City of Night
an imperfect world. He took some comfort from his conviction that one day his people would be refined to the point where they matched his own high standards.
Until then, the world would torture him with its imperfections, as it always had. He would be well advised to laugh at idiocy rather than to be inflamed by it.
He didn’t laugh enough. In fact he didn’t laugh at all these days. The last time he could remember having a really good , long laugh had been in 1979, with Fidel, in Havana, related to some fascinating open-brain work involving political prisoners with unusually high IQs.
By the time he arrived at the second floor, Victor was prepared to laugh with Werner about Annunciata’s mistake. Werner had no sense of humor, of course, but he would be able to fake a laugh. Sometimes the pretense of joviality could lift the spirits almost as high as the real thing.
When Victor stepped out of the elevator alcove into the main corridor, however, he saw a dozen of his people gathered in the hall, at the doorway to Randal Six’s room. He sensed an air of alarm about the gathering.
They parted to let him through, and he found Werner lying faceup on the floor. The massive, muscular security chief had torn off his shirt; writhing, grimacing, he hugged himself as if desperate to hold his torso together.
Although he had exercised his ability to switch off pain, Werner poured sweat. He appeared terror-stricken.
“What’s wrong with you?” Victor demanded as he knelt at Werner’s side.
“Exploding. I’m ex, I’m ex, I’m exploding.”
“That’s absurd. You’re not exploding.”
“Part of me wants to be something else,” Werner said.
“You aren’t making sense.”
With a chatter of teeth: “What’s going to be of me?”
“Move your arms, let me see what’s happening.”
“What am I, why am I, how is this happening? Father, tell me.”
“I am not your father,” Victor said sharply. “ Move your arms! ”
When Werner revealed his torso from neck to navel, Victor saw the flesh pulsing and rippling as though the breastbone had gone as soft as fatty tissue, as though within him numerous snakes squirmed in loose slippery knots, tying and untying themselves, flexing their serpentine coils in an attempt to split their host and erupt free of him.
Astonished and amazed, Victor placed one hand upon Werner’s abdomen, to determine by touch and by palpation the nature of the internal chaos.
Instantly, he discovered that this phenomenon was not what it had appeared to be. No separate entity was moving within Werner, neither a colony of restless snakes nor anything else.
His tank grown flesh itself had changed, had become amorphous, a gelatinous mass, a firm but entirely malleable meat pudding that seemed to be struggling to remake itself into… into something other than Werner.
The man’s breathing became labored. A series of strangled sounds issued from him, as if something had risen into his throat.
Starburst hemorrhages blossomed in his eyes, and he turned a desperate crimson gaze upon his maker.
Now the muscles in his arms began to knot and twist, to collapse and re-form. His thick neck throbbed, bulged, and his facial features started to deform.
The collapse was not occurring on a physiological level. This was cellular metamorphosis, the most fundamental molecular biology, the rending not merely of tissue but of essence.
Under Victor’s palm and spread fingers, the flesh of the abdomen shaped itself— shaped itself —into a questing hand that grasped him, not threateningly, almost lovingly, yet in shock he tore loose of it, recoiled.
Springing to his feet, Victor shouted, “A gurney! Hurry! Bring a gurney. We have to get this man to isolation.”
Chapter 38
As Erika disengaged the five steel lock bolts from the second vaultlike door, she wondered if any of the first four Erikas had discovered this secret passageway. She liked to think that if they had found it, they had not done so on their first day in the mansion.
Although she had tripped the hidden switch in the library by accident, she had begun to construe her discovery as the consequence of a lively and admirable curiosity, per Mr. Samuel Johnson, quoted previously. She wished to believe that hers was a livelier and more admirable curiosity than that of any of her predecessors.
She blushed at this immodest desire, but she felt it anyway. She so wanted to be a good wife, and not fail as they had
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