But the gods are asleep, too, he remembered, or thought he did. Who told me that?
Come, he told the faded ghost of his father. Come. I'll take you where you need to go.
Beyond the city they passed into a shadowy wood and then walked down a hillside covered with black ivy and gray birches into a silent valley. They crossed a blood-colored river at the bottom of the valley on rocks that stood up through the flood like teeth. They walked on, the sky as bleak as stone, the light never brighter than a faint reddish glow in the far west, like a bloodstain that would not wash out of an old shirt.
Time passed, or would have in a different place. Vansen's father sang as he walked, senseless ritual ditties about dividing his body in pieces, endless loving verses that described the divestiture of flesh and memory, but oth¬erwise the old man said little and seemed to recall nothing of his former life. There were moments Vansen thought he had been terribly wrong, that he had seized some old man who was not his father, but then an angle of his companion's insubstantial face, an expression flitting across the thin mouth like a fish in a shallow pool, would convince him he had been right after all.
They crossed four more streams, one of moving ice, one of water that boiled and bubbled with heat, one so full of green growing things that it seemed motionless, although the streambed squirmed between the roots
with tiny, cluttering, splashing shapes, and last a torrent of which they could see nothing but moving fog in a deep crevasse, although they heard sounds coming up from it that no fog ever made, and across which they had to leap, Vansen clutching at the misty shape that marked where the old man's hand should have been.
Eventually all distinctions became one, each step the same step, each song the old man sang the same song. Shadows approached them, some of them fearful to look at, but Vansen told them his name and the old man's name and they retreated into the twilight once more. Other times the shad¬ows came in fairer shapes with offers of hospitality-sumptuous meals, soft beds, or even more intimate comforts-but Vansen learned to refuse these just as firmly, and those shapes retreated, too.
Finally they came to a wide, empty land where the dust blew always and the wind was fierce, a place where they could walk no faster than a dying man could crawl. At times in that place his father faltered and Vansen had to pull him along through the stinging, smothering dust. Once, when even the twilight was blotted out by thick clouds and they trudged forward in complete darkness, the old man fell and could not get up. As he lay, croak¬ing a song about white bracelets and hearts of smoke, Ferras Vansen crouched beside him in despair. He knew that he could rise and walk away and the old man would not see him go, would never even realize he was gone. Instead he staggered to his feet, then bent and lifted the old man onto his back. Pedar Vansen's body had no more substance than a woman's veil, but somehow he was also heavier than a great stone, and Vansen could walk only a few steps each time before he had to stop to catch his breath.
At last the dust storms subsided. They were still in the empty land, the gray expanses, but for the first time he saw something on the horizon other than more nothingness. It was a house-a hut, really, a crude thing made of sticks and unworked stones, its crevices mortared with what looked like centuries of dust, so it seemed the mound of some tremendous and slovenly insect. A man stood in front of it, leaning on his long staff like one of the Kertish herders who had sometimes come to live in Ferras Vansen's dales when driven out by a tribal feud back home.
There! It was a triumphant moment, overshadowing even the sight of an¬other being in this endless, dust-choked void. He had remembered some¬thing new: / am Ferras Vansen-a man of the dales.
The stranger wore the kind of ragged cloth around his belly that the an¬cients had worn, but was otherwise without ornament. His long beard was
gray as cobweb beside his mouth, but dust had turned the rest of it yellow. He did not move but only watched them approach, and Vansen and his fa¬ther's ghost had almost reached him before Ferras Vansen realized this bearded apparition was the first being he had seen in these lands for as long as he could remember whose eyes were open-the first who was not asleep.
Who are you? Vansen said to him. Or is it forbidden to ask?
The man's eyes seemed bright as stars beneath his bristling brows. He smiled, but there was no kindness in it, or malice either. You stand before the last river, but the place you wish to go does not exist in this Age of Sleep. You must cross instead to another side, one in which those great ones you wish to see are still in their houses to be seen.
I don't understand, Vansen told the bearded man. As they spoke, his father sat down in the dust and began singing to himself.
You do not need to understand. You need only do what you must. Whether you come through again afterward is in the hands of greater powers than mine. The dusty old man shifted his bare feet, the spread, leathery toes of someone who had never worn shoes. Unlike Vansen's father, he was as real as could be-Ferras Vansen could see every inch of his coppery skin with great clar¬ity, every scar, every hair.
You will not tell me who you are, Master?
The bearded man shook his head. Not a master-certainly not yours. A shape, an idea, perhaps even a word. That is all. Now step through the door. You will find water there. Both of you must wash yourselves.
And without knowing how it happened, Ferras Vansen found himself on the inside of the small wooden hut, but here for the first time they had left the twilight behind: what he could see through the cracks in the walls was velvet black sky and the gleam of stars. He stepped closer to the walls and peered through one of the openings. The entire hut was surrounded by stars, innumerable white sparks flickering like the candles of all the gods in heaven-stars above, beside, and even below them, as though the hut floated untethered through the night sky. Dizzied by the enthralling, terri¬fying view, he turned to see his father already washing himself with the water from a simple wooden tub as crude as the hut itself.
Vansen joined him, and for long moments lost himself in the glory of water running down his skin. He had forgotten he even had a body, and this was a wonderful way to be reminded. Even his father's phantom, no more substantial than if he were made of spiderwebs, seemed to have come close to something like happiness.
/ should haw tonic home, Vansen said. I feared you, liiti. I leared you suffer-ing.And I hated you, at least a little. Because you did not make it easy for me, when you could have.
His father broke off his singing and for a long time did not say anything. He stood up straight and let the water slide off him like rain dripping down a window.
/ was a prisoner of my own understanding, Pedar Vansen said at last. At least that is what I imagine. In truth, I cannot remember-it is all gone, drifted away like smoke…
And then, before Vansen could hear any more of these words that came to him like food to a starving man, they were out of the hut again, returned to the twilight and dust. The bearded man stood leaning on his long staff, a length of wood as gnarled and knobbed as the ancient man himself. There, the bearded man said, pointing at a pile of dull, red-orange stones lying in the dust. Crumble them and rub yourself with it so you may cross into the last sun¬set light and still retain something of yourself. Both of you. There is no difference now between living and dead in this house-all are subject to the same laws.
Vansen rubbed the red rocks together, scraping them into blood-colored powder, rubbing that powder onto his clean skin. Instead of rubbing dirt onto himself, it seemed instead as though he rubbed himself with light. When he finished, he gleamed, and even his father's phantom shimmered beneath its layer of dust and seemed more substantial.