Books of Blood, Volume IV

“It wasn’t me,” he muttered; a child’s defense in the face of any and every accusation.

“Yes it was,” Pope replied with incontestable authority. “Let’s not waste breath with fabrication. You stole from me, and your colleague has paid the price. You can’t undo the harm you’ve done. But you can prevent further harm, if you return to me what’s mine. Now.”

Karney’s hand had strayed to his pocket, without his quite realizing it. He wanted to get out of this trap before it snapped on him. Giving Pope what was, after all, rightfully his was surely the easiest way to do it. His fingers hesitated, however. Why? Because the Methuselah’s eyes were so implacable perhaps; because returning the knots into Pope’s hands gave him total control over the weapon that had, in effect, killed Catso? But more, even now, with sanity at risk, Karney was loath to give back the only fragment of mystery that had ever come his way. Pope, sensing his disinclination, pressed his cajoling into a higher gear.

“Don’t be afraid of me,” he said. “I won’t do you any harm unless you push me to it. I would much prefer that we concluded this matter peacefully. More violence, another death even, would only attract attention.”

Is this a killer I’m looking at? Karney thought; so unkempt, so ridiculously feeble. And yet sound contradicted sight. The seed of command Karney had once heard in Pope’s voice was now in full flower.

“Do you want money?” Pope asked. “Is that it? Would your pride be best appeased if I offered you something for your troubles?” Karney looked incredulously at Pope’s shabbiness. “Oh,” the old man said, “I may not look like a moneyed man, but appearances can be deceptive. In fact, that’s the rule, not the exception. Take yourself, for instance. You don’t look like a dead man, but take it from me, you are as good as dead, boy. I promise you death if you continue to defy me.”

The speech-so measured, so scrupulous-startled Karney, coming as it did from Pope’s lips. Two weeks ago they had caught Pope in his cups-confused and vulnerable-but now, sober, the man spoke like a potentate; a lunatic king, perhaps, going among the hoi polloi as a pauper. King? No, more like priest. Something in the nature of his authority (in his name, even) suggested a man whose power had never been rooted in mere politics.

“Once more,” he said, “I request you to give me what’s mine.”

He took a step toward Karney. The alleyway was a narrow tunnel, pressing down on their heads. If there was sky above them, Pope had blinded it.

“Give me the knots,” he said. His voice was softly reassuring. The darkness had closed in completely. All Karney could see was the man’s mouth: his uneven teeth, his gray tongue. “Give them to me, thief, or suffer the consequences.

“Karney?”

Red’s voice came from another world. It was just a few paces away-the voice, sunlight, wind-but for a long moment Karney struggled to locate it again.

“Karney?”

He dragged his consciousness out from between Pope’s teeth and forced his face around to look at the road. Red was there, standing in the sun, Anelisa at his side. Her blond hair shone.

“What’s going on?”

“Leave us alone,” Pope said. “We’ve got business, he and I.”

“You’ve got business with him?” Red asked of Karney.

Before Karney could reply Pope said: “Tell him. Tell him, Karney, you want to speak to me alone.”

Red threw a glance over Karney’s shoulder toward the old man. “You want to tell me what’s going on?” he said.

Karney’s tongue was laboring to find a response, but failing. The sunlight was so far away; every time a cloud-shadow passed across the street he feared the light would be extinguished permanently. His lips worked silently to express his fear.

“You all right?” Red asked. “Kamey? Can you hear me?”

Karney nodded. The darkness that held him was beginning to lift.

“Yes…” he said.

Suddenly, Pope threw himself at Karney, his hands scrabbling desperately for his pockets. The impact of the attack carried Karney, still in a stupor, back against the wall of the alleyway. He fell sideways against a pile of crates. They, and he, toppled over, and Pope, his grip on Karney too fierce to be dislodged, fell too. All the preceding calm-the gallows humor, the circumspect threats-had evaporated. He was again the idiot derelict, spouting insanities. Karney felt the man’s hands tearing at his clothes and raking his skin in his bid for the knots. The words he was shouting into Karney’s face were no longer comprehensible.

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