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"I should be afraid of you," Kosonen said. "You killed people. Before they put you here."
"You don't know what it's like," Esa said. "The plague does everything you want. It gives you things you don't even know you want. It turns the world soft. And sometimes it tears it apart for you. You think a thought, and things break. You can't help it."
The boy closed his eyes. "You want things too. I know you do. That's why you are here, isn't it? You want your precious words back."
Kosonen said nothing.
"Mom's errand boy, vittu vittu. So they fixed your brain, flushed the booze out. So you can write again. Does it feel good? For a moment there I thought you came here for me. But that's not the way it ever worked, was it?"
"I didn't know-"
"I can see the inside of your head, you know," Esa said. "I've got my fingers inside your skull. One thought, and my bugs will eat you, bring you here for good. Quality time forever. What do you say to that?"
And there it was, the old guilt. "We worried about you, every second, after you were born," Kosonen said. "We only wanted the best for you."
It had seemed so natural. How the boy played with his machine that made other machines. How things started changing shape when you thought at them. How Esa smiled when he showed Kosonen the talking starfish that the machine had made.
"And then I had one bad day."
"I remember," Kosonen said. He had been home late, as usual. Esa had been a diamond tree, growing in his room. There were starfish everywhere, eating the walls and the floor, making more of themselves. And that was only the beginning.
"So go ahead. Bring me here. It's your turn to make me into what you want. Or end it all. I deserve it."
Esa laughed softly. "And why would I do that, to an old man?" He sighed. "You know, I'm old too now. Let me show you." He touched Kosonen's shoulder gently and Kosonen was the city. His skin was of stone and concrete, pores full of the G.o.d-plague. The streets and buildings were his face, changing and shifting with every thought and emotion. His nervous system was diamond and optic fiber. His hands were chimera animals.
The firewall was all around him, in the sky and in the cold bedrock, insubstantial but adamantine, squeezing from every side, cutting off energy, making sure he could not think fast. But he could still dream, weave words and images into threads, make worlds out of the memories he had and the memories of the smaller G.o.ds he had eaten to become the city. He sang his dreams in radio waves, not caring if the firewall let them through or not, louder and louder- "Here," Esa said from far away. "Have a beer."
Kosonen felt a chilly bottle in his hand, and drank. The dream-beer was strong and real. The malt taste brought him back. He took a deep breath, letting the fake summer evening wash away the city.
"Is that why you brought me here? To show me that?" he asked.
"Well, no," Esa said, laughing. His stone eyes looked young, suddenly. "I just wanted you to meet my girlfriend."
The quantum girl had golden hair and eyes of light. She wore many faces at once, like a Hindu G.o.ddess. She walked to the pier with dainty steps. Esa's summerland showed its cracks around her: there were fracture lines in her skin, with otherworldly colors peeking out.
"This is Sade," Esa said.
She looked at Kosonen, and spoke, a bubble of words, a superposition, all possible greetings at once.
"Nice to meet you," Kosonen said.
"They did something right when they made her, up there," said Esa. "She lives in many worlds at once, thinks in qubits. And this is the world where she wants to be. With me." He touched her shoulder gently. "She heard my songs and ran away."
"Marja said she fell," Kosonen said. "That something was broken."
"She said what they wanted her to say. They don't like it when things don't go according to plan."
Sade made a sound, like the chime of a gla.s.s bell.
"The firewall keeps squeezing us," Esa said. "That's how it was made. Make things go slower and slower here, until we die. Sade doesn't fit in here, this place is too small. So you will take her back home, before it's too late." He smiled. "I'd rather you do it than anyone else."
"That's not fair,"Kosonen said. He squinted at Sade. She was too bright to look at. But what can I do? I'm just a slab of meat. Meat and words. But what can I do? I'm just a slab of meat. Meat and words.
The thought was like a pine cone, rough in his grip, but with a seed of something in it.
"I think there is a poem in you two," he said.
Kosonen sat on the train again, watching the city stream past. It was early morning. The sunrise gave the city new hues: purple shadows and gold, ember colors. Fatigue pulsed in his temples. His body ached. The words of a poem weighed on his mind.
Above the dome of the firewall he could see a giant diamond starfish, a drone of the sky people, watching, like an outstretched hand.
They came to see what happened, he thought. he thought. They'll find out. They'll find out.
This time, he embraced the firewall like a friend, and its tingling brightness washed over him. And deep within, the stern-voiced watchman came again. It said nothing this time, but he could feel its presence, scrutinizing, seeking things that did not belong in the outside world.
Kosonen gave it everything.
The first moment when he knew he had put something real on paper. The disappointment when he realized that a poet was not much in a small country, piles of cheaply printed copies of his first collection, gathering dust in little bookshops. The jealousy he had felt when Marja gave birth to Esa, what a pale shadow of that giving birth to words was. The tracks of the elk in the snow and the look in its eyes when it died.
He felt the watchman step aside, satisfied.
Then he was through. The train emerged into the real, undiluted dawn. He looked back at the city, and saw fire raining from the starfish. Pillars of light cut through the city in geometric patterns, too bright to look at, leaving only white-hot plasma in their wake.
Kosonen closed his eyes and held on to the poem as the city burned.
Kosonen planted the nanoseed in the woods. He dug a deep hole in the half-frozen peat with his bare hands, under an old tree stump. He sat down, took off his cap, dug out his notebook and started reading. The pencil-scrawled words became bright in his mind, and after a while he didn't need to look at them anymore.
The poem rose from the words like a t.i.tanic creature from an ocean, first showing just a small extremity but then soaring upwards in a spray of glossolalia, mountain-like. It was a stream of hissing words and phonemes, an endless spell that tore at his throat. And with it came the quantum information from the microtubules of his neurons, where the bright-eyed girl now lived, and jagged impulses from synapses where his son was hiding.
The poem swelled into a roar. He continued until his voice was a hiss. Only the nanoseed could hear, but that was enough. Something stirred under the peat.
When the poem finally ended, it was evening. Kosonen opened his eyes. The first thing he saw were the sapphire antlers, sparkling in the last rays of the sun.
Two young elk looked at him. One was smaller, more delicate, and its large brown eyes held a hint of sunlight. The other was young and skinny, but wore its budding antlers with pride. It held Kosonen's gaze, and in its eyes he saw shadows of the city. Or reflections in a summer lake, perhaps.
They turned around and ran into the woods, silent, fleet-footed and free.
Kosonen was opening the cellar door when the rain came back. It was barely a shower this time: the droplets formed Marja's face in the air. For a moment he thought he saw her wink. Then the rain became a mist, and was gone. He propped the door open.
The squirrels stared at him curiously from the trees.
"All yours, gentlemen," Kosonen said. "Should be enough for next winter. I don't need it anymore."
Otso and Kosonen left at noon, heading north. Kosonen's skis slid along easily in the thinning snow. The bear pulled a sledge loaded with equipment. When they were well away from the cabin, it stopped to sniff at a fresh trail.
"Elk," it growled. "Otso is hungry. Kosonen shoot an elk. Need meat for the journey. Kosonen did not bring enough booze."
Kosonen shook his head.
"I think I'm going to learn to fish," he said.
THE TRUTH IS A CAVE IN THE BLACK MOUNTAINS.
NEIL GAIMAN.
Neil Gaiman was born in England and worked as a freelance journalist before co-editing Ghastly Beyond Belief Ghastly Beyond Belief (with Kim Newman) and writing (with Kim Newman) and writing Don't Panic: The Official Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy Companion Don't Panic: The Official Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy Companion. He started writing graphic novels and comics with Violent Cases Violent Cases in 1987, and with the seventy-five installments of award-winning series in 1987, and with the seventy-five installments of award-winning series The Sandman The Sandman established himself as one of the most important comics writers of his generation. His first novel, established himself as one of the most important comics writers of his generation. His first novel, Good Omens Good Omens (with Terry Pratchett),appeared in 1991, followed by (with Terry Pratchett),appeared in 1991, followed by Neverwhere Neverwhere, Stardust Stardust, American G.o.ds American G.o.ds, Coraline, Coraline, and and Anansi Boys Anansi Boys. His most recent novel is The Graveyard Book The Graveyard Book. Gaiman's work has won the Caldecott, Newbery, Hugo, World Fantasy, Bram Stoker, Locus, Geffen, International Horror Guild, Mythopoeic, and Will Eisner Comic Industry awards. Gaiman currently lives near Minneapolis.
You ask me if I can forgive myself? I can forgive myself for many things. For where I left him. For what I did. But I will not forgive myself for the year that I hated my daughter, when I believed her to have run away, perhaps to the city. During that year I forbade her name to be mentioned, and if her name entered my prayers when I prayed, it was to ask that she would one day learn the meaning of what she had done, of the dishonor that she had brought to our family, of the red that ringed her mother's eyes.
I hate myself for that, and nothing will ease that, not even what happened that night, on the side of the mountain.
I had searched for nearly ten years, although the trail was cold. I would say that I found him by accident, but I do not believe in accidents. If you walk the path, eventually you must arrive at the cave.
But that was later. First, there was the valley on the mainland, the whitewashed house in the gentle meadow with the burn splashing through it, a house that sat like a square of white sky against the green of the gra.s.s and the heather just beginning to purple.
And there was a boy outside the house, picking wool from off a thorn-bush. He did not see me approaching, and he did not look up until I said, "I used to do that. Gather the wool from the thorn-bushes and twigs. My mother would wash it, then she would make me things with it. A ball, and a doll."
He turned. He looked shocked, as if I had appeared out of nowhere. And I had not. I had walked many a mile, and had many more miles to go. I said, "I walk quietly. Is this the house of Calum MacInnes?"
The boy nodded, drew himself up to his full height, which was perhaps two fingers bigger than mine, and he said, "I am Calum MacInnes."
"Is there another of that name? For the Calum MacInnes that I seek is a grown man."
The boy said nothing, just unknotted a thick clump of sheep's wool from the clutching fingers of the thorn-bush. I said, "Your father, perhaps? Would he be Calum MacInnes as well?"
The boy was peering at me. "What are you?" he asked.
"I am a small man," I told him. "But I am a man, nonetheless, and I am here to see Calum MacInnes."
"Why?" The boy hesitated. Then, "And why are you so small?"
I said, "Because I have something to ask your father. Man's business." And I saw a smile start at the tips of his lips. "It's not a bad thing to be small, young Calum. There was a night when the Campbells came knocking on my door, a whole troop of them, twelve men with knives and sticks, and they demanded of my wife, Morag, that she produce me, as they were there to kill me, in revenge for some imagined slight. And she said, 'Young Johnnie, run down to the far meadow, and tell your father to come back to the house, that I sent for him.' And the Campbells watched as the boy ran out the door. They knew that I was a most dangerous person. But n.o.body had told them that I was a wee man, or if that had been told them, it had not been believed."
"Did the boy call you?" said the lad.
"It was no boy," I told him, "but me myself, it was. And they'd had me, and still I walked out the door and through their fingers."
The boy laughed. Then he said, "Why were the Campbells after you?"
"It was a disagreement about the ownership of cattle. They thought the cows were theirs. I maintained the Campbell's ownership of them had ended the first night the cows had come with me over the hills."
"Wait here," said young Calum MacInnes I sat by the burn and looked up at the house. It was a good-sized house: I would have taken it for the house of a doctor or a man of law, not of a border reaver. There were pebbles on the ground and I made a pile of them, and I tossed the pebbles, one by one into the burn. I have a good eye, and I enjoyed rattling the pebbles over the meadow and into the water. I had thrown a hundred stones when the boy returned, accompanied by a tall, loping man. His hair was streaked with gray, his face was long and wolfish. There are no wolves in those hills, not any longer, and the bears have gone too.
"Good day to you," I said.
He said nothing in return, only stared; I am used to stares. I said,"I am seeking Calum MacInnes. If you are he, say so, I will greet you. If you are not he, tell me now, and I will be on my way."
"What business would you have with Calum MacInnes?"
"I wish to hire him, as a guide."
"And where is it you would wish to be taken?"
I stared at him. "That is hard to say," I told him. "For there are some who say it does not exist. There is a certain cave on the Misty Isle."
He said nothing. Then he said, "Calum, go back to the house."
"But da-"
"Tell your mother I said she was to give you some tablet. You like that. Go on."
Expressions crossed the boy's face-puzzlement, hunger, happiness-and then he turned and ran back to the white house.
Calum MacInnes said, "Who sent you here?"
I pointed to the burn as it splashed its way between us on its journey down the hill. "What's that?" I asked.
"Water," he replied.
"And they say there is a king across it," I told him.
I did not know him then at all, and never knew him well, but his eyes became guarded, and his head c.o.c.ked to one side. "How do I know you are who you say you are?"
"I have claimed nothing,"I said."Just that there are those who have heard there is a cave on the Misty Isle, and that you might know the way."
He said, "I will not tell you where the cave is."
"I am not here asking for directions. I seek a guide. And two travel more safely than one."
He looked me up and down, and I waited for the joke about my size, but he did not make it, and for that I was grateful. He just said, "When we reach the cave, I will not go inside. You must bring out the gold yourself."