Barker, Clive – Imajica 01 – The Fifth Dominion. Part 10

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Five miles up the mountainside from the house in which Jude and Dowd were taking their first gasps of Yzordder-rexian air, the Autarch of the Reconciled Dominions sat in one of his watchtowers and surveyed the city he had inspired to such notorious excess. It was three days since his return from the Kwem Palace, and almost every hour somebody—it was usually Rosengarten—had brought news of further acts of civil defiance, some in regions of the Imajica so remote that word of the mutinies had been weeks in coming, some—these more disturbing—barely beyond the palace walls. As he mused he chewed on kreau-chee, a drug to which he’d been addicted for some seventy years. Its side effects were severe and unpredictable for those unused to it. Periods of lethargy alternated with bouts of priapism and psychotic hallucination. Sometimes the fingers and toes swelled to grotesque proportions. But the Autarch’s system had been steeped in kreauchee for so many years the drug no longer assaulted either his physique or his faculties, and he could enjoy its capacity to lift him from dolor without having to endure its discomforts.

Or at least such had been the case until recently. Now, as if in league with the forces that were destroying his dream below, the drug refused to give him relief. He’d demanded a fresh supply while meditating at the place of the Pivot, only to get back to Yzordderrex to find that his procurers in the Scoriae Kesparate had been murdered. Their killers were reputedly members of the Dearth, an order of renegade shammists—worshipers of the Madonna, he’d heard it rumored—who’d been fulmigating revolution for years and had until now presented so little threat to the status quo that he’d let them be for entertainment’s sake. Their pamphlets—a mingling of castration fantasies and bad theology—had made farcical reading, and with their leader Athanasius in prison many of them had retreated to the desert to worship at the margins of the First Dominion, the so-called Erasure, where the solid reality of the Second paled and faded. But Athanasius had escaped his custody and returned to Yzordderrex with fresh calls to arms. His first act of defiance, it seemed, had been the slaughter of the kreauchee pushers. A small deed, but the man was wily enough to know what an inconvenience he’d caused with it. No doubt he was touting it as an act of civil healing, performed in the name of the Madonna.

The Autarch spat out the wad of kreauchee he was chewing and vacated the watchtower, heading off through the monumental labyrinth of the palace towards Quaisoir’s quarters in the hope that she had some small supply he could filch. To left and right of him were corridors so immense no human voice would carry along them, each lined than ever. And if she told him all she knew, pleasurable as that unburdening would be, could she be absolutely certain that he wouldn’t cleave to his history, at the last, and use what he knew against her? What would Clara’s death and Celestine’s suffering have been worth then? She was now their only agent in the living world, and she had no right to gamble with their sacrifices.

“What have you done,” Oscar said, “besides plot? What

have you done?”

“You haven’t been honest with me,” she replied. “Why

should I tell you anything?”

“Because I can still take you to Yzordderrex,” he said.

“Bribes now?”

“Don’t you want to go any longer?”

“I want to know the truth about myself more.”

He looked faintly saddened by this. “Ah.” He sighed.

“I’ve been lying for so long I’m not sure I’d know the truth

if 1 tripped over it. Except..,”

“Yes?”

“What we felt for each other,” he murmured, “at least,

what I feel for you . . . that was true, wasn’t it?”

“It can’t be much,” Jude said. “You locked me away.

You left me to Dowd—” “I’ve already explained—” “Yes, you were distracted. You had other business. So

you forgot me.”

“No,” he protested, “I never forgot. Never, I swear.”

“What then?” “I was afraid.”

“Of me?”

“Of everything. You, Dowd, the Society. I started to see plots everywhere. Suddenly the idea of your being in my bed seemed too much of a risk. I was afraid you’d smother

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