Zelazny, Roger - Amber Chronicles, The 08 - Sign of Chaos.txt

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     Roger Zelazny. Sign of chaos

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 Roger Zelazny
 THE AMBER CHRONICLES - BOOK EIGHT
 SIGN OF CHAOS
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     CHAPTER 1

     I felt vaguely uneasy, though I couldn't say why. It did not  seem  all
that  unusual  to be drinking with a White Rabbit, a short guy who resembled
Bertrand Russell, a grinning Cat, and my old friend Luke  Raynard,  who  was
singing  Irish  ballads  while  a  peculiar  landscape shifted from mural to
reality at his back. Well, I was impressed  by  the  huge  blue  Caterpillar
smoking  the hookah atop the giant mushroom because I know how hard it is to
keep a water pipe lit. Still, that wasn't it. It was a convivial scene,  and
Luke  was  known to keep pretty strange company on occasion. So why should I
feel uneasy?
     The beer was  good  and  there  was  even  a  free  lunch.  The  demons
tormenting  the red-haired woman tied to the stake had been so shiny they'd.
hurt to look at.  Gone  now,  but  the  whole  thing  had,  been  beautiful.
Everything  was  beautiful.  When  Luke  sang  of  Galway Bay it had been so
sparkling and lovely that I'd wanted to dive in and lose myself there.  Sad,
too.
     Something  to  do with the feeling. . . . Yes. Funny thought. When Luke
sang a sad song I felt melancholy. When it was a happy  one  I  was  greatly
cheered.  There seemed an unusual amount of empathy in the air. No matter, I
guess. The light. show was superb. . . .
     I sipped my drink and watched Humpty teeter, there at the  end  of  the
bar.  For  a  moment  I tried to remember when I'd come into this place, but
that cylinder  wasn't  hitting.  It  would  come  to  me,  eventually.  Nice
party....
     I  watched  and  listens  and  tasted  and  felt, and it was all great.
Anything that caught my attention was fascinating. Was there  something  I'd
wanted  to  ask  Luke?  It  seemed  there was, but he was busy singing and I
couldn't think of it now, anyway.
     What had I been doing before I'd come into this place? Trying to recall
just didn't seem worth  the  effort  either.  Not  when  everything  was  so
interesting right here and now.
     It  seemed  that  it might have been something important, though. Could
that be why I felt uneasy? Might  it  be  there  was  business  I  had  left
unfinished and should be getting back to?
     I  turned  to ask the Cat but he was fading again, still seeming vastly
amused. It occurred to me then that I, too, could do that. Fade, I mean; and
go someplace else. Was that how I had come here  and  how  I  might  depart?
Possibly.  I  put  down  my  drink and rubbed my eyes and my temples. Things
seemed to be swimming inside my head, too.
     I suddenly recalled a picture of me. On a giant  card.  A  Trump.  Yes.
That was how I'd gotten here. Through the card. . . .
     A  hand  fell  upon  my shoulder and I turned. It belonged to Luke, who
grinned at me as he edged up to the bar for a refill.
     "Great party, huh?" he said.
     "Yeah, great. How'd you find this place?" I asked him.
     He shrugged. "I forget. Who cares?"
     He fumed away, a brief blizzard of .crystals swirling between  us.  The
Caterpillar exhaled a purple cloud. A blue moon was rising.
     What is wrong with this picture? I asked myself.
     I  had  a  sudden feeling that my critical faculty had been shot off in
the war, because I couldn't focus on the anomalies I felt must be present. I
knew that I was caught up in the moment, but I couldn't see my way clear.
     I was caught up. . .
     I was caught. . . .
     How?
     Well. . . . It had all started when I'd shaken my own hand. No.  Wrong.
That  sounds  like  Zen  and that's not how it was. The hand I shook emerged
from the space occupied by the image of myself on the card that  went  away.
Yes, that was it. . . . After a fashion.
     I  clenched my teeth. The music began again. There came a soft scraping
sound near to my hand on the bar. When I looked I saw that  my  tankard  had
been  refilled.  Maybe  I'd  had  too  much  already. Maybe that's what kept
getting in the way of my thinking. I fumed away. I looked off  to  my  left,
past  the  place  where the mural on the wall became the real landscape. Did
that make me a part of the mural? I wondered suddenly.
     No matter. If I couldn't think here. . . . I began running . . . to the
left. Something about this place was messing with my  head,  and  it  seemed
impossible  to  consider  the process while I was a part of it. I had to get
away in order to think straight, to determine what was going on.
     I was across the bar and into that interface  area  where  the  painted
rocks  and  trees  became three-dimensional. I pumped my arms as I dug in. I
head the wind without feeling it.
     Nothing that lay before me seemed any nearer. I was  moving,  but  Luke
began singing again.
     I  halted.  I turned, slowly, because it sounded as if he were standing
practically beside me. He was. I was only a few paces removed from the  bar.
Luke smiled and kept singing.
     "What's  going  on?"  I asked the Caterpillar. "You're looped in Luke's
loop," it replied. "Come again?" I said.
     It blew a blue smoke ring, sighed softly, and said, "Luke's locked in a
loop and you're lost in the lyrics. 'That's all."
     "How'd it happen?" I asked.
     "I have no idea," it replied.
     "Uh, how does one get unlooped?"
     "Couldn't tell you that either."
     I turned to the Cat, who was coalescing about his grin once again.
     "I don't suppose you'd know-" I began.
     "I saw him come in anD  I  saw  you  come  in  later,"  said  the  Cat,
smirking.  "And  even  for  this  place  your  arrivals  were somewhat . . .
unusual-leading me to conclude that at least one of you is  associated  with
magic."
     I nodded.
     "Your own comings and goings might give one pause," I observed.
     "I  keep  my  paws to myself," he replied. "Which is more than Luke can
say."
     "What do you mean?"
     "He's caught in a contagious trap."
     "How does it work?" I asked.
     But he was gone again, and this time the grin went too.
     Contagious trap? That seemed to indicate that the problem  was  Luke's,
and  that I had been sucked into it in some fashion. This felt right, though
it still gave me no idea as to what the problem was or what I might do about
it.
     I reached for my tankard. If I couldn't solve my problem,  I  might  as
well  enjoy  it.  As  I  took a slow sip I became aware of a strange pair of
pale, burning eyes
     gazing into my own. I hadn't noticed them before, and  the  thing  that
made them strange was that they occupied a shadowy comer of the mural across
the room from me
     that, and the fact that they were ,moving, drifting slowly to my left.
     It was kind of fascinating, when I lost sight of the eyes but was still
able to follow whatever it was from the swaying of grasses as it passed into
the area  toward  which  I  had  been headed earlier. And far, far off to my
rightbeyond Luke-I now detected a slim gentleman in a dark  jacket,  palette
and  brush  in  hand, who was slowly extending the mural. I took another sip
and returned my attention to the progress of whatever it was that had  moved
from flat reality to 3-D. A gunmetal snout protruded from between a rock and
a  shrub;  the  pale eyes blazed above it; blue saliva dripped from the dark
muzzle and steamed upon the ground.  It  was  either  quite  short  or  very
crouched,  and I couldn't make up my mind whether it was the entire crowd of
us that it was studying or me in particular. I leaned to one side and caught
Humpty by the belt or the necktie, whichever it was, just as he was about to
slump to the side..
     "Excuse me," I said. "Could you tell me what sort of creature that is?"
     I pointed just as  it  emerged-many-legged,  long-tailed,  dark-scaled,
undulating, and fast. Its claws were red, and it raised its tail as it raced
toward us.
     Humpty's bleary eyes moved toward my own, drifted past.
     "I  am  not  here, sir," he began, "to remedy your zoological ignor- My
God! It's-"
     It flashed across the distance, approaching rapidly. Would it  reach  a
spot  shortly  where  its  cunning would become a treadmill operation-or had
that effect only applieD to me on trying to get away from this place?
     The segments of its body slid from side to side, it hissed like a leaky
pressure cooker, and steaming slaver marked its trail from  the  fiction  of
paint. Rather than slowing, its speed seemed to increase.
     My  left  hand jerked forward of its own volition and a series of words
rose unbidden to my lips. I spoke them just  as  the  creature  crossed  the
interface  I had been unable to pierce earlier, rearing as it upset a vacant
table and bunching its members as if about to spring.
     "A Bandersnatch!" someone cried.
     "A frumious Bandersnatch! " Humpty corrected.
     As I spoke the final word and performed the ultimate gesture, the image
of the Logrus swam before my inner vision. The dark  creature,  having  just
extended  its  foremost  talons, suddenly drew them back, clutched with them
against the upper left quadrant of its breast, rolled its  eyes,  emitted  a
soft  moaning  sound,  exhaled  heavily,  collapsed,  fell to the floor, and
rolled over onto its back, its many feet extended upward into the air.
     The Cat's grin appeared above the creature. The mouth moved.
     "A dead frumious Bandersnatch," it stated.
     The grin drifted toward me, the rest of the Cat occurring about it like
an afterthou...
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