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THE SUMMONS
al woke suddenly.
There was a slight chill in the air, though that wasn’t what had woken him. It was Lemuel Lo, calling his name.
‘Calhoun … Calhoun …’
He sat up. Lemuel was at his side, smiling through the thicket of his beard.
‘There’s someone here asking for you,’ he said.
‘Oh?’
‘We haven’t much time, my poet,’ he said as Cal struggled to his feet. ‘The carpet’s being rewoven. In little more than minutes all this’ll be sleeping again. And me with it.’
‘That can’t be right.’ said Cal.
‘It is, friend. But I have no fear. You’ll be watching over us, won’t you?’
He clasped Cal’s hand in a fierce grip.
‘I dreamt something …’ Cal said.
‘What was that?’
‘I dreamt that this was real and the other wasn’t.’
Lemuel’s smile faded, ‘I wish what you dreamt were true,’ he said. ‘But the Kingdom’s all too real. It’s just that a thing that grows too certain of itself becomes a kind of lie. That’s what you dreamt. That the other place is a place of lies.’
Cal nodded. The grip on his hand tightened, as though there was a pact in the making.
‘Don’t be lost to it, Calhoun. Remember Lo, eh? And the orchard? Will you? Then we’ll see each other again.’
Lemuel embraced him.
‘Remember,’ he said, his mouth next to Cal’s ear.
Cal returned the bear-hug as best he could, given Lo’s girth. Then the orchard-keeper broke from him.
‘Best go quickly,’ he said. ‘Your visitor has important business, she says,’ and he strode away to where the rug was being rolled up, and some last melancholy songs sung.
Cal watched him thread his way between the trees, his fingers brushing against the bark of each as he passed. Commanding them to sweet sleep, no doubt.
‘Mr Mooney?’
Cal looked round. There was a small woman with distinctly oriental features standing two trees’ breadth from him. In her hand she held a lamp, which she raised as she approached him, her scrutiny both lengthy and unapologetic.
‘Well,’ she said, her voice musical, ‘he told me you were handsome, and so you are. In a quirky kind of way.’
She cocked her head slightly, as if trying to make better sense of Cal’s physiognomy.
‘How old are you?’
‘Twenty-six. Why?’
‘Twenty-six,’ she said. ‘His mathematics is terrible.’
So’s mine, Cal was about to say, but there were other more pressing questions. The first of which was:
‘Who are you?’
‘I’m Chloe,’ came the woman’s reply. ‘I’ve come to fetch you. We should hurry. He gets impatient.’
‘Who does?’
‘Even if we had time to talk I’m forbidden to tell you,’ Chloe replied. ‘But he’s eager to see you, that I can say. Very eager.’
She turned and started to walk away from the corridor of trees. She was still speaking, but Cal couldn’t catch the words. He set off in pursuit of her, the end of a sentence drifting back to him.
‘– not time by foot –’
‘What did you say?’ he asked, coming abreast of her.
‘We have to travel quickly,’ she said.
They had reached the perimeter of the orchard, and there stood, of all things, a rickshaw. Leaning on the handles, smoking a thin black cigarette, was a wiry middle-aged man, dressed in bright blue pantaloons and a shabby vest. On his head, a bowler hat. This is Floris,’ Chloe told Cal. ‘Please get in.’
Cal did as he was told, settling himself amongst a litter of cushions. He could not have refused this adventure if his life had depended upon it. Chloe got in beside him.
‘Hurry,’ she said to the driver, and they took off like the wind.