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Mercury Falls Part 22

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She grabbed the flower-bird-flame thing and carried it to the center of her linoleum, roughly where she had appeared. Kneeling on the floor, she raised the ambiguous award above her head and brought the point down as hard as she could. BAM! BAM!

The impact shot through her hands and arms. It was like striking concrete.

Inspecting the point of impact, she saw only a tiny divot in the surface of the linoleum, and even that was springing back into shape. After a few seconds there was no evidence of any damage.

She tried again, even harder this time. Once again, the floor refused to budge more than a millimeter, and the brunt of the impact shot through her body. She felt it in her toes.

The third time the award shattered, and a shard nearly sliced open Christine's wrist. Still no damage to her floor was evident.



Christine cursed herself for acquiescing to the installation of Mrs. Frobischer's linoleum in her condo. Poor Mrs. Frobischer; Lucifer's minions had probably killed her to set up this whole linoleum ruse. She had to admit, though, that she was impressed with the linoleum's durability. She would recommend Don's Discount Flooring to anyone who didn't mind the occasional demonic intrusion on their breakfast nook.

She toyed with the idea of leaving the gas open on the oven and hoping for an explosion after all, it had been hours since the last time she had nearly died in an explosion but she suspected that such a plan would result in the incineration of the entire building while leaving her linoleum intact. Besides, she remembered hearing that natural gas was actually quite safe, generally speaking. She would need to rig something to create a spark, something on a timer maybe. She wished that she had watched more movies where this sort of thing was done. She tended to watch a lot of movies featuring Hugh Grant. Had Hugh Grant ever needed to explode a condominium? She thought not.

This was not, she thought ruefully, a job for an English major from Eugene, Oregon, who didn't know a router bit from a Philips screwdriver. Philips! That was it!

It occurred to her that her stove was electric.

She needed to get out of the condo. She needed to find Mercury.

Mercury.

He was her only hope. The world's only hope. He was, ironically, the only one whom she could trust, because he was the only one acting on motivations that she could comprehend. Selfishness she could understand. The abstract impetuses of angels and demons were beyond her. There were no good guys in this story, as far as she could tell. There were only the bad and the incompetent. The closest thing to a good guy was, she grimly realized, Mercury.

She had no idea where he was, or whether he would even want to help her. But if she could convince a pair of demons that she was sent by Lucifer himself to check up on them, maybe she could convince Mercury that it was in his interest to help her put an end to this idiocy. The thought did occur to her that maybe there was nothing Mercury could do, even if he wanted to, but she shoved it back into the far recesses of her mind. One impossible task at a time.

TWENTY-SIX.

There is a good deal of confusion among angels about how the Mundane Plane got its name. A common misconception is that the name arose from the fact that the plane is, to the typical extraplanar visitor, almost unfathomably dull. The relative dullness of the Mundane Plane is, however, only a symptom of a more profound difference, and it is that difference that gave rise to the name.

To best understand this difference, one should consider the fact that over the past few centuries on the Mundane Plane an overwhelming movement has arisen to describe everything that happens there in what is known as "scientific terms." This movement is perplexing to angels, as we are used to dealing with a Universe that is arbitrary, unpredictable, and completely beyond comprehension.

Most occupants of the Mundane Plane labor blissfully under the illusion that the Universe operates according to certain definite and inexorable rules. It is thought that one needs only to ascertain these rules through scientific experimentation, after which one can insist that the Universe continue to act according to these rules from that point on. When the Universe opts not to follow a rule that it has been given, the scientists a.s.sume that the rule is inadequate, not that the Universe is misbehaving.

The situation is rather like that of parents who observe their son doing his homework diligently every night at seven o'clock and decide on this basis to enact a rule that their son should should do his homework every night at seven o'clock. When, on the following three nights, the son does in fact do his homework every night at seven o'clock, the parents congratulate themselves for their excellent parenting and are perhaps invited to speak at a parenting conference in Belgium. do his homework every night at seven o'clock. When, on the following three nights, the son does in fact do his homework every night at seven o'clock, the parents congratulate themselves for their excellent parenting and are perhaps invited to speak at a parenting conference in Belgium.

Then, on the fourth night, the son decides to watch cartoons at 7 o'clock. The parents, thinking themselves powerless to control their son's behavior, modify their rule to allow their son to watch cartoons on Thursdays. If he takes the weekend off, they append their rule with a Weekend Exception. If he starts taking days off apparently at random, they suspend the rule until some PhD candidate in Indiana informs them that their son's homework schedule correlates with the cycle of the moon, or possibly the programming schedule of the Cartoon Network. The PhD candidate is probably wrong, but it makes the parents feel better, and the PhD candidate gets his dissertation published in the Connecticut Journal of Juvenile Homework Studies Connecticut Journal of Juvenile Homework Studies, so everybody is happy.

This goes on until the rules used for predicting the son's homework schedule get so unwieldy that they are thrown out in favor of a far simpler explanation that has fewer holes for example, that the son is simply trying to drive his parents crazy. This is what is known as a paradigm shift.

The amazing thing about this method is that it works works, at least on the Mundane Plane. The Universe, generally an ornery and capricious beast, has for some unfathomable reason allowed itself to be domesticated on the Mundane Plane. For the most part, within the confines of the Mundane Plane, the Universe actually acts in a predictable fashion. Thus it is that Mundane scientists can gradually eke out an understanding of the laws by which their plane operates.

What these scientists don't realize is that the laws which they so painstakingly formulated are themselves completely arbitrary and do not apply to most of the Universe. Most of the Universe doesn't give a d.a.m.n about things like entropy or the conservation of energy. On planes other than the Mundane, the shortest distance between two points might involve a jaunt through an abandoned tire factory, and an object at rest tends to stay at rest until it finds something more interesting to do. Principles that are thought to be ironclad laws on the Mundane Plane are more like general suggestions to the rest of the Universe.

In fact, even on the Mundane Plane the Universe is not completely housebroken. Occasionally, even the Mundane Plane experiences violations of its supposedly inviolable physical laws. These violations are referred to as miracles miracles, and they are the result of a being usually, though not always, an angel manipulating supernatural energy that flows through invisible tunnels that perforate every plane. These tunnels are commonly referred to as interplanar energy channels.

Mundane science does not permit the existence of miracles, because Mundane science has never even been able to establish the existence of the interplanar energy channels an oversight that would be rather embarra.s.sing if anyone on the Mundane Plane had any way of knowing about it. But as science won't admit the existence of anything that hasn't been scientifically proven, it can't ever be held responsible for missing anything. In this way, science is like a judge who is in charge of recusing himself of a case where he feels that he has a conflict of interest.

Anyone familiar with the mysterious workings of the interplanar energy channels, then, would not have been surprised that not a single scientist[9] could be found among the dozens of people who had gathered to see a six-foot-four man with silver hair building a gigantic snowman in a freak snowfall just south of Bakersfield. could be found among the dozens of people who had gathered to see a six-foot-four man with silver hair building a gigantic snowman in a freak snowfall just south of Bakersfield.

Snow angels, it turned out, were not all they were cracked up to be, but Mercury had higher hopes for his snowman. So far it was twelve feet tall, and that was only the bottom sphere. Mercury had started rolling it by hand but was pretty well exhausted by the time it was four feet in diameter. At that point, the s...o...b..ll began miraculously to roll itself. The snowfall itself was, of course, a minor miracle as well. Nearly three feet of snow had fallen in giant heavy flakes over the past two hours in a roughly circular area about a hundred yards across.

This was, to Mercury's knowledge, the first time an angel had personally created anything on the Mundane Plane. The fact that it was in the most ephemeral medium was of no account; he didn't really expect to finish it. He was surprised, in fact, that his casual manipulation of extraplanar energy hadn't already brought the angelic cavalry raining down on him.

Mercury paused a moment in his task and looked skyward. The snow continued to fall, impossibly thick, and the heavens gave no sign of wanting to obliterate him with a pillar of fire. He shrugged and continued to work. Around him, at what they presumably thought was a safe distance, a ring of onlookers stood open-mouthed, agape at the freak snowfall and the absurdly large s...o...b..ll rolling itself in circles along the ground.

"Enjoying yourself?" asked a woman's voice.

Mercury turned to see who it was. Her features were nearly obscured by the thick blanket of flakes drifting down, but there was no mistaking that face.

"Christine!" he yelped, with an enthusiasm that surprised him.

"The world's going to h.e.l.l, and you're making s...o...b..a.l.l.s?" Christine said.

"Snow man man," corrected Mercury. "He's not really ready for prime time yet. How'd you find me?"

"I just started driving north from L.A. When I heard about a freak snowstorm outside of Bakersfield, I figured you were involved. You're cheating, you know."

"How do you figure?"

"You're supposed to roll them by hand. It's no fun if you use magic."

"Miracles."

"Whatever."

"So it turns out that my linoleum installer is in league with Satan."

"Most are," said Mercury. "And don't get me started on the masons."

"Seriously," said Christine. "He's a demon named Malphas. You know him?"

"Doesn't ring a bell," said Mercury.

"Anyway, he's evidently installed a portal from my condo to a place called the Floor. They're planning to send six hundred sixty six demons with bombs through it. They're trying to destroy the world."

"Impossible," said Mercury. "First, the transplanar energy channels aren't right in Glendale. You'd need some kind of ma.s.sive..."

"Earthquake. Or quakes. To reconfigure the energy channels."

"Yeah, and to cause cause an earthquake you'd need..." an earthquake you'd need..."

"The Attache Case of Death, which they apparently have."

"Really? Wow. That's... still, there would be no point. Lucifer can't just go off the reservation and send a horde of demons through a portal with... did you say bombs bombs?"

"I think they called them 'anti-bombs,' whatever that means."

Mercury whistled long and low.

"What? What are 'anti-bombs'?"

"Very short-lived portals. When triggered, they open a rift to an empty plane. The rift creates a ma.s.sive vacuum, sucking everything around it into the other plane. An implosion rather than an explosion. Hence anti anti-bomb. I didn't realize Lucifer had access to them. But as I was saying, Lucifer can't just send his minions through a portal to wreak havoc whenever he wants. There are very clear rules for the Apocalypse. The final battle takes place at Megiddo. That's why it's called Armageddon."

While they talked, a group of young boys, having overcome their initial fear of the giant self-rolling s...o...b..ll, were now playing in the snow nearby. They quickly tired of trying to build a snow fort, the destructive whims of the giant s...o...b..ll making such an endeavor precarious, and they agreed instead to have a s...o...b..ll fight. The boys split into two groups, which headed for opposite ends of the snowfield.

Christine, irritated with Mercury's skepticism, said, "Do you think I'm making this all up? Don that is, Malphas gave me the whole rundown. They're not going through the Megiddo portal. They're going through Glendale. Through my my condo. A surprise attack." condo. A surprise attack."

"But that's suicide," Mercury replied. "The interplanar authorities would never allow it. There's a complex system of checks and balances that prevents things like this from happening. If there weren't, Lucifer would have blown this place up long ago."

The two groups of boys had sent out their advance teams with a supply of s...o...b..a.l.l.s and were now gingerly testing each other's defenses. Christine noticed, in the middle of the escalating fray, one little boy who seemed to have been left out of the negotiations. He sat midway between the two groups, pathetically building something unrecognizable out of snow.

"Oh, and Izbazel is on Lucifer's team after all," Christine said. "They said something about needing to eliminate Karl. But that doesn't make any sense; the Antichrist is supposed to be on their side."

"A Buckminster Fuller fan, I see," said Mercury to the small boy laboring alone in the snow.

"Huh?" the boy grunted.

"He's the wizard of the dome."

The boy looked confused. He had the kind of open-mouthed, squinty eyed face that always looked a little confused, but which really only took its proper shape when it was seized by full-on bewilderment. It was in full bloom now. "It's a ca.s.shole," he said, as if Mercury must be blind not to recognize a ca.s.shole when he saw one. The boy's nose, having evidently noticed the snow, began to drip big globs of snot, as little boys' noses are required to do under such circ.u.mstances.

"And a fine ca.s.shole it is," said Mercury. "None of those pesky vertical walls or turrets to defend. Anyone attacking that ca.s.shole would ride their horses right up one side and down the other looking for a way in. Genius."

The boy, having given up trying to understand anything Mercury was saying, slapped another shapeless glob of snow onto the sloped side of his castle.

As the s...o...b..ll fight escalated, Mercury and Christine stepped back to avoid the crossfire. Christine noticed, though, that the two sides had evidently agreed to leave the snotty little castle-builder alone. The war raged, but the boys were careful to make a wide berth around him.

"Izbazel working for Lucifer," said Mercury. "I figured as much."

Christine said, "If Izbazel is working for Lucifer, why would he want to kill Karl? Karl is on their side. I mean, he's the Antichrist, right?"

"Well," said Mercury. "Ostensibly Karl is on their side. But between you and me, I have a hard time seeing what he brings to the table exactly. He's a liability, if anything."

"An astute observation. What's your point?"

"Well, let's suppose for a moment that if the Antichrist were eliminated by a third party, a supposedly renegade faction of angels...."

"Yes? Then what?"

"Well, conceivably Lucifer could cry foul. He could argue that the renegades were actually taking orders from Heaven. I suppose the plan would be for Izbazel to kill Karl and then turn himself in, claiming that he was acting on orders from Michael."

"Slow down. Lucifer has Izbazel kill Karl, but blames it on Heaven?"

"Right. I mean, that's the obvious a.s.sumption, right? One of h.e.l.l's agents gets killed, you'd a.s.sume that Heaven is to blame. But Heaven can't just kill Karl. Not yet. It's a violation of the Apocalypse Accord."

A sudden shout from one of the s...o...b..ll fighters rang out. "Hey! You hit Timmy!"

The snotty castle builder, who was evidently named Timmy, had the remnants of a s...o...b..ll sliding down his face and neck. His mouth was open wider than before, in the kind of rictus grimace that portended a crying jag for the ages.

"Did not! It was Tyler!"

"It was not, you liar. I saw you!"

As Timmy let loose a horrific scream, soldiers on both sides of the s...o...b..ll conflict indignantly accused the other side of having whacked poor bewildered Timmy with a s...o...b..ll. Yelling gave way to a vigorous volley of s...o...b..a.l.l.s.

"So," Christine said, trying to remain focused on the larger issue. "Lucifer blames Heaven for breaking the terms of the Apocalypse Accord by killing Karl. How does that help him?"

"It gives him..." Mercury started again, struggling to be heard over fracas and Timmy's injured howls. "It gives him an excuse to withdraw from the Accord. As you know, Lucifer got the bad end of that deal. Following the Accord to the letter, Lucifer is bound to be defeated. It's all there in black and white. But if he accuses Heaven of cheating, and then pulls out of the Accord... All the terms of the Accord, which were hammered out over centuries by Heaven and h.e.l.l, are voided. Everything is thrown into disarray. Then, while Heaven is off balance, Lucifer launches a surprise attack, supposedly in retaliation against Heaven's violation of the Accord. If you're right, and there's now a portal between Glendale and one of the planes under Lucifer's control..."

"Trust me, I just traveled through it myself a few hours ago."

"Then Lucifer now has the means to launch a surprise attack on the Mundane Plane, and a legal excuse to do it. Michael's forces would be mobilized at Megiddo, waiting for the hordes of demons to show up. But they never show up, because they're busy smuggling anti-bombs into Glendale. Wow. This could be... wow."

As the s...o...b..ll fight grew more rancorous, Christine's eyes followed a young blond-haired boy who found himself only an arm's length from an enemy combatant a boy who appeared to have at least two years and five inches on him. The smaller boy, having just thrown his last s...o...b..ll, was empty handed, while the larger boy held a s...o...b..ll in each hand. The larger boy grinned and pulled back his right arm to pelt his little blond adversary.

Christine watched as the face of the younger boy telegraphed a complex and fateful series of thoughts all in the instant it took the older boy to aim his s...o...b..ll.

The first thought that occurred to the younger boy was, "Gosh, I wish I I had a s...o...b..ll. But I don't, and if I reach down to make one, I'll get smacked in the head and probably have snow stuffed down the back of my shirt." had a s...o...b..ll. But I don't, and if I reach down to make one, I'll get smacked in the head and probably have snow stuffed down the back of my shirt."

The boy's second thought was along the lines of, "Of course, it wouldn't have have to be a s...o...b..ll. Anything that would smack my opponent in the head hard enough for me to get away would do." to be a s...o...b..ll. Anything that would smack my opponent in the head hard enough for me to get away would do."

This thought was quickly followed up with, "Do I have anything like that? Something like a s...o...b..ll, but maybe a little harder. Something that would work well at close range. Like a rock. But not a rock, because I don't want to crack his skull open and be grounded for a week. Something in between the hardness of a s...o...b..ll and the hardness of a rock. Maybe something hard on the inside, but wrapped in something soft."

Finally, it occurred to the boy that he did indeed have something like that with him. Two of them, in fact. One on the end of each wrist. Bone wrapped in skin. Perfect!

The younger boy's fist popped out at lightning speed, smacking the older boy in the nose. A look of shock came over the older boy's face. He dropped his s...o...b..a.l.l.s and clutched his face as it began to bleed.

The younger boy, realizing that he had transformed the character of the battle from s...o...b..ll fight to something else entirely, turned and ran. The older boy, forgetting about the blood pouring from his nostrils, pursued him with newfound rage. All around Mercury and Christine, boys were now pummeling each other mercilessly with their fists.

"So," Christine said, finding it ever more difficult to concentrate. "This could be really bad. If Lucifer gets away with killing Karl."

"Yes, well," said Mercury thoughtfully. "On the upside, Armageddon is averted."

"And the downside..."

"Something far worse happens."

"So you believe me?"

"The pieces do fit together," admitted Mercury.

Two boys, their faces b.l.o.o.d.y and their limbs intertwined, rolled in between them.

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Mercury Falls Part 22 summary

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