high agony.
That time Devereux heard it too, and was still for a moment; then, âNot our responsibility,â he said, as I should have expected. âLeave it alone, for Godâs sake, weâre not the police.â
Ignoring him, I got out of the car â and then I could see, as well as hear. Then I knew. Not my responsibility, no, Iâd disinvested; but not well enough, seemingly. At any rate, there was no question of my leaving it alone.
Through an archway under a run of flats, through a short square tunnel came that wailing scream again, and a light that failed as the scream failed: a cold, pale, flickering light, the nightfire that marked all my family but me.
Somewhere through that archway there was a Macallan in desperate trouble, his strength no succour now; and me, I was already moving.
Seven: Total Meltdown
Through the tunnel at a run, heedless and stupid, and what was that Devereux had been saying about inbreeding? âViciousâ I might have argued with, back then at least, but the rest was plain to be seen.
Through the tunnel and into a muggerâs paradise, one of those Sixties housing experiments that went so dreadfully wrong. It was an enclosed court, with blocks of flats three or four storeys high and no grass, only paving underfoot. Just the one way in and out for cars, but several more of those tunnel passageways; and balconies and stair-wells all around, any route you fancied to go under or over or through, and hardly a light to see it by except for the car burning like a torch, like a lantern, like a sign.
No noise, no heat. Nightfireâs no true flame, unless itâs the opposite of that: unless itâs the truest expression of flame and mortal fire is only a clumsy imitation.
Nightfire doesnât feed on what it burns. Destruction isnât incidental. Where it touches, damage is cold and slow; the light it throws is blue and thin and telling. Seen once, thereâs no mistaking it.
Here was a car burning that way, the metal of it writhing as I watched; and someone of my kin had set it to burn there. That was a given, didnât need debating.
No one in sight, though, no one at all. There should at least have been faces lining the balconies, peering down. Not all those flats were empty. A fire, and a manâs screams: they should have been irresistible.
But maybe these riverine families werenât so stupid after all, however inbred they might be. I guessed that the people who lived around here would know nightfire as well as I did and were being as wise as they knew how, keeping behind closed doors and shuttered blinds. If a Macallan was screaming, they truly didnât want to know.
Thatâs what it was, no question: the man who set that fire to burn was the same man whoâd been tearing the night apart with his howls. This was Jackoâs universal rhythm in action, and inarguable. The light had flared with the scream, searingly bright, striking out through that passageway to find me; and now in the screamâs silence it flickered and guttered, bright enough in here where no light was but no beacon now.
I might have no fire of my own but at least I wasnât vulnerable here, my blood was worth that much to me. I could walk up to the flaming car, and did; I could and did walk around it, looking to see inside, seeing nothing but fire and distortion; being that close I could and did stumble over the body lying dark on dark paving, lying where no one would see him because theyâd all be looking into the light.
It was only logic now, told me that this was a Macallan. All his skin was moving.
o0o
I knelt beside him when kneeling was the last thing I wanted to do, or close to the last. Kissing him would have been bottom, maybe, but any form of getting closer was bad. Kneeling was quite bad enough. It took me near enough to see and to smell what was happening to him, without doing what it was meant for. My eyes searched him desperately,
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