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‘Capra?' said Jerichau. It was enough to make him neglect his glass. ‘How can that be?'

The Prophet says so. It's all planned. Capra speaks to him -' ‘Wait. Wait!' said Suzanna. ‘What Prophet?' ‘He says we have to spread the word,' said Nimrod, his enthusiasm boundless. ‘Find the ones who left the Weave, and tell them liberation's at hand. I've been all over, doing just that. It was by chance I got wind of you. What luck, eh? Nobody knew where you were -'

‘And that was the way it was meant to stay,' said Suzanna. ‘I was to make contact in my time, when ,'judged the trail had grown cold.'

‘It is cold,' said Nimrod. ‘Stone cold. Surely you must have noticed that?' Suzanna kept her silence. ‘Our enemies have given up the chase,' he went on. ‘The Prophet knows that. He tells us what Capra says, and Capra says our Suppression is at an end.'

‘Who is this Prophet?' said Suzanna. Nimrod's excited flow ceased. He frowned as he stared at her.

The Prophet is the Prophet,' he said. No further explanation was necessary, it seemed.

‘You don't even know his name?' she said.

‘He lived near the Gyre,' said Nimrod. That much I do know. A hermit, he was, until the weaving. That night, last summer, Capra called him. He left the Weave, to begin his teachings. The tyranny of the Cuckoos is nearly at an end -'

‘I'll believe that when I see it,' said Suzanna.

‘You will,' said Nimrod, with the unshakeable fervour of a true convert. This time, the earth will rise with us. That's

what people are saying. The Cuckoos have made too much mischief. Their Age is over.'

‘Sounds like wish-fulfilment to me.'

‘You may doubt -' said Nimrod.

‘I do.'

‘- but I've seen the Prophet. I've heard his words. And they come from Capra.' His eyes glittered with evangelical glee. ‘I was in the gutter when the Prophet found me. Broken in pieces. Prey to every Cuckoo sickness. Then I heard the Prophet's voice, and went to him. Now look at me.'

Suzanna had argued with zealots before - her brother had been bom again at twenty-three, and given his life to Christ - she knew from experience there was no gainsaying the bigotry of faith. Indeed there was part of her wanted to join the happy throng of believers Nimrod described; throw off the burden of the carpet and let the Fugue begin its life afresh. She was weary of being afraid to meet anybody's eye, of forever passing through. Any pleasure she might have taken in being an outsider, possessed of a wonderful secret, had long since soured. Now she wanted to have her fingers in clay again, or sit flirting with friends. But tempting as it was, she couldn't accept this cant and be silent. It stank.

‘How do you know he doesn't mean us all harm?' she said.

‘Harm? What harm is there in being free? You have to give the Weave back, Suzanna. I'll take you to him -' He snatched hold of her hand as he spoke, as if he was prepared to do it now. She pulled her fingers from his grip.

‘What's the problem?' he said.

‘I'm not just going to give the carpet up because you heard the Word,' she said fiercely.

‘You must,' he said, as much disbelief as anger in his tone.

‘When does this Prophet speak again?' said Jerichau.

‘The day after tomorrow,' Nimrod replied, his eyes still on Suzanna. The chase is over,' he said to her. ‘You must give the carpet back.'

‘And if I don't, he'll come and get it?' she said. ‘Is that the implication?'

‘You Cuckoos -' Nimrod sighed. ‘Always making things so damn difficult. He's come to give us Capra's wisdom. Why can't you see that?' He halted a moment. When he spoke again he'd modulated his strident tone. ‘I respect your doubts,' he said. ‘But you must understand the situation's changed.'

‘I think we should see this Prophet for ourselves,' said Jerichau. He cast a glance at Suzanna. ‘Yes?'

She nodded.

‘Yes!' Nimrod grinned. ‘Yes, he'll make everything clear to you.'

She longed for that promise to be made true. ‘The day after tomorrow,' said Nimrod. ‘There'll be an end to chases.'

II

SEEING THE LIGHT

1

That night, with Nimrod gone, and Jerichau sleeping off his champagne, she did something she'd never done before. She evoked the menstruum, simply for company. It had shown her many sights in recent weeks, and it had saved her from Hobart and his malice, but she was still suspicious of its power. She still couldn't quite work out whether she controlled it, or vice versa. Tonight, however, she decided that that was a Cuckoo's way of thinking, always making divisions: the viewer from the viewed; the peach from the taste it left on the tongue.

Such compartments were useful only as tools. At some point they had to be left behind. For better or worse, she was the menstruum, and the menstruum was her. She and it, indivisible.

Bathing in its silver light, her thoughts turned again to Mimi, who'd lived a life of waiting, her years growing dusty while she hoped for a miracle that was too late in coming. Thinking of that, she began to cry, quietly.

Not quietly enough, for she woke Jerichau. She heard his footsteps outside, then his tapping on the bathroom door.

‘Lady?' he said. It was the name he only used when there was an apology in the air. ‘I'm all right,' she said.

She had neglected to lock the door, and he pushed it open. He was dressed only in the long vest he always slept in. Seeing her misery, his face dropped.

‘Why so sad?' he asked.

‘It's all wrong,' were the only words she could find to express her confusion.

Jerichau's eyes had found the dregs of the menstruum, which moved across the floor between them, their brightness flickering out as they left her immediate vicinity. He kept a respectful distance.

Til go to the meeting place with Nimrod,' he said. ‘You stay with the Weave. Yes?' ‘Suppose they demand it?'

‘Then we'll have to decide,' he said. ‘But we shall see this Prophet first. He could be a charlatan.' He paused, not looking at her, but at the empty floor between them. ‘A lot of us are,' he said after a moment. ‘Me, for instance.'

She stared at him as he loitered in the doorway. It wasn't the dying glamour of the menstruum that kept him at bay, she now realized. She spoke his name, very quietly. ‘Not you,' she said. ‘Oh yes,' he replied. There was another aching silence. Then he said: ‘I'm sorry, lady.' ‘There's nothing to be sorry for.'

‘I failed you,' he said. ‘I wanted to be so much to you, and look how I failed.'

She stood up and went to him. His misery was so heavy he could not raise his head beneath its weight. She took hold of his hand and held it tight.

‘I couldn't have survived these months without you,' she said. ‘You've been my dearest friend.'

‘Friend,' he said, his voice small. ‘I never wanted to be your friend.'

She felt his hand tremble in hers, and the sensation brought back their adventure on Lord Street, when she'd held him in the crowd, and shared his visions, his terrors. Since then, they'd shared a bed as well, and it had been pleasurable, but little more. She'd been too obsessed with the beasts on their heels to think of much else; both too close and too distant from him to see how he suffered. She saw it now, and it frightened her.

‘I love you, lady,' he murmured, his throat almost swallowing the words before they were said. Then he extricated his hand from hers and retreated from her. She went after him. The room was dark, but there was sufficient illumination to etch his anxious face, his jittering limbs.