"That's an overreaction if I ever heard one," Azzie said. "To destroy an anomaly you propose to produce a greater one."
"Well, that's how the universe crumbles," Nameless said. "I'm afraid I'll have to destroy you."
"I suppose you have to try," Azzie said, "but why don't you have it out with Ananke instead? She's top gun around here."
"That's not the way I do business," Nameless said. "I'll start with you. After I've eaten your soul and washed it down with your body, I'll think about who to take on next. That's my agenda."
Chapter 2
Nameless waved what might have been an arm. Before he even had a chance to say good-bye to the watchman. Azzie found himself transported to an outdoor cafe table in a city whose architecture made it look very much like Rome.
Azzie was impressed by the transition, which Nameless had effected without any visible apparatus, but he was careful not to show his admiration. Nameless seemed to have a swelled head anyway. Nameless was there with him, wearing an overweight human body with a green Tyrolean hat on top of it. A
white-coated waiter came over; Azzie ordered a Cinzano and turned to Nameless.
"Okay, now, about this fight. Are we going to have any rules, or is this going to be freestyle all the way?"
Azzie knew he didn't stand a chance against Nameless, whom he suspected of being a just-born superdeity. But he was putting a bold face on it, trying to bluff his way to some advantage.
"Which fighting style are you better at?" Nameless asked.
"I'm known as a master of the contest without rules," Azzie said.
"Is that so? Then I guess we'll have some rules."
Rules were something Azzie knew he could deal with. He had been taking exception to them since he was born, so already he had an advantage. But he was careful not to gloat visibly.
"What rules do you want to fight by?" Nameless said.
Azzie looked around. "Are we in Rome?"
Yes, we are.
"Then let's go by regulation gladiatorial drill."
No sooner were the words out of his mouth than he had a moment of vertigo. When his head cleared, he found himself standing inside a great amphitheater. Empty seats rose in a circle on all sides of him. Azzie was naked save for a loincloth; apparently the new deity was a bit of a prude. That was worth, remembering.
found himself standing inside a great amphitheater. Empty seats rose in a circle on all sides of him. Azzie was naked save for a loincloth; apparently the new deity was a bit of a prude. That was worth, remembering.
a standard Roman short sword.
"That was fast," Azzie said.
"I catch on quick," Nameless said, his voice coming from nowhere in particular.
"What now?" Azzie asked.
"Hand-to-hand combat," Nameless said. "Just you and me. Here I come!"
A door slid open on one side of the amphitheater. There was a noisy snarling sound, and out rolled a large metallic object with tracks. Azzie had seen one of these before, during his visits to the First World War battlefields in France. It was a standard-sized army tank with the usual armor and cannon.
"Are you in that tank?" Azzie asked.
"I am the tank," Nameless said.
"Not quite evenly matched, are we?" Azzie said.
"Don't be a sore loser," Nameless said.
The tank rumbled forward, its blue exhaust bleating out a chorus of challenge. Tentacles sprouted from its sides, each tentacle terminating in a whirring buzz saw. Azzie retreated until he felt the wall at his back.
"Wait!" he cried. "Where's the audience?"
"What?" the tank asked, coming to a stop.
"Can't have a real gladiatorial contest without an audience," Azzie said.
The stadium doors opened, and people started to enter the amphitheater. Azzie knew all of them. First came the Greek gods in their sculptured white sheets. Then came Ylith, and with her was Babriel. A few steps behind them came Michael.
Nameless looked them over and apparently didn't like what he saw.
"Just a minute," he said. "A short time-out, okay?"
Azzie found himself in a nineteenth-century sitting room with Nameless.
Chapter 3
Now, look," Nameless said. "You can see that I've got you outclassed and outmatched. Nothing to be ashamed of. I'm the new paradigm. No one can oppose me. I'm the visible sign of "what is to come."
"So kill me and get it over with," Azzie said.
"No, I have a much better idea. I want to let you live. I want you to join me in the new universe I am going to create."
"What do you need me for?"
"I don't. Let's be very clear about that. It's just that once I'm established I'd like to have someone around to talk to. Someone from the good old days, which are now. Someone I didn't create. I suspect it gets boring when there's nobody to talk to but emanations of your own being. I imagine that's why your God went away—He got tired of having nobody to talk to. Nobody from the old days, I mean. Nobody who wasn't Himself in some way or other. I'm not going to make that mistake. You're another point of view, and I can make use of that, so I'd like you to stay on with me."
Azzie was hesitant. It was a great opportunity, of course. But still…
"What are you delaying for? I can defeat you utterly, and rather easily, but now I'm giving you a chance to come to my side. You and you alone from this universe, Azzie, will live on after the destruction of everything else. We'll sweep them all away—gods, devils, humans, nature, fate, chance, the whole works. We'll start all over with a jollier cast of characters. You can help me plan it out. We can have it any way we want. You'll be in at the creation of a new universe! You'll be one of its founding fathers.
Can't say fairer than that, can I?"
"But everybody else…"
"I'm going to kill them all. They all have to go. Don't try to change my mind."
"There's a young boy named Quentin…"
"He'll live in your memory."
"There's a witch named Ylith…"
"Don't you have a lock of her hair for a keepsake?"
"Can't you keep her alive?" Azzie asked. "And the boy, too? Take the rest."
"Of course I can keep her alive. I can do whatever I want. But I'm not going to let her live. Or the kid.
Or anyone else. Only you, Azzie. It's a kind of punishment, you see."
Azzie looked at Nameless. He had the feeling that things weren't going to be much different under the new cosmic management. But he wasn't going to be around to see it. It was time to fight, time to die.
"No, thanks," he said.
Chapter 4
The tank rumbled forward. Now it was a beautiful machine made of an amalgam of anodized aluminum and glowing chrome. White-hot it glowed, and it moved toward Azzie. He dodged out of its way. Due to its melting state, its wheels sagged out of shape and it suddenly had a hard time moving. Nameless hadn't gotten that bit quite right.
The tank fired its cannon. From the cannon's maw came a blobby plastic ball that split upon contact with the sand. Out of it came chiggers and baby mice. All together, they began to dig what looked like a barbecue pit. Azzie was careful not to judge: he didn't know what Nameless had in mind, if anything.
The cannon fired again, but what came out this time was a bunch of notes of the sort musicians write on ruled paper. Azzie could hear Nameless saying, "Cannon, not canon!"
Nameless was having trouble reining in his exuberant imagination. The cannon fired again, and this time it emitted a cascade of multicolored spatter cones, which burbled and gurgled and gave off a noxious fizz.
The tank came into the center of the arena. There was a certain hesitancy about its movements, for it had learned that while Azzie might be negligible as an antagonist, Nameless himself was his own worst enemy. Azzie picked up a stone and prepared to throw it.