Thunder and Silence
Thunder crashed around the
valley, its echoes shaking the misted glass of the old house. Well-maintained,
despite its age, the red bricks of those stoic walls were the only sign of
human artistry for a hundred miles around. No broad, flagstoned highways scarred
the silent, sylvan, surrounds; indeed no paths at all save the winding,
scarce-seen tracks along which wolves stalked the nervous deer. This was a
primeval land. No booted foot had dared pick its way through the uninviting
undergrowth for three hundred years; not since a grey-robed man had willed a
house into existence at the bend of the stampeding river in that sly-shadowed
valley.
Watching
the river through the stinging hail, from the warmer side of the lead-fixed
panes was a man whose beard now matched the grey of his robe. Lines that had
been formed by several lifetimes of studious scowling were being deepened as
the man watched the raucous play of the storm-gods with irritated disdain.
“Go
blow yourselves out somewhere else,” he told them in the kind but firm tones of
a harassed parent. “Some of us are trying to work.”
There was a pause while the
bruise-coloured cloudbank digested this. The next crash, an unobserved observer
could imagine, sounded angry and defiant, like a child refusing to accept it
was bedtime. A blue-white streak of blistering light flung itself from the
petulant sky towards the man and his window. The observer might have thought a
lightning bolt would not have been able to look taken aback; they would have
been wrong. This one, unused as it was to being stopped by an unseen barrier,
managed it quite well.
“Stop that.”
The words, though calmly said, filled the
entire valley. The cloudbank flinched then rumbled sullenly.
“I mean it. Right now.”
The wind suddenly ceased, dropping
its hastily-snatched cargo of forest-floor detritus. In the now-thunderless
calm the tiny percussive sound of the last few hailstones completing their fall
could be heard. The robed man drew breath for another reprimand. The clouds
parted instantly and obsequiously, letting a shaft of warm sunlight fall onto
the window and the man it framed. He suspiciously regarded the sky for one long
moment, harrumphed and returned to the leather armchair and battered scroll he
had abandoned.
He was
so engrossed in the arcane spider-scrawl in front of him as to be rendered
almost-uninteresting, so the unseen witness might now take this opportunity to
leave the wild-haired scholar to his reading and nose about the room, leafing
through the draws in search of a spare cigarette. It was cluttered. Books and
papers lay where they’d been discarded, half-obscuring the esoteric apparatus
that occupied all of the many tables, desks and workbenches. One of the benches
was conspicuously free from the academic snowdrifts. It held the studious man’s
current project. On this bench, stood under the room’s large sky-light, sat a stone.
In the light from the globe hovering a few inches from the ceiling it seemed to
have sheen about it. First red, then green, then the blue of deep sunlit waters
could be seen from its apparently perfect surface. About the size of a child’s
skull, it was held by heavy, black iron vices that were themselves screwed to
the work-surface. If stones could escape, someone had ensured this particular
one would struggle to do so. If asked what it was, the man would, depending on
his mood, answer either “None of your concern,” or “Something fascinatingly
dangerous.” If he answered with the latter, he would then indicate the scorch
marks along one wall.
A gnat,
bored with aimless flitting, settled itself on the stone. It burst into flame. The
smell of a tiny life extinguished without care filled the room and failed to
break the man’s concentration. With enough exposure and apathy, people can get
used to anything. The light from the globe wasn’t the clearest ever seen, so an
observer might have missed the stone’s adding of half a millimetre to its
circumference.
“Jumped-up,
new-age rubbish!”
A
scroll, written a hundred years before the birth of the oldest person in the
world outside this room, landed in the grate under the undusted mantelpiece
where it crumpled despondently. The paper became even more dejected when the
robed man felt the evening’s chill and ignited it with a small, precise
gesture. The little ember was fed on thought and mild irritation directed down
that gesture until a respectable blaze at in the grate, denying all association
with the barely-warm little squirt that had recently occupied the space.
The
bewhiskered man turned his attention and his chair towards the workbench. The
stone stood still. He frowned. The stone did nothing. He glowered. The stone,
if anything, became slightly less animated.
“Right, you.
That’s enough of this brooding-in-the-corner-threatening-the-whole-of-existence
business.”
Two ancient
consciousnesses reached decisions, gathered their insurmountable wills and
focussed on their opponents. One took a couple of goes to roll up his
voluminous sleeves; the other wished it had sleeves to roll up.
The air
in the room took on a dense and pressing aspect, thickening enough to delay the
glow from the ceiling-globe and trap the heat from the fire. Sound could not
move through that immobile mass. Time was held in place by the full force of
millennia of mental mass meeting at high speed. It strained against the steel-clad
thoughts blocking its path. The immense wills used the energies of supernovas
to force their opponent one proton back.
The old
man felt like one for the first time in centuries; he could no longer spare the
energy to maintain his physical strength. The thought that had been sent into
the world to create the fire rushed along the psychic highways to defend its
native home; the force that had created the house abandoned its colony of
mortar to fight for the capital of flesh and bone; the bricks themselves melted
to dust then to unbound force to rally the broad-cuffed commander. All reported
for duty and promptly charged from synaptic gates to scream their battle cries
at the massed opposing legions. An enemy rank fell. Then another. The whole
barbarian horde was in full rout! The marshalled thought of three hundred years
and more charged across the space and threw its weight at the red-streaked
black of the hostile citadel.
The
stone cracked.
Sleeves
fell back to wrists. Now-white hair hung limply down.
The
ancient Sage of the River’s Bend fell backwards and dust settled on his barely
rising chest.
Thunder
crashed around the valley and it started to rain.
One hopes you're well,
yrs,
ADWoodward
This is very, very fucking good. Must read more soon!
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