"You comprehend rapidly and well, once you get into
it," Nature agreed, and her compliment pleased him despite
his underlying anger.
"I comprehend that you put me on a track through a
Mobius strip with a cross section of a prism, so I had to
traverse the loop three times. But why ?"
"We answered that before. A mortal could not have
passed; the equipment is not spelled to work for mortals.
An immortal could not have passed either; an angel would
not have needed the equipment, and the true path exists
only for that equipment. A demon would have fought
himself to death at the first encounter, for that is the way
of demons."
"I felt like fighting," Zane admitted. "That arrogant
idiot in the power boat - " He grinned ruefully. "Who was
me. It seemed so different in the car! I thought I owned
the road and that the others were intruding on my surface.
As a walker or swimmer, I wasn't paying attention to
anything except getting myself along. As a cyclist or
bottlist or whatever, I was caught in the middle, between the
arrogant power driver and the ignorant self-mover. Both
seemed wrong. I'm not proud of my performance, in
retrospect."
Nature shrugged, making an interesting ripple in the
mist about her. At times she seemed fat, but at other times
she seemed voluptuous; the fog never quite betrayed the
truth. "You will have leisure to ponder the implications.
You did get through, as only a true Incarnation would,
blundering as it may have appeared. We Incarnations are
not quite living and not quite dead; we are a unique
category, with unique powers. We occupy our offices, but
sometimes we are our offices. Like light, we are both
wave and particle." She gestured, dismissing the matter.
"Now we have privacy."
"Wait," Zane said, remembering something. "How can
a demon fight himself to death? He's already dead."
"It may be true that the dead can not die - but if you
do to a demon's corporate body what would kill a living
creature, that demon loses the use of that body and must
return directly to Hell. So it is much the same, in practice."
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Zane returned to another matter. "What's so important
about privacy? Do we have secrets to exchange?"
"Indeed we do. We are the mortal immortals; we can't
have our secrets known to mortal mortals, lest we lose
respect. We can't tell all to the Etemals, lest we lose our
power."
"What secrets?" Zane asked. "I'm just doing my job."
"As you perceive it."
"Is there something I don't know about it?"
"Perhaps." She settled into a livewood chair, her am-
bience of mist spreading to fog much of it out. "I can
make a small and not entirely comfortable demonstration."
She gestured, and suddenly Zane felt a tremendous
concupiscence. He wanted sex, and he wanted it now.
He found himself standing, in more than one manner, and
approaching her.
"No!" he gritted, knowing this was not his own desire,
but one imposed from without. Nature only smiled.
He reached for her - but forced himself to grasp for
her soul, not her body. His gloved hand passed through
the mist and her flesh, and his fingers hooked into her
soul. He drew on it, stretching part of it out of her body.
She stiffened as if in sudden pain. Then Zane's erotic
feeling left him as quickly as it had come. Her spell was
off. He relaxed his hold on her soul and withdrew his
hand from her flesh.
Nature took a deep and somewhat shuddering breath,
and the mist about her fluctuated in intensity. She had
lost some of her composure. "I have shown you part of
my power," she gasped. "And you have shown me part
of yours."
Again Zane suffered an illumination. "I do have power
over the living - to a degree!" He remembered how his
client in the hospital, the old woman like his mother, had
reacted when he had tried the first time to take her soul.
It had to be a terrible shock to have the soul pulled from
a living body.
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"You do indeed, Thanatos. No one can balk an Incar-
nation in his specialty - not even another Incarnation.
There is no profit in opposing each other, ever. Nature
governs all of life - but she doesn't govern Death. The
individual powers each of us has are inviolate. No one - "
Here she paused, giving him a straight glance of enigmatic
significance, her eyes like the swirlings of a tempest at
night. "No one can interfere with any one of us with
impunity."
Zane was shaken by her revelation. He had not realized
before how directly and specifically she could affect him,
or how he could affect her. His own power had surprised
him as much as hers. But he got himself organized and
returned to the subject. "So you summoned me here to
tell me something and show me something, putting dif-
ficulties in my way. What is really on your mind?"
She shrugged again, seeming to like the motion. She
had recovered her composure. She was, of course, an
exceedingly tough creature. "You have met the others."
"I presume you mean the other special figures - Time,
Fate, War. Yes, briefly."
"We really are special, Thanatos, we mortal immortals.
We differ from one another, but we interact in devious
yet essential ways, exerting our vectors."
"Vectors?"
"Well, you don't suppose any of us are completely free,
do you? We don't do what we do frivolously. Just as the
vectors offeree, elevation, wind, temperature, humidity,
barometric pressure, and landscape interact to determine
exactly where a thrown ball will fall, so do the relevant
factors determine how a war shall proceed, or how a cold
front shall move, or when a given life will end. It may
seem like chance or caprice, but that is only because no
mortal person and few immortal entities comprehend the
nature of the operative forces. We are not free - no one
is absolutely free - yet we do have some leeway, and in
this we individualize our offices. Each Incarnation can
counter another to a limited degree, if that other permits,
but we prefer not to do that unless there is sufficient
reason."
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Zane was curious. "How can Death be countered, even
if Death permits?"
"Fate could arrange for a replacement, cutting off a thread."
Now he felt a chill, for he knew this had been done
before. "Fate - why should Fate ever want to do that?"
"Chronos could halt the approach of an appointment."
"Yes, but why - "
"Mars could fashion a social disruption that could
change the entire picture."
She was avoiding his question. Still, this seemed worth
pursuing. "And what of Nature? What cute little trick do
you have up your fog, aside from the doubtlessly
convenient ability to inflict instant lust?"
"Show me your soul," she said.
"My - !" Then he made the connection, and brought
out the soul of the left-footed dancing girl. He had stuffed
his soul-bag automatically in his pocket and forgotten it
until this moment.
Nature wafted a ball of mist at the soul. "Do not
misjudge the power of any Incarnation, Thanatos. When you
leave me, go to the crypt and try this soul. Then you will
comprehend."
Zane put the soul away. It seemed unchanged. Was
she bluffing? What could she really do with a soul? "You
brought me here only for this?"
She laughed, causing little puffs of mist to spin off and
float free. "By no means. I merely make my point with
that soul so you learn proper respect and pay attention
to my implication."
"Well, make your implication!" Zane exclaimed
impatiently.
"What do you suppose is the most ancient profession
of the human species?" Nature asked.
What was this distaff dog up to now? "It's a female
profession," he said guardedly.
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"Not so, Thanatos. Females were not permitted. The
oldest profession is that of shaman, or medicine man, or
witch doctor."
"Witch doctor!" Zane exclaimed incredulously. "What
validity did he have before modem magic was mastered?"
But as he spoke, he remembered Molly Malone's
comment about the old cave painters and their lost powers
over the souls of animals. The practice of magic did predate modem advances.
"The shaman was the original liberal arts supporter.
The chief of the tribe was the man of action, while the
shaman was the man of intellect. It may not have been
easy for him in primitive times, when neither magic nor
science worked better than erratically, but he was the one
with the true vision of the future. From him descended
those who had to fathom why, instead of merely accepting
what. Doctors, philosophers, priests, scientists, magicians, artists, musicians - "
"All those who cater in some fashion to Nature," Zane
agreed, though privately he wondered whether artists and
musicians really belonged in that category. Their professions were more subjective than most.
"But your point - "
"There is a way."
"A way for what? I don't follow you at all!"
"Are you an evolutionist or a creationist?"
"Both, of course! But what does that have to do with anything?"
"There are those who feel there is a conflict."
She was changing the subject again, in that infuriating
way of hers. "I see no conflict. God created the cosmos
in a week, and Satan caused it to evolve. Thus we have
magic and science together, as is proper. How could it
be otherwise? But what did you intend to say to me? I
do have other business."
"We do fear the unknown," Nature said. "Thus man
seeks to explain things, to illuminate what remains dark.
Yet he remains fascinated by mystery and chance and
ofttimes gambles his very life away." She glanced smokily
at him, and Zane was sure that she, along with all the
other Incarnations, knew how he had gambled with money
and then with his own life. "Man is the curious creature,
and if his curiosity can kill him, it also educates him.
Today we have both nuclear physics and specific conjuration
of demons."
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"And both are hazardous to the health of man!" Zane
snapped. "It's an open question whether a rogue nuclear
detonation would do more damage than a ranking demon
of Hell loosed on Earth. Maybe World War Three will
settle the question."
"I trust we can settle it less vehemently," Nature said.
"Much as I would dislike to deny Mars his heyday.
Assuming mankind is worth saving."
"Of course it's worth saving!"
"Is it?" she asked, turning her enigmatic, deep-pool
gaze on him.
Suddenly Zane had doubts. He shoved them aside.
"Let's assume, for the sake of discussion, that man is
worth saving. What's your point?"
"An appreciation of several modes of thinking might help."
"Help avert war? How?"
"By means of formations of thought."
"Formations?" Zane was annoyed, but refused to admit
the extent of his confusion. If Nature had a point to
make, he wanted to grasp it.
"Man is not merely a linear thinker," she said, drawing
a line of mist in the air. It hovered like a distant contrail.
"Though series effort is certainly straightforward, and
useful in many circumstances."
Zane contemplated the contrail. "Series?" he asked blankly.
"Imagine the synapses of your brain, like so many
matchsticks, connecting head to tail. Your thoughts
travel along these little paths." She punctuated the line
with her finger, breaking it into five parts:
"This is a series arrangement. It is like driving down a
highway, start to finish."
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"Oh. Yes, I see. Synapses connected in series. I suppose
we do think in that fashion, though there are alternate paths."
"Precisely. Here is a system of alternate paths." She
swept her hand across the contrail, erasing it, then used
her finger to draw five new matchsticks.
"This is a parallel formation. It is, of course, very fast and strong;
it leads to a virtually certain conclusion, based on many
facts. It is perhaps the most powerful mode."
"But it doesn't reach as far."
"True. It is conservative, leading to small, certain
steps with few errors, rather than the sudden leaps of
understanding possible with the series formation. It does
have its liability, but is useful when the occasion requires."
"Maybe so. But your point - "
"You do at times seem to be that type of thinker," she
said, smiling. She pursed her lips and blew out a ring of
mist that swirled toward the ceiling. "You cling to essentials.
But they will not always serve you well."
"I've been getting in trouble in Purgatory because I
haven't clung to essentials!" he protested.
"Then we have the creative formation," she continued
blithely, erasing the parallel formation and drawing five
matchsticks radiating out from a common center:
"Divergent thoughts, not necessarily limited to the
immediate context."
"Going in all directions," Zane agreed. "But - "
"And the schizoid formation," she said, drawing a
pentagon:
"Going round and round, getting
nowhere, internalizing."
"What use is that?"
"It might help a person come to terms with an ugly
necessity," she said.
"I don't see that - "
"Finally, there is the intuitive formation." She traced
another formation:
"A sudden jump to a conclusion. Not the most reliable mode, yet
sometimes effective when others are not."
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"Five formations of thinking," Zane said, nearing
exasperation. "Very interesting, I'm sure. But what did you
have in mind to say to me?"
"I have said it," Nature said calmly.
"Said what? You have evaded the issue throughout!"
"What issue?"
Zane had had enough. "I don't care to play this game."
He stomped out of the citadel. Nature did not oppose him.
The exit from the center of the estate was much easier
than the entrance had been. He walked down a path and
through a thicket and emerged in the original field without
passing lake or bog or deep forest, a matter of only a few
hundred feet. Mortis and Luna were waiting for him.
"What did old Mother Nature have to say to you so
urgently?" Luna demanded archly.
"She's not that old. At least, I don't think she is."
"Estimate to within a decade."
"Are you jealous?" he asked, pleased.
Luna checked about her as if verifying that she wore
no Truthstone. "Of course not. How old?"
"I just couldn't tell. She wore fog."
"Fog?"
"Some sort of mist. It shrouded her whole body. But
I had the impression of youth, or at least not age."
"Nature is ageless."
"I suppose she is, technically. But so is Death."
Luna took his arm possessively. "And I shall make
Death mine. But didn't she have some important message
or warning for you? If it is not for mortals like me to
know, just say so."
Zane laughed uncomfortably. "Nothing like that!
Apparently she just wanted to chat."
page 211
"Or to size up the new officeholder."
"Maybe that. She talked about this and that, evolution
and the shaman as the oldest profession, formations of
thought, and how the other Incarnations could deviously
counter me, if I permitted it. She looked at the soul I
harvested on the way here and implied she could restore it."
"Maybe she was baiting you. Trying to make you react,
to take your measure. Some women are like that, and
Nature is surely the most extreme example."
"Surely the archetype," he agreed. "But it's easy to
find out about the soul. Let's call her bluff. I'll take this
soul back to its body now."
"This is an interesting date," Luna remarked as they
mounted Mortis.
"If you insist on dating Death, you must expect morbid things."
The horse took off, knowing where to go. Luna circled
her arms about Zane's torso and clung tightly.
"The prospect of dying has become less of a specter
for me since I've known you," she said into his back as
they flew in overdrive across the world. "Maybe that was
what my father had in mind."
Zane didn't answer. The thought of her early dying
was not becoming easier for him to accept. What would
there be for him when she was gone? In what way was
she deserving of such a fate? He did not care what the
official ledger listed for the burden of sin on her soul; she
was a good woman.
Mortis lighted beside a funeral home. It was still night,
here in San Diego, or wee morning, and the place was quiet.
The entrance was locked, but it opened at the touch
of the Deathgloves; no physical barrier could bar Death.
They went in and found their way to the freezer vaults,
where the recent bodies were stored for the required waiting period.
Zane used his gems to locate the specific drawer
where the dancing girl lay, and drew it out. He had not
realized before he made the effort that the gems would
orient on a soulless body if he willed it; they were more
versatile than he had known.
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There she lay, definitely dead, not pretty in the manner
of a corpse laid out for display with its eyes and mouth
stapled shut, its guts eviscerated, and its blood replaced
by embalming fluid; she was just a cold corpse.
"Definitely an unusual date," Luna murmured.
Zane opened his bag and drew out the girl's soul. He
shook it gently, unfolding it, then placed it over the corpse.
"This is as far as I can go to - "
The soul sank into the stiff body. In a moment the
naked torso shuddered, and the eyes cracked open.
Ragged breathing resumed.
"She's alive!" Luna exclaimed. "We must get her out
of the drawer!"
"Nature wasn't bluffing!" Zane said. "She restored this
girl!" He slid his arms around the girl's chill torso and
lifted her up. She remained stiff, as if the rigor mortis had
not yet worn off, yet she was alive and could move somewhat.
Luna helped him carry the girl to a warmer chamber.
They worked on her hands and feet, chafing warmth and
flexibility back into them, but it was not enough. Her
breathing became shallower, and the stiffness did not abate.
"She must be warmed," Luna said. "Otherwise she
will perish again. She was in the freezer too long, and
whatever spell Nature made seems to be only temporary.
I must use magic - "
"But that will increase your burden of sin!" Zane pro-
tested.
"What difference does it make? I am already doomed
to Hell." Luna brought out a gem.
Zane let her do it, knowing that what she said was true.
The use of black magic could not really damage her case
now. Yet it was ironic that she should be further damned
for this good cause. Sometimes there seemed to be no
justice in the Hereafter.
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Luna activated the stone. A soft blue effulgence
surrounded it. She brought it near the cold body of the
dancer, and immediately the body warmed and softened.
Zane's arms, holding the girl upright, were touched by
the radiation, and a gentle but potent heat was generated
in them. "This is like a microwave oven!" he exclaimed.
"Similar principle," Luna agreed. "Anything science
can do, magic can do, and vice versa. But the mechanisms
differ."
Now the girl recovered quickly. Her breathing deepened,
her body became limber, and her color improved."W-what?" she asked.
Zane was still supporting her. At the moment she spoke,
he was standing behind her, arms around to her front,
just beneath her breasts. It took some effort and leverage
to keep a half-dead body standing. His position did not
change, but his awareness of it did. This was not the way
a man held a living girl - especially not a naked one. Yet
if he let her go, and she turned about and looked into the
face of Death -
Luna appreciated the problem at the same time. "We
must get you some clothing, dear," she said to the girl.
Zane continued to support her while Luna searched
the premises. As Luna looked, she talked, reassuring the
girl. "You won't be feeling too well at the moment, dear.
You see, you overdid the dancing and lost consciousness.
They thought you were dead and put you in a vault. That's
why you feel so cold."
"So cold," the girl agreed, beginning to shiver.
Luna found a blanket and brought it over. "Wrap yourself
in this. There's one other thing we must explain. You
have had a very close call - so close that Death was
summoned to collect your soul. But it turned out to be - well,
he decided not to take you, after all. So don't be alarmed;
Death is departing, not arriving."
"Death?" The girl's wits were not too bright, understandably.
page 214
Zane released her as Luna helped her drape the blanket.
The girl turned and for the first time saw Death's
face. She gasped, but accepted it.
"Death doesn't take anyone who isn't ready to go,"
Luna said reassuringly. "He is really your friend, not your
enemy. However, you will have to explain to your
acquaintances about this. Tell them that you sank so low
you saw Death, but he passed you by. It will bring you
some deserved notoriety."
"Oh, yes," the girl agreed faintly. "Pleased to meet
you. Death. I've heard so much about you." But she did
not seem thrilled.
In due course they got the girl to her friends, who
welcomed her like one returned from the dead. "And stay
away from strange slippers," Luna cautioned her in parting.
They rode Mortis back to Kilvarough, galloping through
the sky into the dawn. "Some date," Luna repeated, and
kissed Zane farewell. "Shall we call it love, hereafter?"
"Is it?" he asked, genuinely uncertain. What he felt for
Luna was deeper and broader than what he had felt for
any woman before, but not intense.
She frowned. "No, not yet." She smiled a little sadly.
"Perhaps there will be time."
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END OF CHAPTER EIGHT