Wednesday, December 6, 2023

Epilogue - For Ivy

She didn’t die. The machine was still far below, but the ivy held her. 

Ivy waited in the darkness, listening to the commotion far above. 

Her mother was up there.

As she waited, she remembered her childhood. Her sister wasn’t her sister. Violet had been her friend. Ivy had wanted a sister so badly, so Violet became such. 

Her father was an artist. A painting commissioned by her mother, yet they had fallen in love. She had been born, yet her father still had to fulfil that commission, and so Ivy had never seen him. 

Here falling towards her, in a shaft of light. Here was the one she had chased. Here was the one that had been between them, now falling for her. 

He landed amongst the tendrils and leaves, moaning softly. She crawled towards him from the dark, into the light where he lay. He was broken, yet he would be hers. She would have him as her father. 

He was hers. 

For her. 

For Ivy.

Part II - Final Cycle - Scene VII

He gasped, swallowing lungfuls of air as he awoke. He was trapped in cloying darkness. Suffocating. Something was pushing in from him on all sides. There was a weight on his legs, his body. His chest. His heart was beating an erratic pattern in his chest. 

Which means I’m still alive, he thought, apropos to nothing. 

Of course he was. Why shouldn’t he be? It had been a heavy night, but not that heavy.

He forced the duvet off him, the material sticking to his sweat drenched skin. He felt like hell. He thought about kicking out, forcing whatever weight still lay on him off him. A muffled laugh from beneath the thrown back duvet. 

Christ, he thought, closing his eyes. He was going to throw up. He was surprised he hadn’t yet. Unless he had the night before and it was on the floor on what was once her side. He would be able to smell it if that was the case. Or at least she would. The giggling mound. 

“Vi,” he said as evenly and calmly as he could. “Good morning sweetheart.”

The mound giggled and wriggled in response. 

“Any chance you could give your dad some space? Just for a moment.”

More giggling. More wriggling. 

Get off me because I swear to god I’ll fucking throw up on you.

“Please darling, daddy is tired and not feeling too well.”

A shocked gasp, then the pressure on his body diminished, the weight on his legs going. A whump as she rolled on to the floor, then a frenzy of footsteps down the hall. He allowed himself a moment to close his eyes again. The sun was too bright. He had forgotten to shut the curtains, and the sun was streaming through the window. He may not be able to smell the telltale ammonia infused stink of booze vomit, but he could at least lie there and reveal in the funk from his own body. Middle of summer, and the nights had been humid and sticky. He normally partially circumvented this by opening a window or two but, again, because he passed out in nothing but his own smelly underwear the night before, he hadn’t bothered. As a result, funky odour time. 

He groaned and let his arm fall from the bed, idly brushing his fingertips against the carpet. A little tactile feedback to bring him to earth. His hand brushed against something cold and smooth. Something cold and smooth that rolled a little and clinked against something else cold and smooth. He moved, shifting his weight towards the side of the bed and lowering his arm further. There were quite a lot there. Not small bottles either. How Violet had managed to miss them when rolling off the bed was a mystery. 

Another groan and he lay back again. It had been worth it. She had been so impressed with his finished cover piece. Her words like aural champagne, and the promise of the remaining manuscript “soon”, as she was so keen to see it done. They had dinner together, yet she had returned to her own home. This time. Adam was sometimes able to palm Violet to a friends house for the night but as he had been unable to, then he had come home alone, paid the babysitter, and continued his celebrations at his own pace. After all, he was due it. He had done a fucking good job. She had said that she didn’t realise just how much potential he had in him. She thought initially she was hiring an illustrator. 

“But I’ve hired an artist,” she said, taking a sip of her own champagne, although it had been the first and last she had drank. Adam had finished her share when she was collecting her coat from the cloakroom. “You’re an actual visionary, able to articular not just the words I’ve given you, but everything in between.”

Adam had said nothing and instead taken another drink, hoisting his glass aloft and letting her bring hers towards it for a small clink.

They had chatted a little and then he 

said it

What did I say?

“Fuck,” he said softly. He had. Shit. Now he would have no choice but to honour the arrangement. 

Running footsteps, the door swinging open again. He had pulled the covers above his head but they were tugged away. His eyes were still closed. Something cold on his forehead. The feel of a small wet hand. A matronly tut beside him, then something wet. She must have gone to get him a cold cloth. 

“You’ll be okay in a minute poor daddy, on your day as well,” another tut, making her sound comical in how grown up it was.

She’s growing up so fast. 

Wait.

You’ve thought that before. 

“On my day?” He spoke softly, afraid of giving himself a worse headache than he already had. 

“It’s your day silly!” A giggle like a hot knife through the glass of his brain. “I made you a card in school!”

“Thanks sweetheart, I’ll get it later. When I’m up. I’m sure it’s lovely”

Please leave me alone. Then: Maybe she’s forgotten. Could she have forgotten?

“That’s okay, you can open it whenever you like.”

Shallow breathing. She was building up to something. He didn’t speak. Let her ask. He wasn’t about to put his foot in it if she had forgotten and was going to ask something completely innocuous instead. 

“Daddy…”

He didn’t answer. Instead lay with his eyes closed. 

“Daddy…” she asked again. Her voice a slight tremor.

“Mmmhmm?”

“Are we going to go?”

He heard the bottles clink on the floor next to him. She was moving nervously from foot to foot. 

“To where?” He thought he may as well try it. 

“The wildlife park. Member? You said we’d go today because it was your daddy’s day and you said we could see the tiger.”

Dammit.

“Yeah, we’re still going,” he replied flatly. 

He wouldn’t have been able to get out of it anyway, even if Violet had forgotten (and what eleven year old was going to bloody forget a thing like that). He wouldn’t have been able to get out of it because -

“Is she coming too?”

“Yes.”

“Really? You promise?”

“I said so didn’t I?”

That did it. Despite the ire and frustration and fatigue and everything else in his voice, the reaction was instant. The cold cloth was pulled away and his forehead down to his chin was smothered in kisses. “Thank you daddy she’s going to love it!”

Small hurried footsteps diminishing into the hall and down. Her bedroom door slamming closed. She would be already getting dressed. Choosing the things she wanted to take. The things she wanted to show off. 

He swung his legs out of bed. No getting away from it. Steadying himself, he went to the en-suite, throwing the shower on cold and stepping in, gasping as the icy needles pricked against his skin. 

“Are you busy tomorrow?” He had asked her. “I need to see you.”

She smiled in response. “I’m needed in the gallery. There’s a new exhibition happening. Lon wants me to give it the once over to finalise hanging positions for some of the larger pieces.”

He had seen the advertisements for it. 

“Couple of Trent’s pieces there,” he said

“Is this going to be something?” Her voice matched his in tone almost perfectly. She continued to smile, despite her eyes betraying a different emotion. 

“Just an observation.” 

“He’s gone, Adam. He doesn’t even see his daughter.”

Another drink. “Can I see you after?”

“I don’t know if we -”

“Please.” There was no way to keep the desperation out of his voice, so he didn’t try. “Daphne, please. I can take Vi to her friends again and -”

She shook her head. “I don’t know when I’ll be finished. I thought you said you were taking Violet to a wildlife park?”

“Yeah.” He tried to sound nonchalant. Tried to sound as though he hadn’t been trying to forgo the trip.

“In that case, can I ask you something?”

Here it comes.

Don’t pretend you wouldn’t lick the shit from her shoe if she asked you to.

“Shoot. Anything.”

“I’ve been so busy of late. I never do anything for her. She needs…something. For her.  Would you take her? Her and Violet seem to get on so well. They could be sisters. So alike. Same age too.”

“Of course. I’d love to. This trip will be for her too. If you drop her off about eleven.”

“Perfect. Thank you Adam. Thank you for doing this

for Ivy

He stepped out the shower to his alarm. Half past ten. He had set it just in case. One of the few bits of foresight he had possessed. He hit the top with the palm of his hand and when it didn’t cease, he angrily swatted it against the wall, knocking the batteries out the back. He stood there, dripping water on to the carpet, the bed. Everywhere. Momentarily unsure what to do next. Everything was wet. 

He went back to the en-suit and dried himself off. By the time he was downstairs making coffee, Violet was munching her way through a huge bowl of cheerios, talking about twenty things at once. In front of her she had her favourite book (something about a tower in a forest) and her stuffed tiger. Her card for him lay on the table but he vowed to open it when they returned, already hearing the car door outside and the trill ring of the doorbell. It was an old doorbell, a large bass bell inside it’s wooden housing. He would miss this house when the fucking thing sold, but not that doorbell. It sounded like an old telephone. 

Violet threw her spoon across the table - cheerios flying everywhere - and ran to the door. There was no point in Adam going. Daphne would have just dropped her daughter off and sped off to the gallery. 

He looked down the hall. The girls already out of sight, the sound of the television in the living room. Some music programme or other. The inane overly processed vocals merging with the samples. Without hesitation, he opened the bread bin and took out the short bottle of malt from behind the loaf, uncapping it and pouring a generous measure into his coffee. It wouldn’t hurt. He just needed a quick pick-me-up after the previous evening. Anything to keep the hangover at bay. He caught sight of the old phone on the counter as he did so. He wasn’t sure why he hadn’t got rid of it. Perhaps he thought it would make a good first phone for Violet. It’s not like he needed it any more. No more need for subterfuge. He had her. At least, he thought he had her. 

He hoped he had her. Although sometimes it seemed as though she was more interested in the work he was still doing for her than him. 

Hell, who was he kidding. Most of the time. 

He knocked back most of the coffee and added another large measure of the malt to the dregs, finishing them off as well before wiping his mouth with the back of his hand. His lips must have been dry and cracked, spots of blood on his skin. 

He wouldn’t be able to put it off any more, and went to fetch the girls from the living room, leading them out to the car. Despite their friendship, Violet insisted on sitting in the front with him, Ivy behind his seat. He fastidiously made sure her seatbelt was on and fastened securely, not taking any risks. He stopped a couple of times, feeling a little dizzy, wondering if he should have had that hair of the dog. 

It’s never done you harm before. You’re fine. 

Daddy come on, we’re going to miss them feeding her.”

He finished securing Ivy in her seat and minutes later they were on the coast road to the Wildlife Park, both girls singing along to the radio at the top of their voices. Adam was feeling increasingly more uncomfortable, not able to just the sun visor properly to keep the unrelenting sun out his eyes. The sun itself was reflecting off everything, every sign, every passing car. It hurt his eyes and forced him to squint. More than once he had forced himself to steer back in to this lane, blaming the sun but knowing that it could well be how he was feeling. 

You’re coming don with something, you’re fine. 

The singing was as unrelenting as the sun. 

He switched radio station. The girls protested but he was having none of it. There was a news report. The war.  

“The Prime Minister met for talks with Minister Denys Ivanov again today for more talks on furthering the peace process, talks that are expected to last -”

He switched it off, putting a CD in instead. Led Zeppelin. Much better. More moaning from his passengers. 

“We all get our turn,” he said, smiling for the first time since climbing in to the car. 

The Wildlife Park was a good drive and one that he had done before. He normally enjoyed the narrow winding road with the view of the ocean on one side, the only thing separating them a thin crash barrier. This time it made him feel uneasy. 

Five miles to go. The large sign with a picture of a huge tiger baring it’s fangs at the side of the road. He thought the tiger had been painted to look friendly but personally found it the opposite. If he got face to face with something like that, he didn’t doubt it would just eat him the fuck up. 

Something large approached him in he rearview mirror, bearing down on him. A truck, the sun glinting off the chrome bumper. It was one of those long snouted vehicles you only saw in American TV programmes, but were found more and more on UK soil. This one was being driven aggressively, and in no time at all it was mere feet behind. He could read the logo above the driver’s windscreen.

FLEET TRANSPORT

“Fuck sake,” he muttered, glancing uselessly in the rearview mirror. 

“What is it?” Violet said, getting up in her seat and turning around.

Something was wrong. She shouldn’t have been able to move so freely. 

Did you check her seatbelt after Ivy’s?

“Fucking hell, Vi, put your seatbelt on!” He leaned towards her, trying to force her around. 

She turned, eyes wide. “What?”

“Your belt! Put your belt on!”

“I have got it on, I -”

His reactions were too slow. Dulled by drink. He didn’t look back up in time. Didn’t grab the wheel in time. 

The car hit the crash barrier and spun twice, moving across to the oncoming lane and back again, the truck ploughing in to the back of the car and forcing it over the barrier and down the embankment towards the water. It was over in moments.

Adam came to, the sound of the waves close by. He felt funny. He felt wet.

Why am I wet?

Focus. The smell. Petrol. Strong in his nostrils. Oil. The steering wheel was too close. Water on his lap. 

He turned to his left, to check his daughter was okay, but her seat was empty. Her door was closed and was pushed into the seat, which was mangled and covered in bits of broken glass, the water swishing them to and fro. The tiny pieces each reflected the sun like glitter. He followed his gaze around to the front window that was no longer there. The dash was covered in a substance that also glistened in the sun. 

Glistened red in the sun. 

Violet. That was where she had gone. Towards the sun. Towards the ocean. Across the bonnet that was like an accordion, smashed against and then over the rocks that broke the waves. Her jacket was on the rocks. One shoe. The other shoe was in the footwell. The trainers he had just bought her. There was something still in it. Something that coloured the water it floated in. 

He continued to turn, his head moving as though it was on a spring. 

She had her seatbelt on. That’s the one I checked. She’ll be okay behind me. 

The truck had followed them down, or at least the cab had. It had stopped because the car had stopped, but not before it had ploughed into and through the back. Part of the engine had come out through the front of the grille, which had in turn gone through the boot, the back seat, and the small girl that had been sitting singing happily in the back seat. She was glued up against the rear of his own seat. Once pretty features an amalgamation of flesh and machinery. 

His numbed and stupid brain tried to make sense of what he saw, but all he could do was turn slowly to the front, look down below the wheel, and wonder how there was room for his legs amongst the engine parts of his own car. 

Darkness soaked into his vision, a single sentence accompanying him into oblivion.

Thank you Adam. Thank you for doing this for Ivy.

Part II - Final Cycle - Scene VI

This was his nightmare. 

This was his reality. 

Did the two now belong to the same version of him? This version? Was there another version?

Adam stood at the base of the staircase, looking up, where the light burned through the canopy of greenery that had enrobed the once naked glass of the ceiling. There had once been daylight beyond, visible from even down here in the darkness. Now there was only the memory of those clear skies. Both the sun and the moon ruled in an equal partnership now, but even that was hidden to him. 

All at once so familiar. That familiarity that had only hovered in the recesses surrounding his waking moments. It now had it’s tendrils across the surface of his brain, and he knew that where he was now, at this very moment, was where he had wanted to be since

the accident

or

long before

he could remember. 

How long had he been plagued with this same nightmare? Had he always had it?

A memory of his childhood. Unhappy, but no more so than any other childhood. Parents ignored him, a father who only spoke to him to ask him to fetch another beer from the fridge. Neither of them had laid a finger upon him however, and he had largely been left to his own devices. 

Yet. 

The screams he had during the night. The ones that would anger his father so much. 

“God dammit Adam I heard you scream again,”

There was always the cloud. That black storm cloud above their house. It threatened to rain almost every day, yet it never did. His father’s threats went unfulfilled, and there was a dysfunctional harmony until they day he left home, never to contact either him or his mother again. But god, those dreams. He had forgotten them. 

Have I forgotten so much?

Yet here he was., and yes, he had dreamed these moments since he was young. He awoke in ungodly hours, during times when the veil was thinnest between worlds and superstitions spoke of creatures passing over. Two o’clock, three o’clock. He would writhe in bed, shrouded in a cocoon of sweat, until one of his parents entered his room and woke him properly. Had he not imagined that his room was covered in ivy? It creeped through the window across to his bed, it threatened to ensnare him and take him back out. Perhaps to those thin thresholds that he knew must be out there. 

Had the accident brought them back? Had he had them as an adult prior? What did happen prior to the accident?

There was a pressing need to move, to ascend, and he did so, crossing the atrium to the foot of the staircase, putting one foot on the first iron riser, his hand on the ivy covered railing.

He ascended.

As he did so, he thought back, to that day of the accident. There were fragments that had always been missing, others he was remembering wrong. He had a feeling that it would become clearer the higher he rose. If he could just reach the top floor, where he knew there to be a doorway, then it would become clearer. The jigsaw in his mind was being assembled, and he could almost hear the pieces snapping together. One at a time. 

The bees had stopped emerging from his legs. The ones that still clung to his skin unmoving. Some pain came back but was quickly pushed away when he consumed this last few insects. He didn’t think he would require any more soon. He was nearly at the end, but he was rising. He was regaining clarity, just as he had regained his purpose. He only had to think that, and to wrap his fingers around the strap across his shoulder for his spirits to lift. 

Onward and upwards. It’s always up. There isn’t going to be a slide down for me. I have been ascending for aeons, and rise I will continue to do. It’s my potential up there. Isn’t it. And she will be there, waiting for me. I was given this task and it’s only me that can fulfil it.

He smiled widely, taking a moment on the third landing to look out and up. A small face looked down. Far, far, above. It bore an expression of

fear

surprise, and quickly ducked out of sight. A noise from below distracted him momentarily and he looked back down, towards the atrium. 

He should have been able to see the floor he crossed, but there was only darkness.

That sound. 

Was it a growl?

It passed, but it brought his attention to another sound. Still a distance above him. The one he had heard outside. The shrill ringing of the telephone. It was ringing for him. Because it had been ringing for him in his dreams. He continued his ascent, the pain now gone from his legs, his hand skimming the ivy on the way up. Every time he paused, for whatever reason, the tendrils threatened to wrap themselves around his hand, holding him into position. He wouldn’t let them. Why they wanted to impede his progress he didn’t know, but he had an appointment to keep, and keep it he would. 

He had loved her, actually, and that’s what he felt surge within him again. They had been happy, despite the secret trysts away from Amber. If she had suspected before she confronted Adam, she had never shown it, so it would have been a shock for her, he knew that, but could she have ben surprised? The love and warmth that had filled the space between them had all but been extinguished. Where there was fire, there was only water, washing their names from the sand. It had been his right to seek comfort elsewhere. If his wife would show him no love, then she would, and laud his achievements, and his vision, at the same time. 

She had ignored you. She is a stinger to you now. 

That could be tru. He didn’t doubt that. Then again, this inner monologue was biased against him, and always had been. Was it not his very own mind that was putting events out of sequence and convincing him of truths that he now could expose as sheer ignorant fabrication? His doctor, once alive and now very much dead, leading him to an exhibition where his new flame had spoken to him as a stranger. How much of that was likely? 

He had been lied to, by himself. One of the other versions of him, or perhaps all of the other versions of him. Conspiring against him. 

They would not win. 

He would not win. 

This version of him, this true version of him, would win out. Or damn him. 

But also: Damn that phone. 

It was louder and more shrill with every step. The landing just above. It rang there. 

But now, below. The sound commenced again. A deep machine. 

Yes, this is how it goes, he thought, pleased that it was happening the way he had foreseen it in his dream. He thought now of the book, and how similar they were. Yet in the book, the girl was pursued, and in his dream, he was pursued. He wondered why that what, until he looked down once more and saw that pale face ascending from the bottom of the staircase. 

Of course, it’s both. 

And it should be both. For was he not possessing of an intrigue? A duality? They all were. His wife had bene Amber, and also not-Amber. She inhabited a person now unknown to him, whereas before every part of her had been laid out naked before him. His daughter, across the ocean, was both in his memories and severed form him in a way that he couldn’t fathom. 

This duality was what drove him. He was Adam, yet he was art itself. He was creation. 

Trent d’Marcan had once spoke so loftily of himself. Back before graduation, he had already thought him transcended above mere artist. He had seen himself as two distinct entities and Adam had scoffed. Trent had met a woman, so he had said, who was his muse, and it was through her he had created such wonders.

Adam had scoffed again, disbelieving that someone could hold thatch sway over someone so singular of purpose as Trent. 

Yet that had been it, hadn’t it. Singular of purpose perhaps, yet converging from a duality of being. 

Only, Adam thought, as he reached the landing where the phone rang, he was perhaps wrong again. There was a convergence, yet not of soul and art, but artist and muse. The convergence had been Trent, and this woman. Just as Adam could easily see that the convergence between himself and Daphne was what bore such sweet fruit. 

Now the machine churned far below and she was rushing up for him. Panic swelled and beat in his chest briefly. He had to get to the top before she caught up with him. Her intent was still unknown, but he couldn’t risk anything stopping him from reaching his goal. 

He paused before the phone. It was next to a door that was unusual from the other doors on the landings below. Each of them had borne nothing. No identifier. This door was different, and in the optical centre there was a plaque of brushed bronze with two words etched clearly in copperplate type. 

OCEAN ROOM

The telephone demanded his attention, and he felt that whomever was calling, was doing so from inside this room. 

He picked up the receiver, despite his fear. 

“Hello?”

“Daddy?” The line was faint, the sound of surf breaking, yet the voice was unmistakable. “I have been waiting for you to answer.”

“”Violet,” he said, “why are you calling me here?”

“This is the only place I can reach you.” Her voice was flat. Lifeless. “I’ve been trying to reach you before but I couldn’t”

“What is it? Are you with your mother? She wasn’t returning my calls. I’ve been -“

Worried? Had he really? At one point he had been but then he had forgotten. He had forgotten about his own daughter

because she’s not important

when she should have been at the forefront of his mind. Yet she was with Amber. So why did he have reason to worry really?

“She’s not here. She’s never been here. I’m too far for her. She won’t hear me.”

The sound of hurried footsteps on the stairs. Across the landing possibly two floors down. 


Ivy rushed up to meet him. She didn’t know how he was ahead again, or why that should be, but he was between her and her mother, and she had to catch up with him. The great machine below masked out the voice of her sister, yet even now she knew that she wouldn’t be speaking to her. She wasn’t her sister at all, not really, and now she was talking on the telephone above her. It had been answered, and that’s why Ivy knew that she could not catch him. She was fleet of foot, and possessed of a great urge.

She would catch him.


Adam couldn’t focus on the sounds in the telephone. The words of his daughter even as they slipped away, below the increasing sound of the surf. The footsteps were hurrying up to meet him, and he had to go.

“Go to your mother, you’ll be fine, just go to her.” He said. 

“I…can’t…I…thought you would…” The words were fading, losing coherency. Like a radio being tuned out. 

“You can, I need to go.” He began to move the receiver away, taking a final look at the door that would forever remain closed. 

“Daddy I lo -“

He placed the receiver down, just as Ivy rounded the corner of the stairwell and ran towards him, arms outstretched. 

Her face. 

Oh god, what’s happened to her face. 

Adam turned and ran. His legs were strong. They felt like his and they were strong. 

The machine was a cacophony of sound below. 

The girl would catch him. He was fast, but not fast enough. 

The next landing, the door here a blur. Back on the stairwell. A hand brushed his leg, fingertips on his calf. He shouldn’t have been able to feel. It. This wasn’t part of him. Yet it was. 

The drawings threatened to fall from his shoulder. He adjusted them, losing precious distance, and that hand grasped again. He had no doubt that there was strength there, even more than the tiger. If it caught him, it would drag him down. Al the way down to where that machine churned int he darkness. Yet he had his art to gift to Daphne. He wished to show her how her words had sparked a beautiful vision. That this was the child borne between both of them. 

A cry of pain and rage from just below, yet if he focused on that the heart would leave him. All he could do was run. In another world, another time, another version of him was caught, pulled roughly down on the steps, his nose rupturing, his face splitting. She was on his back and she would tear the flesh from his spine. Yet not this time. Not this version of him. He was the best version of himself, and he would reach the top. 

One more landing ahead. There it was. The doorway was open. It had been slammed open from inside and he could nearly see within. 

Yet she wouldn’t give up. She was at his heels, so close all the way. 

So he did what he had to do. He stopped, letting her gain those few steps, and he turned, pulling the large tube from his shoulder and arcing it around towards the bannister. It connected with that horrid unthinkable visage and the small body, throwing her towards and over. Her had tried in vain to catch hold, yet could only grasp the dead air. 

She fell. 

Into the machine. 

She fell. 

There was no sound. The machine was too great, too loud. The blackened maelstrom of aged machinery would claim her now, and there was nothing he could do. This wasn’t on him. None of this was on him. 

He collected himself, put the large tube back over his shoulder and walked the last few steps facing the doorway now. 

Three figures emerged as the room beyond was suddenly filled with bright sunlight. Adam stumbled backwards, until the small of his back was agains the railings. The three figures themselves didn’t surprise him so much as what he thought he could glimpse in the room beyond, just before the door was swung shut. It was some kind of studio, a large easel setup before a great window. The painting on it was one of the most wondrous things Adam had ever seen, a staircase of majestic proportions, the original painting that had hung in the Rascal dGallery that may or may not have existed outside of an alternative reality had been perfected, in what was no doubt a much later iteration. The artist was still working on it. He had turned to look at Adam briefly, a blank expression on his face. Registering no recognition or surprise at catching sight of Adam, despite the years that had kept them distant from each other. He was obviously too focused on his work. His next opus. 

Trent d’Marcan, there, and now gone. Behind the door that slammed shut. 

There had been others also. Many others, far beyond and to the sides of Trent. A sculptor, a carpenter, a musician. Each one enraptured in their work. 

“Here he is then,” Vemier Mamoulean said, glancing sideways at the other two. 

“Here he is,” Lon Raschold echoed, nodding his head. 

Both men now looked to the figure in the centre, who look a few steps forward. 

“You have finished?” Daphne Maringian asked. 

“Y-yes,” Adam stuttered. “I’m finished.”

He thought he caught a fleeting smile across her tanned face, gone as soon as it materialised.

He passed the tube to her and she in turn passed it back to the two men, who knelt on the floor and unrolled the contents. 

“Thee it is, the potential,” Mamoulean said, finally sounding as though he was impressed, be it only a little. 

“So vivid,” Raschold said, running his fingers over the surface. 

Adam remained where he stood, arms behind, hands resting on the railings, unaware of the ivy that now wrapped around his skin.

“Are you sure we cannot take him?” Raschold asked, almost petulantly. “There is much here we can use.”

Daphne spoke without taking her eyes of Adam. She placed one had on his shoulder, squeezing slightly. He felt a rush of blood to his nether regions. His lust overriding any other response. 

“It was my intention,” she said, almost sadly, “and all I wished was for an acknowledgement. Remorse offered, forgiveness sought. We gave him what he wanted, but he remained blind. We gave him the chance to walk, and he only crawled.”

“I don’t understand,” Adam said, “I can walk now.”

Daphne shook her head. 

She wants you instead, and I promised her before I promised you. I dedicated it to her, and you took her away.”

Daphne produced a sheet of paper, seemingly from the air itself, and held it before Adam. 

He read the two words printed upon it. The dedication page from her book. He hadn’t been in possession of it. It wasn’t with the others. 

FOR IVY.

“He has so much potential,” Mamoulean said. “We want him.”

I don’t want him,” she said. “He’s broken.”

Adam pushed forward, but the ivy gripped him tighter, pulling him closer to the railing. Pulling slightly over the railing. 

“I’m not, I can walk.” He said, moving his legs, the ivy infused limbs now a part of him in a way that only his own flesh and bone had been before. 

She smiled again. That one that never moved much further up her face. Her eyes cold in the dim light. Two steps further towards him and she was in front of him. He could smell her. Those far off scorched lands. He realised only then just how far off. Just how scorched. Wherever it was, it didn’t exist any more. Shouldn’t exist any more.

“Not there,” she said, glancing down before looking directly in to his eyes. 

The ivy loosened it’s grip, yet still he didn’t notice. He was held in that gaze. In rapture. 

There,” she whispered, lifting one delicate bone china hand, and pressing against his forehead with her forefinger. 

It was so cold. 

The ivy had loosened completely. There was nothing holding Adam to the railing. 

She pushed. 

For one sickening moment he felt he had a chance to redress his balance. His arms flailed wild out, forward. His breath came in short panting gasps. He took everything in. Daphne stood there, finger still outstretched. Behind her both Raschold and Mamoulean watched on in near complete shadow. The door opened. Darkened figures crowded in the threshold, all eyes upon him, before it swung shut for the last time.

He fell. 

Epilogue - For Ivy

She didn’t die. The machine was still far below, but the ivy held her.  Ivy waited in the darkness, listening to the commotion far above.  H...