The Damnation Game by Clive Barker. Part three. Chapter 6

“I’ll tell you sometime,” she said. “Now we should get that damn gun.”

They threaded their way through the house. It was absolutely still. No bloody footsteps, no cries. He fetched the gun from his room.

“Now for Papa,” he said. “Check that he’s all right.”

With the dog-killer still loose the search was stealthy, and therefore slow. Whitehead wasn’t in any of the bedrooms, or his dressing rooms. The bathrooms, the library, the study and the lounges were similarly deserted. It was Carys who suggested the sauna.

Marty flung the door of the steam room open. A wall of humid heat met his face, and steam curled out into the hallway. The place had certainly been used recently. But the steam room, the Jacuzzi and solarium were all empty. When he’d made a quick search of the rooms he came back to find Carys leaning unsteadily on the doorjamb.

“. . . I suddenly feel sick,” she said. “It just came over me.”

Marty supported her as her legs gave.

“Sit down for a minute.” He guided her across to a bench. There was a gun on it, sweating.

“I’m all right,” she insisted. “You go and find Papa, I’ll stay here.”

“You look bloody awful.”

“Thank you,” she said. “Now will you please go? I’d prefer to throw up with nobody watching, if you don’t mind.”

“You sure?”

“Go on, damn you. Leave me be. I’ll be fine.”

“Lock the door after me,” he stressed.

“Yes, sir,” she said, throwing him a queasy look. He left her in the steam room, and waited until he heard the bolt drawn across. It didn’t completely reassure him, but it was better than nothing.

He cautiously made his way back into the vestibule, and decided to take a quick look around the front of the house. The lawn lights were on, and if the old man were there he’d soon be picked out. That made Marty an easy target too, of course, but at least he was armed. He unlocked the front door and stepped out onto the gravel. The floodlights poured unflinching illumination down. It was whiter than sunlight, but curiously dead. He scanned the lawn to right and left. There was no sign of the old man.

Behind him, in the hallway, Breer watched the hero stride out in search of his master. Only when he was well out of sight did the Razor-Eater slouch out of hiding and lope, bloody-handed, toward his heart’s desire.

38

Having bolted the door Carys returned, groggily, to the bench and concentrated on controlling her mutinous system. She wasn’t certain what had brought the nausea on, but she was determined to get the better of it. When she had, she’d go after Marty and help him search for Papa. The old man had been here recently, that much was apparent. That he’d left without his gun did not augur well.

An insinuating voice stirred her from her meditation, and she looked up. There was a smudge in the steam, in front of her, a paleness projected onto the air. She squinted to try to make sense of it. It seemed to have the texture of white dots. She stood up, and-far from vanishing-the illusion strengthened. Filaments were spreading to connect one dot to the next, and she almost laughed with recognition as all at once the puzzle came clear. It was blossom she was looking at, brilliant white heads of it caught in sun or starlight. Twitched by some sourceless wind, the branches threw down flurries of petals. They seemed to graze her face, though when she put her fingers to the places there was nothing there.

In her years of addiction to H she’d never dreamed an image that was so superficially benign and yet so charged with threat. It wasn’t hers, this tree. She hadn’t made it from her own head. It belonged to someone who’d been here before her: the Architect, no doubt. He’d shown this spectacle to Papa, and its echoes lingered.

She tried to look away, around to the door, but her eyes were glued to the tree. She couldn’t seem to unfix them. She had the impression that the blossom was swelling, as if more buds were coming into bloom. The blankness of the tree-its horrid purity-was filling her eyes, the whiteness congealing and fattening.

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