“You’ll tell me,” said Chess. “Quicksilver, I reckon your quarry was.”
There had been no fortuitous ave out of which Chichuwee might forcibly milk and boil Lizzie’s ghost, but Swinburne had brought him one of her handkerchiefs, and so the old bird man had used it as a “plumb line” to facilitate a session of automatic writing by means of a pencil on a felt-footed disk. Her ghost had seemed to volunteer a response, with weak squiggles that only occasionally formed words, but Chichuwee had said that if the responder was indeed Lizzie’s ghost, it was already remote — out of the river and into the sink of the sea. The only chance of meaningful contact was for Swinburne to try calling her from a boat out of sight of land.
“Yes,” Swinburne said now, shivering, “she didn’t linger.”
He didn’t tell Chess that the reason Lizzie’s ghost had not sat dormant in the river might be because her identity had powerfully repelled it by being negatively charged — even diabolically charged.
Her ghost, it seemed to Swinburne, might be her fugitive innocence.
“Out of sight of land,” he added.
Chess nodded. “They’re always that,” he said. “Why don’t you go below? You’re no use up here, and we can fetch you when we’re in the Ghost Roads.”
Swinburne eyed the little square hatch cover in the deck with distaste, but a gust of even colder wind blew tears out of his eyes and he nodded and began groping his way aft.
THE BELOWDECKS SPACE WAS only dimly illuminated by a fire visible through vents in a small cooking stove, but Swinburne could see that the height of the place was no more than four feet, from the plank floor to the plank ceiling, and about eight feet long and perhaps seven feet across at its widest point, though it narrowed to nothing up at the bow end. In this confined space, Chess and his companions had crammed a surprising amount of stuff — a railed crockery shelf, a square teakettle fitted in a square niche, bunks, and bundles of canvas and rope. Soon the inside of Swinburne’s nose had warmed enough for him to grimace at the smells of fish and sweat and tar, and he pulled out Baudelaire to have at least the mental perfume of the decadent Frenchman’s verse.
But after a few minutes of trying to recline with the book held up to a beam of orange light from the stove, Swinburne found himself sliding forward and then rolling up against one of the bunks, where he clung as the boat rolled the other way, and he guessed that they had sailed out past the barrier of the seawall. Hastily he pulled a flask from the breast pocket of his overcoat and gulped some brandy to stave off seasickness, and he anxiously watched the stove and the piles of tarred rope, ready to bolt up onto the deck if the vessel’s pitching should spill burning coals onto the rope. Regretfully he stopped trying to read Métamorphoses du vampire, shut the volume of Baudelaire, and tucked it back into his pocket.
He thought of Lizzie, and the night she had bitten him on the wrist as they had been drunkenly playing cat-and-mouse on the drawing room carpet while Gabriel had been working down the hall in his studio. Swinburne had a moment earlier presumed to call her by the pet name Gabriel used for her, Guggums, and after the answering bite she had said, in an oddly harsh voice, Call me Gogmagog. Swinburne had laughed delightedly and tried to bite her in return, but she had got up and hurried out of the room; and when he had gone looking for her, he had found her with Gabriel in the studio, and she had claimed to have been there for the last half hour.
Probably she had been! Probably the Lizzie who had bitten him was a mimicking apparition, an inhuman impostor, like the couple in Gabriel’s drawing who confronted the originals of themselves in a forest.
After perhaps half an hour, the rolling abated a bit and one of the old men lifted back the hatch cover and called down the hole, “It’s time.”
Swinburne was glad to crawl across to the hatch and stand up with his head out in the fresh air — and then he quailed and sagged, for the wind was icy and shot with spray. He ducked back into the low space and found the boots and scarf that Chess had mentioned, and when he had got them on, he took a deep breath and then crawled back to the hatch and climbed out onto the rocking wet deck.
A couple of flaring kerosene torches mounted at the bow and stern threw a white glare over the dark water, and the nearer waves glittered as they rolled past, like living, diamond-dusted obsidian.
Chess was braced up by the bow, and Swinburne staggered forward against the force of the wind to join him, both to see better ahead and to be nearer to the flame.
Chess was holding the unstoppered bottle of holy water, and Swinburne could see that half of its contents were gone.
Swinburne’s face was already numb with cold, but the chill shivered through his belly too when he looked ahead and saw … white figures standing out there over the waves in the night.
They moved bonelessly like splashes of milk in oil, and the holes that were their eyes and mouths appeared and disappeared as randomly as spots of moonlight on pavement below windblown trees; their arms waved above their shapeless heads.
And over the wind in the rigging he could hear their voices, a shaking cacophony like wind chimes. Men and women, and children, their frail cries rang away across the infinite dark face of the sea in weird atonal harmony.
Swinburne clung dizzily to the bow gunwale. Flying sea spray stung his eyes.
Then one voice out there was clear: “Hadji!” it called. “Save me with your blood!” Swinburne saw the figure now, only a dozen yards away and clearer than the rest. And even out here, even without an organic throat to propel it, the voice was one Swinburne recognized.
Chess leaned toward Swinburne. “You need to throw some of your blood into the sea,” the old man said, speaking loudly to be heard over the ghost chorus and the wind. “The bird man told you that, right?”
“No,” said Swinburne, his gloved hands gripping the slick gunwale. He shook his head.
“Well, it needn’t be gallons — just a few drops will do.” With a sharp click Chess opened a clasp knife and pressed the grip into Swinburne’s palm. “Finger’s fine. That’s your fugitive, is it?”
Tears were blowing back along Swinburne’s cheeks, mingling with the sea spray.
“No,” he said.
Hadji had been Swinburne’s childhood nickname. This was the ghost of his grandfather, who had died two years ago; Swinburne had written about him, “the two maddest things in the north country were his horse and himself”—old Sir John Swinburne had been a free-thinking follower of Voltaire who was once sent to prison for insulting the Prince Regent, and young Algernon had loved and admired him.
“Hadji!” came the cry again across the water, distinct over the wailing of the other ghosts. “Some of your living blood!”
“You have to answer,” said Chess, leaning in close to be heard, “or he’ll hang about and drown out any others.” He grinned. “Huh. Drown out.”
“It’s my grandfather,” said Swinburne, near sobbing. “I can’t bear it that he’s dead — out here.”
Chess laughed harshly. “My grandfather is dead too, and out here. At least yours doesn’t have to work a Purgatorial fishing boat.”
That made Swinburne look directly at the old man beside him, and then he hunched around to look aft at the two figures standing halfway back along the deck, black silhouettes backlit by the stern torch.
Swinburne suddenly felt cold all through, colder than the wind-borne spray. Very aware of the multitude of ghosts and the vast night sea around them, he turned back to face Chess. “Am I,” he quavered, “dead myself?”