Principles of Angels (45 page)

Read Principles of Angels Online

Authors: Jaine Fenn

 
The world returned in a mad, crazy rush, like sex, like chemicals, like being born. He had a body again.
 
Except it wasn’t his.
 
CHAPTER THIRTY-SIX
 
In the Assembly Hall politicians cower under their benches while the High Speaker lies sprawled on his dais. A lone fragment of consciousness tries to slip back into the Speaker’s inert body, but it’s like trying to flex a deadened limb.
 
I am filled with echoes of other amputated islands of consciousness: one slumped at the head of a table in a boardroom on Silk Street; another on the floor by a bed in an Opera Street penthouse; a third lying in a pool of noodle soup by a bench at the end of Chow Street. All beyond reach now.
 
How can I be all those people?
 
Through half-blind eyes I see hundreds of others who are not part of me:
 
. . . below an ancient tree in the Gardens two strangers fuck like beasts, bodies sliding over each other, desperate that their end should be in ecstasy, not terror . . .
 
. . . outside a Memento Street hotel whose gilt and marble facings are cracked and skewed, a man is trying to pull the body of a child from under a fallen pillar, his cries for help ignored by the few people still standing . . .
 
. . . on Chance Street a riot has evolved, a confused rush of desperate humanity looting and screaming purposelessly . . .
 
. . . on Grace Street isolated groups of people pray together, while others stand transfixed, turning eyes wide with fear to the disintegrating heavens . . .
 
. . . Amnesia Street, the haunt of those already halfway out of reality back when reality was still a viable option, is empty now, save for the occasional prone figure, dead or paralysed . . .
 
How can I be in all these places?
 
Who am I?
 
What am I?
 
I look beyond sight for the answer.
 
Above the Streets the skin that covers me is breaking down. Soon the bubble of warmth that has endured a millennium against the thin air will disperse to the winds. Soon I will lose myself to the void.
 
The deep engines of decay and rebirth have fallen silent: the great breaths that take in foul air and excrete oxygen have faltered, the water that trickles down through filters and back up has dried up, the ingestion of used matter, the molecule-by-molecule conversions that create nourishment or structure from waste - all have stopped now.
 
My thousand-year heartbeat is slowing to nothing . . .
 
I am dying.
 
I do not know who I am, but I know that I am dying.
 
But I cannot die. I am eternal.
 
This must not happen. I must take control.
 
First, the skin that encloses me, and the million minds I watch and protect: I must draw energy from the planet’s core to feed the processes of transformation deep underground. Slowly, slowly, the swirl of energy starts to coalesce, to strengthen. I start to rebuild the forcedome—
 
But something else is wrong. While I am concentrating my efforts on my skin, I realise my very body is tipping off-balance, and if my unimaginable mass comes crashing down—I have to catch myself, stabilise myself, and centre myself, reach down to access the great devices that offset gravity. I must juggle the forces that bind the universe and harness them to my service . . .
 
But while I work on gravity, my control on the forcedome is slipping. The pressure of the gases trying to escape is ripping holes in the damaged fabric of my skin.
 
So many processes, so much to think about: too much. I cannot do this alone.
 

 
I cannot control all this—
 

 
The other presence slips in gently, supporting, augmenting his efforts, taking control of the forcedome, healing the wounds in his skin. He concentrates on the gravitational trickery that keeps the City afloat. It is stable, just. The other presence is here too, underpinning his own efforts, buoying him up in the vortex.
 
Soon he -
they
- start to deal with the myriad other problems. Deep down, the recycling systems start up again: water flows, power surges and the chill air starts to warm.
 
Together they are strong.
 

 
Now, for the first time, he wonders who he was before he was the City.
 

 
Human, like the tiny beings cowering and running about and dying: small, pathetic, insignificant, and yet strangely compelling beings. Could he really be one of them?
 
we
- are not meant to live like this. We still have flesh.>
 
He addresses the unknown presence that is supporting and comforting him. <
But the City still needs us. We
are
the City now, we are in control. In charge.>
 

 

 

 
He looks, though he has no eyes. In a dark limbo, protected by the same presence sharing control of the City with him, a small pearl of life is curled in on itself. As he watches the pearl grows, strengthens.
 
He feels an invasion at the edges of his consciousness: the original mind, feeling its way back? No! This City is theirs now!
 
He starts to resist.
 
The voice is soft and sad. <
You must let him take back what is his, Taro.>
 

 

 

 

 

 

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