22
The Samhain Gate was little more than a toppled portion of a stone wall that stood only to my waist. The stones were chalk-white and smelled of sulphur. My merely pinching a smaller chip of one caused it to crumble to a powder.
Capricorn divulged that this Gate would be of great import to us, but not just yet. It was a risky place. The great veil was thinnest here, and there was no promise that whatever lurked beyond the wall would be held at bay, nor did the Gate guarantee one’s return.
When it saw me settling into the straw of the field with my hands pressed against my cranium, Capricorn asked if I felt all right.
“Dizzy,” I managed. “Head hurts, too. I think it might be the poison.”
I was assured that it was only the Greylight, that it can afflict those who are not acclimatized to it. This rang true with me. After all, the Greylight was the shade of a migraine headache, a nuclear winter glimmer.
Capricorn promised to find me some respite. This was for the best, as it was not wise to linger at the Samhain Gate.
We went into the woods, dark and deep, until we came upon a limestone plateau. We crossed the flat white expanse with great care, as though it were a frozen pond that threatened to crack at any minute.
Capricorn halted, as did I in turn. Capricorn waved its hands to push some of the fog away. Fog clung thicker here, and more coldly.
We were standing at a rip in the stone. Cold air that smelled of a deep glacial winter came gusting up from the rift, itself so succulently dark and quiet.
No Greylight down there, Capricorn assured me.
I asked Capricorn to go lead, assuming that it knew where to step and grip, but Capricorn insisted that I make my own way down first.
The opening was more like a forged smoke-hole than a natural cave mouth, but it was wide enough to spore me. I crawled down and watched the Greylight vanish. Very soon my world was all wet rock and dark.
I hit bottom sooner than I’d expected. I took two or three blind backward steps to allow Capricorn some room. It joined me on the cave floor and together we negotiated the terrain that was pocked with little pools of water.
Everywhere was the sound of dripping; a vast mouth salivating over something delectable.
We hobbled through until we reached the heart of the cavern—a great amphitheatre of tinkling moisture, keen breath, chinking stone.
Capricorn said it was safe to lie there awhile, which I did. I did not sleep, but I still found myself dreaming. The darkness never shrank and the air was oddly fresh because of its coldness and its fragrance of minerals. It was good.