Chapter Sixty
ON THE CAMPUS OF THE SUBURBAN UNIVERSITY, BILLY AND Dane's vaguely purposeful scruffiness was camouflage. It had not taken long at an Internet cafe to check which room was Professor Cole's. They knew his office hours, too. Dane's vaguely purposeful scruffiness was camouflage. It had not taken long at an Internet cafe to check which room was Professor Cole's. They knew his office hours, too.
While they were online Billy had poked around to find and check Marge's MySpace. He saw the picture of Leon, the call for help, the number that was not her number, must be some dedicated phone. It shocked him how much it made emotion fill him. He printed more than one copy.
"If this bloke's such a powerful knacker," said Billy, "why's he work at Shitechester Central Poly? And is it not a bit nuts for us to go up against him?"
"Who said we was going up against anyone?" said Dane. "Is that the plan? We're just looking for information."
"We might. Like you said, it sounds like this might all be down to him. The fire, the everything. So what can we-"
"Yeah. I know. We might."
Wati would not come. The strike was dying, and even now his first allegiance had to be to his members.
"We don't have time to wait. We have to find out whatever there is to find out," Dane said. "This is the first lead we've had. So yeah." That long stare had come with him out of the basement. "We do what we have to, and we be ready."
Every one of their moves now might plausibly be the last, but they could not do everything, could not take care of all business. They did their best, just in case there was an aftermath. Dane spoke to rabbi Mo, a quick connection through stolen phones. Simon was curing. They were purging him of all those angry ex-hims. "He's drained and weak, but he's getting better," he said she had said. "Good." As if it were likely that it would, ultimately, make a difference.
Billy and Dane waited in the corridor, forcing smiles when Cole's secretary, a middle-aged woman, and the three students waiting glanced at them curiously. Cole must have protections. They had made what desperate plans they could. When at last the student who had been with the professor left the room, they walked to the head of the waiting line. "You don't mind, do you?" Billy said to the young man in front. "It's really important."
"Hey, there's like a queue?" the boy whined, but that was all he did. Billy wondered passing if he had been so feeble at that age.
They entered, and Cole looked up. "Yes ...?" he said. He was a middle-aged man in an ugly suit. He frowned at them. He was cave-pale, and his eyes were shaded ridiculously dark. "Who ...?" His stare widened and he stood, grabbing at the clutter on his desk as he came. Billy saw papers, journals, books open. A photo of a young girl in school uniform between Cole and a bonfire.
"Professor," said Dane, smiling, holding out his hand. Billy closed the door behind them. "We had a question."
Cole's face went between expressions. He hesitated and took Dane's hand in his shaking own. Dane twisted and pulled him down.
"I ain't going to take him if we go knack to knack," Dane had said when they prepared. "If he's what we think. At the very least it sounds like he knows what's going on, and just in case he is is the burner ... the only chance we've got is to be the burner ... the only chance we've got is to be stupid stupid, and brutal, and fucking base."
Dane brought Cole's body down beneath him, expelling the man's breath and locking him into place. He struck Cole twice with the weapon he pulled from his pocket. The way he held him Cole could make no sound.
"Billy?" Dane said.
"Yeah." Billy found two places in the doorway where there were drill holes. He gouged with the knife he had brought, uncovering a scrap of flesh and thin chains, a wire figurine. He could see no other magics. "Done," he said.
"Exit?" Dane said. Billy went fast to the window.
"One floor down, onto grass," he said. He aimed the phaser at the groaning Cole.
"Professor," Dane said. "I'm sorry about this, genuinely, but I'll do it again the second I think you're knacking. We need you to answer some questions. What do you know about the kraken? It was you wanted to burn it, wasn't it? Why?"
Billy riffled urgently through the papers on the desk with his non-gun hand. He went to the bookshelves, found the collection of books and papers by Cole himself: A Particle Physics Primer A Particle Physics Primer, offcuts, an edited volume on the science of heat. He took the latter and saw, behind it, a second row of works. A slim book, that he grabbed, that was also by Cole, that was called Abnatural Burnings Abnatural Burnings. He took another look at the photograph of Cole and his daughter.
"Come on," Dane said. Billy shoved the papers into a bag. "Could be this is all nothing," Dane said. "We got to get you so you can't do anything, in case it's not nothing. You're going to come with us, and if it turns out you've got bugger-all to do with it and we owe you an apology, then what can I tell you? We'll apologise. What did you want with the kraken? Why burn everything?"
There was a noise. Cole was staring up at Billy. Dark smoke was coming out of his scalp. Dane sniffed at the burning.
"Oh piss ..." he said. Cole was not looking at him. He was staring at Billy, holding his papers, his picture. "Shit ..." The smoke came from Cole's clothes now. Dane gritted his teeth. "Billy, Billy," he said. "Go."
Cole smouldered and Dane swore and scrambled off him, shaking his hot hands, and Cole rose onto all fours and bared his teeth in the smoke that coiled like mad hair around him.
"What have you done with her?" he shouted. Flames came out of his mouth.
Billy shot him. The inventy phaser-beam slammed him into unconsciousness and the smoke dissipated. They stared at him supine, in the sudden quiet.
"We have to move," Dane said.
"Hang on, you saw him," Billy said. "He thought we were-" There was a knock on the door behind him.
"Professor?"
"Window," Billy said to Dane. "We got to go."
But the door was shoved suddenly and sent Billy staggering. The secretary stood in the threshold, shadow coagulating around her raised hands. Billy fired at her, missed, as she ducked animal fast into the room. He tightened his gut, and time slowed for her, held an instant, and he fired again and sent her spinning.
Dane smashed the window and gripped Billy, cantripped. He pulled them out. His weak little knack slowed their fall by a second, still depositing them on the verge with a breathtaking smack, but without breaking bones. People stared at them from around the irregular quad. Billy and Dane rose and ran raggedly. A few braver and bigger men halfheartedly tried to get in their way, but at the sight of Dane's face and the phaser Billy waved they got out of the way.
There was a shout. Cole leaned out of the window. He spat in their direction. The stench of burning hair swamped Billy and Dane as they ran, making them gag. They kept running, did not stop, out of the university grounds, back into the city proper and away.
"THAT WENT WELL," BILLY SAID. DANE SAID NOTHING.
"You saw the picture?" Billy said.
"You still got it?"
"Why the hell would he want to end the world?" Billy said. "He's not a nihilist. See the way he was looking at it?"
"Could be unintentional. Side effect. By-product."
"Jesus, I hurt," Billy said. "By-product of what? Burning the kraken? He sent Al to get it? Why'd he want to do that? Okay, maybe. But you heard what he said. Someone's took her. He thought it was us. That's part of this."
In the boarded-up building they squatted, they went through the papers. They scanned the mainstream physics, but it was the arcana that gripped them.
"Look at this shit," Billy said, turning the pages of Abnatural Burnings Abnatural Burnings. He could not follow it, of course, but the abstracts of the essays-cum-experiments-cum-hexes gave glimpses. "'Reversible ashes,'" he said. "Jesus. 'Frigid conflagration.'" It was a textbook of alternative fire.
"What's reversible ashes?" Dane said.
"If I'm reading this right, it's what you get if you burn something with something called 'memory fire.'" Billy read the conclusion. "If you keep them hot, they're ashes: if they get cold again, they go back to what they were before." There was endless fire, that burned without consuming-notorious, that one. Antifire, that burnt colder and colder, into untemperatures below absolute zero.
Papers were folded between the book's pages, bookmarks. Billy read them. "'Behave and you get her back. Prepare three charges of," hold on, "katachronophlogiston. Delivery TBA.'" He and Dane looked at each other. "It's like a ransom note. He's making notes for his work on it." Under the typed words were scrawled pen and pencil.
"I suppose using that as your pad would inspire your bloody researches," Dane said.
"See what's weird about this?" Billy said. He held out the photo. "Look. Look at it. The little girl's in the middle, Cole to one side." The two of them were smiling.
"It's bonfire night, maybe."
"No, that's what I'm saying. Look." The layout was skewed, the fire to the other side of the girl from Cole, very close, lighting them strangely. "He's on one side of her and the fire's on the other." Billy shook it. "This isn't a picture of the two of them, it's the three of them. This is a family shot."
Dane and Billy squinted at it. Dane nodded slowly.
"The djinns are freaking out, people reckon," Dane said. "Maybe it's got something to do with all this. This was a mixed marriage."
"And now someone's got his daughter. He thought it was us."
"He's obeying orders. Even if it's his stuff behind the burning, this isn't his plan, he's just doing as he's told."
"His kid. Find the kidnapper ..." Billy said.
"Yeah, which he thinks is us."
DID THAT MEAN ANOTHER PURSUER? WELL. THEY HAD NEVER BEEN unhunted anyway. That was why they stayed well away from the kraken on its circling journey. No matter how out of sight the Londonmancers were, obscured by the matter of the city of which they were functions, Billy and Dane were the targets of the greatest personhunt in memory, and they could not risk bringing that sort of attention to the enjarred god. Dane prayed to it, quietly but visibly, quite unembarrassed. He hankered to be in its presence but would not endanger it-any more than it was already endangered, what with the whole end of the world. unhunted anyway. That was why they stayed well away from the kraken on its circling journey. No matter how out of sight the Londonmancers were, obscured by the matter of the city of which they were functions, Billy and Dane were the targets of the greatest personhunt in memory, and they could not risk bringing that sort of attention to the enjarred god. Dane prayed to it, quietly but visibly, quite unembarrassed. He hankered to be in its presence but would not endanger it-any more than it was already endangered, what with the whole end of the world.
The proximity of that worst horizon did not mean they should forget, as they did, the more everyday hunters and knackers after them for the Tattoo's lucre. The drab and frightening fact of that came back to them that night, as they worked through Cole's papers, auditioned theories as to who might be behind what terrible action done to Cole's child, as they walked a dangerous walk to a dingy cafe where they could access the Internet. A commotion sounded in some alley near them.
"What's that?"
"It's ..." A drone between the bricks. A bounty-hunting swarm, it sounded like, some baleful hive thinker coming at them for payment in evil apiary kind. Billy and Dane matched each other preparation for preparation. They checked weapons and clung close to the wall, got ready to fight or run while the moan came closer under the noise of the cars and the lorries only around the corner.
"Get onto the main road," said Billy. "They going to send it out there?"
"Or under?" said Dane, nodding at a lid in the pavement. Billy weighed the options, but hesitated, because there was another sound coming. Dane and Billy heard a glass-and-bone rattle, the slide of a jar on the pavement.
"Jesus," Billy said. "It's still following. It's back." A quick warning in his head, in an articulate wave of pain. "It's found me again."
A bee-mass turned into their sight. Spread out like a chitin-cloud wall, blocking their exit, but through those insects another figure darkly was visible, roll-wobble-walking. There was an eddy among the bloodymoney bees and an inrush of air as a seal was cracked. The buzz faltered. A smoke of insects gushed like reversed film out of sight, like steam back into a kettle, like something, and there was nothing before Billy and Dane but the angel of memory.
It showed itself to Billy for approval, having saved him. The source of his glass and time clench; he, mistakenly, its test-tube prophet. Could it feel his guilt at not being what it thought? Being promised by nothing to no one? Its body was again a Formalin-filled bottle, in which, this time, floated hundreds of specks, evanescing bodies of the attacker. Its bone arms were bones, its head was made of bone.
But it was much reduced. It had been destroyed, probably more than once, on its exhausting treks to track and protect Billy. It had dissipated and reconstituted. This time it had made itself from some preserving jar less than half Billy's height. This time its skull was an ape's or a child's.
It chattered at him from the dark of an alley. He raised his hand to it. Exhaustion came over it-Billy could feel the echo in his head-and it shivered. The glass-bottle-and-bone sculpture settled into a more natural and complete still as its fleshless arms fell from it to become rubbish, as its skull head toppled and rolled from its slanted lid to crack apart on the pavement. Only its jawbone stayed, held on the lid's glass nub handle. Dissolving bees bobbed in its swill.
Maybe its presiding angel force was remaking itself in another yet-smaller bottle with a yet-smaller bone head, back at its museum nest, and it would set out on its journey again tracking the power it had given Billy, the trace of itself in him, to find him or be broken on the way and try again.
Dane and Billy went to another vagrant shelter. They were glad when it rained: it seemed to batten down the burning smell Cole had brought on them that would not quite go. Billy still smelt it when he slept. He smelt it through the water in which he sank in his dream. Warm, cool as the sea grew dark, cooler darker cold, then warm again. Through black he saw the dream-glow of swimming light things. He was falling into a city, a drowned London. The streets were laid out in glow, the streetlights still illuminated, each glare investigated by a penumbra of fish. Crabs as big as the cars they pushed aside walked the streets made chasms.
From towers and top floors waved random flags of seaweed. Coral crusted the buildings. Billy's dream-self sank. There were, he saw, men and women, submerged pedestrians walking slow as flaneurs, window-shopping the long-dead long-drowned shops. Figures ambling, all in brass-topped deep-sea suits. Air pipes emerged from the top of each globe helmet and dangled up into the dark.
No cephalopods. Billy thought, This is someone else's apocalypse dream This is someone else's apocalypse dream.
But here it came, the intrusion of his own meaning, what he was here for. From the centre of the sunken London came a hot tide. The water began to boil. The walls, bricks, windows and slimy rotting trees began to burn. The fish were gusted away toward the drowned suburbs, the rusting cars and crabs were bowled by the force of what came. And here it came, bowling like a tossed bus the length of this street, this underwater Edgware Road, that skittered under the flyover and turned. The kraken's tank.
It shattered. The dead Architeuthis Architeuthis slumped from it, dragged the pavement, its tentacles waving, its rubberising mantle thick and heavy and moving only with the tide, the gush, flailing not like a cephalopod predator but like the drifting dead god it was. The kraken and its tank shards scraped and cracked and disintegrated as the water rushed and heated and a subaquatic fire burned everything away. slumped from it, dragged the pavement, its tentacles waving, its rubberising mantle thick and heavy and moving only with the tide, the gush, flailing not like a cephalopod predator but like the drifting dead god it was. The kraken and its tank shards scraped and cracked and disintegrated as the water rushed and heated and a subaquatic fire burned everything away.
ANOTHER INSIGHT DREAM INSIGHT DREAM? R REALLY? BILLY WOKE FROM IT TO W WATI'S voice. He was sweating from the hot black ocean. The smell of the burn Cole had sent was still on him. Wati had come back. He was in the Captain Kirk. Billy found his glasses. voice. He was sweating from the hot black ocean. The smell of the burn Cole had sent was still on him. Wati had come back. He was in the Captain Kirk. Billy found his glasses.
"Here you are," the toy said in the little plastic voice. "Something's happening."
"Yeah?" Dane said. "Really? We nearly got burnt alive by our only lead, yesterday, and we still don't know what's going on." Dane said. "Really? We nearly got burnt alive by our only lead, yesterday, and we still don't know what's going on."
"Maybe this'll help," said Wati. "Maybe this is it. Apocalypse."
"We know that," Billy said. "That's why we're here."
"Sorry," said Wati. "That's not what I mean. I mean there are two of them."
Chapter Sixty-One
THE WIZARD WHO HAD SOLD HER THE PROTECTION HAD, IN A gruff way, been too kind to answer her question and tell her where to go, if he even knew. But knowing where to look, now, with her own online contacts and link trails, it was not too hard for Marge to find out when, and even hints of where, these competing, overlapping or collaborative apocalypses were due to occur. The Internet debates were over how to respond. gruff way, been too kind to answer her question and tell her where to go, if he even knew. But knowing where to look, now, with her own online contacts and link trails, it was not too hard for Marge to find out when, and even hints of where, these competing, overlapping or collaborative apocalypses were due to occur. The Internet debates were over how to respond.
bottl whisky & head under covers got 2 b squid this is it C U all in L "Jesus, really?" Marge said out loud.
have to go cant miss whole world there It was not that she did not care if she lived or died: she cared about it a great deal. But it turned out that she would not play safe at any price-and who would have predicted that? There were more messages from her friends on her machine. This time she felt as if by not answering them she was less turning her back on than protecting them.
Leon, she thought. We're going deeper We're going deeper. She had her iPod bodyguard. She needed a lay of the land. If everyone who was everyone in that heretic cityscape would be there, there were things she could learn. And if it was was the squid behind it, if this animal thing was it, if as the insinuations insinuated this was the thing incoming, then she might find Billy. the squid behind it, if this animal thing was it, if as the insinuations insinuated this was the thing incoming, then she might find Billy.
Anyone up for going? she wrote. she wrote. Keep each other safe? Go as team see wots wot? Keep each other safe? Go as team see wots wot?
I duno no no u crazee???
Screw them, that didn't matter. Billy might be there. She knew that Leon would not.
Marge loaded playlists onto the iPod. She grabbed them at almost random from her computer, a big mix, using up all the available memory. When she was out, now, she felt watched by the world, under threat, pretty much all the time. She went walking, and she went as it grew dark, before she put her earphones in. She pressed random play.
The streetlights shone at her through the haze of branches, woody halos. She walked through her nearest cheerful row of kebaberies, small groceries and chemists. A voice started in her ear, a tuneless, happy, piping voice, singing push push pushy push really really good pushy good push push pushy push really really good pushy good, accompanied by the noise of a record player being turned on and off, and something hit with a stick.
Marge felt bewildered and instantly cosseted, wrapped in that tuneless voice. The iPod screen told her this was supposed to be Salt' N Pepa's "Push It." She skipped forward. Amy Winehouse's "Rehab," she read, and heard not the familiar orchestration and that magnificent, once-in-an-epoch growl but a little throat-clearing noise and the same reedy querulous asexual tones as before singing in the roughest approximation of the track they try make me to go to the rehab no no no no no they try make me to go to the rehab no no no no no. She heard the repeat-twanging of one guitar string.
The singer did not sound so enthusiastic this time, and the envelope around Marge cooled, as if a gust of air got in. She skipped, to Kanye West's "Gold Digger." gimme she gimme money money gimme she gimme money money. The little singer was happy again and Marge was safer.
The voice liked Run-DMC. Marge walked patiently through its incompetent renditions of old-skool hip-hop classics. It liked some of the Specials-this town town aaah ah this is a is ghost town, with a double-tempo clapping. It did not like Morrissey. To Marge's horror, it raised an enthusiastic rorty voice during "Building a Mystery," a guilty Sarah McLachlan track that she could not remember why she had.
"Jesus," she said to the iPod. "If you're into Lilith Fair I'd rather take my chances with Goss and Subby."