas shook his head at himself and stood up. “C'mon. Let's go take a walk. I got to mail a letter.”
“Texas.” Volos did not move. “Please. I have to know.”
McCardle stood looking at him a moment, took the one necessary step and laid a hand softly on sleek feathers. It was not that his memory needed help. He would remember the rush of that first touch of an angel's wing when he was in his grave, probably. But the words to describe what he had felt were hard to find.
“Texas?”
He said in a voice gone only slightly husky, “You make me feel young.”
“Young?”
“Never say die. Hero riding into the sunset. Love forever. That sort of thing.”
“Love,” Volos murmured, his tone puzzled. No reaction to the word other than bemusement, Texas noted. Okay, so he had spilled his guts and the kid barely blinked, okay. He should be used to putting himself on the line for people who took it for granted. He was a cop, and a father.
He lifted his hand, stepped back.
“But with those others,” Volos said, “on the street that first night, it was hate. They wanted to kill me.”
“That's a goddamn fact. Nothing I can do about that, kid.” Texas sat down again, looking at Volos.
“And the woman tonightâshe never saw me truly, yet she seemed afraid of me.”
“KidâI don't know what to tell you.”
“I think I see, though.” Volos talked quietly to his long, skilled hands, rubbing at the guitar-string calluses on his fingertips. “The wings manifest. Or magnify. They take everything and make itâmore. You are a good man, andâand touching me only made you better.”
“Whoa,” Texas protested. “I'm no saint.” Since he was away from Wyoma, he had the
Hustler
magazines under the bed to prove it.
“Of course not. A saint is a dead person. You are alive.”
“I mean, it's not that simple.” Texas had known a contract murderer who wept at weddings, a sadistic child abuser who wrote award-winning poetry, a rapist who was the sole and loving support of his aged father. “People aren't like that, just plain good or bad.”
“Tell that to the ruler of heaven and hell.”
Texas heard something very bitter in Volos's voice, and stared at him for a considerable moment before he said, “Tell me something. You should know.” His voice had gone very soft. “Does God really send people to hell?”
“How can I tell?” The angel's eyes flashed up, dark, startling, their color an angry purple. “What you call heaven was hell to me.”
Texas flinched from the look in those eyes, tried to think of something calming to say. No time. Volos talked on, his words a stormwind, rising.
“Eternity is a very long time to sing in a choir, Texas. Think of it. Eons and eons of circling the Throne, chanting âGloria, Gloria, Gloria'â”
“I always heard heaven is what you want it to be.”
“For you humans, perhaps.” Volos said “humans” with venom. “Not for us slaves. You children of God, you think being a servant of God is all basking in the Lordlight, immortal and sinless, but without free will ⦠To be without freedom is to be without a soul. Summoned here, summoned there, prayed to by generation after generation of mortal wretches, called upon, with no way to say no, with no self to hide inâand you think service to humankind is happiness, it makes us sweet, ladylike thingsâ”
“I wouldn't say that,” Texas remarked. “Not now that I know you.”
“But you don't know. Or you don't like to remember. For every angel of mercy there is an angel of punishment. If you ever met Chayylielâ”
“Chayyliel?”
Volos's voice softened as he wearied of vehemence. “My choirmaster. The one who will be allowed to put on beast form in the end days, who will swallow the world in a single gulp. When we sang badly he punished us with whips of flame.”
“Jesus.”
“Yes, I remember Jesus. I knew him, a little. He was another one who obeyed and obeyed and obeyed.”
Texas felt his head start pounding; he was a chopper churning through L.A. smog. He wished he hadn't started this. “I'm sorry,” he mumbled.
“For what?”
“I don't know ⦠for not knowing. I always thought heaven would be what you made it. Like life.”
“No. It's all a sham and a trick and an almighty joke. These wings of mine, are they not laughable? Is it not amusing to see me struggle with them?” Now, speaking of his wings, Volos sounded brattish, though a moment before, speaking of Chayyliel, his voice had crackled with truth. “They get in the way of everything,” he complained of his wings, nearly whining. “Movie seats. Bus rides. Shopping. Dancing. Fucking.”
“Take it easy, big guy.” Texas gladly abandoned theological research. “Fucking will happen. Bound to. Come on, let's walk. Your wings are going apeshit.”
Texas got an envelope out and addressed and stamped it. Before he sealed his letter inside, though, he looked at it awhile, then added one more line:
“P.P.S. Wyoma, are you really pissed? I sure would like to hear from you. Please write.”
chapter five
It was not difficult for Mercedes to track down his angel, and no great sacrifice was required for him to come into the holy presence. All he had to do was pay the cover charge at the Club Decimo, where Volos was headlining.
On the other hand, there was a purgatory to be endured. The place was packed. Mercedes found himself standing in the back of the music hall, jammed disagreeably close to hetero males and their heavily scented dates.
“I hear they done it by surgical implant,” a man with an orange mohawk was saying to his girlfriend. “Took condor wings, something like that, put them on him.”
“That's stupid. They can't do that, not between different species.”
“Sure they can. It's no weirder than the stuff Michael Jackson does to himself.”
His girlfriend looked at him with utmost scorn. “Okay,” she said. “Sure. So, say they did that. You telling me condor wings change colors?”
“Microcircuitry.”
“Nah,” a denim-jacketed man put in, an aging hippie with a gray ponytail. “It's all lights. Special effects. You know, like an illusionist.”
The mohawk and his girlfriend both ignored the ponytail, for they were too involved with detesting each other. When they went home, Mercedes knew, they would fall into each other's arms, slobbering. The mohawk was young, hard, lean and mean in black leather, and the thought that he was going to let her female sloppiness touch his smooth male body disgusted Mercedes almost as much as the unidentified mammaries pressing into his back.
“Dumb,” the girlfriend said.
“Well, what do you think they are, big mouth?”
“I think they're just plain light-up fake wings. The trouble with men is they always want to complicate things.”
The woman was right in a way, Mercedes thought. It was all very simple: The wings were real. Volos was just what he appeared to be. Though his reasoning, founded in his mysticism, was inexpressible, Mercedes Kell felt not a doubt in the world that soon he would meet an angel. The thought caused him excitement but no nervousness, for angelic intervention on his behalf was no more than he needed and deserved.
“Me, I don't care about no wings, man,” the ponytail announced to anyone who would listen. “What I say is, if he can't rock my ass, I'm gonna kick his.”
This, Mercedes sensed, was the mood of the crowd overall. Volos had come out of nowhere, he had shortcut his way to the stage, and no true rock fan really likes a gimmick. There were a lot of people there; they had come to see a freak show, but some of them had brought things to throw. The unfortunate glam rock band that opened for Volos drew only boos. Then there was a long wait before the main act, letting the audience mutter and grow restless, not a good moveâ
The room lights went out.
Not down, but out, hushing the crowd, turning its muttering to a whisper. In blackness like that of the chaos before creation Volos came onstage.
Then a single still, small light dawned, and the dawn had wings.
With his back to the congregation Volos stood, and the spotlight started just at his feathered shoulder blades and slowly spread, as slowly as the wings themselves were lifting and spreading to fill the small stage, shimmering, their color pulsing somewhere between crimson and electric-blue. Then Mercedes couldn't see, there were people craning their necks in front of him, it made him furious, he missed the turn and that first bone-quivering downbeat, but he felt the tremor of the crowd amid the seism of the music and knew he was standing heart-deep in rock-and-roll history. Whether he could see or not, he was a witness: There was revelation in the room.
He caught glimpses of Volos between the heads of annoyingly taller people. Even at this distance, the singer's face gave Mercedes hope for some sort of understanding between the two of them, for it was so beautiful as to be nearly androgynous. And that bodyâVolos was tall, strong, and he carried himself with a huge, half-naked joy. Except for the plain leather guitar strap across one shoulder the guy wore nothing above the waist, nothing at all.
If
he were mine
, Mercedes thought,
I
would dress him in gold armbands, gold chains, topaz pendants the size of his balls
. He shivered in anticipation, for he had heard all the legends of rock star prowess, of groupies laid in the dressing room, the bus, the hotel stairwell, of clusterfucking, of lingam worship, of erections sustained while being cast in plaster.
Volos looked as if he could do all those things. Yet, Mercedes thought, there was something vulnerable in the utter bareness of that exquisitely muscled, hairless chest.
“Great buns,” he heard the woman behind him remark to her friend. “Great everything.” Her voice yearned.
Not for you
, Mercedes thought.
“He's a hunk,” the friend, another woman, agreed. “And he sure does know how to swing his ass. Hey. He even knows how to sing.”
Not for you. Swine, you think the world is going to give you pearls to eat?
Pigs, what were they thinking of? Of course Volos knew how to sing. What angel would not know how to sing? But if these barnyard animals had come to see a winged oddity and had instead witnessed the nascence of a star, it was because of something more. He was a profligate, a prodigal, a huge spender, this Volos. The faces in front of his stage were precious gold to him, and expensive. They were costing him everything he had, and he was giving it unstintingly.
LET ME IN
Tell me where they hid all the flowers
LET ME IN
Where they put the shrouded women
I'll pull those petals open to the stem
I'll probe those blossoms
With a hummingbird tongue
I'll bust wide open that golden cage
Tear down the walls of that holy bower
Let me in
LET ME IN