“Silence!” cries Freydag. “I did not call thee in for a consultation!”
“They are my innards! I will not have them misread by a poseur!”
“The next two answers are not yet come clear, dear Horus,” says Freydag, slashing at another length of entrail.
“False seer!” sobs Boltag. "Marachek will also lead him to the emissary of Anubis-whose name is spelt out in my blood-there-on the editorial page! That name-being-Wakim…”
“Oh false!” cries Freydag, slashing further.
“Hold!” says Horus, his hand falling upon the man’s shoulder. “Your colleague speaks truly in one respect, for I know his present name to be Wakim.”
Freydag pauses, considers the editorial page.
“Amen,” he agrees. “Even an amateur may suffer an occasional flash of insight”
“… So it seems I am destined to meet with Wakim after all, if I go to the place called Marachek-and go there I must. But as to my second question: Beyond the name of Wakim, I wish to know his true identity. Who was he before Lord Anubis renamed him and sent him forth from the House of the Dead?”
Freydag moves his head nearer the floor, stirs the stuff before him, hacks at another length.
“This thing, Glorious Horus, is hidden from me. The oracle will not reveal it-“
“Dotard…!” gasps Boltag. “… It is there, so-plain- to see…”
Horus reaches after the gutless seer’s dying thought, and the hackles rise upon his neck as he pursues it. But no fearsome name is framed within his mind, for the other has expired.
Horus covers his eyes and shudders, as a thing so very near to the edge of comprehension suddenly fades away and is gone.
When Horus lowers his hand, Freydag is standing once more and smiling down upon his cousin’s corpse.
“Mountebank!” he says, sniffing, and wipes his hands upon his apron.
A strange, small, beastly shadow stirs upon the wall.
ARMS AND THE STEEL MAN
Diamond hooves striking the ground, rising, falling again.
Rising…
Wakim and the Steel General face one another, unmoving.
A minute goes by, then three, and now the falling hooves of the beast called Bronze come down with a sound like thunder upon the fairground of Blis, for, each time that they strike, the force of their falling is doubled.
It is said that a fugue battle is actually settled in these first racking moments of regard, before the initial temporal phase is executed, in these moments which will be wiped from the face of Time by the outcome of the striving, never to have actually existed.
The ground shakes now as Bronze strikes it, and blue fires come forth from his nostrils, burning downward into Blis.
Wakim glistens with perspiration now; and the Steel General's finger twitches, the one upon which he wears his humanity-ring.
Eleven minutes pass.
Wakim vanishes.
The Steel General vanishes.
Bronze descends again, and tents fall down, buildings shatter, cracks appear within the ground.
Thirty seconds ago, Wakim is standing behind the General and Wakim is standing before the General, and the Wakim who stands behind, who has just arrived is that instant, clasps his hands together and raises them for a mighty blow upon that metal helm-
–while thirty-five seconds ago, the Steel General appears behind the Wakim of that moment of Time draws back his hand and swings it-
–while the Wakim of thirty seconds ago, seeing himself in fugue, delivering his two-handed blow, is released to vanish, which he does, into a time ten seconds before, when he prepares to emulate his future image observed-
–as the General of thirty-five seconds before the point of attack sees himself draw back his hand, and vanishes to a time twelve seconds previously…
All of these, because a foreguard in Time is necessary to preserve one’s future existence…
… And a rearguard, one’s back…
… While all the while, somewhere/when/perhaps, now, Bronze is rearing and descending, and a probable city trembles upon its foundation.
… And the Wakim of forty seconds before the point of attack, seeing his arrival, departs twenty seconds backward-one minute of probable time therefore being blurred by the fugue battle, and so subject to alteration.
… The General of forty-seven seconds before the point of attack retreats fifteen to strike again, as his self of that moment observes him and drops back eight-
… The Wakim of one minute before goes back ten seconds-
Fugue!
Wakim behind the Steel General, attacking, at minus seventy seconds sees the General behind Wakim, attacking, as both see him and his other see both.
All four vanish, at a pace of eleven, fifteen, nineteen and twenty-five seconds.
… And all the while, somewhere/when/perhaps, Bronze rears, falls, and shock waves go forth.
The point of initial encounter draws on, as General before General and Wakim before Wakim face and fugue.
Five minutes and seven seconds of the future stand in abeyance as twelve Generals and nine Wakims look upon one another.
… Five minutes and twenty-one seconds, as nineteen Wakims and fourteen Generals glare in frozen striking-stances.
Eight minutes and sixteen seconds before the point of attack, one hundred twenty-three Wakims and one hundred thirty-one Generals assess one another and decide upon the moment…
… To attack en masse, within that instant of time, leaving their past selves to shift for themselves in defense-perhaps, if this instant be the wrong one, to fall, and so end this encounter, also. But things must end somewhere. Depending upon the lightning calculations and guesses, each has picked this point as the best for purposes of determining the future and holding the focus. And as the armies of Wakims and the General clash together, the ground begins to rumble beneath their feet and the fabric of Time itself protests this use which has been made of its dispositions. A wind begins to blow and things become unreal about them, wavering between being and becoming and after-being. And somewhere Bronze smashes his diamonds into the continent and spews forth gouts of blue fire upon it. Corpses of bloodied and broken Wakims and fragments of shattered Generals drift through the twisting places beyond the focus of their struggles and are buffeted by the winds. These be the dead of probability, for there can be no past slaying now, and the future is being remade. The focus of the fugue has become this moment of intensity, and they clash with a force that sends widening ripples of change outward through the universe, rising, diminishing, gone by, as Time once more tricks history around events.
Beyond their midst, Bronze descends and somewhere a city begins to come apart. The poet raises his cane, but its green fires cannot cancel the blue flare that Bronze exhales now like a fountain upon the world. Now there are only nine cities on Blis and Time is burning them down. Buildings, machines, corpses, babies, pavilions, these are taken by the wind from the flame, and they pass, wavering, by the fairground. Regard their colors. Red? There’s a riverbank, green stream hung above, and flying purple rocks. Yellow and gray and black the city beneath the three lime-hued bridges. Now the creamy sea is the sky and buzz-saw come the breezes. The odors of Blis are smoke and charred flesh. The sounds are screams amid the clashing of broken gears and the rapid-fire rainfall of running feet like guilt within the Black Daddy Night that comes on like unconsciousness now.
“Cease!” cries Vramin, becoming a blazing green giant in the midst of chaos. “You will lay waste the entire world if you continue!” he cries, and his voice comes down like thunder and whistles and trumpets upon them.
They continue to strive, however, and the magician takes his friend Madrak by the arm and attempts to open them a gateway of escape from Blis.
“Civilians are dying!” cries a moment of the General.
A moment of Wakim laughs.
“What difference does a uniform make in the House of the Dead?”
A great green door appears in outline, grows more substantial, begins to open.