“See that? That’s a reference to the sharpsie riots. Oh, very clever.” Tap, tap, went the cane.
“Wh-”
“Shh, shh.”
Later:
“Ah! Did you catch that? The Minister of Defense is going to choke on his breakfast tomorrow!” Tap, tap, tap.
“You mean-”
“Shh, shh.”
All in all, the experience was both frustrating and strangely entertaining. Valentine found himself, at first, spending as much time craning his neck towards the other box seats in order to gauge the responses of the Families and Ministry members-the ones that Roger named as the butt of certain obscure jokes-as he spent watching the play itself. And despite all that, there was something about the piece, something he couldn’t quite put his finger on, that struck him as being familiar. It wasn’t the story itself, which was clearly a dangerously accurate allegory for current imperial politics-he knew that one off the top of his head. It was something else, something to do with the structure of the language, some quality of sound or syntax that he had trouble shaking off.
And yet as the play progressed, Valentine became aware of a compelling spirit, as though beneath the social referents some deeper truth had been brought to light, and all the complexity, the humanity, the reality of the characters, seemed to shrink away in the shadow of that truth. That something was being revealed was an undeniable sensation, and it drew Valentines eye back to the stage, time and again, to watch the haggard face of the actor playing Theocles, whose voice changed from the throaty rasp of the soldier to the dread thunder of the wicked king, to the quiet horror of the man whose circumstances had outpaced him. Here was a man cast adrift from his own humanity; Theocles, in service to his nation, had lost touch with certain elements of his soul, and found what replaced them was bloody-mindedness and growing paranoia. All in all, Valentine found Theocles to be a far more compelling character than the actual, present emperor upon whom he was based.
When intermission came, he seized on the opportunity to stretch his legs, and it was while he walked in the lushly-appointed halls behind the Royal’s balconies that he ran into Skinner.
This was not literally true; for though Valentine had been carelessly eyeing the elaborate woodwork along the doorframes while he walked, and certainly would have crashed headfirst into anyone that had the misfortune of walking in the opposite direction, Skinner herself had a long and practiced sensitivity to the location of bodies in space. She heard Valentine’s carpet-muffled footsteps, and carefully stepped to the side as he approached.
“Valentine.”
The young man nearly stumbled. “Skinner! What are you doing here?”
Skinner permitted herself a small smile. “I heard there was a play tonight.”
“Oh, right. Well, right. Hey, did you notice the author? E. E. Beckett? You don’t think…that’s not El-I mean, that’s not our Beckett, right?”
“I don’t think so,” she replied, challenged now to keep a broad, self-satisfied grin off of her face. “Surely we’d have heard?”
“I wonder if it’s a relative.”
“Does he have relatives?”
“Younger brother, I think, in Khent-On-Stark. A bootmaker. Hm. I guess I should ask him? Maybe I shouldn’t. I won’t.” He seized her shoulders, all grins and good cheer. “But what are you doing here, I mean? I thought you’d left the city! And you don’t have a box up here, do you?”
“No, a friend is letting me use hers. Someone I think you know, actually. Isn’t Emilia Vie-Gorgon your cousin?”
“Third cousin. I-hm.”
Skinner could hear the frown in his voice. “What is it?”
“Nothing. Nothing, I just. She’s…how do you know Emilia?”
“She found out that I was in some distress after losing my job, and was good enough to offer some assistance. Why?” Her voice took on an edge as she spoke.
Valentine drew his friend to the side of the corridor and spoke in a low voice. He didn’t suspect Emilia was at this performance, but there was no telling what sorts of stray words might find their way back to her. “Nothing. It’s just. Emilia…I’ve known Emilia for a long time, Skinner, and she doesn’t have friends. She just wants things, and so she gets things. I mean, I love my cousin-“
“Enough, Valentine. I’m a grown-up. I can take care of myself. And I don’t recall very many people offering to help. If I have a friendship with Emilia…”
“I just think you should be careful, is all.”
“I’ll take it under advisement,” Skinner replied, coolly. “Now, I think you might want to find your seat. The show’s about to resume.”
“Yes. Right. Sorry.” He coughed and cleared his throat. “Look, I am sorry. I don’t mean to…to be a busybody, or anything. I just. Was concerned.”
“It’s all well to be concerned now,” Skinner snapped. There was something, something ludicrously vulnerable about Valentine’s voice that roused her temper. “It’s all very well to be concerned that someone has decided to help me. Where was your concern when I was down to my last six pennies? Where was your concern when I was being thrown out of my house?”
“I didn’t know, look, I’m sorry, I didn’t know about your house…”
“…where was your concern when the Moral Ministry took my job?”
“I’m sorry, I just, wait…”
“Nevermind. Forget about it, Valentine.” She took a deep breath. “I’m sorry I shouted at you, all right? Just go sit down, don’t worry about it.”
“I’m sorry,” Valentine muttered again. “Sorry.” He cleared his throat again. “That’s…uh. That’s a nice dress, by the way. The blue suits you.”
“I wouldn’t know. Emilia gave it to me.”
And with that last icy comment, she was gone. Valentine stood, blushing and sheepish, cursing himself, wishing he could go back in time and punch himself in the teeth before he had the chance to open his idiot mouth. Instead, he settled for returning to the critics’ box, where Roger was engaged in an animated discussion with another critic.
“I just think,” the man-a raw-boned fellow that Valentine thought wrote for the Observer-was saying, “that real tragic art should be transcendent of political circumstances. You can’t make a good play that’s too topical-”
“Shh, shh,” Roger interrupted. “It’s starting up again.” He tapped his cane imperiously on the balcony, the red-gold house lights dimmed, and the play resumed.
The second act of Theocles was a marvel; a piece of such blistering intensity that even Roger’s lively tongue was stilled. Valentine sat on the very edge of his seat and leaned as far on the railing as he possibly could. A lightheaded euphoria filled him as the raw passions of the actors seemed to dredge his soul up and tear it free from its moorings.
Partly, this was a purely mechanical effect. The new director of the Royal had perfected a way to use an array of lenses and phlogiston and incandescent lamps to produce a bright, narrow spotlight that could range in color from bright white to a pale, ghostly blue. Theocles stood in a circle of strange, denatured light, and his cheap theatrical armor was transmuted into something real, ragged and bloody. Pools of blue light illumined the bogeymen that the wicked king, in his desperation and his arrogance, returned to-their leather masks were made into vivid and leering faces that Valentine found uncomfortably familiar.
Theocles, pursued to the last battlements of his fortress, haunted by vengeful ghosts, was finally cut down by Arden Wyndham, who had lost his family to Theocles’ bloody ambition. When Wyndham returned the stage, now illumined by a wash of lurid color, bearing the head of his enemy on the tip of his sword, the audience roared-not approval, not anger, not exactly. It was a kind of pure, undifferentiated feeling, something more primal than fear or sadness or rage, something that had been building during the enforced stillness of the preceding scenes, something worked to a fever pitch and then finally freed itself.