Transcendence (2 page)

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Authors: C. J. Omololu

Tags: #Speculative Fiction

BOOK: Transcendence
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“So now you’re the expert? Your precious guidebook says there are ghosts. Maybe we should bail on this whole Tower thing and do a ghost walk. Now
that
might be cool.”

“Those ghost tours are just a scam.” I was having enough trouble with weird visions coming to me. The last thing I wanted was to go looking for them.

“Why can’t you even let yourself believe for one minute that there are things out there that you don’t understand?” she asks. “Sometimes you have to forget about logic and go with your gut, and my gut says that this place has to be crawling with ghosts. Besides, it’s printed right there, so someone must have checked it out.”

I honestly don’t have an answer for that, so I start toward the entrance, knowing she’ll follow me. Kat can’t stand being alone even for a minute.

Walking through the arch of the outside wall, I pause, trailing my fingers over the rough stone. The old Tudor buildings, the grass, the castle in the middle of the green—as I look from place to place in the compound, I feel a chill that has nothing to do with the wind that whips our faces.

“That tour is just about to start.” I nod toward a red-uniformed guard standing on a small cement block. “Come on. We’ll do the Jewels after.”

Kat’s shoulders fall, but she follows me over to the edge of the stone wall where people are gathering.

“Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Tower of London.” The guard is met with quiet muttering from the crowd, so he tries again, a little louder. “Good morning, ladies and gentlemen.” He cups his ear and leans toward us so that we have no choice but to shout “good morning” like we’re back in fifth grade. I sigh. I never like tours or classes where enthusiastic participation is required.

Kat nudges me. “He’s kind of cute,” she says, grinning.

I look back at the guard, with his largish nose and funny black hat. The wind has given his rough cheeks a pink glow, and he needs a shave. He has to be at least forty, which is old even for her. “Seriously? You just like his uniform. And his accent.” Kat has fallen in love with a British accent attached to a questionable guy at least twice every day since we got here.

“It is my pleasure to be your guide today, and I hope that you will enjoy some of the nine hundred years of history that have taken place within these very walls.” I look past him to the tall glass and steel buildings on the other side of the river. The modern structures seem to diminish the historical effect, reminding us that even here, all that is left of the past is made of stone and wood. The people who have experienced it are all long gone.

After blazing through several hundred years of history in under a minute, the guard directs our attention to Tower Hill, over by the tube station where we’d been just a few minutes before. “Imagine thousands of people standing and cheering as the poor—often innocent—soul gave his last address to the masses.” I nudge Kat and point to the book. She glances at me out of the corner of her eye, but pretends to be absorbed in what he’s saying.

“And when the prisoner was done speaking, he was obliged to tip the executioner a small fee in the hope that the deed would be done swiftly and with a painless chop of the axe. That, of course, has given rise to what we now know”—he pauses dramatically—“as severance pay.” He waits for a response from the group, only to be greeted with a few quiet chuckles. He grins. “And that was my best line.”

Kat laughs out loud, and he smiles at her. “After the prisoner
had put his neck on the block, the axe would come down, and with a great crunching of bone and gushing of blood the deed would be done.” He brings his arm down like an axe chopping off a poor guy’s head while the crowd giggles nervously. “Grabbing hold of that severed head, the executioner would raise it high for all to see and declare, ‘Behold the head of a traitor.’” Everyone in the group winces, and there are a few groans of disgust as he continues. “It’s a pity that most of those beheaded were guilty of no other crime than displeasing the king or queen of the time.” He pauses, and then motions with his arm. “Right. Follow me, then.”

We walk over cobblestones worn smooth from centuries of footsteps until the guard stops in front of a few stone steps that lead down to a big iron gate. “Behind me, please admire the Traitors’ Gate. Through this passage into the Tower of London came many of the poor men and women who were imprisoned between these walls, never to leave again. Both Anne Boleyn and Thomas Cromwell trod up these very steps to await their deaths.”

As he speaks and gestures to the stairs, it suddenly feels like I’m watching from far away; his words grow tinny and faint. I blink to try to pull everything back, but an image pushes itself forward until the guard and the crowd fade away.

Shouts echo against stone and water laps against wood as the narrow boat maneuvers through the gate. Hands reach out to escort us up the slippery stairs, made more dangerous by the darkness that is broken only by torches flickering on the walls. I can smell the fear and panic in the air as we are hurried up the steps and through the tall, stone walls of the Tower
.

“The water,” I say without thinking.

Kat glares, while the guard turns his attention to me. “I’m sorry, miss?”

My heart is still racing and my palms are wet as I look around at the eager faces of the tour group. I
so
didn’t mean to say that out loud. “Um, I was just saying that there was water here. People came through this gate in a boat.”

“Give the young lady a prize for knowing her history,” the guard says as he leans back and points to me. “I was about to say that this was originally called the Water Gate, as the moat that once surrounded the Tower provided for boats to enter the grounds at this very spot. Most of your prisoners did indeed arrive by boat.”

“Guess your book came in handy for something,” Kat whispers to me as the guard moves on to another building and we follow. “Way to impress the tour guide.”

I nod quickly and then glance down at the book. I’ve been through the section on the Tower of London enough times to know that it never talks about the Water Gate.

“You okay?” Kat asks, her eyes intent on my face. “You look funny.”

I run my hand over my forehead and squeeze my eyes closed. “Yeah. I’m fine,” I say quickly. I feel panicky and a little sick to my stomach, but I don’t want to go back to the hotel. I have to prove to myself that this is nothing. That the fact that what I saw in the vision is actually the truth doesn’t mean that I’m seeing ghosts—although a more rational explanation is escaping me at the moment. “Come on, they’re leaving us behind.”

We stand in front of the White Tower as the guard talks about the kings and queens who lived there over the years. As we listen,
it’s easy to imagine people from hundreds of years ago crossing this same courtyard and peering out these same windows, a fact that I’m a little less enthusiastic about than I was just a few minutes ago. I want to get through the rest of this tour seeing old men wearing black socks and sandals with big, bulky cameras hanging around their necks, not anyone dressed in velvet hats and flowing gowns.

Perched on his little cement post, the guard is really revving up now, gesturing at each building as he describes its purpose, and I try hard to concentrate on what he’s saying. “Now that you’ve seen where some of England’s kings and queens lived, follow me and I’ll show you where some of them actually died.”

We follow him to a grassy area with a low iron fence. He stands on a small platform and waits for us to quiet down. “Let me draw your attention to that circular memorial,” he says, pointing to what looks like a mirrored coffee table with a glass pillow on top. “That memorial is placed where the scaffold for the executions of noblemen and women was constructed. Only ten men and women were executed within the walls of the Tower itself. Who they were and why they died I’ll explain to you once we’re inside the Chapel Royal.”

Kat nudges me as everyone else follows the guide inside the entrance to the Chapel. “I’m bored. You ready to be done yet?”

I watch the rest of the tour group file into the stone church. Swallowing hard, I nod my head, feeling a little too fragile to hear gruesome stories of the beheadings that took place on this very spot. I have to get a grip on myself, or the rest of this vacation is going to be ruined.

We slip away from the back of the crowd as Kat checks the map we’d been handed along with our tickets. “On to the Jewels,” she says. I follow her past the glass memorial that looks weirdly modern and out of place among the old buildings and green lawns. People actually died right on the spot where I’m standing, and if there are wayward spirits anywhere in the Tower, they should be here. I don’t feel any of the things I felt outside the tube station—no unexplained emotions, no overwhelming feelings of fear, no graphic images replaying in my head. As an experiment, I put my hand out to touch the metal railing surrounding the memorial, close my eyes, and feel … nothing. I open them again and look around, relieved.

“The line for the Crown Jewels still looks pretty long,” I say, pointing to the snaking rows of people waiting to get into the stone building. I check the time on my phone. “It’s going to be lunchtime soon—maybe we can sneak in when everyone else takes their kids to the café.”

Kat eyes the line and reluctantly agrees with me. “Let’s figure out which is the least boring building.” She reads from the map and points to the big castle in the middle. “That’s the White Tower. It’s where the weapons and armor and stuff is.” She rolls her eyes, and I can tell that we won’t be spending a lot of time there.

I tap the map on the spot where we’re standing. “Let’s start with Beauchamp Tower. It’s right here, and there’s supposed to be some graffiti written on the walls by the prisoners as they were waiting to be executed.”

Centuries-old tagging seems to appeal to her, so we walk up the stairs and into a large stone room with arched doorways and
tiny windows set into the thick walls. I stop by one of the window ledges and peek out through the narrow opening to the paths and grass below, feeling my heart pound like it always does whenever I’m more than a few feet off the ground. I step back from the window and imagine sitting in this very spot, watching life pass by below, knowing that my time left on earth is almost over. It smells musty in the low-ceilinged room, as if centuries of desperation have worked their way into the walls.

Kat peers at the designs that are etched into almost every stone surface. “I wonder what they used to carve them? You think the king was stupid enough to give them knives and let them go at it?”

“I doubt it. See if it says on the display board over there.” I walk slowly around the edges of the room, gazing at the carvings that were done by doomed men so long ago. Some are really elaborate, with images of lions and pleas to God for mercy. Others are just names and dates chiseled roughly into the walls. I end up standing in front of one carving, a simple square filled with words I don’t recognize. I place my hand over the clear Plexiglas that protects all of the carvings and feel a subtle energy flowing from the solid stone. There are feelings of fear and loneliness, but overriding it all is a sense of peace. There’s a tug of connection, and I long to put my skin on the bare stone, to touch the lines that have been carved by another hand centuries before:
For eternity. 1538
.

Kat leans over my shoulder, and I jerk my hand away. I feel guilty, but I have no idea why. “What’s that one?” She looks closer. “
Ad vitam aeternam
? What is that, Latin? At least I can read the date—1538. But it doesn’t say who did it or anything.”

“Um, I don’t know,” I say, my voice shaky.
Ad vitam aeternam—For eternity
. I’ve only seen Latin in a few musical scores, but I know, deep in my heart, that this is what the carving says, as plainly as if it had been written in English.
For eternity
. The words echo through my whole body.

“There sure are a lot of carvings in here,” Kat says, looking back at the map. “It says that there’s a carving done by Lady Jane Grey’s husband just before they were both beheaded. That is
so
romantic. Let’s find that one.”

Kat wanders off in search of her tragic graffiti and I follow her, glancing back at the small, square carving on the wall. It’s one of the least elaborate carvings here—no names, no fancy drawings, just a few mysterious words and a date.

Somehow, it feels like the most important one in the place.

Two
 

“The line for the Jewels is a lot shorter now. Let’s go,” Kat says as we stand near the exit. Walking out, I glance up at the small window that marks the prisoners’ room. I have the nagging feeling that I’m leaving something important behind.
For eternity
. Goose bumps appear on my arms despite the rising temperature.

In fact, the sun is beginning to blaze as we cross the pavement toward the entrance to the Crown Jewels exhibit, and I unzip my jacket for the first time today. Spring has finally shown up—just in time for us to be heading home. The path is wider here, and there are fewer people wandering around. Apparently, hunger calls to most families a lot more strongly than the royal diamonds.

I can see the small line at the entry door, and next to that is a narrow wooden hut with a redcoated soldier standing at attention.
He has on one of those huge fur hats like at Buckingham Palace. As soon as Kat sees him, I know what’s coming next.

“Ooh, take a picture of me with this guy,” she says, unwinding the strap of her camera from her wrist. Most of Kat’s photo collection from this trip consists of her posing with various soldiers and guards at all of the tourist sites in the city.

I back away, waiting for people to pass while she stands in front of the small iron railing near the soldier. “Can you get everything in from there?” she calls, shading her eyes with her hand. “I want the whole thing. I think you need to step back a little ways, otherwise you’re going to cut stuff off.”

I move back a few feet toward the White Tower, knocking hard into someone walking behind me. As he reaches out to steady me, I start to feel dizzy, and it’s like sparks are racing through my body. My ears fill with a rushing noise and the blazing sun is replaced with the cold, gray fog of a winter morning.

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