Sarah couldn't believe her ears. Everything was happening so quickly. First Frostfire, then Dimsun, then Diana and
now this: the person they had come to stop, demanding an alliance and
offering... Sarah wasn't sure what the
right word would be, but it was just possible that it might be Salvation.
"Well," Barkham demanded, taking another
step forward, "what is it going to be?
Are you going to try and kill me and end up like my 'beautiful' daughter
over there, or will you help me get out of here?"
Sarah didn't know what the right answer should
be. She tried to think how Thomas might
have dealt with the same situation, but the very idea of someone like Thomas in
a world like Shadow seemed ridiculous to her.
Until he was actually here there was no way to tell... but perhaps. She tried to think of all that she had learnt
before Christmas, before she was unceremoniously deposited in this world of
monsters and madness. Wasn't a big part
of it about mercy? Wasn't she supposed
to be merciful, because of the mercy that had been shown to her, a sinner? It was all foggy. She had never had enough training, didn't
even have a bible with her on this apparently God-forsaken world, but something
about that seemed right.
And yet it also seemed horribly wrong. All the things Frostfire and Dimsun had told
her about the Noble Society and its aims, the things Doctor Barkham had done in
the past, Frostfire's reasons for revenge - and then all that she had just seen
and heard. Could she dare show
compassion to a woman who seemed to have none herself? What would happen if they escaped from
Fracture alive and Barkham got free from her?
Would she just be unleashing a horror she could have prevented?
"Need I remind you," Doctor Barkham said
impatiently, interrupting Sarah's confused thoughts, "that I'm your only
way of getting out of Fracture alive as well!
Do you have a way to reach the surface?
And what about my guards - whatever's left of them? Who will let you past them if not I?"
"I... I have my own strengths!"
"And they were neutralised the moment you
entered this building. Only my
hypostatick devices will work in here, girl.
Your Slayer powers are useless."
Sarah felt a jolt of shock and realised that, sure
enough, despite all of the high emotion she had just experienced there had been
no sense of the hypostatick energy within her trying to rise. she had long since learned to control it, to
bring it out at will, but that didn't mean it didn't try to surface when her
blood was stirred. And yet...
What was she on Shadow without her powers? She was just a girl, lost and now effectively
alone, who didn't know the rules of any of the games she was playing, willingly or otherwise, surrounded
by powerful people who did. The thought
sent a chill of fear down her spine.
There was another explosion outside and the building
shook once more, sending yet more shards of glass from the window frames to
smash on the carpet.
"Hurry girl!" Barkham was looking ready to bolt, whether
Sarah promised to help her, or not.
There was something else, though, something within
her that told her that even without her seemingly supernatural powers, she was
far from powerless. How many times over
the last three months had she actually used those powers, and how many more
times had she been instrumental in their progress, just like every other part
of their team?
I am not
helpless, she thought, and even if I
am... she let her mind drift to that compartment where her faith was slowly
coming to bloom and all the times her wary, nascent prayers had seemed to be
answered. She was not alone, she was
almost certain of that.
"What about Diana?" she asked, partly to
stall for time, but mostly because she realised she was going to go through
with this and that there were going to be consequences.
"We leave her," Barkham replied
dismissively, barely even giving her groaning, injured daughter a glance.
"She's my companion… my friend!"
"She'll just slow us down now, besides, do you
really think she will let me get out of here alive? Or you, if you ever decide to help me?"
Sarah started.
The Countess, callous though she was, had a point. Diana was too much like her mother to back
down on her revenge. If Sarah helped her
then she would forever be a traitor in Diana's eyes. Her indecision returned, but then she
remembered Barkham's offer. The chance
to stop Lakhma, to see Ellis again, to go home.
Oh God,
she prayed silently, help me! What do I do?
But there was no clear answer, only Rosetta staring
at her impatiently just a few feet away.
"Well?" she asked and Sarah got the
impression it was the final time. There
would be no more time to decide after this.
She felt her heart pounding, her hands trembling and there were tears
threatening to form in her eyes as she thought of leaving Diana, but she knew
she couldn't have killed this woman before her either and that if saving her
gave them a chance to save the world and to allow her to see Thomas again...
"Okay," she said, barely believing she'd
had the courage, or cowardice, to say the word, "I'll do it. I'll help you."
Barkham smiled and Sarah supressed a shiver,
"Excellent choice." Another
explosion ripped through the compound outside.
"Come! There's no time to
waste!"
Barkham ran for the big double doors of her study,
which flew open even as she did so to reveal a trio of guards staring at them
all in confusion.
"There they are," one of them shouted, but
Barkham was running towards them, a series of glowing symbols forming in the
air before her restless lips and then he and the other two were flying
backwards towards the wall of the corridor, clearing the way and revealing once
more the Countess’ callous attitude towards her followers.
I must always
be wary, Sarah thought as she glanced at the crumpled forms of the guards
in the corridor beyond.
Barkham herself was paused in the doorway, staring
back at Sarah and beckoning her along.
"Hurry, girl. We need to get
to the submersible pen before Tiberius' men do!"
Sarah nodded and started for the door, but as she
did so she heard a groan from the floor by the wall and turning, saw Diana
rolling over and glaring at her.
"Don't do this," Diana seemed to be
pleading, but there was fire in her eyes and deadly rage beneath her tone,
"don't go with her..."
"I don't have any other choice," Sarah
replied, unsure if it was really the truth or not, but knowing that there was
no other answer, "I'm sorry."
And then she was out the door and Barkham was
running ahead of her, the building shaking all around as the Lakhma faction
increased their bombardment and all the chances to turn back, to undo what she
was doing, seemed to be slipping away from her.
And I’m not
going to take any of them, Sarah realised, with dawning horror. I’ve
made my decision and I’m leaving with the enemy.
God forgive
me.
Great ending!! And I can't believe Sarah's actually going with Barkham. Craziness.
ReplyDeleteReally enjoyed the last couple episodes!!