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

As these thoughts came, the shaking of her head grew wilder, the motion possessing her like a fit. Tears spat from her eyes. Her hands went out for help even as the power to request it went from her throat. Through a blur of motion she was just able to see Dowd standing beside the table, his hand covering his wounded wrist, watching her impassively. She turned from him, terrified that she’d choke on her tongue or break her head open if she fell, and knowing he’d do nothing to help her. She wanted to cry out for Oscar, but all that came was a wretched gargling sound. She stumbled forward, her head still thrashing, and as she did so saw Oscar in the hallway, coming towards her. She pitched her arms in his direction and felt his hands upon her, to pull her up out of her collapse. He failed.

He was beside her when she woke. She wasn’t lying in the narrow bed she’d been consigned to for the last few nights but in the wide four-poster in Oscar’s room, the bed she’d come to think of as theirs. It wasn’t, of course. Its true owner was the man whose image in oils had come back to her in the throes of her fit: the Mad Lord Godolphin, hanging above the pillows on which she lay and sitting beside her in a later variation, caressing her hand and telling her how much he loved her. As soon as she came to consciousness and felt his touch, she withdrew from it.

“I’m. . . not a pet,” she struggled to say. “You can’t just . . . stroke me when . . . it suits you.”

He looked appalled. “I apologize unconditionally,” he said in his gravest manner. “I have no excuse. I let the Society’s business take precedence over understanding you and caring for you. That was unforgivable. Then Dowd, of course, whispering in my ear. . .. Was he very cruel?”

“You’re the one who’s been cruel.”

“I’ve done nothing intentionally. Please believe that, at least.”

“You’ve lied to me over and over again,” she said, struggling to sit up in bed. “You know things about me that I don’t. Why didn’t you share them with me? I’m not a child.”

“You’ve just had a fit,” Oscar said. “Have you ever had a fit before?”

“No.”

“Some things are better left alone, you see.”

“Too late,” she said. “I’ve had my fit, and I survived it. I’m ready to hear the secret, whatever it is.” She glanced up at Joshua. “It’s something to do with him, isn’t it? He’s got a hold on you.”

“Not on me—”

“You liar! You liar!” she said, throwing the sheets aside and getting onto her knees, so that she was face to face with the deceiver. “Why do you tell me you love me one moment and lie to me the next? Why don’t you trust me?”

“I’ve told you more than I’ve ever told anybody. But then I find you’ve plotted against the Society.”

“I’ve done more than plot,” she said, thinking of her journey into the cellars of the tower.

Once again, she teetered on the edge of telling him what she’d seen, but Clara’s advice was there to keep her from falling. You can’t save Celestine and keep his affections, she’d said, you’re digging at the foundations of his family and his faith. It was true. She understood that more clearly

There was a balmy rain falling as they left London the next day, but by the time they’d reached the estate the sun was breaking through, and the parkland gleamed around them as they entered. They didn’t make any detours to the house but headed straight to the copse that concealed the Retreat. There was a breeze in the branches, and they flickered with light leaves. The smell of life was everywhere, stirring her blood for the journey ahead.

Oscar had advised her to dress with an eye to practicality and warmth. The city, he said, was subject to rapid and radical shifts in temperature, depending on the direction of the wind. If it came off the desert, the heat in the streets could bake the flesh like unleavened bread. And if it swung and came off the ocean, it brought marrow-chilling fogs and sudden frosts. None of this daunted her, of course. She was ready for this adventure as for no other in her life.

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Categories: Clive Barker
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