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“Who may he be, Master?”
“He is called the Prince Who Was A Thousand, and he dwells beyond the Middle Worlds. His kingdom lies beyond the realm of life and death, in a place where it is always twilight. He is difficult to locate, however, for he often departs his own region and trespasses into the Middle Worlds and elsewhere. I desire that he come to an end, as he has opposed both the House of the Dead and the House of Life for many days.”
“What does he look like, the Prince Who Was A Thousand?”
“Anything he wishes.”
“Where shall I find him?”
“I do not know. You must seek him.”
“How shall I know him?”
“By his deeds, by his words. He opposes us in all ways.”
“Surely others must oppose you also…”
“Destroy all you come upon who do so. You shall know the Prince Who Was A Thousand, however, because he shall be the most difficult of all to destroy. He will come closest to destroying you.”
“Suppose he succeeds.”
“Then I shall take me a thousand years more to train another emissary to set upon this task. I do not desire his downfall today or tomorrow. It will doubtless take you centuries even to locate him. Time matters little. An age will pass before he becomes a threat, to Osiris or myself. You will learn of him as you travel, seeking after him. When you find him you will know him.”
“Am I mighty enough to work his undoing?”
“I think you are.”
“I am ready.”
“Then I shall set your feet upon the track. I give you the power to summon me, and in times of need to draw force from the fields of Life and of Death while you are among the Middle Worlds. This will make you invincible. You will report back to me when you feel you need to. If I feel this need, I will reach out after you.”
“Thank you, Master.”
“You will obey all my sendings, instantly.”
“Yes.”
“Go now and rest. After you have slept and eaten again, you will depart and begin your mission.”
“Thank you.”
“This will be your second-last sleep within this House, Wakim. Meditate upon the mysteries it contains.”
“I do so constantly.”
“I am one of them.”
“Master…”
“That is part of my name. Never forget it.”
“Master-how could I?”
THE WAKING OF THE RED WITCH
The Witch of the Loggia stirs in her sleep and cries out twice. Long has she slept now, and deeply. Her familiar rushes to comfort her, but bungles the job and causes her to awaken. She sits up then among cushions in her cathedral-high hall, and Time with Tarquin’s ravishing stride from her divan moves like a ghost, but she sees him and freezes him in his tracklessness with a gesture and a word, and hears then her doubled cry and looks backward with her eyes upon the dreamdark scream-sought thing she’d borne. Let there be ten ca
The Red Witch sleeps within her cathedral-high hall, between the past and the future. Her fleeing rapist of a dream disappears down dark alleyways, while Time ticks history around events. And she smiles now as she sleeps, for Janus is again doing things by halves…
Backward-turned to glory, she dwells in his warm, green gaze.
Listen to the world. It is called Blis, and it is not hard to hear at all: The sounds may be laughter, sighs, contented belches. They may be the clog-clog of machinery or beating hearts. They may be the breathing of multitudes or their words. They may be footsteps, footsteps, the sound of a kiss, a slap, the cry of a baby. Music. Music, perhaps. The sound of typewriter keys through the Black Daddy Night, consciousness kissing paper only? Perhaps. Then forget the sounds and the words and look at the world.
First, colors: Name one. Red? There’s a riverbank that color, green stream hauled between, snagged on purple rocks. Yellow and gray and black is the city in the distance. Here in the open field, both sides of the river, are pavilions. Pick any color-they’re all about. Over a thousand pavilions, like balloons and tepees and stemless mushrooms, blazing in the midst of a blue field, strung with pe
The odors are of sweet and growing things and kissful come the breezes. When these breezes and these odors reach the fairground, they are altered subtly. There comes up the odor of sawdust, which is hardly unpleasant; and that of perspiration, which ca
… Like the man with the eyepatch and the alpenstock.
He walks among the hucksters and the fillies, fat as a eunuch, but not. His flesh is strangely flesh-colored, and his right eye is a gray wheel, rolling. A week's growth of beard frames his face, and all colors are missing from the blot of his garments. His gait is steady. His hands are hard.
He stops to buy a mug of beer, moves to watch a cockfight.
He wagers a coin on the smaller bird, which tears the larger apart and so pays for his beer.
He watches the deflowering-show, samples the narcotics exhibit, foils a brown man in a white shirt who attempts to guess his weight. A short man with close-set dark eyes then emerges from a nearby tent, moves his side, tugs upon his sleeve.
“Yes?” His voice seems centrally located, that deeply potent does it stir.
“I see by your outfit you may be a preacher.”
“Yes, I am-of the non-theistic, non-sectarian sort.”
“Very good. Would you care to earn some money? It will only take a few moments.”
“What would you have me do?”
“A man is going to commit suicide and be buried in that tent. The grave is already dug and all the tickets have been sold. The audience is growing restless now, though. The performer won’t do it without proper religious accompaniment, and we can’t sober up the preacher.”
“I see. It will cost you ten.”
“Make it five?”
“Get yourself another preacher.”
“All right ten! C’mon! They’re starting to clap their hands and boo!”
He moves into the tent, blinks his eyes.
“Here’s the preacher!” calls out the emcee. “We’re ready to go ahead now. -What’cher name, Dad?”