Authors: Sarah Mussi
âYes,' I said, although the idea struck terror into me.
âWell said,' commended Kamuel. âYou will not regret this hour.'
âBut how did you free Vincent? Where will he go?'
âDo not ask how I released Vincent, which angels helped me, which broke into God's Army's camp and shattered the chains that held him. That is how we work.'
âWe?' I said.
âAh,' smiled Kamuel, âso you have not yet heard of the work of the Mission?
I shook my head. In all the long hours spent in study or devotion at the Cloisters, I had never heard of any group called the Mission.
âIt's just as well,' said Kamuel. âNo one should know who we are.' He drew his cloak closer around him. âIf God's Army should arrest you, you will not betray us. And I will not forget you.'
I nodded. Already it was too late. Was I not here, cloaked in darkness, already assisting an escaped criminal?'
âWhat about Vincent?' I said, looking at the thin angel beside us.
âHe will fall to Earth,' said Kamuel. âHe will fall from the edge of the Abyss and he will escape.'
âBut . . .' I said.
âAnd he will dwell among men, forever invisible, forever unable to return to Heaven, but he will survive. He will work doing the will of the true faith, until the day we triumph. He will become one of the Outcasts,' said Kamuel.
âOne of the Fallen?' I said.
âThere are many.'
I blinked. Where had I been for the past few millennia? Why didn't I know about this? About Outcasts, about Falling, that unseen angels trod the pavements on Earth? I opened my mouth to ask: can they apparition to humans? Can they command rainbows? Do they touch mortals?
But Kamuel held a finger over his lips and I said nothing.
âThey all worked for the Mission. They all knew the price they might have to pay,' said Kamuel. âThey live on Earth in secret. One careless flash of angelic power would give them away. Retribution would be swift and entire.'
I thought about that. Had I passed Outcasts in my duties on Earth? Had I not noticed they were there? Had that lonely figure in the club been one of them? I suddenly knew he
must
have been one of them. It had been
him
at Styx! The cities of Earth were probably thronged with the Fallen.
âUnless they cross over to the dark.'
âThe dark?'
âJoin Satan.'
I shivered. Join Satan?
My thoughts were interrupted. âAre you ready?' Kamuel asked.
Kamuel took Vincent's arm. Vincent nodded.
âCome, brace yourself. Take courage, Vincent,' said Kamuel. âLucifer shall not have you, and God's Army will not find you.'
Vincent seemed to shrink under the fortification. His cheeks sank in, and his eyes stared back out of deep hollows.
âSo, Vincent, can you do God's work on Earth in secrecy, in silence?'
Vincent nodded. His thin shoulders twitched a little.
âCan you renounce Heaven, and Fall?'
âGod bless you, Kamuel,' whispered Vincent, âfor offering me the chance.'
âThe work will be hard and thankless. You will go unnoticed, often cursed.'
Vincent looked like that had been the case for a very long time already.
âYou will be called upon to deceive out of Kindness, to be cruel out of Love, to kill out of Mercy.'
âI'm ready.'
âThen go with the Mission's blessing.'
âWhat were God's Army going to do?' I squeaked.
Vincent smiled. âGod's Army would have taken me to the Day of Judgement Courts to be tried before the Senior Team. The penalty for unlawful killing is vaporisation.'
I shuddered. In my mind's eye I saw Vincent shattered into a million tiny fragments of dust, each angelic speck doomed to waft in the air for eternity.
âIf I had only done it once,' continued Vincent, âperhaps they might have just stripped me of my wings and banished me from Heaven . . .'
âOh,' I whispered. I wanted to ask more â who, why, how many â and did Extensions count as unlawful Collections? And why had he chosen to become an Angel of Mercy? But I just couldn't.
Vincent smiled.
Kamuel silenced us with a wave of his wing. He beckoned us forward. âNow,' he hissed.
The three of us hurried through the North Gate and down the narrow lane that led out to the wasteland beyond.
Silently, like shadows in the night, we passed the barren plains that stretch northwards towards the Sapphire Mountains. None heard us pass, none stopped us with shout nor alarm. On we flew, quiet as the grave, skimming the land and keeping low so that no careless moonbeam would betray us.
At last we came to the first postings of rock that signalled our closeness to the Abyss. No fields, nor woodlands, adorned this part of Heaven, only the bones of the mountains, austere, unwelcoming. I'd never in all my days been this far north.
âDevil's Drop is not far off,' whispered Kamuel.
We alighted upon stones as quietly as snow falls. I drew my raiment tight around me. I was so glad I'd chosen such a thick one. It was very cold. The wind wailed like a disembodied spirit out of the depths of the Abyss, blasting us with icy particles. I could hear it moaning even from where we were.
âDraw close,' said Kamuel.
The three of us huddled together in the shadows of the rocks. From amongst the folds of his robes Kamuel drew a rope.
âWhat's that for?' I asked, imagining somehow that Vincent was going to have to climb down it into the Abyss.
âTo bind his wings. Come, Vincent,' said Kamuel. âLet me tie them for you.'
Vincent shuffled forward.
âWhy do you tie his wings?' I asked.
Kamuel smiled as he pulled the knot tight. âIf I do not, once he has jumped he will use them. There is no other way. None can withstand the Fall if they have wings to save themselves.'
Kamuel finished his work. Vincent tested the knots. I shuddered to see his feathers broken in places, crushed, deformed. But Vincent didn't murmur.
We walked the rest of the distance on foot. In single file we tiptoed silently between the overhanging rocks, crept round the curved mass of the boulders, and made our way quietly to the lip of the Abyss.
There it was. I'd never seen it before. The rocks so perilously smooth. One wrong step and you'd slip, fall, plunge. Instinctively I unfurled my wings. The edge beckoned; seemed to tempt. I felt a sudden overwhelming urge to slide forward, to peer over its edge, to look into the void beneath . . .
Kamuel caught my shoulder. âHave a care,' he said. I stepped back. The wind moaned up. Mists swirled out of the deeps below â sometimes thin and wispy in phantom shapes, sometimes thick and treacherous. My pulse raced. I balanced precariously on the rocks.
A sudden noise.
What was that?
A squeak of leather on stone.
I jumped, slipped, tipped towards the edge, unfurled my wings, beat the air. Kamuel held me steady.
It happened so fast. Before I knew what was going on â there they were.
âSTEP AWAY FROM THE EDGE,' boomed a dreadful voice.
I whirled around. Wildly I stared into the mists. Not phantom shapes at all. There they stood, as if they had materialised straight out of the Apocalypse. A whole regiment of God's Army.
God's Army!
How had they surrounded us so quietly? Why had I imagined their tramping would give them away?
âStand off,' commanded Kamuel, instantly summoning a swirling fog to hide us.
âBEWARE! We act with authority,' ordered the voice I remembered from Raquel's party. âShow yourselves. Someone has signed a pact with the Devil. They must be found and punished. You cannot stand in our way. Do not protect the wicked. Until the threat is dealt with everyone is at risk.'
There he stood, whip in hand, towering over all the others. My heart beat. I made to step forward. Kamuel and Vincent should not be caught because of me.
âWe know a Seraph is amongst you. We know you are assisting an escaped convict.'
Instantly Kamuel turned to me, grabbed my arm, exposed the Cloister's identity band. Without hesitation he ripped it off, hurled it into the Abyss and whispered in my ear,
âDo not argue. You have been tricked. Fly
.
'
Confused, alarmed, I beat my wings. I rose straight up.
âJump!'
Kamuel screamed at Vincent.
But Vincent hesitated, undecided.
âJump, for God's sake!'
Archangel Jehudiel raised his arm. The huge whip curled into the air. âSTEP AWAY FROM THE EDGE,' he ordered. âFALLING IS FORBIDDEN ON PAIN OF VAPORISATION.'
Kamuel rose in the air, sent a fury of thunderbolts. The ranks of God's Army scattered. The fog thinned.
Vincent just stood there.
âJUMP!'
screeched Kamuel.
I beat the air, soared ten thousand feet.
Kamuel followed, but Vincent remained motionless, like a rabbit caught in a finger of light.
And Archangel Jehudiel flicked the Whip of Justice up into the whirling air. âSTEP BACK FROM THE EDGE NOW OR I WILL WIELD THE WHIP,' he commanded.
And still he didn't jump.
And Jehudiel cracked the whip down.
And a length of white-hot fire â thinner than a flower stalk â snaked out.
And shattered Vincent into a million shining pieces.
After Vincent was vaporised everything came to a full stop. Of course. The paperwork was endless. The searches took forever. I didn't dare use the spare pass, and it was all chaos.
But if Marcus had called me I'd have heard. I'd have found a way to reach him. All he needed to do was whisper:
âAngel?'
We Seraphim can hear the rustle of a butterfly's wing as it beats the air a continent away. I'd even have braved using the fire escape if he'd called.
But he didn't.
I thought he might. Hoped he would. He'd said he'd like to see me again. I grew impatient waiting. I had to talk to him. But perhaps it was just as well he didn't.
Heaven was in uproar.
The
Daily Trumpet
had a field day:
EVIL ANGEL ATTEMPTS ESCAPE!
KNOWN KILLER DONE IN AT DEVIL'S DROP!
VILLAIN VAPORISED ON VERY VERGE OF VICTORY
DEVIL'S DISCIPLES AT WORK IN HEAVEN
JEHUDIEL CRACKS DOWN THE WHIP
It was all obviously part of Satan's campaign. And it was all major news. And oh, poor Vincent. Poor, poor Vincent. Vaporised by the swirling Abyss. His poor sunken cheeks. His tied wings. His empty eyes, those staring deep hollows. Would I ever forget? The terror. The horror. The moment of impact â how the whip had turned him white-hot, fused his wings, sent a web of fissures out into every vein, every artery, his face a mask of pain. How for one moment he'd appeared in his true glory â beautiful beyond compare â then the shattering of his limbs, how they'd melted down, cracking, twisting, breaking . . .
Why hadn't he jumped?
Why had we just flown away? Couldn't we have saved him?
The terrible look of retribution on Jehudiel's face.
I hid in the Cloisters. I joined the vigil. I went to devotions. I covered my guilt and my terror with white raiment and endless prayer.
Had they seen me?
Every time a door opened I started, every time it closed I heaved a sigh of relief.
Did they know who I was?
The identity bracelet.
Would I be recognised by the guard?
I'd been followed â hadn't I? I'd been tracked and tagged. It was the bracelet, wasn't it?
I tried never to be in my cell; I stayed away from my friends, lest in my eyes they read my terror and asked of it; when the Superior demanded details of all our movements, I didn't own up.
Thank God I hadn't been recognised.
When Jehudiel searched our cells I trembled in silence and hid Marcus's key. When the Seraphim were issued new Individualised Identity Curfew Bracelets, I accepted mine as if I'd never seen one before.
They'd vaporised Vincent.
God's Army were on to me.
And I didn't dare use Raquel's spare pass. Not until it had all died down. Not until I was absolutely sure it was safe.
And so three days elapsed before I could get back down to Earth. Three whole days. That left only five before Halloween, and it was torture.
But at length the day came when I could slip out. I removed the new identity bracelet, fearing it would betray me. I hid it inside the Announcers' Offices, where I pretended I was going to work all day. Then I tagged along with a choir of Seraphim who were going down to sing at the inauguration of a new bishop. I slipped through the checkpoint â waving my pass â hiding in their ranks.
Once on Earth, in the flick of a feather I got to the hospital. I hurried to his room. Made ready to apparition.
But Marcus had vanished.
I panicked. Had they moved him to another room? Was he in intensive care? Had something gone wrong?
Had my miracle not worked?
He wasn't in another room. Not in intensive care. Immediately I was terrified. Was he dead? What had happened? I looked in the morgue.
Thank God he wasn't in the morgue.
I tried touching the bed he'd lain on â but it wasn't his. I flicked from ward to ward, trying to find the right bed, but when I did, it told me nothing, except that he'd left it yesterday.
Where was he? How could I find him?
I remembered hospitals keep notes. Instantly I scanned through records, found his file. He'd received a phone call and discharged himself on 22nd October. Nobody had come to pick him up â that's what his notes said.
Why had he done that? He was still so weak.
Stay calm. There must be news of him. Use your powers. I tuned my ears into the music of the spheres to see if any chance refrain sang of him. But there was no mention of Marcus. Alarmed, I tried listening in to a thousand conversations, whispered across the spinning globe, but none revealed his whereabouts. In desperation I gazed with angelic vision through thicket, stone, cement, steel, to north, south, east, west â yet
still
I could not find him.