In some way, ToPu believed his watching protected the other mask-spirits—that they would wisp away to nothingness if someone didn’t remove himself from the revelries and look on from the sidelines. If no one watched, the dance was random capering, dissipative frenzy…a meaningless hell. Someone had to see how a mask drew pictures in the dirt, someone had to hear it sing nonsense syllables to a stone. Being watched made it all real; taking pictures kept them safe.
There was seldom any logic in the pictures he took. When I put the diskette into the viewer on the morning after a dance, I might see a close-up of someone’s hand, or a badly framed tangle of copulating bodies. I don’t know if ToPu even understood what the camera did, for he never learned how to advance the diskette from shot to shot—each new shot overwrote the previous one, so only the last shot of the night was preserved.
But ToPu didn’t care about preserving pictures; he only cared about watching. The camera was a watching machine, and watching was ToPu’s duty.
Picture 7—The death of Junior Planetologist DiDeel, during the Dance of the Arcana:
I took this picture moments after waking from the trance. I believe ToPu saw the horror begin and surrendered the body to me prematurely, in the hope BarlDan could cope with something ToPu could not.
I did not understand. I awoke sluggish, my mask beside me, my camera in hand. When I saw what was happening to DiDeel, my first reaction was to snap a picture, thinking I was seeing some remarkable atmospheric phenomenon.
The picture shows DiDeel frozen in the moment of transition from mask-self back to man. His mask belongs to the house of the Blind Priestess, an eyeless shell of pearly plastic with a wig of blended human hair reaching the ground in a blond-brown-red-black tumble. The mask is pushed far enough back on DiDeel’s forehead that the man’s mouth is uncovered. The mouth is open wide. He appears to be screaming.
That is what the camera recorded; but what my eyes saw was a stream of creamy mist pouring from his mouth like smoke belched by a fire-eater. The mist pierced the surrounding fog and sent it billowing outward in ripple after ripple. DiDeel made no sound but a choked crooning in his throat, like a heartsick child humming itself a lullaby.
All this…and my first reaction was merely to snap a picture. I found the sight odd but not disturbing, as if I were a four-year-old watching a favorite uncle do a magic trick. Accepting it all; almost absorbed. But when I look again at the picture, I cannot blind myself to DiDeel’s agony. His body is bent backward as if some invisible assailant has wrapped one arm around his waist and is pressing the other hand on his sternum, pushing with full strength in an attempt to snap DiDeel’s spine. The man is held impossibly off balance, screaming without noise, the hair of his mask dragging in the dirt.
Yet in the moments after waking, I had a lingering feeling this was very right: that I should want the same for myself.
DiDeel’s body wavered in that pose for one second, two seconds, three, then jerked twice with the force of whipcracks. He heeled backward, striking the ground hard enough to scuff up a cloud of dust, and lay there as limp as his hair.
It was only then I put down the camera. I started shaking and couldn’t stop.
A few of the masks came to look at the fallen body. Lilijel poked it with her finger once, then a second time much harder. I had to shout at her to go away and leave DiDeel alone.
Mask spirits almost never understand death.
Picture 8—Campfire, second night of the mission:
A jump forward in time…but I was too busy to take pictures during the day after DiDeel’s death. There were reports to file. There were morale restoration activities to run: a group contact experience in the morning, a unification dialogue at lunch, grief counseling sessions all afternoon. My hardest duty was calling my superiors in orbit, formally asking them to quarantine Muta until we determined the cause of DiDeel’s death. If this was some kind of disease, we could not risk infecting the main body of the task force. The mother ship offered to send us robots, medicines, any equipment we might need; but what could I ask for?
The picture around the campfire shows the team at the end of the day: haggard, subdued. Our Senior Medical Officer leans against the shoulder of the man beside her; her eyes are half closed. She has not slept except for a three-hour nap I ordered her to take before supper. For the rest of the time, she and her junior have tried to determine why DiDeel died. No success.
Many of the other team members also show signs of exhaustion. No one slept well. DiDeel was popular, respected for his exceptional openness and generosity to all; his death struck hard. The majority of those around the fire simply stare into the flames, their expressions somber. The camera has caught one junior in the process of glancing over his shoulder into the fog.
The fog is thicker than the previous night. It crowds around us hungrily.
Chiala and MolanDif sit in almost the same positions as before. She is not singing—no one is singing—but she is speaking intensely to him, punctuating her words with a sharp gesture of her hands.
The neckerchief is around her throat.
I intended to take it to her hut and leave quickly without being seen…but the hut was full of her, the smell of her hair, a book she’d been reading, the imprint in the blankets where she recently sat on the edge of her cot. As I laid the neckerchief across the pillow I could smell her everywhere—on her pillow, the linen, the talismans dangling from the headboard. A chocolate-brown dress jacket was thrown across the top of her storage trunk; the sight of it brought back memories of her wearing it at celebration dinners, her eyes meeting mine as we drank from a shared chalice, her eyes, her skin, her skin the color of the jacket, her eyes…not one of these photos truly shows her eyes, not the way I want to remember them, how full they were with warmth and heat and fire. And my memory is slippery—in embarrassment and fear, it shies away from recalling the intensity of her gaze. I can see Chiala’s face, but I can’t look into her eyes.
She found me in her hut. I don’t know how long I’d been standing there. The neckerchief was in my hands, though I don’t remember picking it up again. When I laid it down a second time, smoothing it out on the pillow, she asked why.
I had a speech prepared—not that I’d planned to recite it to her. I’d constructed it for my own benefit, putting the issues into well-chosen words supposedly showing the wisdom of my decision. In the naked light of her eyes, the words and wisdom shattered. I could say nothing more than “I’m sorry, I can’t, not me” as I fled the hut.
The words of my rehearsed rationalizations came back like shouting ghosts as I retreated to my hut through the fog. “I love you so much I can’t see you. I see your face, that’s all. All I know of you is fragments—the warmth of your body, the smoothness of your bare shoulder, your off-key singing. I can’t glue the fragments into a real woman. I’m blinded by love, I can’t see, what am I loving but a voice, a perfume, the imagined kiss of your skin?”
The ghost words haunt me today as I view my photos and pretend I’ve left my past behind. Like all ghosts, words are liars. I chose loneliness because it was familiar and safe.
Even cowards find themselves facing the truth eventually. They just do it too late.
Picture 9—Fog:
It was my duty to ensure that the Dance proceeded as normal. All the morale-building exercises of the day would be wasted if we didn’t fulfill the Arcana. Every person on the team had danced each night since his or her initiation; to skip the ritual now would completely unhinge them. It was bad enough we had to dance without the circle full. MolanDif kept asking, “Can we do this with only twenty-one houses? Isn’t it against the rules?”