…And, as the Pattern in Rebma had helped to restore my faded memories, so this one I was now striving to create stirred and elicited the smell of the chestnut trees, of the wagonloads of vegetables moving through the dawn toward the Hallos… I was not in love with anyone in particular at the time, though there were many girls — Yvettes and Mimis and Simones, their faces merge — and it was spring in Paris, with Gipsy bands and cocktails at Louis’… I remembered, and my heart leaped with a kind of Proustian joy while Time tolled about me like a bell… And perhaps this was the reason for the recollection, for this joy seemed transmitted to my movements, informed my perceptions, empowered my will…
I saw the next step and I took it… I had been around once now, creating the perimeter of my Pattern. At my back, I could feel the storm. It must have mounted to the plateau’s rim. The sky was darkening, the storm blotting the swinging, swimming, colored limits. Flashes of lightning splayed about, and I could not spare the energy and the attention to try to control things.
Having gone completely around, I could see that as much of the new Pattern as I had walked was now inscribed in the rock and glowing palely, bluely. Yet, there were no sparks, no tinges in my feet, no hair-raising currents — only the steady law of deliberation, upon me like a great weight… Left…
…Poppies, poppies and cornflowers and tall poplars along country roads, the taste of Normandy cider… And in town again, the smell of the chestnut blossoms… The Seine full of stars… The smell of the old brick houses in the Place des Vosges after a morning’s rain… The bar under the Olympia Music Hall… A fight there… Bloodied knuckles, bandaged by a girl who took me home…
…What was her name? Chestnut blossoms… A white rose…
I sniffed then. The odor was all but gone from the remains of the rose at my collar. Surprising that any of it had survived this far. It heartened me. I pushed ahead, curving gently to my right. From the corner of my eye, I saw the advancing wall of the storm, slick as glass, obliterating everything it passed. The roar of its thunder was deafening now.
Right, left…
The advance of the armies of the night… Would my Pattern hold against it? I wished that I might hurry, but if anything I was moving with increasing slowness as I went on. I felt a curious sense of bilocation, almost as if I were within the Jewel tracing the Pattern there myself while I moved out here, regarding it and mimicking its progress. Left… Turn… Right… The storm was indeed advancing. Soon it would reach old Hugi’s bones. I smelled the moisture and the ozone and wondered about the strange dark bird who had said he’d been waiting for me since the beginning of Time. Waiting to argue with me or to be eaten by me in this place without history? Whatever, considering the exaggeration usual in moralists, it was fitting that, having failed to leave me with my heart all laden with rue over my spiritual condition, he be consumed to the accompaniment of theatrical thunder… There was distant thunder, near thunder and more thunder now. As I turned in that direction once more, the lightning flashes were nearly blinding. I clutched my chain and took another step…
The storm pushed right up to the edge of my Pattern, and then it parted. It began to creep around me. Not a drop fell upon me or the Pattern. But slowly, gradually, we came to be totally engulfed within it.
It seemed as if I were in a bubble at the bottom of a stormy sea. Walls of water encircled me and dark shapes darted by. It seemed as if the entire universe were pressing in to crush me. I concentrated on the red world of the Jewel. Left…
The chestnut blossoms… A cup of hot chocolate at a sidewalk cafe… A band concert in the Tuileries Gardens, the sounds climbing through the sunbright air… Berlin in the twenties, the Pacific in the thirties — there had been pleasures there, but of a different order. It may not be the true past, but images of the past that rush to comfort or torment us later, man or nation. No matter. Across the Pont Neuf and down the Rue Rivoli, buses and fiacres… Painters at their easels in the Luxembourg Gardens… If all were to fall well, I might seek a shadow like this again one day… It ranked with my Avalon. I had forgotten… The details… The touches that make for life… The smell of the chestnuts…
Walking… I completed another circuit. The wind screamed and the storm roared on, but I was untouched. So long as I did not permit it to distract me, so long as I kept moving and maintained my focus on the Jewel… I had to hold up, had to keep taking these slow, careful steps, never to stop, slower and slower but constantly moving… Faces… It seemed that rows of faces regarded me from beyond the Pattern’s edge… Large, like the Head, but twisted-grinning. Jeering, mocking me, waiting for me to stop or step wrongly… Waiting for the whole thing to come apart around me… There was lightning behind their eyes and in their mouths, their laughter was the thunder… Shadows crawled among them… Now they spoke to me, with words like a gale from off a dark ocean… I would fail, they told me, fail and be swept away, this fragment of a Pattern dashed to pieces behind me and consumed… They cursed me, they spat and vomited toward me, though none of it reached… Perhaps they were not really there… Perhaps my mind had been broken by the strain… Then what good were my efforts? A new Pattern to be shaped by a madman? I wavered, and they took up the chorus, “Mad! Mad! Mad!” in the voices of the elements.
I drew a deep breath and smelled what was left of the rose and thought of chestnuts once again, and days filled with the joys of life and organic order. The voices seemed to soften as my mind raced back through the events of that happy year… And I took another step… And another… They had been playing on my weaknesses, they could feel my doubts, my anxiety, my fatigue… Whatever they were, they seized what they saw and tried to use it against me… Left… Right… Now let them feel my confidence and wither, I told myself. I have come this far. I will continue. Left…
They swirled and swelled about me, still mouthing discouragements. But some of the force seemed gone out of them. I made my way through another section of arc, seeing it grow before me in my mind’s red eye.
I thought back to my escape from Greenwood, to my tricking Flora out of information, to my encounter with Random, our fight with his pursuers, our journey back to Amber… I thought of our flight to Rebma and my walking of the reversed Pattern there for a restoration of much of my memory… Of Random’s shotgun wedding and my sojourn to Amber, where I fought with Eric and fled to Bleys… Of the battles that followed, my blinding, my recovery, my escape, my journey to Lorraine and then to Avalon…
Moving into even higher gear, my mind skimmed the surface of subsequent events… Ganelon and Lorraine… The creatures of the Black Circle… Benedict’s arm… Dara… The return of Brand and his stabbing… My stabbing… Bill Roth… Hospital records… My accident…
…Now, from the very beginning at Greenwood, through it all, to this moment of my struggle to assure each perfect maneuver as it appeared to me, I felt the growing sense of anticipation I had known — whether my actions were directed toward the throne, vengeance, or my conception of duty — felt it, was aware of its continuous existence across those years up until this moment, when it was finally accompanied by something else… I felt that the waiting was just about over, that whatever I had been anticipating and struggling toward was soon to occur.
Left… Very, very slowly… Nothing else was important. I threw all of my will into the movements now. My concentration became total. Whatever lay beyond the Pattern, I was now oblivious to it. Lightnings, faces, winds… It did not matter. There was only the Jewel, the growing Pattern and myself — and I was barely aware of myself. Perhaps this was the closest I would ever come to Hugi’s ideal of merging with the Absolute. Turn… Right foot… Turn again…