Barker, Clive – Imajica 01 – The Fifth Dominion. Part 6

“A little sibling rivalry,” Dowd remarked. “How does it feel being a woman contested over?”

“There’s no contest,” she replied.

“They don’t seem to think so,” he said.

The voices were shouts now, rising to a pitch, then suddenly subdued. One of them went on talking—Oscar, she thought—interrupted by exhortations from the other. Were they bargaining over her, throwing their bids back and forth? She started to think she should intervene. Go back to the chapel and make her allegiance, irrational as it was, quite plain. Better to tell the truth now than let Charlie bargain away his goods and chattels only to discover the prize wasn’t his to have. She turned and began to walk towards the chapel.

“What are you doing?” said Dowd.

“I have to talk to them.”

“Mr. Godolphin told you—”

“I heard him. I have to talk to them.”

Off to her right she saw the voider rise from its haunches, its eyes not on her but on the open door. It sniffed the air, then let out a whistle as plaintive as a whine and started toward the building with a loping, almost bestial, gait. It reached the door before Jude, stepping on its dead brother in its haste to be inside. As she came within a couple of yards of the door she caught the scent that had set it whining. A breeze—too warm for the season and carrying perfumes too strange for this world—came to meet her out of the chapel, and to her horror she realized that history was repeating itself. The train between the Dominions was being boarded inside, and the wind she smelled was blowing along the track from its destination.

“Oscar!” she yelled, stumbling over the body as she threw herself inside.

The travelers were already dispatched. She saw them passing from view like Gentle and Pie ‘oh1 pah, except that the voider, desperate to go with them, was pitching itself into the flux of passage. She might have done the same, but that its error was evident. Caught in the flux, but too late to be taken where the travelers had gone, its whistle became a screech as it was unknitted. Its arms and head, thrust into the knot of power which marked the place of departure, began to turn inside out. Its lower half, untouched by the power, convulsed, its legs scrambling for purchase on the mosaic as it tried to retrieve itself. Too late. She saw its head and torso unveiled, saw the skin of its arms stripped and sucked away.

The power that trapped it quickly died. But it was not so lucky. With its arms still clutching at the world it had perhaps glimpsed as its eyes went from its head, it dropped to the ground, the blue-black stew of its innards spilling across the mosaic. Even then, gutted and blind, its body refused to cease. It thrashed in its coils like the victims of a grand mal.

Dowd stepped past her, approached the passing place cautiously for fear the flux had left an echo, but, finding none, drew a gun from inside his jacket and, eyeing some vulnerable place in the mess at his feet, fired twice. The voider’s throes slowed, then stopped. Sighing heavily, Dowd stepped away from the body and returned to where Jude stood.

“You shouldn’t be here,” he said. “None of this is for your eyes.”

“Why not? I know where they’ve gone.”

“Oh, do you?” he said, raising a quizzical eyebrow. “And where’s that?”

“To the Imajica,” she said, affecting complete familiarity with the notion, though it still astonished her.

He made a tiny smile, though she wasn’t sure whether it was one of acceptance or subtle mockery. He watched her study him, almost basking in her scrutiny, taking it, perhaps, for simple admiration.

“And how do you know about the Imajica?” he inquired.

“Doesn’t everybody?”

“I think you know better than that,” he replied. “Though how much better, I’m not entirely sure.”

She was something of an enigma to him, she suspected, and, as long as she remained so, might hope to keep him friendly.

“Do you think they made it?” she asked.

“Who knows? The voider may have spoilt their passage by trying to tag along. They may not have reached Yzord-derrex.”

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