The Six Messiahs by Mark Frost


  Nothing happened. The man stared right back at him.

  Blood poured freely out of the Reverend's nose; the effort had weakened him tremendously. Shocked, slowly realizing he could effect no control over this man, the Reverend searched this stranger's face with increasing desperation. The man's expression remained strong but infuriatingly neutral, without rancor, offering no purchase for the Reverend's influence to grasp.

  There's no fear in the man, thought Jacob, watching Jack. Without fear there's nothing for the Reverend to seize hold of.

  The standoff continued. Finally, when Reverend Day spotted a ghost of something familiar in the stranger's eyes, his own went wide with terror and he scrambled and clawed to pull away, but Jack held his head ferociously in place. Recognition was what he had been waiting for.

  "No," said Jack.

  Unable to escape, the Reverend tried to avoid his eyes, but Jack maintained his grip, exerted his own will, and pulled the Reverend's eyes back into contact with his own.

  "What do you want?" the Reverend asked weakly.

  Jack did not answer.

  "Who are you?" said Day, his voice failing.

  "You know who I am," said Jack.

  The man's pitiful, ill face struggled against that suggestion until his last vestige of resistance melted and he sagged forward.

  "You know who I am."

  "Yes," the Reverend whispered.

  "Who am I? Tell me."

  After a long silence, the Reverend replied: "My brother."

  "What's my name?"

  Reverend Day looked puzzled again. "Jack."

  "And what is yours?"

  After an even longer silence, he whispered: "Alexander."

  Jack nodded once. Every pretense fell away from the exchange between them, every mask. All enmity and struggle stripped away. Now they were only brothers.

  "Listen to me," said Jack quietly and slowly, trusting that the words he needed would come to him. "Listen to me, Alex. We are all here, in this room; mother, father. Our little sister. None of us know why any of it happened, how you fell so far away from us, the darkness that took you and made you do the crimes you did to us or any of the others. None of that matters now. Do you hear me?"

  Alexander Sparks stared at his brother with the rapt attention of a terrified child, praying for comfort and relief. Trembling, lost, the fear was in him now.

  "They are all with us here in this room now; their spirits are with us and here is where it ends. I speak for them, their voices are joined with mine. Listen to me...."

  Jack found what he had come here to say, leaned forward, and whispered in his ear.

  "We forgive you, my brother."

  A quiet sob burst from Alexander.

  "We forgive you."

  Now Alexander sagged forward completely and collapsed into his brother's arms; Jack guided his brittle weight gently down to the floor, knelt beside him, and cradled his brother's piteous broken body in his lap.

  "We forgive you," he whispered.

  A heartrending wail rose from Alexander, a lifetime's mourning for a multitude of lost and stolen souls. He clung weakly to his brother as sobs jolted his fragile bones. The others in the room, despite their fears or anger at Alexander's crimes, could not look on with anything but pity.

  With a grinding metallic ring, one of the grills above the center of the room lifted from its rim; Jacob looked up as Kanazuchi let himself down through the cavity and dropped to the floor beside them. The last of the blood flow followed and ran off into the pit. The rumbling from below rose again in pitch and power; wind from the hollow guttered the flames of the lanterns. Kanazuchi sat unmoving, stunned. When he weakly failed to lift himself to his feet, Jacob unsteadily walked the few steps to Kanazuchi.

  "Come along, my friend," said Jacob quietly.

  He extended his hands to Kanazuchi and helped him slowly rise; leaning on one another they walked to Jack and Alexander. Jacob helped Kanazuchi down and then sat beside him next to the brothers.

  Walks Alone nodded to Presto; he wrapped an arm around her. They moved forward and filled the last places in the circle. Walks Alone held Presto's left hand and extended her right to Jack. He grasped it tightly with his left, holding on to Alexander's in his other. While Kanazuchi held his right hand, Jacob leaned over and gently covered Alexander's right hand. Kanazuchi reached out to Presto and their hands completed the circle.

  Alexander's sobs subsided; he looked up and his eyes found Jack's. Jack nodded to him, gentle and kind. Alexander nodded in return. Then Jack's eyes sought out each of the others and now a silent understanding, something pure and inexpressible, passed among them all.

  Realizing there was no place for him among their number, Lionel stood up and moved deliberately around the circle, from casket to casket, removing each of the stolen books and securing them safely by the wall. When he completed this task and looked back at the circle, the sight that greeted him forced him to the ground, his back pressed against the wall in deep humility. Although he would never again be as certain of it as he was in the moments that followed, as the Six looked at each other Lionel thought he saw a penumbra of light extend into the air above them, a round transparent curtain that contained in the fabric of its weave a host of swirling forms and shapes and faces, each carrying within it the strength and beauty and compassion of a hundred thousand human souls.

  In that moment this is what Lionel, a secular man, thought he had seen, but as the years passed he would never again be as sure.

  As the light above the circle brightened, the deep rumbling in the pit below the chamber fell gradually away. No one in the circle moved.

  When it was gone entirely, the light receded.

  In the peaceful silence that followed, Alexander gave out a small cry and died quietly in his brother's arms.

  Lionel helped his father to his feet, staring down in sympathy and horror at the broken, impossibly thin body of the brother still resting in Jack's arms.

  "Whatever did he want the books for?" Lionel asked softly.

  "He thought he wanted to destroy God," said Jacob.

  Lionel blinked back his astonishment. "But he would have had to ... end the world."

  "He was mistaken," said Jacob sadly. "All he really wanted to destroy was himself."

  Doyle had searched for and found a rope in one of the corners of the church after Kanazuchi went below. When the rumbling stopped—an earthquake or some sort of related seismic disturbance, Doyle decided, and no one later contradicted him— he secured one end of the rope around his waist, let the other fall down into the chamber, and called out to them to take hold. Then his powerful arms lifted the survivors and then-rescued books, one by one, to the floor of the moonlit cathedral.

  Jack Sparks was the last to ascend; after remaining below alone and committing his brother's body to the memory of their lost family, he grasped the line and Doyle pulled him up, up into the light.

  Table of Contents

  prologue

  BOOK ONE

  chapter 1

  chapter 2

  chapter 3

  chapter 4

  BOOK TWO

  chapter 5

  chapter 6

  chapter 7

  chapter 8

  BOOK THREE

  chapter 9

  chapter 10

  chapter 11

  chapter 12

  BOOK FOUR

  chapter 13

  chapter 14

  chapter 15

  chapter 16

 


 

  Mark Frost, The Six Messiahs

 


 

 
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