'How! LOVELY! IT is! Here!' Nadya exclaimed.
I picked her up in my arms. We were standing on a cobbled street in Edinburgh, surrounded by hundreds and thousands of sleeping people. The sirens were drawing closer and closer as the time of the Others was coming to an end.
'Yes,' I agreed. 'Everything here is real.'
'Only everyone's sleeping,' Nadya observed sadly. 'Like in the fairy story about the sleeping princess. Can I wake them up?'
She could... She could do anything at all now ?if she was taught.
'But aren't you tired?' I asked. My legs were buckling under me and I was feeling a bit dizzy.
'What from?' Nadya asked in surprise
'In a little while,' I said. 'Just a little while, we'll wake everyone up ... all those we can. Daddy just has to do one thing that's very important first. Will you help me?'
'How?'
'Just hold onto me,' I said. I closed my eyes and flung out my arms. I held my breath.
I had to feel this city. The stones and the walls that remembered Merlin and Arthur. People might have forgotten, but the stones remembered. The ancient fortress, set above the city like a crown, remembered too, and it was waiting.
Why were we so stupid sometimes? Why did we expect magic to be hidden in something we could hold in our hands, when it could be everywhere all around us?
Of course, Merlin hadn't hidden his most important creation in the Twilight, he hadn't put his trust in the strength of the golem, but he hadn't put it in the strength of oak chests either. This ancient fortress had stood on the cliff for fifteen hundred years, it had been defended and captured, it had been destroyed and rebuilt, the proud kings of Scotland had kept their treasures in it ?and the stones covered with runes that Merlin had laid in the deepest foundations had been waiting for their time to come.
I only had to reach out to them. Touch them. Feel them...
'Light One!' someone roared behind me. I looked round, emerging from my trance.
Edgar and Arina were standing there, just looking at me ?and I was astonished to realise that their eyes were full of fear. Gennady was running at me. Running and shouting. Surely he didn't think that the power of magic depended on how loud you shouted? He came rushing towards me, taking immense bounds, transforming as he advanced, looking less and less like a human being. His fangs were growing, his skin was turning the colour of death, the hair on his head was falling out in tangled grey skeins.
I raised my hand, gathering Power for the Grey Prayer.
But just then Nadya stepped forward and shrieked in the vampire's face:
'Don't shout at my daddy!'
Gennady staggered. What had struck him was more powerful than hate. But he couldn't stop, he kept moving forward, as if he was running against a hurricane. And he collapsed at our feet. Nadya squealed and hid behind me.
I squatted down and looked into Gennady Saushkin's eyes. He looked at me and asked:
'Can't they come?'
'No, they can't come. And they would never have been able to. But I will do what they asked me to. Go, while there is still time.'
'Help me, Anton,' he said in an almost normal voice.
'Nadya, look the other way!' I ordered.
'I'm not looking, I'm not!' my daughter mumbled, turning away and putting her hands over her eyes to make quite sure.
I raised my hand, with Gennady watching my movements as if he were already spellbound. And the Grey Prayer dispatched the vampire to the sixth level of the Twilight.
I got up and looked at Edgar and Arina. 'A zero-point Other,' Arina said in delight. 'An Absolute Enchantress...'
'For five minutes I'll be much too busy too be concerned with you,' I said, looking at them. 'But afterwards... '
'We have the Minoan Sphere,' Edgar said pleadingly. 'Can we?'
'They'll search for you,' I said. 'And so will I, remember that. But just now you have five minutes. And only because they asked me to forgive.'
'What are you going to do?' Arina asked.
'What those who have withdrawn have been dreaming of. Grant them death. Because without death resurrection is impossible.'