more like an answer than a threat.
‘Follow,’ growled the man, and stepped away.
Martin stumbled forward, off the threshold. Rational objections burst like bubbles. Past and present melted into one. The street was full of shadows; the evening hush polluted by their prayers and lamentations. Suddenly he was a stranger here.
No time to say goodbye to Claire. He didn’t even pause to shut the door. By opening it, he’d wrenched his life completely out of joint. Claire was disconnected now. She might as well have been another pin-up on his wall.
The swordsman led him off down greying streets, past lamps that sputtered on in ones and twos. Martin’s chest was breathless, but he matched the other’s pace. It felt as if he’d joined some kind of underground resistance. The people they passed were refugees; non-combatants who hadn’t heard the curfew.
Three streets away, he knew where they were going.
With the sun now gone, the Burnt House looked totally charred: a stark, black wreck against the fading sky. The swordsman crossed towards it, with Martin at his heels like a dog.
They slipped in through the back way, like before – and Martin froze. An eerie phosphorescence tinged the kitchen, as if some glowing entity was waiting in the passageway beyond. He remembered that same aura from the decomposing Chart. But scar-face was behind him now, he had to keep on going. Onward and inward: through into the hall.
A new constellation had been born in this dead house. Flames glowed in the cinders, like small ghosts of the roaring beast that had devoured the place. Night-lights lined the blackened stairs, ascending like the stairway to a shrine. Another man was waiting at the bottom: crouched there like a hunter, with his back against the wall. His figure seemed unearthly in the half-dark. The light showed up an atavistic face.
Martin came up short again; the swordsman nudged him forward. With nauseous reluctance he went over to the staircase. The second man stayed motionless, enjoying his discomfort. His nose was broken, scarred across the bridge. It gave his grin a stupid, sneering cast.
Martin tested the first step. The brittle wood creaked dully. A voice upstairs was speaking into silence. Murmuring, monotonous: a language that he couldn’t understand.
He started up. The swordsman followed. He heard the hunter climbing to his feet. The disembodied voice kept up its dirge. Two more men were waiting on the landing. They moved aside to let him pass; he did so with his heartbeat in his throat. It felt like he was stuck inside the hospital again – beset by human faces, alien minds.
The voice had died away. He heard them breathing.
A gaping doorway loomed ahead. The darkness had the pull of an abyss. He knew it was the black heart of the house – its crematorium. The thought brought bile seeping up; he swallowed it back down.
The furnace was as cold as ashes now. The murk was thick and soupy, like a sewer. But as he reached the threshold, a rustling movement came from just ahead. The dank air shifted faintly. Somebody was waiting in the room.
Martin tried to back away – and found the other men were all behind him. Their clothes smelled ages old. He looked from face to stony face – then quickly turned his head.
The shape inside the room was coming forward.
A mane of pale hair grew clear; the highlights of the face. The mask of shadow peeled away, revealing pallid skin; but pools of darkness lingered in the sockets of his eyes.
It was the face he’d seen before, of course: the figure who’d looked back. The one with eyes like somebody insane.
‘So,’ he said, ‘the Summoner, at last.’ The voice was harsh, but there was humour in it. A grim amusement, bleak as bone. He reached out with one finger, prodding Martin in the chest. The shock of contact gave the touch the impact of a blow: a hammer-stroke against his pounding heart. Martin had to gulp for breath. The other merely smiled.
‘You woke us, and we came. We always answer. Has it seemed long, the waiting for the Ravens to return?’
Do I belong to some ancient race?
I like to walk in ancient places:
These are things that I can understand.
THE LEVELLERS
Dear Craig
Hi there, how’s it going? I’m still waiting for that airmail envelope to come plopping through the letterbox, but I expect you’ve got your work cut out upholding the New World Order. If you get a moment free, I’d appreciate it if you’d let me know.
Look, new pen now: different day. I don’t mean to sound snotty; I’m just missing you, that’s all. I’ve got a lot on my mind right now, and I’d love to hear your voice. I’m still at Lyn’s. Please ring me.
Love you
Frannie
x
1
Sitting on the sofa, listening to Lyn gushing on the phone, Fran felt a strange, resentful little twinge. Was that a man at the other end? She rather thought it was. Leaning back, she peered into the hallway. Lyn stood there, sideways on to her, head nodding as she listened. Her sunny smile was private, like a dreamer’s. It soured Fran’s mood to know she couldn’t share it.
The twinge became a pang of guilt. She shifted with discomfort and sat forward. After all that Lyn had done for her, she still begrudged her friend her separate pleasures. You selfish cow, she told herself; went glumly back to towelling her hair.
She was fresh from the bath, still flushed with warmth; wrapped up in Lyn’s spare bathrobe. She rubbed her damp hair harder as if jealousy was something she could simply scrub away. And how might Lyn be feeling, when she thought of Fran and Craig? Having brought them back together, she could only stand and watch. She knew how it felt, to see a friend enticed away …
Reality engulfed her then. The whole room seemed to change, as if the sun had shifted round. Her mundane instincts fell away; Craig’s smile was just a picture in her head. The cold blue gaze of Athelgar dispersed it like a mist.
‘Oh, no!’ said Lyn delightedly, still giggling.
Fran sat there, very still: the towel’s dampness clutched against her chest. She’d spoken with a ghost, the other week. A solid phantom, trapped in time; still wandering those half-forgotten roads. He’d called on her to follow him – and she had said she’d come.
Jesus, Fran: what were you thinking of?
So what if Lyn had just acquired a boyfriend? So what, if it was Fran’s turn to be eased politely out? Such things seemed almost trifling now. The world through which she walked had been upturned.
How could he have reached her from a thousand years ago, to warm her carefree heart on Heaven’s Field?
Swallowing, she stood and padded through into the kitchen. Her mouth was very dry, she needed something to drink. She poured herself some fruit juice from the fridge, still listening to Lyn with half an ear. Her jealousy, still vague, was of a different order now. An envy of her friend’s unclouded sky.
Turning round, she took a sip. The Tropical Mix was cool and sweet; but it went down quickly, leaving her still dry. Moodily, she wiped her mouth; then stiffened. The