Louise Katz

The Orchid Nursery


Скачать книгу

the night along the pale chalk line that weaves its way among stones and low wiry shrubs, and as the sun stain seeps into the worn hills to the east and the darkness ebbs to grey, I find I am very thirsty. I notice also that my feet hurt me where the shoe-leather has rubbed. There is no cover, no way to protect myself from the Ecumen or foot-soldiers who might already have been dispatched to pursue me, no relief from the elements. Still, I must rest awhile. I draw my cowl over my head and lie down.

      But my mind is teeming and I do not sleep for some hours. Still, I use those hours well. I review my actions of the last day, meditating on what I have done, what I have seen, and what it might mean. Now, revisiting my feelings of horror in the Orchid Nursery, I see that I have reacted as if fully possessed by the fleshly fallacy, incapable of seeing beyond the surface of things. Thus limited I could only experience a purely visceral reaction. For without the light of reason guided by faith and prayer, how can one see truly? And the truth of what I saw was this: a set of lovely streamlined propagation machines, living (wo)Men whose whole being is directed towards one pure and precious goal. That of service to the Truth embedded in the ideals of Perfect State.

      Time passes and eventually I feel myself drifting, buoyed up on a current of images, most soothing and harmonious, of fields of clean, dry grasses, of silken garments, of unfurling flowers, of Pearl’s face. I will find her and bring her home. I will be forgiven in time, in time, and if the Brother Ministers will still allow it I will Beseech again, next year … and surely they will, when I bring back my prize Pearl who will be recovered from her madness, will be glad that I found her, will walk with me in all willingness relieved and grateful that I have saved her. On our return we will confess and suffer whatever punishment is meted out, for it will be fair, and good, and redemptive … and yes, we will both Beseech. Next year, next year…

      I awake in a clammy sweat. My lips are parched. I have slept through the dewfall and now there is not even that moisture to refresh me. The sun is stewing away in the soupy cauldron of the sky, the low clouds promise yet withhold rain. But it is slightly more possible to walk than to rest. I gather some of the coarse grass that grows between the stones and layer them in a crosswise thatch-pattern between the tongue of each shoe and my blistered feet. This remedy lasts about five minutes before I am again limping badly and now hunger, as well as thirst, comes to torment me. I have eaten nothing since yesterday morning. The physical discomfort is hard to endure, but the knowledge of my own stupidity in going off without any preparation at all makes me realise once more what a foolish, dull scrap of a thing I am. Truly, I am a waste of air. Yet since I still breathe I must find a way to sustain myself for such is the animal nature of all living creatures, however undeserving.

      By the grace of GodFather,

      May the shadow of his

      Sceptred Eye forever

      Darken the false glister

      That is not gold,

      But tinsel.

      Tinsel tawdries that clutter

      The margins of the right path

      Drawing us towards the offer

      Of guileful glamour

      And temporal temptations.

      Lead us not

      Now or ever

      Alive-alive-oh, amen.

      A small creature darts out, startled by my footfall. Anticipating his direc­tion I throw myself bodily forward – and yes, my judgement is true for I feel the small, warm body crushed beneath me.

      I sit up carefully and observe that it is a stone rodent, the kind with tall ears and thighs like pistons. Quickly I wring the last of the life out of him, and his head slumps heavily from his broken neck. I cut into the skin with Pearl’s knife and with a strong tug I pull the whole furry sheath back to expose the pink flesh, all shiny, and the striations of white fat; I slit his belly open, pulling out the organs and taking care not to tear the intestines with their burden of filth.

      I consider taking the time to build a fire to cook him here and now, but I do not have the patience to endure further rumblings in my gut while I painstakingly coax fire from stone and tinder. Thus, I eat the little heart for the modest measure of valour that is in it, and the liver for its rich blood. I feel immediately stronger, but now, with the taste of iron and salt in my mouth, my thirst is unbearable. But no – not so – for I must bear it. I wrap the remains of the small corpse for later in a strip of fabric torn from my dressless, and continue to walk in the direction I hope will eventually lead me to Hagovel, the destination outlined in the map beneath the Standard of the Fool.

      I stop to rest a couple of hours later and cook my small meal. I allow myself time for a brief nap, awaking in the evening with my thirst now a mortal agony. The cruel moon glares down with baleful malice, and I curse her, the sow-faced Lili, monster daughter of Lilith, first (wo)Man and original criminal for whose sinful demonstration of waywardness all girlies must now suffer grief and woe, now and forever, alive-alive-oh amen. Though my feet bleed, I continue on my way in the cool of the night until, towards dawn, with the tired moonlight seeping through the dirty scrambled-egg clouds, my energy begins to wane. My head is light, my feet heavy. I stumble a little over stones and bracken and scrub. A soft, penetrating rain begins to fall, chilling my skin, pasting my hair across my face. I raise my face and open my mouth to the delicious moisture. But once my thirst is quenched, new trials await me.

      The landscape has become ill-defined, foully female in its featurelessness, grey rain blurring into grey pre-dawn light, marsh gas stinking all sulfurous and greenish and wavering in the still air and yes, I am fearful of these lights now that I am alone. How will I be able to tell the difference between a marsh-light and a fey-light? How will I know if some stealthy stalker, an emissary of the Hag, is mere inches from me, ready to drain the life from me that she might live on, a warped semblance of (wo)Mankind? Keep your head low, I tell myself. The way leads ever downwards now, and the land is less stony; there are trees now, thin, gaunt, writhy in the unreliable light refracted by rain, rain, rain; they are anchored by twisted roots into black mud, and I am now walking by the banks of a sluggish river pocked with the fat drops of the slow, insistent rain. I recognise this country. It is a dangerous place filled with fey humours, certainly riddled with the spores of Lilith. It is the place we came to before, years back, with MaOblat on that excursion to where the orchids grow, where Pearl reached out her hand to touch … My shoes are waterlogged and my garments stick to my body like a second, ill-fitting skin, freezing me to the marrow of my bones. I stumble on, teeth chattering in my skull, and after a time I feel as if I too am losing definition, becoming blurred and vague in body and in mind both. This is surely the effect of the evil presences as yet invisible, and I pray hard that they will remain so. Indeed, the effort of traversing this place alone, without the support of the sorority, is wearing me down, so that by daybreak I feel as if I might dissolve completely and become another part of this landscape. The ground underfoot is swampy, spongy, and I too am damp and soft. I am the swamp. I’ve got frogs. And crocodiles. The sky reflected in my water is yellow as sulfur.

      As I walk, to comfort myself I recite the Fourth Tenet from the Way of (wo)Man: ‘Gonna Take up My Burden, Far From the Riverside’.

      though I walk through damp val-leys

      oo-zing with lilith spores

      ten-thousand filthy whores

      who spurn the sacred cause

      gonna think on

      the Scep-tre

      the Rod pro-tect-eth me.

      gonna take up the bur-den

      far from the riverside

      far from the salt-steeped tide

      where fey lil’im reside.

      gonna cut out my e-go

      far from the ri-ver-side

      gonna take up the bur-den

      far from the riverside

      far from