Read The Shadow and Night Online
Authors: Chris Walley
Tags: #FICTION / Christian / Futuristic, #FICTION / Religious
“I need to leave,” Elana said abruptly, her blue eyes fixed on his. “I need to leave here.” There was a note of desperation in her voice.
“Why, Elana?” he asked, feeling sorry for her.
“It's the atmosphere,” she replied. She picked up a blade of grass and began to chew on it, her sky-colored eyes still looking into his. He was vaguely aware that he found her closeness very agreeable. He was also dimly aware that there was something perilous about this proximity.
“I want to escape. It's not a good place anymore. It's tiny and boring and the atmosphere gets me down. I want to live somewhere else. I want to
be
someone else. Can you help?”
“Me?”
“Get me out. Anywhere. Herrandown, Isterrane. The Southern Seas, the ends of Farholme. I don't care. Just get me out of here.”
He tried to smile. “I'd love to help. How?”
She chewed a little more on the grass stalk, then took it out of her mouth. “There are ways. Get us relocated. Go back to your bossâ what's his name?”
“Henri.”
“Okay, now, I've been thinking. We've been here eight years. In two years, Mum and Dad's posting is reassessed. So you could, you see, just ask Henri to move us early.”
“I can't do that. There are rules. There's a long transfer list.”
“Rules can be bent. You could say that Dad's getting weird. Mum'sâwhat's the word?â
unbalanced.
Get us reposted. South. Somewhere with beaches.”
“I can't do that,” he protested as he tried to think of some other way of helping her. He paused. “I could, I suppose, request a psychological survey of you all. Say you have been through a stressful time.”
She gave a firm shake of her head. “No. I've read up on that stuff; it's in the Library. Dad would fight an assessment.”
“True.”
And you'd never get a verdict in your favor; you are all sane. Or at least as sane as anyone else on this increasingly messed-up planet.
“Merral,” she said in a low, soft voice that he found extraordinarily compelling, “Couldn't you go to Henri and ask for us to be moved? Now. As a special favor. A private arrangement.”
I could too,
he realized with a shock.
Henri trusts me.
“But there's a list.” As he said it he felt his protest sounded feeble.
“Please. As a favor. Just get us put on the top of it.” There was a gentle, troubling tone of pleading in her voice.
“Elana, I can't do favors,” Merral answered, aware that his voice sounded as if it belonged to someone else.
But I can,
he thought.
There are vacancies in the new southern colonies.
“Not even for me?” she implored, flicking her pale hair back and wriggling slightly, as if pressing herself down into the grass.
“Well . . .”
I could do it. Get them put on the top of the transfer list. And why not? She
has
had a rough time. And who would be affected by one family moved to the top?
She stared at him. “For us.”
He was silent.
She reached out and stroked his hand gently.
“Please.”
Suddenly, Merral jerked his hand away. He started to his feet, conscious that his face was burning.
“No, Elana!”
She stared at him with a hurt look, as if something precious had been snatched from her.
Merral headed toward the house and then stopped.
He looked behind, relieved to see that she was not following him. He brushed the grass off himself, took a deep breath, and tried to settle his thoughts. He had been tempted and had gone a long way to giving in. In his mind, he began to pray for forgiveness.
A few minutes later, to his enormous relief, he heard the whispering of the approaching rotorcraft.
In his urgency to get back to Isterrane, Merral arrived slightly early at the Ynysmant airport terminal. He was walking around the waiting area trying to bring some calmer reflections to bear on what had happened when he saw Ingrida Hallet standing looking out of the window, a travel bag at her feet.
“Hello, Ingrida,” he called out, welcoming the possibility of a conversation that would distract him from his guilty thoughts. “I haven't seen you since before Nativity.” He remembered again that memorable evening, the night that he had first met Vero, when Ingrida had so warmly wished him well with the new job he was to be given.
“Oh, it's you,” Ingrida said in a cold, hushed voice. Her face, framed by her long black hair, showed no trace of welcome.
“Yes . . .” Merral stared at her, alarmed at the lack of welcome in her face. “What's the problem? You don't seem very pleased to see me.”
Ingrida bent down, picked up her bag, and then looked at him with a hard, irritated expression. “Frankly,” she snapped, “I'm not.”
Wounded, Merral shook himself. “Look, what have I done? I don't understand.”
“Remember the rain forest job? The one
you
were offered?”
“Yes, you were the first to tell me about it.”
“Oh yes. I was, wasn't I?” She snorted, as if furious with herself. “Well, it was a job
I
wanted, the job of a lifetime. And it went to you, didn't it?”
“Butâ”
She was unstoppable now. “So I had to take something else, didn't I?” she snapped. “And what a second best. They put me on lichens! A millimeter's growth in a hundred years. They are barely alive. Lichens!” For a moment, he thought she was going to spit.
“Well, sorry. But I don't see why you are so mad at
me.
” Merral felt overwhelmed by this onslaught that, for all its fury, seemed to have no focus.
Ingrida gave him a look of contempt. “Why? Because I
now
find out you are not taking the job. Mr. Merral pick-and-choose, eh? Henri tells me when I pass through today that you are âdoing something else,' that you are âno longer really in Planning.' It's wasted!” Her face was pale with anger.
Merral, appalled and sick to his stomach, felt he had never heard anyone be so sarcastic.
“Sorry, I meanâ”
“Oh, keep your words!” she snorted. “I can't apply for it now. I'm stuck with my lichens.”
“I'm sorry. I had no idea.”
“Really?” she grunted, glaring icily at him in a way that no one ever had before. “To change your mind like that . . . it's rotten!”
Suddenly Merral was seized by a sense of how totally and utterly unfair it was. Here he was, prepared to risk his life trying to save Farholme, and thisâthis senseless womanâwas attacking him! The total injustice of her assault irritated him beyond measure. He felt himself getting angry in response and could now no longer be bothered to rein in his feelings. The offense against justice was, he knew, so great that it required an appropriate and just response. He had to tell this stupid woman bluntly, and plainly, how idiotic she was.
Merral was just going to say, “Ingrida Hallet, you are a total fool and you have not the slightest idea what you are talking about,” when he saw another passenger staring at them with a look of shocked curiosity. Ingrida followed Merral's glance then, with a toss of her head and a new snort of anger, turned her back on him and walked away.
For a fleeting moment, Merral considered pursuing her to tell her exactly what she ought to hear. Then, suddenly ashamed of his temper, he controlled himself and walked away in the other direction to the men's room. There, instinctively, he washed his face in cold water. When he looked in the mirror, he saw that he was as pale as if he had been sick.
Isabella, Elana, and Ingrida. Jorgio's prayer had been answered in triplicate with an appalling vengeance. One answer alone would have been enough.
Dear God,
he prayed,
have mercy on me.
Ten minutes later, he got on the plane and made his way to the very back. Ingrida came in later and, without looking at him, sat down at the front. When they landed at Isterrane, she got up and exited as soon as the fuselage door had slid open.
To Merral's surprise, Vero was waiting for him at the terminal.
“How did you know I was on the flight?”
“It's hardly a stunning feat of intelligence to check the passenger lists.” Vero stared at Merral. “You know, you look dreadful.”
“I'll tell you about it. But not here.”
His friend had a vehicle outside, and once they were inside and had closed the door, Vero turned to Merral. “Have you met them?” he asked.
“No. I found no trace of them. At least not physically.”
“But . . . ?”
“I found enough evidence to make me know that Iâ
weâ
have to fight.”
“I am glad you now agree. But I am concerned. What did you find?”
“Let me be clinical,” Merral said, trying to keep his voice level. “In under two days I found evidence of sin, to my knowledge, unparalleled in Assembly history. I found, among other things, a flagrant and open desire to dishonor parents, a gross outbreak of anger in public, and . . . something else I will not name.”
“In two days?” Vero's eyes opened wide. “The rot is faster than I thought.”
Merral stared out of the windscreen at the lights of town. Then he turned to Vero.
“The
rot?
Vero, you have no idea at all how bad it is. You see, I didn't find the rot in others; I found it in myself.”
34
V
ero drove Merral to Corradon's residence, an unremarkable single-story building at the edge of the lake that lay at the heart of Isterrane. As they walked through the garden toward the house, a man standing by the door came over as if to ask a question. Seeing Vero, he nodded respectfully and stepped back. “Who was that?” Merral whispered as Vero knocked on the door.
“A guard. One of Clemant's ideas. Justified, I suppose.”
The representative, dressed casually in an open-necked shirt, answered the door himself. The sounds of family chatter and music drifted past him. “Welcome both,” he said, looking unsurprised at their arrival. “Do come in.”
Merral was briefly introduced to those members of Corradon's family who were present: his wife, Victoria; one of their three sons; a daughter-in-law; and two grandchildren. They were curiously formal introductions, and any anticipation Merral had had that here, at his home, he might meet a private Anwar Corradon evaporated. Merral had a brief conversation with Victoria, a graceful lady with short white hair, who made some warm comments about Ynysmant, recalling a happy visit there some years earlier. But as she spoke, Merral noticed that her eyes were constantly glancing toward her husband as if she had some deep worry for him.
Within a few minutes, Merral was shown to the representative's study. It was full of books of poetry and theology, family images, and statues, with one wall being devoted to a large map of Menaya, drawn and painted by hand with exquisite engraved scenes scattered across it. Beyond it was another glass door that led to a small conservatory full of plants.