Clive Barker Books Of Blood 6 Eng (m76)(1).rtf

(1070 KB) Pobierz
CONTENTS

CONTENTS

THE  LAST ILLUSION

page 1

THE  LIFE OF DEATH

page 74

HOW  SPOILERS BLEED

page 122

TWILIGHT  AT THE TOWERS

page 165

     THE      BOOK      OF   BLOOD

           (a postscript)

ON JERUSALEM STREET

page 209

THE LAST ILLUSION

WHAT     HAPPENED  THEN  - when the magician,

having mesmerised the caged tiger, pulled the tasselled cord that released a dozen swords upon  its head - was the subject of heated argument both in the bar of the theatre and later, when Swanns performance was over, on the sidewalk of 51st Street. Some claimed to have glimpsed the bottom of the cage opening in the split second that all other eyes were on the descending blades, and seen the tiger swiftly spirited away as the woman in the red dress took its place behind the lacquered bars.

Others were just as adamant that the animal had never

been in the cage to begin with, its presence merely a

projection which had been extinguished as a mechanism

propelled the woman from beneath the stage; this, of

course, at such a speed that it deceived the eye of all but

those swift and suspicious enough to catch it. And the

swords? The nature of the trick which had transformed

them in the mere seconds of their gleaming descent from

1 steel to rose-petals was yet further fuel for debate. The explanations ranged from the prosaic to the elaborate, but few of the throng that left the theatre lacked some theory. Nor did the arguments  finish there, on the sidewalk. They raged on, no doubt, in the apartments and restaurants of New York.

The pleasure to be had from Swanns illusions was, it seemed, twofold. First: the spectacle of the trick itself - in the  breathless moment   when  disbelief was,  if not suspended,  at least taken  on  tip-toe.  And  second, when the moment was over and logic restored, in the debate as to how the trick had been achieved.

How do you do it, Mr Swann? Barbara Bernstein was eager to know.

Its magic, Swann  replied. He had  invited her backstage to examine the tigers cage for any sign of fakery in its construction; she had found none. She had examined the swords: they were lethal. And the petals, fragrant. Still she insisted:

Yes, but really . . . she leaned close to him. You can tell me, she said, I promise I wont breathe a word to a soul.

He  returned her a slow smile in place of a reply.  ‘Oh, I know. . .she said,youre going to tell me that youve signed some kind of oath.

Thats right, Swann said.

- And  youre forbidden to give away any  trade secrets.

The  intention is to give you pleasure, he told her.

Have I failed in that?

Oh no, she replied, without a moments hesitation.  ‘Everybodys talking about the show. Youre the toast of New York.

No, he protested.

Truly, she said, I know people who would give their eye-teeth to get into this theatre. And to have a guided tour backstage . . . well, Ill be the envy of everybody.’ ‘Im   pleased, he said, and touched her face. She had clearly been anticipating such a move on  his part. It would  be  something else for her to boast of: her seduction by the man critics had dubbed the Magus of Manhattan.

Id like to make love to you, he whispered to her.

Here? she said.

No, he  told her.  Not within  ear-shot of the tigers.

She laughed. She preferred her lovers twenty years Swanns junior - he looked, someone had observed, like a man in mourning  for his profile, but his touch promised wit no boy could offer. She liked the tang of dissolution she sensed beneath his gentlemanly fagade.  Swann was a dangerous man. If she turned him down she might never find another.

We could go to a hotel, she suggested.

A hotel, he said, is a good idea.

A look of doubt had crossed her face.  ‘What about your wife . . .? she said. We might be seen.

He took her hand. Shall we be invisible, then?

Tm  serious.

So am  I, he insisted. Take it from me; seeing is not believing. I should know. Its the cornerstone of my  profession. She did not look much reassured. If anyone recognises us, he told her, Til simply tell them their eyes are playing tricks.

She smiled at this, and he kissed her. She returned the kiss with unquestionable fervour.

Miraculous, he said, when their mouths parted.

Shall we go before the tigers gossip?He led her across the stage. The cleaners had not yet got about their business, and there, lying on the boards, was a litter of rose-buds. Some had been trampled, a few had not. Swann took his hand from hers, and walked across to where the flowers lay.

She watched  him stoop to pluck a rose from the ground, enchanted by the gesture, but before he could stand upright again something in the air above him caught her eye. She looked up and her gaze met a slice of silver that was even now plunging towards him. She made to warn him, but the sword was quicker than her tongue. At the last possible moment he seemed to sense the danger he was in and looked round, the bud in his hand, as the point met his back. The swords momentum carried it through his body to the hilt. Blood fled from his chest, and splashed the floor. He made no sound, but fell forward, forcing two-thirds of the swords length out of his body again as he hit the stage.  She  would have screamed, but  that her attention was claimed by a sound  from the clutter of magical apparatus arrayed in the wings behind her, a muttered growl which was indisputably the voice of the tiger. She froze. There were probably instructions on how best to stare down rogue tigers, but as a Manhattanite born and bred they were techniques she wasnt acquainted with.

Swann? she said, hoping this yet might be some baroque illusion staged purely for her benefit. Swann.  Please get up.

But  the magician only lay where he had fallen, the pool spreading from beneath him.

If this is a joke - she said testily,- Im not amused.When  he didnt rise to her remark she tried a sweeter tactic. Swann, my sweet, Id like to go now, if you dont mind.

The growl came again. She didnt want to turn and seek out its source, but equally she didnt want to be sprung upon from behind.

Cautiously she looked round. The wings were in dark-ness. The clutter of properties kept her from working out the precise location of the beast. She could hear it still, however: its tread, its growl. Step by step, she retreated towards the apron of the stage. The closed curtains sealed her off from the auditorium, but she hoped she might scramble under them before the tiger reached her.

As she backed  against the heavy fabric, one of the shadows in the wings forsook its ambiguity, and the animal appeared.  It was not beautiful, as she had thought it when behind bars. It was vast and lethal and hungry. She went down on her haunches and reached for the hem  of the curtain. The fabric was heavily weighted, and  she had more  difficulty lifting it than shed expected, but she had managed to slide halfway under the drape when, head and hands pressed to the boards, she sensed the thump of the tigers advance.  An  instant later she felt the splash of its breath on her bare back, and screamed as it hooked its talons into her body and hauled her from the sight of safety towards its steaming jaws.

Even then, she refused to give up her life. She kicked at it, and tore out its fur in handfuls, and delivered a hail of punches to its snout. But her resistance was negligible in the face of  such authority; her  assault, for all its ferocity, did not slow the beast a jot. It ripped open her body  with one casual clout. Mercifully, with that first wound  her senses gave up all claim to verisimilitude, and took instead to preposterous invention. It seemed to her that she heard applause from somewhere, and the roar of an approving audience, and that in place of the blood that was surely springing from her body there came fountains of sparkling light. The agony her nerve-endings were  suffering didnt touch her at all.  Even when  the animal had divided her into three or four parts her head lay on its side at the edge of the stage and watched as her torso was mauled and her limbs devoured.

And  all the while, when she wondered how all this could be possible - that her eyes could live to witness this last supper - the only reply she could think of was Swanns:

Its magic, hed said.

Indeed, she was thinking that very thing, that this must be magic, when the tiger ambled across to her head, and swallowed it down in one bite.

Amongst  a certain set Harry DAmour liked to believe he had  some small reputation - a coterie which did not, alas, include his ex-wife, his creditors or those anonymous  critics who regularly posted dogs excrement through his office letterbox. But the woman who was on the phone now, her voice so full of grief she might have been crying for half a year, and was about to begin again, she knew him for the paragon he was.  ‘-1 need your help, Mr DAmour; very badly.

Im busy on several cases at the moment, he told her.

Maybe you could come to the office?

I cant leave the house, the woman informed him.

Til explain everything. Please come.He  was sorely tempted. But there were several out-standing cases, one of which, if not solved soon, might end in fratricide. He suggested she try elsewhere.  ‘I cant go to just anybody, the woman insisted.

Why me?

I read about you. About what happened in Brooklyn.Making  mention of his most conspicuous failure was not the surest method of securing his services, Harry thought, but  it certainly got his attention. What had happened  in Wyckoff  Street had begun innocently enough, with a husband whod employed him to spy on his adulterous wife, and had ended on the top storey of the Lomax house with the world he thought hed known  tu...

Zgłoś jeśli naruszono regulamin