âLincoln, listen to me. We don't have much time. Do you remember the man with the gray face and the green lipstick and the long gray hair?'
Lincoln blinked at her. âWhat? I still don't know what you're talking about!'
âIt was back at the Griffin House Hotel, room one-oh-four. A woman was lying on your bed. She was badly hurt, wasn't she? Then the bed caught fire and you tried to hide in the bathroom but the man with the gray face and the green lipstick was there, hiding in the shower stall.'
Lincoln said nothing, but continued to stare at her wide eyed. As he did so, a flickering image began to move inside his mind, as if he were remembering a grainy old movie that he had seen a long time ago, in some unfamiliar movie theater.
The gray-faced man stepped out of the shower stall, all spindly and dressed in black, and his lips were painted with green make-up into a mad, pointed grin, even though his real lips were tightly puckered with anger. His voice when he spoke sounded as if he had a mouthful of dry sand.
âI warned you not to come, now didn't I? You would not listen to me, though, would you? You out-and-out refused to listen.'
Eulalie said, âHe came after you with his handsaw, didn't he? And the room was burning and the door was locked and there was only one way out.'
âThe fire escape,' Lincoln whispered.
Now
he remembered.
âThat's right. And it collapsed, and you fell three stories to the ground. And that's how you broke your back.'
Eulalie kissed his hand again, and then she said, âThe hotel staff who found you on the patio, they did the right thing and didn't try to move you. So the chances of your recovering look pretty good.'
âThat man who came after me, who was he?'
âWe don't know for sure. But we think he could have been a murderer called Gordon Veitch.'
âWho?'
âGordon Veitch. He raped and killed at least a dozen women in the nineteen-thirties. Maybe it wasn't the
real
Gordon Veitch, because Gordon Veitch is probably dead by now, but a nightmare of Gordon Veitch.'
âA
nightmare
? That doesn't make any sense at all. You're tryin' to tell me that he was only a dream?'
âMaybe he was, maybe wasn't. Another possibility is that he was somebody who was made up to look like Gordon Veitch. A copycat.'
Lincoln said, âWhat happened in that hotel room, believe me, that
felt
real. I don't know how it could have been, but I'm lyin' here right now with my back broke, and nothin' comes much realer than that, does it?'
âWhoever that man was, Lincoln, and whether he was real or not, we need your help to track him down and put a stop to what he's doing.'
âYou're kiddin' me, right? Look at me, I can't even get out of bed.'
Eulalie leaned forward so that her face was very close to his, almost as if she were going to kiss him on the lips. He could even see his own face reflected in her eyes. âI'm not Eulalie, Lincoln, even though I look like her. The reason I took on Eulalie's appearance was because you know her and like her, and I needed to gain your trust as quickly as possible.'
âYou're
not
Eulalie? Then who the hell are you?'
âMy name is Springer. I'm kind of a messenger, an envoy.'
âWho for? DHL?'
Springer shook her dreadlocks. âI come from Ashapola, who is the spirit of faultless light and absolute purity.'
There was a very long pause. Lincoln didn't know if he ought to snort or laugh or burst into tears. âYou're talkin' about, like,
God
?'
âAshapola is known to many different people by many different names. But Ashapola is our guardian and our protector. Ashapola is all that stands between the human race and ultimate chaos.'
âYou're not some hospital visitor, are you? Where you from, the Baptists or somethin'? You tryin' to convert me?'
Springer smiled. âI don't need to convert you, Lincoln. You are what you are. You're descended from a long line of people who have the capability of entering the world of dreams and nightmares and fighting on the side of good. We call them Night Warriors. If you like, you're one of Ashapola's army.'
âSay what? I wasn't descended from no Night Warriors. My father was a jazz musician and my grandfather was a cook at The Whitney and my great-grandfather before him worked as a sweeper-upper in the Polish match factory.'
âI know. But apart from being a cook, your grandfather Joseph was Zebenjo the Arrow-Storm. He was a Night Warrior who was capable of firing over two hundred arrows so fast that you couldn't see them coming.'
âOh,
right
.'
Springer squeezed his left knee through the blankets.
âFeel anything? Anything at all?'
Lincoln shook his head.
âThat's because of your spinal injury. But that won't affect your ability to become Zebenjo'Yyx, the grandson of the great Zebenjo, and fire arrows at the same devastating rate as Zebenjo did.'
âOf course I will. Forget about the fact that I can't sit up and I've never thrown anythin' in my life more lethal than a frisbee. Lady â whoever you are â all of this sounds totally insane. It's obvious that I've been hurt real bad. Maybe it happened for real or maybe I was havin' some kind of trip. Maybe I was havin' a nightmare. Maybe I'm
still
havin' a nightmare, right now, and I'm beginnin' to think that maybe I am. But, come on, what's this arrow-shootin' shit?'
Springer stayed where she was, leaning over him, so that he could feel her steady breathing on his cheek. In spite of himself, his testiness began to subside. There was something so attractive about her that he wished he had the strength to raise up his head just two or three inches more, and kiss her. Yet the attraction wasn't so much sexual as spiritual. He suddenly felt that here was a woman who really understood him, all of his ambitions, all of his frustrations, all of his impatience, right down to the very core of his soul. She gave him a feeling of deep relief, as if he had been waiting for this moment of revelation all of his life. As if she had said to him, this is
you
, Lincoln. This is who you really are. No need for posturing. No need for swagger. This is
you
.
Springer reached across and picked up a hand mirror from the nightstand. She held it up so that Lincoln could see his own face in it.
âYou can't stand up yet, so I can't show you the way you're going to look when you're a Night Warrior. Not your whole armor, anyhow, head-to-toe, and all of your weapons. But this will be the face that you wear, when you enter other people's dreams. This is the face that the enemies of Ashapola will see, and learn to fear.'
Lincoln looked up into the mirror, but all he could see was his usual face, with a crimson bruise over his left eyebrow, and a split in his upper lip.
âSo?' he asked Springer. âWhat am I supposed to be lookin' at?'
âZebenjo'Yyx, grandson of the great Zebenjo, the Arrow-Storm.'
âOh, of course. I can distinctly see the resemblance.'
âWait,' Springer chided him. âHave patience.'
âI need to see a doctor, lady. I need to see a doctor right now.'
âYou're not hurting, are you?'
âNo. I'm not hurtin' at all. I almost wish that I was. At least that would mean I could
feel
somethin'.'
He looked up into the hand mirror again, and when he did so, he said, â
Shit
!' The face looking back at him was no longer his, but a tan leather mask, intricately decorated with scar patterns and diagonal lines of white paint. It was topped with braided knots of dry red hair, and its mouth was fixed in a ferocious scowl, with what looked like a mixed-up collection of human and animal teeth crammed into it.
He could see his eyes staring out of the mask, and he knew they were his, because they blinked whenever
he
blinked. But the mask itself was terrifying, like a ju-ju mask. His grandfather Joseph used to have one hanging on his front door, with bulging eyes and a red protruding tongue. He had told Lincoln that he had nailed it up there to scare away any bad spirits, but it had scared Lincoln, too, when he was little, and he had always run past it with his hands covering his eyes.
âThis is a trick, right?' Lincoln asked Springer. âSome kind of optical illusion?'
âNo trick,' Springer assured him. âThis is the battle mask that Zebenjo'Yyx wears, whenever he goes to war. And you should see his amazing armor, and the weapons he carries. In fact you will.'
She reached down and picked up a small alligator-skin purse. She opened it up and took out a folded sheet of paper. âHere,' she said. âThis is the invocation that Night Warriors always have to say before they go to sleep at night. Once you have spoken these words, the spirit of Ashapola will visit you in your dreams and invest you with all of the equipment and protection that you require.'
âLadyâ' said Lincoln. âDo you really expect me to believe any of this?'
âDo you believe what happened to you at the Griffin House Hotel?'
âI believe I saw it, for sure. But I don't necessarily believe that it really happened for real. You can go to the desert, can't you, and see lakes, but there's no lakes there at all, only sand. You wouldn't get your feet wet.'
âSo how did you fall out of a ground-level window and break your spine?'
âI don't know. Maybe I just fell awkward. I don't even want to think about it.'
âBut you have to think about it, Lincoln, because we need you, desperately, and we need you now.'
Lincoln turned his head away and stared at the yellow seabirds on the curtains. âI'm goin' crazy,' he said. âI've lost it. I've gone nuts. Admit it â tell me that this is a nuthouse.'
âYou're not crazy, Lincoln, and tonight you'll find that out for yourself. But you have to promise me that you'll repeat the invocation. Look â I'm tucking it under the pillow, right here.'
âWhat does it say?'
Springer unfolded it. â“Now, when the face of the world is hidden in darkness, let us be conveyed to the place of our meeting, armed and armored; and let us be nourished by the power that is dedicated to the cleaving of darkness, the settling of all black matters, and the dissipation of all evil. So be it.”'
âRead it again,' Lincoln asked her.
Springer read the words again. After she had finished, Lincoln said, âThese Night Warriors â what exactly are they?'
âThey were created by Ashapola to protect us in our dreams. Their original Sanskrit name means “Army of Dreams”, although the Greeks and the Romans called them “The Legions of Sleep”.'
âGo on.'
âAshapola created the first human so that she could dream how the world of humans was eventually going to turn out, and he could copy her dreams and make them come alive. Some of her dreams were beautiful beyond any description, but others were violent and chaotic. So the
second
human that Ashapola created was capable of becoming a Night Warrior, to make sure that the first human came to no harm when she was asleep. And that was how the Night Warriors' bloodline began.'
âCome on . . . you're tellin' me that Adam wasn't Adam at all, but some woman?'
âEve, that's right. Why do you think she was called “Eve”? In Hebrew, her name means “life” or “breathing”. But she was created to imagine the world in her sleep, every night when evening fell.'
âA woman. I can't believe it. No wonder the world is in such a goddamned mess.'
At that moment, the curtain around the bed was sharply drawn back, and a doctor and a nurse appeared. The doctor was Indian, with a long face and huge black-rimmed spectacles and a tiny black moustache, while the nurse was plump and red-haired and kept smiling and raising her eyebrows as if she had just been told a hilarious off-color joke and was bursting to share it with them.
âI am very sorry to be interrupting your visit,' the doctor told Springer. âPlease â if you can come back in maybe ten minutes?'
âI have to go now anyhow,' said Springer. She leaned over again and kissed Lincoln on the cheek. â
Tonight
,' she said. âYou won't forget, will you? We really need you. The others will be waiting for you. So will I.'
âOthers?'
âAt least six more, maybe seven.'
âI don't know. I don't think I can handle any more nightmares.'
Springer kissed him again. âPlease,' she breathed. âJust be there. Please.'
When she had left the room, the doctor came up to Lincoln's bedside and leafed through his notes.
âI am Doctor Dhawan and this is Nurse Fairbrother. How do you do, Mr Walker? It was I who first treated you when you were admitted.'
âHi,' said Lincoln.
âDid I hear you say to your friend that you had been suffering from nightmares?'
âRight now, everythin's a nightmare. Am I going to stay paralysed like this for the rest of my life?'
âOf course that is the very first thing you will be wanting to know, sir. What has happened is that you have fallen with considerable impact, fracturing your T10 thoracic vertebra in the middle of your back. I will be able to show you your injury very clearly on your MRI and CT scans.'
Lincoln waited while Doctor Dhawan frowned at his notes again and tugged at his moustache. Eventually, he said, âWhat has happened is that a broken fragment of bone is pressing on your spinal cord. You must remember that the spinal cord is very soft, with a consistency like toothpaste, and so it is very susceptible to pressure of this nature.