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my right foot upon it, and I felt the current Random had mentioned. I took another step.
There was a crackle and I felt my hair beginning to rise. I took another step.
Then the thing began to curve, abruptly, back upon itself. I took ten more paces, and a certain
resistance seemed to arise. It was as if a black barrier had grown up before me, of some substance
which pushed back upon me with each effort that I made to pass forward.
I fought it. It was the First Veil, I suddenly knew.
To get beyond it would be an achievement, a good sign, showing that I was indeed part of the Pattern.
Each raising and lowering of my foot suddenly required a terrible effort, and sparks shot forth from my
hair.
I concentrated on the fiery line. I walked it breathing beavily.
Suddenly the pressure was eased. The Veil had parted before me, as abruptly as it had occurred. I
had passed beyond it and acquired something,
I had gained a piece of myself.
I saw the paper skins and the knobby, stick-like bones of the dead of Auschwitz. I had been present
at Nuremberg, I knew. I heard the voice of Stephen Spender reciting "Vienna," and I saw Mother
Courage cross the stage on the night of a Brecht premiere. I saw the rockets leap up from the stained
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hard places, Peenemunde, Vandenberg, Kennedy,
Kyzyl Kum in Kazakhstan, and I touched with my hands the Wall of China. We were drinking beer and
wine, and Shaxpur said he was drunk and went off to puke. I entered the green forests of the Western
Reserve and took three scalps one day. I hummed a tune as we marched along and it caught on. It
become "Auprés de ma Blonde." I remembered, I remembered . . . my life within the Shadow place its
inhabitants had called the Earth. Three more steps, and I held a bloody blade and saw three dead men
and my horse, on which I had fled the revolution in France. And more, so much more, back to--
I took another step.
Back to--
The dead. They were all about me. There was a horrible stink-the smell of decaying flesh-and I heard
the howls of a dog who was being beaten to death. Billows of black smoke filled the sky, and an icy
wind swept around me bearing a few small drops of rain. My throat was parched and my hands shook
and my head was on fire. I staggered alone, seeing everything through the haze of the fever that burned
me. The gutters were filled with garbage and dead cats and the
emptyings of chamber pots. With a rattle and the ringing of a bell, the death wagon thundered by,
splashing me with mud and cold water.
How long I wandered, I do not know, before a woman seized my arm and I saw a Death's Head ring
upon her finger. She led me to her rooms, but discovered there that I had no money and was incoherent.
A look of fear crossed her pained face, erasing the smile on her bright lips, and she fled and I collapsed
upon her bed.
Later-again, how much later I do not know-a big man, the girl's Black Davy, came and slapped me
across the face and dragged me to my feet. I seized his right biceps and hung on. He half carried, half
pulled me toward the door.
When I realized that he was going to cast me out into the cold, I tightened my grip to protest it. I
squeezed with all my remaining strength, mumbling half-coherent pleas.
Then through sweat and tear-filled eyes. I saw his face break open and heard a scream come forth
from between his stained teeth.
The bone in his arm had broken where I'd squeezed it.
He pushed me away with his left hand and fell to his knees, weeping. I sat upon the floor, and my head
cleared for a moment.
"I . . . am . . . staying here," I said, "until I feel better. Get out. If you come back-I'll kill you."
"You've got the plague!" he cried. "They'll come for your bones tomorrow!" and he spat then, got to
his feet, and staggered out.
I made it to the door and barred it. Then I crawled back to the bed and slept.
If they came for my bones the next day, they were disappointed. For, perhaps ten hours later, in the
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