Read The Slanted Worlds Online
Authors: Catherine Fisher
“You're not crying, are you?” the bird said. Its head tipped, sidelong.
“No,” she lied. “Look . . . I have to take this. It belonged to meâI gave it to Summer . . .”
“Oh, don't say her name.” The bird seemed to shrink; at once it was tiny, a shiny miniature. “She'll hear!”
“Now I'm taking it back. It's vital. I can't explain why. But . . .”
“Are you one of the Venns?”
She didn't know what was best to say, so she nodded.
The bird whirled on its axis with an agitated rattle. Then it grew, just a little, and said, “I've seen him, you know, Oisin Venn. A handsome man. She torments him wonderfully.”
“It's not Oisin anymore. Now it's Oberon.”
The bird made a shrug in its depths. “Oberon, Oliver, Oscar. All the same. To her, that is. She's like the weather and the earth. Ageless and pitiless. Come closer.”
Sarah approached, pulling the chain around her neck. “Look, I've got to . . .”
“She did this to me.” The bird fixed her with its bead of an eye, and she thought that deep down inside it, there was a spark, like a flame. “Imprisoned me in here. Turned me into this contraption of twigs and feathers.”
“Why?”
“Disobeyed her once. There was a place in the Woodâa trap. It looked just like any other piece of grass. But if a mortal stepped on it, they'd be stuck there while time went by without them. A step that would last a hundred years. Her idea of a joke. So everyone waited for one to come along.”
Despite her fear, Sarah was interested.
“Everyone except you.”
“I . . . well.” The bird preened. “Sort of felt . . . mischievous. I wanted to annoy her. The mortal was a real yokelâspade over his shoulder, right off the fields. The Shee were all clustered round like flies. So I warned him off. Whispered in his ear. You should have seen him run!”
It gave a soft, sad whistle. “Then she found out.”
Sarah said, “I'm sorry for you. But I have to go.”
“With that?” the bird gave a cheep of scorn. “You'd never get out of the room. Unless . . .”
“What?” But she already knew what.
“Take me with you. Put the box in your pocket. I'll guide you all the way out of the Summerland. Refuse, and I SCREECH NOW.”
Sarah almost laughed. The pompous pride of the tiny thing was almost funny.
Then, outside, there was a crash. She whirled. “What's that?”
“Nothing good, be sure.”
She decided. The mirror's destruction depended on it. Without a moment's hesitation she grabbed the box and slid it into her pocket, and even as she turned, the door opened.
There was no door out. Even the one they had come through was gone. There was nothing except the repeated surfaces of the obsidian mirrors, all identical and all, Wharton thought, illusions. He said, “She's trapped us here. If we step through any of these, without a bracelet . . .”
“It doesn't matter.” Gideon was gloomy. “We won't be going anywhere. All this is in the Summerland, and that goes on forever.”
Ignoring the paradox, Wharton stared at himself. Really, he thought, he was getting a touch overweight. He said, “What do you think?”
Venn frowned. He went up to the nearest mirror and put his hands on it. It was black and solid. “We're so used to going through mirrors,” he said, “that we've forgotten what they're really for.” He stared into his own wintry eyes. “They show us what we think is real. But it isn't. Nothing is real.”
He opened his fingers.
And to Wharton's astonishment the wall of black glass held the tiniest point of light, diamond bright. As he watched, it grew, as if it zoomed toward them, became a circle, then a square, then filled the mirror and was a window down onto some peculiar street, narrow, sun-slanted and cobbled.
As they watched, it closed again.
“Was that real?” Wharton said, fascinated.
Venn had stepped back, every sense alert.
“Possibly. In some other time. Or it might be a trap set for us by Summer, because I'm beginning to think she knows we're here.”
Wharton didn't like the sound of that. “There's nowhere to go.”
“Maybe.” Venn turned suddenly to Gideon. “You. Tell me. Why did you bring Sarah here?”
Gideon's green gaze flickered. “She begged me. I . . .”
“Felt sorry for her?” Venn advanced on him. “I don't think so.”
Gideon stared back, fierce. “We made a deal. She told me that she would help me.”
“How can . . .”
“She said that in her time
there were no Shee
.”
The words seemed to spill like a whispered wonder into the room. Gideon clenched his fists, hugged himself, as if he had said something terrible, something fascinating, that should never have been spoken.
Venn too, Wharton saw, was both astonished and intrigued. He stepped forward and lifted a hand, but as Wharton jerked forward in alarm, Venn's fingers stopped inches from Gideon's white glare. “No more,” he breathed. “Don't talk of that here. Summer will hear.”
He paced, restless, furiously watching his own reflections pace with him. All, Wharton noticed with a sudden chill, except one.
Because there was one mirror that held no Venn, that held nothing but darkness.
Wharton looked at it. Sidled closer.
Venn turned. “I'll smash every panel in this place if I have to. There must be a way out!”
Wharton reached out. The mirror was black, but not glass. It was a door painted dark as midnight, and there was a tiny handle recessed into it, and he reached out and turned it, and it opened.
Gideon yelled, “No!”
Venn turned and lunged at the door.
But Wharton was gone. All he saw was his own face in the mocking glass.
Progress report: ALICIA HARCOURT SYMMES
Subject observed continually. Seems to meet co-conspirators only at alleged séances. Information likely to be passed here.
Subject may be aware of surveillance. Yesterday she left the house and winked at this officer.
ALLENBY Covert Operations
T
HE ROOM WAS
set up as a crude laboratory. Alembics stood on the bench; a rack of bizarre glass retorts bubbled and spat. A skull watched them with empty eyes.
David crossed quickly to a small cupboard in the wall and unlocked it. He took out a tiny vial. “This is it.”
He brought it over. “I've been trying to isolate an antibiotic. It's crude, unrefined. But it might work, Jake, it might save a few lives.”
The vial was filled with a grainy substance, amber as honey.
A noise somewhere in the building startled them. They froze, listened to footsteps running up the stair outside. The baby made a small snuggling motion against Rebecca's warmth. The footsteps came close, passed the door. Then they pattered on up and died into the distance.
Jake breathed out. “Right.” He undid the bracelet from his own arm and slid it onto Rebecca's wrist, clicking it shut.
“What?” She stared in alarm. “But we're all going together, aren't we?”
“Of course we are. But this is just in case.”
For a moment she stared at him in dread, the possibilities of being lost in the endlessness of time reeling out before her. Then he turned her to the mirror.
“What do you use to operate this, Dad? There are no controls . . .”
“I've learned a few things about the mirror.” David came toward the silver frame. “All that electrical input, you don't even need it. These letters here, these words. They're enough if you know how to use them. You put your hands here. And here. Sometimes I think it reads your DNA. But”âhe shook his head, stepping away in dismayâ“for God's sake Jake, every time I've tried I've gone further back! What if we all end up in some prehistoric swamp? What if . . .”
“We won't.” Before his father could object, he moved, grabbing Becky and pulling her close. “Do as he says.”
She touched the silver frame.
Under her fingers she felt it tremble, felt it sense the bracelet she wore, the terror she felt. She felt it waken and become interested in her.
“Jake.”
Jake grabbed David. “Now us, Dad.”
The mirror hummed. It shuddered. The air in the room gathered itself up.
But what burst open, with an abrupt, shocking crash, was the door. The guards leaped inside, halberds at the ready. Behind, striding tall in his robe of damask, the condottiere of the palazzo entered and stared.
The mirror throbbed.
It opened like a sudden vacancy in the world and took Rebecca and Lorenzo into a sudden roaring gust of emptiness.
The guards fell to their knees, speechless with terror. A halberd clattered. All the retorts on the bench shattered; Jake was flung sideways, and in the seconds it took him to stumble up and get his breath back, the signore had a knife at his throat and one strong arm tight strangling around his neck.
He saw his father stop in midstride, fling up his arms, yell, “Signore!
No!
”
Jake gasped for air. His hands clutched at the warlord's arm, but it was firm as steel, and the man's voice was contorted with anger and fear.
“What sort of filthy devilry have you brought into my house, dottore?”
The very last ghost I ever saw was in January 1941.
I really should have given up by then, but even though I was an old woman, I could not stop hoping. My father had been so sure they would comeâDavid or his son Jake, or their mysterious and rather thrilling-sounding friend Mr. Oberon Venn.
I had taken to keeping the mirror covered, and all those years it had been a silent presence in my room. It had never shown me anyone again but for my own sadly ageing face. Perhaps I had begun to wonder if David had ever existed. My father died, the world changed, another world war loomed over us. Food was rationed, London cowered under the Blitz.
And then, on a cold spring morning when the daffodils in the square were splitting their papery yellow buds, Janus came back.
I had long since ceased to be able to afford a maid. I had become a dusty old woman, gray and lined, but still my spirit was high. I was happy with my séances, which had become strangely popular, and my tea parties and my dear friends from the Psychic Society.
So when I entered the study that morning, the fire was unlit and the blackout curtains drawn. I opened them myself, letting them rattle in their great rings, and was gazing sleepily out into the street when he said behind me, “Hello again, Alicia.”
I turned, my heart thumping.
He had not changed by even the growth of a hair. Small and uniformed, his hair lank, his glasses blue discs, he stood on my hearthrug and smiled that twisted smile that had no warmth.
“You!” I gasped. Not my most original retort, I admit, but I was so shocked to see him out of the mirror. It leaned behind him. One of my china dogs lay smashed on the tiles of the grate.
“I hope you don't mind me appropriating your parlor.” He waved a small hand. “I intend to meet someone here.”
I stared, astonished.
“In fact, they should be here any moment now.”
“Is it David?” I confess my voice quavered.
He smiled. “Ah yes. You have wasted all your life waiting for David. How pitiful a thing that is.”
Now, I take pity from no one. I rose, drew myself to my full height, and said, “My dear sir, I have waited for anyone who would come from the Other Side. My father and I spent many years contemplating our next visitor. And be assured, we did not waste our time.”
And with what I hope was a suitably grandiloquent gesture, I put my hand up and tugged at the lever hidden discreetly behind the curtains.
The concertinaed cage crashed down from the ceiling.
Electric wiring crackled on.
Janus stood startled and unmoving in the trap that for years had been awaiting him.
To say I felt satisfied would be too inadequate a word. I really felt rather gleeful. I turned, sat demurely upon my sofa, folded my hands, and contemplated my handiwork. A tyrant from the end of time was my prisoner. It was really rather gratifying.
Janus said nothing. He reached out curiously as if to touch the steel bars but I said quickly, “I would not wish you to harm yourself. There is a charge of twenty-five volts throbbing through that metal as we speak, enough to give you quite a nasty shock. My dear papa designed the whole apparatus.”
“Did he now.” Janus nodded, folding his arms. He looked at the mirror, safely beyond his reach. “My dear lady, I congratulate you. I really do.”
“I'm only sorry you have no chair in there. I have no wish to make you uncomfortable.”
He gazed out at me. The blue lenses of his glasses hid his eyes, and that made him so difficult to read. But with dismay I became aware that he was not as devastated as I had hoped.
So I said, “I am quite aware that you are using my séances as a cover for some fiendish device to trap me. Your men are continually watching my house. Really, it's ridiculous.”
He looked amused. “My men? You really don't understand anything, do you?”
I looked smug. “I have hidden all the evidence about my father's device in a safe place. You will never find it.”
He shook his head. Then he said in a voice as silky as poison, “Alicia, you are perhaps the most foolish old woman I have ever met.”
I bristled. “Well, I'm not the one in the cage,” I snapped.
“Ah yes. The cage. So may I ask what you intend to do with me?” he asked softly.
In truth, I had no idea. We had expected David, or Jake. We had expected to be able to demand the bracelet in exchange for their release. But I merely shrugged. “I have my plans,” I said, deadpan.
His smile was fixed. “Indeed. Well, so do I, madam. And here they come.”
The mirror hummed. I leaped to my feet and stood well back, hastily grabbing the remaining china dog and hugging it to my bosom.
The whole room seemed to collapse. A terrifying vacuum opened deep in the heart of the mirror.
My hair was torn from its pins, my skirts snatched and whirled, my very soul enticed. And I saw, for one appalling second, the blackness that lies at the heart of the universe.
Maskelyne turned the pages of Sarah's diary with his long fingers, reading silently. Behind him, Piers fidgeted impatiently against the table. “So you see? She's been in contact with Janus all this time! And it says
children
. What children? Those replicants?”
“Almost certainly.”
“Well, we know what to do about that.” Piers fished a great bunch of keys out of his striped waistcoat and hurried to a small wall safe. Opening it, he brought out a cellophane-covered package and carried it carefully back. Maskelyne, hearing the rustle of the plastic being unwrapped, looked up.
Piers was holding the glass gun that could kill replicants.
“That's mine,” Maskelyne said at once. He put the book down and took the weapon firmly from the little man's nervous grip. “Don't handle it unless you need to. It's a very dangerous thing.”
Piers made an odd grimace. “Don't want to. It makes my skin itch.” He sidled closer, watching Maskelyne check the weapon, slide open a panel in it, adjust a small glowing dial in there. “Is it still working?”
“Yes.”
Piers shivered. “Good. Because something tells me we're going to need it.”
Outside, the crack and slither of earth seemed to shudder through the damp walls.
Maskelyne placed the gun carefully on the table. “Listen to me, Piers. From what Sarah writes here, these replicants have appeared to Jake. Been targeting Jake, I would say. Janus has been implanting prophecies in his earâonly too easy to do, if you come from the far future.”
Piers crowded closer. “What prophesies?”
“The
Black Fox will release you
was the first. That came true. Then
The Man with the Eyes of a Crow.
”
He frowned. “Given the dates on the mirror, I have an idea what that may be. But what is this
Box of Red Brocade?
It contains something vital, that's clear. Something Janus wants and can't get, so he needs Sarah to get it for him. Therefore something she desires.” He looked up.
Piers stared back, eyes wide. “The Zeus coin! Yes, but Janus can reach anywhere in time. If he knows where it is, why not get it himself and . . .”
Maskelyne began pacing, a lean, dark figure in the gloomy lab, lifting a hand. “Stop talking, and just think about it. The coinâif reassembledâwill destroy the mirror. Janus doesn't want that, so he needs to keep the two pieces safe and apart. Who knows, maybe he's got the left side himself. The box must hold the right half of the coin, the piece Sarah gave to Summer. That must mean it's in the only place, the only dimension Janus cannot access.
And it needs to stay there.
”
They looked at each other across the malachite labyrinth.
“The Summerland,” Piers said gloomy.
“The Summerland.” Maskelyne stood in front of the mirror, gazing at its blackness. “That's where it is. That's where it's safe. If Sarah brings it out . . . that's exactly what Janus wants.”
For a moment they were silent. Then Piers said, “What about you. You don't want that either.”
“No. I don't.” Maskelyne put the gun on the table and they stared at each other over it.
“Venn needs to know,” he said.