IV
BREAKING THE LAW
1
t was Jerichau’s voice she heard, Suzanna had no doubt of that, and it was raised in wordless protest. The cry startled her from the murky pit that had claimed her since Hobart’s departure. She was at the door in seconds, and beating on it.
‘What’s happening?’ she demanded.
There was no reply from the guard on the other side; only another heart-rending shout from Jerichau. What were they doing to him?
She’d lived all her life in England, and – never having had more than a casual acquaintance with the law – had assumed it a fairly healthy animal. But now she was in its belly, and it was sick; very sick.
Again she beat a tattoo on the door, again it went unanswered. Tears of impotence began, stinging her sinuses and eyes. She put her back to the door and tried to stifle the sobs with her hand, but they wouldn’t be quelled.
Aware that the officer in the corridor could hear her sorrows, she started across to the other side of the cell, but something stopped her dead in her tracks. Through her watery vision she saw that the tears she’d shed on the back of her hand no longer resembled tears at all. They were almost silvery; and bursting, as she watched, into tiny spheres of luminescence. It might have come from a story in Mimi’s book: a woman who wept living tears. Except that this was no faery-tale. The vision was somehow more real than the concrete walls that imprisoned her; more real even than the pain that had brought these tears to her eyes.
It was the menstruum she was weeping. She hadn’t felt it move in her since she’d knelt beside Cal at the warehouse, and events had proceeded so speedily from there she had given little thought to it. Now she felt the torrent afresh, and a wave of elation swept her.
Down the corridor Jerichau cried out again, and in response, the menstruum, bright to blinding, brimmed in her subtle body.
Unable to prevent herself, she yelled, and the stream of brightness became a flood, spilling from her eyes and nostrils, and from between her legs. Her gaze fell on the chair which Hobart had occupied and it instantly flung itself against the far wall, rattling against the concrete as if panicking to be gone from her presence. The table followed, smashing itself to splinters.
From outside the door she heard voices, raised in consternation. She didn’t care. Her consciousness was in and of the tide, her sight running to the edge of the menstruum’s reach and looking back at herself, wild-eyed, smiling a river. She was looking down from the ceiling too, where her liquid self was rising in spume.
Behind her, they were unlocking the door. They’ll come with cudgels, she thought. These men are afraid of me. And with reason. I’m their enemy, and they’re mine.
She turned. The officer in the doorway looked pitifully frail, his boots and buttons a weak man’s dream of strength. He gaped at the scene before him – the furniture reduced to tinder, the light dancing on the walls. Then the menstruum was coming at him.
She followed in its wake, as it threw the man aside. Parts of her consciousness trailed behind her, snatching the truncheon from his hand and breaking it in pieces; other parts surged ahead of her physical body, turning corners, seeking under doors, calling Jerichau’s name –