The Dragons of Babel (38 page)

Read The Dragons of Babel Online

Authors: Michael Swanwick

BOOK: The Dragons of Babel
11.25Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Pale faces stared out from windows that flashed by and were gone. The air was cold and the winds were so strong
that they shoved Will like enormous hands one way and another, threatening to tear him from the saddle and fling him to his death. But in the presence of his beloved, Will discovered that, however fleeting the moment might be, he was happy.

The ring of skyscrapers that sat atop Babel like a ragged crown were named after the sacred mountains of the world: Kilimanjaro, Olympus, Uluru, Sinai, McKinley, T'ai Shan, Amnye Machen, Annapurna, Popocatépetl, Meru, Fuji… And by tradition, the tallest of them all, whichever it might happen to be at any given time, was named Ararat, after the mountain that had been quarried, shaped, and deconstructed to build Babel. At the very peak of this last and mightiest of buildings was the Palace of Leaves. Wings laboring, the hippogriff flew toward it.

“Where are we going?” Will shouted.

“You'll see.”

The palace itself, almost hidden in its arboreal gardens, was a Second Empire wedding cake of gleaming white marble. But the fortress walls beneath it were blank and gray and windowless for the space of many floors. There, four Titans were shackled and chained, one facing each direction: Gog to the north, Magog to the east, Gogmagog to the south, and a fourth giant without a name facing westward. These had been the Guardians of the Four Quarters, who in the First Age held up the world but had subsequently rebelled against Marduk's heirs and so for punishment were imprisoned where operatives of His Absent Majesty's governance could keep a close eye on them—and call upon their divinatory talents at such times as might be politic, as well.

The hippogriff alit on a balcony so small as to be invisible from a distance, located directly beside the western Titan's face. Her head was twice as tall as Will was, but the Titan gave no notice of their presence but continued to stare vigilantly straight ahead of herself.

“Hand me a chicken,” Alcyone said. “There's a tape
recorder in the saddlebag. Make sure there's a windscreen on the microphone and then perform a sound check. The documentation on this has got to be tight.”

Will eased a chicken out of the crate and gave it to her. When the tape recorder was up and running, Alcyone said, “It's the Day of the Kraken, Vendemiaire, Year of the Monolith.” She glanced at her watch. “About two-thirty p.m.” Removing a small silver sickle from her cincture, she cut off the bird's head. She held the spasming body in the crook of one arm so that its blood sprayed over the Titan's mouth.

The cracked stone lips slowly parted. A tongue as gray as granite emerged to lick them clean. “Ahhhh,” the Titan sighed. “It has been long, long since I was fed.”

“Show your gratitude, then. You moved in your chains—our observers saw you. What is it you saw that so alarmed you?”

“The sun blackens. Lands sink into sea
,

the radiant stars fall from the sky
.

Smoke rages against fire, nourisher of life
,

The heat soars high against heaven itself.”

The Titan fell silent.

“Fabulous,” Alcyone said. “They're really going to love this one back in the office.”

Will hit pause, so his voice wouldn't be on the tape. “It's from the Motsognirsaga. That's one of the sacred books of dwarvenkind. I was told that no surface-dweller had ever read it, though.”

“Well, believe it or not, it's more straightforward than the kind of crap they usually feed us. Give me another bird.” Alcyone nodded for him to start recording again and repeated the ritual bleeding. “What form does this menace take?”

“And there appeared another wonder in heaven; and
behold a great red dragon, having seven heads and ten horns, and seven crowns upon his heads. And his tail drew the third part of the stars of heaven, and did cast them to the earth.”

“I don't know that one,” Will said.

“I do, and it's never good news,” Alcyone snarled. “Another bird!” More blood spurted. “Is it the War that comes?”

“I have seen war. I have seen war on land and sea. I have seen blood running from the wounded. I have seen the dead in the mud. I have seen cities destroyed. I have seen children starving. I have seen the agony of mothers and wives… My answer is bring' em on.”

“This just gets better and better. Another!”

“This is the last bird.”

“Just record, okay?” To the Titan, Alcyone said, “Is the doom in flight? Or is it something you see in the future?”

“Chicken blood is weak stuff,” the Titan grumbled.

“I wouldn't know.”

“So long have I hung here, and so dry! How I yearn for something stronger.”

“Too bad.”

“Once I drained millions of your kind for their blood. The swarming multitudes came to my hand to be crushed to pulp and squeezed for their juice. I drank and drank, so much overspilling my mouth that it stained the hills red and the seas as dark as wine.”

“Answer the damn question. Is what you see on its way? Or yet to come?”

Those enormous stone eyes turned slowly to stare down at Will and Alcyone. Then, equally slowly, they moved away. “It is already here.” The great stone face once again froze into immobility.

Will turned off the tape recorder.

In a rage, Alcyone kicked the chicken carcasses off the ledge and threw the crate after them. “It's always the
same—high-sounding words that mean nothing and ominous warnings of threats they will not define! Now I've got to spend the next three days dummying up reports to make it sound like we've actually learned something from this fiasco. I don't know why we don't just close the whole fucking office down.” She swung up into the saddle and thrust out a hand for Will. “Come on.”

“Wait.” Will took out his Swiss Army knife and cut a large, shallow X in the palm of his hand. He smeared his blood across the gray stone lips. “It's not much,” he said, “but it's the best I have and better than you're likely to get anytime soon.”

Slowly, the lips were sucked into the mouth and—in a manner that in a being of flesh would have been distinctly v oluptuous—slowly they emerged, licked clean. “There is mortal blood in you,” the Titan said.

“I know. That's not what I fed you for.”

“And a vile power as well. You believe you have mastered it, but you have not. The monster lurks in dark and secret places inside you, gathering its strength.”

“Nor that.”

A dark glitter of malice entered those vast gray eyes. “Then ask.”

“Perhaps I aspire beyond my natural place,” Will said. “But I don't give a rat's ass about that. I don't give a rat's ass for anything but Alcyone. Can I win her? Can our love endure? Can we live together to the end of our days? That's all I want to know.”

The Titan's mouth twisted up almost imperceptibly, so that its expression took on a sardonic cast. “You do not need to consult an oracle to know that a lady of House L'Inconnu and a pretender to the Obsidian Throne can never wed. Particularly after you have made an enemy of her brother. Yet you asked, and that is my augury. If you want more, you must cut yourself again, and deeper.”

Will slashed another cut into his forearm and bent to
smear more blood upon those mocking lips. “I'll surrender my claim to the kingship! I'll be her consort, her alphonse, her champion-without-favor, her backdoor man! Can then we be together?”

With an amusement vast and cruel, the Titan said, “No. All of Babel will conspire to keep you apart. Bleed yourself again and ask if there is any hope for you in the larger world.”

Will's arm was red with blood. Nevertheless, he slashed himself a third time.

“Anywhere in the world!” he cried. “Offer me hope. Something! Anything!”

The Titan roared with laughter. “Not in all of Fäerie will you find haven together, nor safe harbor in all the world, nor in a thousand lifetimes nor in a thousand worlds will you ever experience peace.”

Will went to cut his flesh again and found that Alcyone had leapt down from her hippogriff and was holding back his arm. “Stop!” she cried. “Would you bleed yourself to death because you don't like the answers you hear?”

“Yes,” Will said angrily. Then, bitterly, “Yes.” Finally, in despairing sadness, “Yes.”

She folded him into her arms and they were Elsewhere.

M
any rooms were there in House L'Inconnu. After they'd made love in the great billowing bed he'd so coveted the night of the masked ball, Will and Alcyone wandered through them, hand in hand. Aimlessly they strolled down colonnades of ancient Atlantean pillars, past an erotic frieze by Phidias, through jade-tiled baths that had once graced the palace of Prester John, under cave paintings by the hands of the first witch-women. Half the vanished treasures of the world, it seemed, were here amassed. Sometimes they paused to kiss, and from kissing declined to a nearby couch or billiards table or even the floor, after which they rose again, adjusted their clothing, and went onward as before.

They came to light on the lip of a Moorish fountain in a courtyard whose arched windows opened on one side to the sky and the other to the city. Heat lightning played in the distance and ambulance sirens warbled. Alcyone trailed a finger in the water and then flicked droplets at Will and laughed.

“Will you get in trouble for turning in your report late?” Will asked.

“No. Of course I will. Or not. What do I care?” Between bouts of lovemaking, she had clapped her hands thrice to summon a jackal-headed servitor who, ignoring Will's presence and Alcyone's nakedness with equal aplomb, had accepted the audiotape of her interview with the Titan and some hastily composed notes to be couriered to her staff. So Will knew that whatever passions she felt for him, her office was ever in her thoughts.

“Tell me why you stole the ring.”

“Why should you care?”

“Because I want to know everything about you. You took an enormous risk depriving your brother of his trinket. Surely your reasons were serious. Surely they mattered deeply to you.”

“Surely they were and surely they did. But I will not share them.”

Lightly, ironically, Will glanced down at his ban daged hand and forearm, then back at Alcyone. Meaning:
See what I have done for you
.

Alcyone looked away. “You ask too much. I—hark!” A vast bell began to toll, its sound bottomless and unending, from somewhere deep underfoot. Its voice was muffled, as if it came from the center of the earth, yet its vibrations shook the flagstones. She stood. “A compulsion is placed upon me to return to the Mayoralty. I can resist the call of duty for only a moment or two. But I shall leave another in my place to see you safely free of my family's House.”

The courtyard darkened and shifted queasily, and Alcyone
threw open a pair of doors in a wall that had not been there before. Inside was a shallow closet, empty save for a full-length bronze mirror. She lifted her hands toward it and her reflection, in turn, reached for her. They seized each other's wrists and struggled, the one pulling inward and the other outward.

Alcyone stumbled and lurched forward, her face briefly plunging through the polished bronze interface between realms. But then she pulled back, shifted her grip, and hauled her reflection bodily out of the mirror and into the courtyard.

“This is my fetch,” she said, closing the closet doors. To the fetch she said, “Get him out of here alive.” Then she spun on her heel and hurried away, fading. With her slowly faded the tolling of the great bell.

Will looked after her and then back at her fetch. They were identical in every detail. He grinned. “Oh, where my imagination has gone.”

“Dream on,” the fetch snapped. “
She
may love you. I don't.”

“You think she loves me, then?” Will said, still grinning.

“If her love is as great as my despite, then you are the worst calamity ever to befall her.”

“Hey!”

“Let me explain something to you: There is no future in this. The only thing you and she have in common is your prick, and that only occasionally. You're young and cocky and you think that's enough. But you haven't the education or social standing to walk where she walks. Your experience, outlook, and values are incompatible with hers. You won't like her friends. She wouldn't like yours. You're penniless and she's rich, which means you'd end up parasitic upon her wealth. Even your accent is wrong.”

“Obstacles exist to be overcome.”

“Love conquers all. Oh, yes.” The fetch rolled her eyes. “These high-blooded elf-bitches are aristocratic, inbred, solipsistic, given to sociopathic rages and sudden vendettas,
murderous and sentimental by turn, occasionally incestuous, intermittently suicidal, passionate by whim, moody by nature, always unpredictable… I can see why you're drawn to Alcyone. But what's in it for her?”

“I can make her happy.”

“What makes you think she wants to be happy?”

“What kind of woman exposes her breasts to strangers, knowing they will want her and be helpless to aspire so high?” Will said. “What kind of woman steals a ring she could borrow for the asking? What kind of woman strips her lover naked and dumps him in the Bay of Demons un-tasted? Makes love and then abandons him to her fetch without declaring her feelings? Not one who values her fate, I think, but one who struggles against it.”

“And what have you done for her so far? Tempted her away from her duty, gotten her in bad with her boss, made her the talk of the Mayoralty.” The fetch poked his chest with one sharp-nailed finger. “You're a real career-killer, you know that?”

“Now that I reflect on it,” Will said testily, “you're not a bit like Alcyone.”

“Fool! I am her, in all the ways that matter. I—”

Other books

Rules of Deception by Christopher Reich
Between Dark and Light by D. A. Adams
Breaking Walls by Tracie Puckett
Savage Night by Jim Thompson
Makin' Whoopee by Billie Green
Unformed Landscape by Peter Stamm