The Beyond (Book Excerpt) by Jeffrey Ford Buy from Amazon.comPage 1 of 2
Chapter One
Winter Cave
Sheer beauty, violet elixir, medium of dreams...
To think that I once dragged Cley from this drug's clutches, haughtily
crushing vials, and admonishing, with comic asides, against his desire to sleep
his life away cocooned by its illusions. What I knew then was poison for him, I
know now, in my desire to conjure him from the elements of the Beyond, is the
sap that will drive his story from the root that lies buried in my mind, down
my arm, across my wrist, through my fingers, out of the pen and into the
sunlight of clean, white paper.
It bubbles my veins, ripples the convolutions of my brain and sets fire to
the five chambers of my demon heart. Here, the first tendril of ink begins to
sprout, curling inward and out, wrapping around nothing to define a spiraling
plant that grows with the speed of light. It is everywhere at once, bearing
heavy white fruit that splits open amidst the rushing wind of passing seasons,
releasing a flock of screaming, blind birds. They fly upward with full
determination to smash against the ceiling of the sky and vaporize into a
thousand clouds that form one cloud. It rains, and the green land stretches, in
mere moments, into a wilderness so immense that it is impossible even to
conceive of crossing it.
There, like a tiny insect on the head of a giant whose brow is the mightiest
of mountain ranges, is Cley, where I left him, in a clearing of tall oaks.
Beside him, that insignificant black dot, is Wood, the dog with one ear.
Closer now and closer still until I can make out his broadbrimmed black hat,
sporting three wild-turkey feathers, reminders of his first kill in the Beyond.
Beneath it, his chestnut hair is long and twisted together in the back to form
a crude braid tied at the end with a lanyard that was once a demon's tendon. A
full beard descends across his chest. Amidst this profluent tangle jut a nose
and cheeks, the left scarred by the nick of a barbed tail. He stares northward
with unnerving determination, as if he can already see, thousands of miles
ahead of him, his destination.
I have seen scarecrows in the fields surrounding Latrobia who are better
dressed than this hunter. Old brown coat, removed from a skeleton back in the
ruins of Anamasobia, like the hide of some weary, wrinkled beast. The flannel
shirt, dark blue with a field of golden stars, he found in the intact dresser
drawer of one Frod Geeble's rooms, which lay behind the destruction of a
tavern. A pair of overalls. The boots have been Cley's all along, and in the
left one is the stone knife he assured me cut with more grace and precision
than a Physiognomist's scalpel. The rifle, luckiest find of all, is for him
like a marriage partner. He sleeps with it, whispers to it, cares for it with a
genuine devotion. When it comes time to kill, he kills with it, his shot
growing truer and truer until he can drill a demon in mid-flight, dead center
between the eyes, at a hundred yards. His backpack holds boxes of shells, but
the Beyond is limitless.
That dog, potential insanity on four legs, can be as calm as a dreamless
sleeper until danger drops from the trees and then his placid, near-human smile
wrinkles back into a snapping wound machine. The crafty beast learns to lunge
for my brethrens unprotected areas-wing membrane, soft belly, groin, or tail.
I, myself, witnessed that hound tear off an attacking demon's member, slip
through its legs, and then shred a wing to tatters in his escape. He has an
uncanny sense of certainty about him in all situations, as if in each he is
like a dancer who has practiced that one dance all his days. Copyright© 2002, HarperCollins Publishers. All rights reserved. No part of this may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher. This excerpt has been provided by HarperCollins and printed with their permission.
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