V
THRESHOLD
1
hat’s the disturbance?’ van Niekerk demanded to know.
Shadwell smiled his smile. Though he was irritated by the interruption to the Auction, it had served to lend further heat to the buyers’ eagerness.
‘An attempt to steal the carpet –’ he said.
‘By whom?’ Mrs A. asked.
Shadwell pointed to the border of the carpet.
There is, you’ll observe, a portion of the Weave missing,’ he admitted. ‘Small as it is, its knots concealed several inhabitants of the Fugue.’ He watched the buyers’ faces as he spoke. They were utterly mesmerized by his story, desperate for some confirmation of their dreams.
‘And they came here?’ said Norris.
They did indeed.’
‘Let’s see them,’ the Hamburger King demanded, ‘if they’re here, let’s see them.’
Shadwell paused before replying. ‘Maybe one,’ he said.
He’d been fully prepared for the request, and had already planned with Immacolata which of the prisoners they’d display. He opened the door, and Nimrod, released from the Hag’s embrace, tottered onto the carpet. Whatever the buyers had expected, the sight of this naked child was not it.
‘What is this?’ Rahimzadeh snorted. ‘Do you think we’re fools?’
Nimrod looked up from the Weave underfoot at the puzzled faces that surrounded him. He would have set them right on any number of matters, but that Immacolata had laid her fingers on his tongue, and he couldn’t raise a grunt from it.
This is one of the Seerkind,’ Shadwell announced.
‘It’s just a child,’ said Marguerite Pierce, her voice betraying some tenderness. ‘A poor child.’
Nimrod stared at the woman: a fine, big-breasted creature, he thought.
‘He’s no child,’ said Immacolata. She had slipped into the room unseen; now all eyes turned to her. All except Marguerite’s, which still rested on Nimrod. ‘Some of the Seerkind are shape-changers.’
‘This? said van Niekerk.
‘Certainly.’
What crap are you trying to feed us, Shadwell?’ Norris said. ‘I’m not taking –’
‘Shut up,’ said Shadwell.
Shock closed Norris’ mouth; a lot of beef had been minced since he’d last been talked to that way.
‘Immacolata can undo this rapture,’ he said, floating the word on the air like a valentine.
Nimrod saw the Incantatrix make a configuration of thumb and third finger, through which, with a sharp intake of breath, she nonchalantly drew the shape-changing rapture. It was not an unwelcome shudder that convulsed him now; he was weary of this hairless skin. He felt his knees begin to tremble, and he fell forward onto the carpet. Around him, he could hear awed whispers, becoming louder with every step of the undeceiving, and more astonished.
Inmacolata was not delicate in her undoing of his anatomy. He winced as his flesh was transformed. There was one delicious moment in this hasty unveiling, when he felt his balls drop once more. Then, his manhood re-established, a second sequence of growth began, his skin tingling as the hair sprouted on his belly and back. Finally his face appeared from the facade of innocence, and he was – balls and all – himself again.
Shadwell looked down at the creature lying on the carpet, its skin faintly blue, its eyes golden; then at the buyers. This spectacle had probably doubled the price they’d bid for the carpet. Here was magic, in the panting flesh; more real and more oddly bewitching than even he’d anticipated.
‘You made your point,’ said Norris, his voice flat. ‘Let’s get down to numbers.’
Shadwell concurred.
‘Perhaps you’d remove our guest?’ he said to Immacolata, but before she could make a move Nimrod was up and kneeling at the feet of Marguerite Pierce, covering her ankles with kisses.
This excited but mute entreaty did not go unnoticed. The woman stretched her hand down to touch the thick hair of Nimrod’s head.
‘Leave him with me,’ she said to Immacolata.
‘Why not?’ said Shadwell. ‘Let him watch …’
The Incantatrix made a muttered protest.
‘No harm in it,’ said Shadwell. ‘I can handle him.’ Immacolata withdrew. ‘Now …’ said the Salesman. ‘Shall we re-open the bidding?’