Authors: Elizabeth Hand
“No, no,” said Nasrani. He held the door until Hobi stood beside him. Behind them something squeaked and chittered. Hobi looked over his shoulder in time to see a tiny form dart out to seize a bit of tallow. “I'm not angry, my dear. It's just thatâ”
The exile's eyes were immensely sad. “It's just that I come here to forget. About all thatâ”
He shook his hand, indicating the ceiling and what lay beyond, level after level of misery and tumult and twisted steel, humans reduced to living in the ruins of monstrous machines and computers endlessly designing unlivable new habitats. “All that up there. The Holy City; the family curse.” He drew a hand to his face as though he were in pain.
In the doorway Hobi hesitated and looked back. For a moment he glimpsed the room, lit by a single pallid flame. In their cabinets the replicants and androids stood, gazing blindly or else with eyes closed, returned to that terrible dreamless state wherein they would wait forever until someone, came to rouse them. He stared at the nemosyne, her body shimmering blue and rose as the last blue flame leaped and tossed its feeble light upon her frozen smile. Then the flame went out. He heard tiny voices twittering, small feet pattering from the corners, and looked away as Nasrani locked the door.
Outside of Ceryl Waxwing's chambers the nuclear CLOCK clanged twenty. Reive waited to see if this woman would say more. She had already said too much. But Ceryl was silent, her face pale as she stared at the window.
“That's all,” she said at last. She would not look at Reive.
In her chair the gynander nodded and bit her lower lip, her brow creased as she debated how best to answer. Her breath felt heavy inside her; her head spun as she gazed at Ceryl and thought,
She is mad, to have even dreamed of telling this to anyone, she must be crazyâ¦.
But Reive said nothing; only closed her eyes and wished she had brought the little brass case that held her joss sticks and incense burners, anything to gain a little more time, a few more minutes before Ceryl grew tired of waiting for her answer.
The meaning of the dream was clear. Reive had never before heard of a dream so obvious in its portents. Usually she had a little more trouble than the other mantics; just as she looked subtly different from them, so it was more difficult for her to scry the truth behind the mundane fantasies of bored technicians and anxious diplomats. The hermaphrodites had been bred for their sensitivity to the unconscious whims of others, but somehow Reive lacked their insight. She even wondered if she was a true hermaphrodite at all; but of course the physical evidence was unmistakable. It was simply that she had no gift for scrying. Often she just sat there, listening to the tiresome recitative of a nervous aristocrat while a yellow plume of smoke rose from her incense burner. When her patron finally grew silent, waiting for her to interpret the dream, Reive would make something up.
This time that would not be necessary. The back of her neck prickled, excitement burgeoned inside of her like a drug as she realized that this must be what it was like for the others, this certainty that she could read Ceryl's sleeping thoughts like a map. As sure as she knew her name she knew what this dream portended. She took a deep breath and opened her eyes.
“You have dreamed of the holocaust that will destroy Araboth.”
Her voice sounded too deep, hollow as though it boomed up from some great depth. Across from her Ceryl Waxwing blinked.
“It is the dream of Ucalegon the Prince of Storms, and Baratdaja the Healing Wind.” Inside of Reive's head was a pounding that threatened to drown the sound of her own voice. She gasped, “It is growing Outside; it is waiting for the gates to openâ¦.”
Ceryl nodded slowly. Her hands shook as she drew them to her face. “What else?” she whispered.
Eyes wide, the gynander shook her head, unable to speak. The thudding inside her head became a roar. She heard the voice of Zalophus shriekingâ
I hear my sisters calling and the winds gathering for the great storm, I hear the voice of Ucalegon shouting in its sleep
â¦.
The gynander began to shake. Behind her closed eyelids a light pulsed and words whistled through her skullâ
Ucalegon. Baratdaja. Prince of Storms and the Healing Wind. The holocaust that will destroy Araboth.
She recalled the tremor that had shook her room that morning, and a hermaphrodite crying
The domes moved, we saw the walls shake
â¦.
And then once more the voice of the imprisoned leviathan warning her,
“â¦
in the Undercity the rift is widening: soon it will breach the open sea
â¦.”
“Zalophus,” Reive whispered.
He had not been mad. The city was in danger. It was all real, somehow he had sounded the very depths of the Undercity and seen it there; somehow this woman Ceryl had seen it too. It was not
a
dream that haunted Ceryl Waxwing. It was
The Dream,
the Great Portent, the Final Warning that the Orsinate had been searching for so desperately with all their occult games. They had placed all their trust in the Architects, in things that could be measured and quantified and engineered, but the one thing the Architects could not do was dream.
They had thought to keep the world Outside at bay, and had, ever since the Long Night of the First Ascension, when the prairies turned to glass and the sky choked beneath black and frozen rain. After that Araboth had been raised, the Architects set to guard the people who fled the poisoned world Outside the domes. In all those centuries they had never left. The ruling families retreated to the upper levels, where they bred with each other like mad wary spiders. And gradually the world Outside faded to nothing but children's stories, a green monster resurrected each Ãstival Tide and ultimately defeated when once more the Lahatiel Gate clanged shut. An emerald nightmare; the dream of the Green Country.
She saw it now as though it were etched upon her brain. A fissure splitting the Undercity like a wound, prying apart the monstrous colonnades upon which the city rested. Outside, the Green Country overtaking the city. Araboth crushed beneath the wave, a wave like a verdant cape covering the spires and struts and domes of the Holy City.
Reive's eyes flew open. Ceryl cried out at the sudden flash of color in the gynander's masklike face. They stared at each other, neither one daring to speak as they thought the same thing.
Treason. Torture. Execution. Death.
Ceryl spoke first, her voice trembling. “There is no other meaning?” Her tone was without hope.
The gynander shook her head. “No. But this is not the only sign. There have been other things,” she said slowly. “We have seen themâon Virtues Level the ground shook, and we heard a warning, fromâ”
She fell silent, reluctant to speak of Zalophus.
Ceryl nodded. She kneaded the sleeves of her catsuit, her palms leaving damp stains on the fabric. “I have too,” she said hoarsely. “Now that you mention it. A crack in the pavement⦔
Such a tiny thing, it had seemed a few hours ago; now Ceryl stared at the floor of her room, terrified that she would see something there, a rift that would widen until it swallowed them all. She looked at Reive.
“You can't tell anyone,” she said. Her hands tightened as she clenched her arms. Reive said nothing and she went on, desperately, “You know what will happen if you doâthey'll take me, the Reception Committee will come and take me away. This close to Ãstival Tide, they'll give me toâ”
“The Compassionate Redeemer,” Reive said softly.
Ceryl nodded. She looked around her room at the alembics and vials of dried herbs, the weights and measures she used in her work. She could hear the steady crash of waves against the outer domes, a sound that thrummed counterpoint to the panicky beat of her heart. It all seemed tainted now, as though her dream were a sickly odor that had seeped into all her things. When she glanced back at Reive she saw the gynander watching her with wide frightened eyes. A pang shot through Ceryl. A feeling she had not had since Giton died: that there were other people in the world beside herself, and somehow she might be held responsible for them.
She took a deep breath. “I think I'd like for you to come with me. To my chambers on Thrones Level. ItâI think we might be safer there. At least the rooms are larger than here, there would be room for both of us.”
On Thrones they would be closer to the Orsinate, and that was dangerous. But if the city was really threatened with destruction, it seemed they might be safer on the upper levels than here. And there was something to be said for hiding in plain sight. “Will you come with me?”
Reive crouched into her chair, looking more like a child than ever. For a horrible moment Ceryl thought she would refuse. And Ceryl couldn't risk that; couldn't risk letting the gynander return to her own level, where she might betray them both. The thought of killing Reive sickened her; but she would have no choice. She looked at the gynander beseechingly.
Reive lowered her head, drew her hands to her ears. She wished she'd never come here; wished she'd not been so greedy for food and a new patron. But it was done, now.
And Ceryl's quarters
were
on the upper levels. There would be no other hermaphrodites there to snigger at Reive behind her back. She would be well fed, and, if she could trust Ceryl, well cared for. Very slowly, Reive nodded.
Ceryl let her breath out in a long
whoo
of relief. “Good,” she said, and paced to the door. “I think we should go nowâ”
Before you change your mind,
she thoughtâ
“Before it gets any later. I've got everything we'll need up there, the kitchen's full, I've never even spent the nightâ”
She practically dragged Reive after her, the two of them hurrying down the corridor to the gravator that would bring them to the pleasure cabinet's level. It wasn't until they reached Ceryl's chambers and locked the door behind them that Reive realized that she had forgotten the mysid in its globe.
Hobi grew increasingly nervous as they waited for the gravator to arrive in the Undercity and bear them back to the upper levels. His eyes ached, striving to give sharp edges and angles to this shapeless night. Phantom pyramids and cubicles appeared before his eyes, ghostly well-ordered images that begged for substance; but Hobi knew there was only this inchoate blackness, this dank and primal air, this soft
earth
beneath his boots. He shuddered, longing for the cool blues and whites of Cherubim, the sterile and vivifying scents from the air ducts.
“Because of the Architects,” Nasrani was saying. Hobi started. He hadn't been listening; a soft labored sound, like something breathing, had diverted his attention to a heap of rags near the gravator entrance.
“â¦back then they were training me to be the next Architect Imperatorâ”
Hobi looked up in surprise as Nasrani continued, “Before you were born. I had the finest tutors. The Kray Nine Thousand and Natambu Bellairs. I'm the oldest in the family, you know. Ãziz comes next, but she's three years younger and⦔
Hobi nodded, fidgeting. Far above the gravator could barely be discerned, a square of violet light floating down, cables wrapping it like black velvet ropes.
Nasrani continued, “â¦and really she's the least intelligent of all of us. That's why she relies so utterly on the Architects; why for generations they have all enslaved themselves to the Architects. Because they were stupid; because no one had the education or temperament to question the machines.”
“But you did.” Hobi nodded. It seemed the right thing to say.
“That's right. I did. I was researching the western storm system, what the moujiks call Ucalegon. Did you know there was another city here once, before Araboth?”
Hobi shook his head.
“There was. It was called Indianola.”
With a grating noise the gravator finally stopped in front of them. They stepped inside and sat down. Hobi practically groaned with relief as the doors closed and the machine began to rise once more, but Nasrani went on as though nothing had changed.
“We've found evidence that this site was settled nearly a thousand years ago. It was a port then, feeding into the Gulfâ”
“The Gulf?”
“Yes, the Gulf! All that water out there? The
sea?
” Nasrani glared at him. “You've been out at Ãstival Tide?”
Hobi looked offended. “I just never heard anyone call it that.”
Nasrani raised his eyebrows triumphantly. “My point exactly. That's because nobody
knows
anymore. The Architects clean their files periodically and purge them of old data, and then no one remembers the original names of things. But there
was
a city here, quite a large one. Indianola. The Gateway to Texas, they called it. It was a trade center for petroleum and metals and other things. Cattle, in the very beginning when there were farmlands here. A pleasure city for a while. Then a port again, for trade with HORUS and the Commonwealth, before the Long Night destroyed most of the cities and there was no one left to trade with: Then when things were restored somewhat after the Third Ascension, it became a port for the slave trade.”
Hobi tilted his head. “So was this city destroyed by the Commonwealth or the Emirate?”
“It was destroyed by a storm. By several storms. Hurricanes, tidal waves, typhoons. The first timeâthe first time we have recordsâwas in the nineteenth century. Then again in the twentieth, and again in the twenty-first. Each time they rebuilt the city, and each time it was wiped away as though it had never existed. The last time was the worstâby then the storm systems had grown terrificallyâthe weather had mutated like everything else. Afterward the Long Night came before they had a chance to rebuild it. When the Prophets of the Two Faiths finally joined forces a hundred years later, they raised the Quincunx Domes atop the ruins of those earlier cities, and named the new city Araboth. Seventh Heaven.”