Read On a Pale Horse Online

Authors: Piers Anthony

Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fantasy

On a Pale Horse (34 page)

“It is a terrible thing we do,” Chronos said. “But the privations any of us face today are but an eyeblink to those we shall face in a generation if the Prince of Evil wins. We sacrifice the
now
for the sake of the
hence
. I am in a position to know.”

“But you
used
me—and her!” Zane cried in continuing anguish. “Where is your morality?”

“It is our business to use people,” Fate said. “Have you yourself hesitated to employ your power to change the circumstances of your clients?” Of course she was scoring there, for Zane was in deep trouble for doing just
that. He had hardly hesitated to impose his own view of what was right, sparing some clients, taking some, and changing the manner of the dying of others.
Holy, Holy, Holy!

“Now, in the hour of crisis, we are using ourselves,” Fate continued. “We have made it possible for you to save the living world by saving the life of the woman you love. You were ready to oppose us, though you knew our power, when we tested you on this just now. Now you can aid us, to your own advantage.”

It was, of course, true. They had spun him into an inextricable commitment. Without Fate’s intervention in his life, he would probably have shot himself and—no, of course she had also set up his
need
to shoot himself by denying him his romance with Angelica—or had she set that up, too? How far back did this go? Probably, left to his own devices, he would have looked at the stones in the Mess o’ Pottage shop, been able to afford none, and returned to his dreary former existence. He would at this moment be scrounging for back rent by selling pornographic photographs of unsuspecting women. Instead, he had been launched into a fantastic new realm of death and love …

Nature smiled. “Mars grasped the essentials of the battle between God and Satan,” she said. “Chronos spotted the key episode to come. I defined the qualities of the person who could and would do what had to be done, and Fate arranged to put him—you—in the proper situation. We collaborated, and touched your life as you looked at the Deathstone, and now the matter is in your hands. We can not fight this battle without your acquiescence.”

“But you didn’t tell me!”

“Had we set it up openly, Satan would have known,” Fate reminded him. “He would have acted to prevent this encounter, just as he acted to eliminate Luna before her turn. The Prince of Evil has no civilized limits; he seeks only his own aggrandizement, and his craft and power are enormous. But now the deed is done, and even he can not rescind it, though he is surely listening to us now. The time for secrecy is past.”


What
deed?” Zane demanded, exasperated. “I have
not saved Luna’s life; I have only refused to take her soul.”

“And will you take that soul hereafter if Satan asks you to?” Nature asked cannily.

“No! And not if
you
ask me to, Green Mother! I love Luna; I don’t care by what machinations the rest of you arranged this thing, or whom I might have loved otherwise, or whom
she
might have loved; I’ll not betray her myself.”

“We thought you would feel that way,” Nature said. “We never wished you evil, Thanatos; we always wished you success. We deeply regret having to plot against your predecessor, who was a decent officeholder—but he would not have balked at taking Luna. He was too experienced with the mischief of opposing the status quo and would not try to thwart God or Satan. We had to have a headstrong, emotional Death, new enough and young enough not to be jaded by experience, and alive enough to respond to an attractive and intelligent young woman. We chose you and we used you, and for that we apologize—but we believe we had no choice. We could not do the job ourselves. The brunt must be yours. Satan wants Luna dead, but only you can complete that death. As long as you hold out, Satan is foiled.”

Zane looked at Luna’s body, the welling and dripping blood frozen in place. “Much good may it do her or the world,” he muttered. “She is not dead, but neither is she alive.”

Chronos raised his hourglass. “Now I can act.” He turned his hand, reversing the glass without inverting it, so that the sand flowed upward. Outside their circle, time ran backward, as it had on the night of the fire.

The dragoness’ mouth opened. Blood welled into Luna’s body, rising in swift drops from the ground and coursing in rivulets to closing wounds as the monster’s teeth withdrew. The dragoness’ head jerked back and Luna sprang out, blind and flayed. She reeled backward—into a coalescing cloud of smoke. She screamed. In a moment the smoke squeezed into the reptile’s mouth, and Luna backed away unharmed.

Chronos gestured with the hourglass, and time refroze.
“Now you can take her back, on temporary license. But there are some cautions. Satan can not make you take her soul, but he can make you wish you had. You will have to be brutally steadfast.”

Zane looked at the restored Luna, suddenly so healthy. He blinked. The horror had unhappened! “I shall be.”

“But you can not decline this client without declining all,” Nature said. “On others you could choose before, for you were merely juggling their situations when no other supernatural entity was concerned. But in this case the issue has been joined. Satan will hold you to the technicality of the law, for all that he honors no technicalities himself. You will not be permitted to take any soul without first taking Luna’s. You must take none—or all.”

“Then I’m on strike,” Zane said. “I will take none—until Luna is released from this wrongful schedule of demise.”

“Yet Satan will press his case,” Mars warned. “Never in your life or death have you waged such a campaign against an Eternal. We do not know whether you will be able to prevail.”

“I won’t take Luna’s soul,” Zane insisted. “No matter what. You conspired to put me into love with her, and I know that and resent it, but I never betrayed one I loved, though my own soul be in peril.”

“Yes, we know,” Nature said. “That was your prime qualification for our purpose. You are intemporately loyal to your loves and your beliefs.” She kissed him on the cheek.

“The fate of humanity depends, however deviously, on your resolve,” Fate said, kissing his other cheek. “Never forget that.”

Mars and Chronos nodded grave agreement. Then there was a swirl of mixed impressions, and the others were gone. Zane was left with Luna and the Hot Smoke dragoness.

Zane touched his watch, and the motion resumed. Luna moved toward the dragoness. But she stopped, for there was already an offering before the monster.

Evidently Nature had procured a sacrificial lamb for the occasion. The poor lamb gave one terrified bleat before
getting chomped. For an instant Zane wondered how it could die, if no souls could be collected, then remembered that the collectors of animal souls were not on strike. Only human souls were at issue.

In moments the dragoness consumed the virgin lamb, wool and all. She licked off her chops, burped, and limped over to rescue her precious egg. She picked it up carefully in her mouth, breathed just enough fire to melt a spot on the shell, and stuck it to her back. Then she unfurled her wings, scrambled along the sand runway, headed into the wind, got up velocity, and took off. Soon she was a diminishing speck in the sky.

Zane strode across the sand and intercepted the leader of the Dragoons, who was staring as if at a miracle. “Are you satisfied? Then release the virgin.”

The man nodded. “Did you see that?” he asked raptly. “Suddenly a lamb! It must be an Act of God!”

“The virgin’s onus is abated,” Zane said insistently.

“Oh, yes,” the man said absently. “We shall transport her to our base-city to the south of Nevada, Las Vegas, and purchase a carpet ticket to her home. You have my word.”

And the word of this dedicated man was good. Zane turned to the virgin. “When you get home, miss, I suggest you—”

“Oh, yes, sir!” she exclaimed. “I will marry the boy next door immediately!”

Good enough. She would no longer be at risk as dragon bait. Her job was done.

His own, however, was just beginning. Zane walked up to Luna and took her by the arm, leading her toward his horse. Mortis had simply faded out of the picture and faded back in now that he was needed again. Luna seemed dazed. “I was scorched, crushed—” she said, putting her free hand where her wounds had been.

So she remembered! “Time—that’s Chronos, another Incarnation—reversed your sacrifice. You have been spared because I refused to take your soul.”

“But you should not have been summoned for me!” she protested. “My sin outweighs my good. I should have gone directly to Hell!”

“So we thought,” he agreed. “But you chose a good way to meet your transformation, seeking and expecting no reward. Your soul is now in balance, as the other Incarnations knew it would be, and you are my direct client. Your life would still have been forfeit, because of Satan’s cheating, but I have gone on strike. No one will die until your case is settled.”

“But then what is my status?” she asked, perplexed. She seemed bemused to find herself alive and without physical pain, as well she might be.

“Limbo, I believe.” He considered and realized that the other Incarnations had not told him much. They had simply set the scene, and now he had to play it out. “I think you can go about your normal life, on bail, as it were, until this business with Satan is settled.”

“My normal life!” she exclaimed incredulously.

“At least I can take you home, where you will be safe with your griffins and moon moth.”

She formed a wry smile. “I hope you know what you are doing, Zane, because I am not at all sure at the moment where reality lies. I expected to be dead.”

“I’m righting a wrong,” he said. “Satan conspired against you, and I mean to foil him. It would be the proper thing to do, even if I had not been led into this situation like a puppet on a string, and even if I didn’t love you.”

“I hardly think I’m worth it, dead or alive,” she murmured as they reached Mortis.

“Worth saving, or worth loving?”

“Either. I’m just not that important a person. I know I couldn’t stand up to Satan, or even to one of his demons.” She shuddered, remembering the demon she had encountered. “And I doubt that love—”

Mortis leaped into the sky. “Your doubt doesn’t matter,” Zane said. “Your soul will remain on Earth.”

She hugged him uncertainly from behind, not speaking again. He delivered her to her home and left her there with the admonition to stay indoors and sleep. He would check on her frequently.

“Home, Mortis,” he said, suddenly very tired. The Deathsteed plunged into the sky.


11

SATAN’S CASE

The Deathwatch caught his eye. It had clients backlogged. “Sorry—no action today,” Zane murmured. “Or for some time to come.”

They arrived at his mansion in the sky, and Zane dismounted. “I think you’ll have a week’s good grazing, Mortis,” he said. “You’ve been a perfect steed, and I wish you the best.”

The gallant stallion nickered appreciation, shook his body to make the saddle vanish, and headed toward the pasture. Zane went to the house.

The household staff took care of him as always. Zane had a good meal, a shower, a change of clothing, and felt much refreshed. He settled down to watch the news on television, knowing it would be brimming over with his latest scandalous behavior. Everything seemed fine, except for two things: he missed Luna, and he was apprehensive about his future. He knew he faced no easy time. It would not take Satan long, if he had not listened in on the Hot Smoke scene, to realize that Luna had not arrived in Hell on schedule.

“Good evening, Death,” the urbane announcer said from the screen. “I dislike intruding on your well-deserved privacy, but there seems to be a misunderstanding.”

Zane peered more closely at the face. The man’s
complexion was dark with a red tinge, and two small horns projected from his temples. “Satan!” he exclaimed.

“At your service,” the Prince of Evil agreed, inclining his head politely. “Do you have a moment?”

Zane sighed. Already the dread encounter was upon him! Satan was affecting politeness, but he would have his say no matter what Death did. “I refuse to send Luna’s soul to Hell!” Zane said firmly.

Satan laughed. The sound was mellow and good-humored, as if he were enjoying a joke on himself. “To Hell? My dear associate, she need not come here! I’m sure she will be welcome in Heaven, after her several meritorious acts.”

What was this? “You don’t want her?”

“I want only what is due Me, Death. Luna is a good woman, regardless of what the record may indicate. I can personally guarantee she will not come to Hell. I have no use for her kind here.”

“Then why did you slate her for untimely demise?” Zane snapped.

The Devil’s lips quirked. “I must confess there is a bit of awkwardness coming up. I see no reason to involve such a lovely and good woman in that matter.”

“So you’re killing her early!”

“I merely seek the least painful way to alleviate a difficult situation. I regret that this may cause you personal distress, Death, but I am quite willing to compensate you—”

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