In the first corridor, he came across Mother Mary, the cackling old crone, who had seemed almost senile the last time he’d seen her. She sat cross-legged in a pool of gore, white cap stained scarlet, while her black cat played with the remains of a guard. As Hal ran past her, she eyed him coldly, like a lion ready to pounce. Hal didn’t look back.
Two minutes later, he came across another familiar figure. The attractive but unbalanced woman with the long blonde hair that moved like snakes had another guard pinned against a wall; it was impossible to tell if she was attacking him or seducing him. His trousers were open, his erect penis gripped tightly in her hand, but his eyes had rolled upwards to show the whites and a string of drool was falling from one corner of his mouth.
She looked at Hal seductively. ‘Run, Brother of Dragons,’ she whispered sibilantly.
Hal ran, scared now that what he had unleashed might prove worse than the threat he had sought to eliminate. The man who resembled a devil, with horns and cloven hooves, stalked past, completely oblivious to Hal; there was murder in his eyes and a smell of brimstone about him. Further on, Bearskin hunched over a bundle of bloody rags, feeding.
Finally, Hal came to a dark, deserted room and flung himself inside. He slammed the door shut and slipped down to the floor, listening to the constant padding of feet without, and the sounds of rending, and the running, and the screams, until he covered his ears and bowed his head and wished he was a boy again.
Chapter Nineteen
‘ Those who cannot perform great things themselves may yet have a satisfaction in doing justice to those who can.’
Oxford felt like Christmas Eve as Hunter, Mallory and Caitlin ran through the deserted streets. Preternaturally quiet, with the snow lying heavy on the rooftops and roads, there was something uncannily magical about the city. Occasionally, they glimpsed shimmering buildings, ghostly in blue, hovering just behind the familiar ancient landmarks. Just a trick of the light, they told themselves.
Somewhere, Ruth Gallagher was harrying the remnants of the Lament-Brood to destruction. It was in all their minds: once she had been like them, someone struggling to do the right thing against impossible odds, and now she had risen to the status of legend. A human become god. And so it was for all the Five who had fought at the Falclass="underline" gods and demi-gods, angels — and even, in Veitch, a devil to haunt the nightmares of the people. Great, greater, greatest.
Yet this time it was down to the three of them, and Sophie wherever she was, and the mysterious fifth, to defeat something of such magnitude that it was defined as the opposite of life. It didn’t seem right; it certainly wasn’t fair.
Only Hunter had reached any kind of accommodation with the dilemma. For him, it was simply a matter of acceptance. Samantha’s death had removed any link he had with the rest of the world. He had no need of softness or any care for his own survival. Now it was simply death or glory.
And so they arrived at Brasenose. At first glance it appeared deserted, though lights glared from the windows. No sounds of life greeted them as they ventured into the echoing corridors.
‘Maybe they all evacuated when the Lament-Brood came,’ Mallory hissed.
Hunter shook his head. ‘When the Government first moved here, they restructured this place for high security. It wouldn’t make sense for them to leave — they’d be safer here than anywhere else.’
Caitlin stopped moving and sniffed the air. ‘There are people here. Down below.’
‘You can smell them?’ Mallory said incredulously. ‘You know what, sometimes you are an extremely creepy woman.’
Her smile was a challenge. ‘You don’t know the half of it.’
‘Then we should proceed with extreme caution,’ Hunter said. ‘Either they’re gathered for the execution, or they’re barricaded in waiting to blow the heads off anyone who turns up.’ He crept stealthily to the end of the corridor and sneaked a glimpse around the corner.
‘You’ve done this kind of thing before, haven’t you?’ Mallory said wearily.
‘Once or twice. Luckily for you.’
‘Me, I’d just charge in with sword swinging.’
‘Like I said, luckily for you one of us knows what they’re doing.’
Hunter led the way down a short flight of stairs to the lower level. At the bottom step, Caitlin caught his arm. ‘Someone’s nearby,’ she mouthed. She paused, raised her head slightly. ‘It’s-’
‘Over here.’ Sophie beckoned them urgently. At the end of the corridor, she was staggering under Shavi’s weight, who was pale and a little delirious. The others ran up to relieve her.
Mallory grabbed her by the shoulders, unable to restrain his joy. ‘Are you all right?’
‘Fine.’ She forced a smile, but Mallory could see that she was lying.
‘What’s wrong?’
‘Nothing.’
‘You don’t fool me. Spit it out.’
She pulled him towards her and kissed him with a surprising passion that spoke of desperation and loss. When she broke off, she said quietly, ‘Don’t ask me any more. I can’t tell you. Not now.’
‘Later?’
She nodded, but there was a deep sadness shadowing her smile that Mallory didn’t notice. He was distracted by Hunter gently slapping Shavi’s cheeks to bring him round.
‘He’s been in a trance,’ Sophie said. ‘There were some things he needed to find out. But then he started raving, as if… as if what he saw was too terrible to believe. And then he ended up like this.’
‘Have you found anyone down here?’ Hunter asked her as he continued to try to bring Shavi back to consciousness.
‘There was a lot of commotion along that way.’ She motioned in the direction of the high-security wing. ‘We found some guards dead… butchered. That’s when we decided to come back to look for you. If there’s anyone left alive, they must have locked themselves in somewhere secure.’
Caitlin nodded. ‘That’s what we thought, too.’
‘Then maybe they haven’t had time to carry out the execution,’ Hunter said with some relief.
Hunter’s insistent efforts finally brought Shavi round, his eyes gradually focusing. He tried to support his own weight, staggered, then succeeded in propping himself against the wall.
‘The things I saw,’ he said, shuddering at the memory. The horror in his voice chilled them all.
‘What’s up, Shavi?’ Mallory clapped the arm of the man he had come to consider a good friend.
Shavi managed a wan smile. ‘I saw the Cailleach Bheur filling the universe with ice and snow. The White Walker has failed. The Fimbulwinter…’ He gasped, took a deep breath. ‘The prophecy of the Fimbulwinter at the end of the world, the coming of the Void — both are linked. The End-Winter comes because the final days are near… and the final days are near because the Void has come. But the Void needs the extreme cold to exist. It can’t abide heat. It comes from beyond the edge of the universe where there is no light or warmth. It has been here, gestating in the cold, waiting until the moment is right-’
‘Here?’ Hunter grabbed Shavi’s arm. ‘Where?’
Shavi shook his head. ‘I saw so many things… I saw the followers of Veitch prepare a ritual of such magnitude that it sent ripples through the world. Black T-shirts, red V, faces like rainy city nights.’ His eyes were glazing over again as the images paraded across his mind. ‘They were drawing on the dark energy the Void brought in its wake, trying to bring him back, calling to his wandering spirit, corrupting it with the blackness, sucking all hope and chance of redemption from it.’
‘Veitch is coming back?’ Mallory asked. ‘Are you saying he’s becoming part of the Void?’
‘I don’t know, I don’t know…’ Shavi was slipping away again.