The Physiognomy

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Authors: Jeffrey Ford
stairs, his very skin creaking, his exhalations, heaves of dust. I wondered if he was using the banister. “Mantakis,” I yelled at the top of my voice, yet only the slightest murmur escaped me.
    The sound of steps ceased at the landing and I cocked the trigger. I had never fired the gun before, and I wondered if it was, in fact, loaded. Three methodical raps sounded upon my door and in the silence that followed I detected the faint wheeze of labored breathing. “Come in,” I said.
    The door opened, and it was a good thing I did not give in to the urge to pull the trigger, because standing before me was the pig-faced driver of the coach and four. The miserable wretch stared, glassy-eyed, as if he were walking in his sleep.
    â€œThe Master requested that I fetch you,” he said without the slightest trace of his misbegotten humor.
    â€œDrachton Below is here?” I asked, unable to hide my astonishment.
    â€œYou must accompany me,” he said.
    â€œVery well,” I mumbled. I put on my overcoat and gathered up my instruments. Hastily I put them in the bag and snapped it shut. When the driver turned to begin his descent, I slipped the derringer into the pocket of my coat. Shaking like a leaf, my mind swimming through rough seas of beauty, I staggered toward the door. I knew that whatever came of this, it would be no good.
    The driver took each step at the same dense pace with which he had ascended. When I reached the landing outside the Mantakises’ bedroom door, I heard Mrs. Mantakis gibbering on and on about something, and the very sound of her voice drained the energy out of me. I leaned, exhausted, against the wall for a moment and closed my eyes.
    â€œYour honor,” said the driver.
    I instantly awoke and somehow we had gotten outside the hotel. The moon was bright, and I was startled that the weather had turned warm and the snow seemed to have all melted.
    â€œBut how could this be?” I asked.
    â€œThe Master is waiting,” he said, holding open the door of the coach.
    I nodded once and got in.
    As we drove down the main street of town, I wondered where he could be taking me. I had a million questions, but soon I realized that the whole episode must be the result of the beauty, working its magic on me. “It’s not real,” I said to myself. When we passed the church and headed across the field to the boundary of the wilderness, I leaned back in my seat and closed my eyes. I hoped that if I could fall asleep and wake up, I would be back in my room at the Hotel de Skree, or better yet, back in the Well-Built City.
    I must have fallen asleep, because I was awakened by the jolt of the carriage coming to an abrupt stop. “Persistent hallucination,” I whispered. Looking out the window was like looking into a pool of ink. I could not make out the merest glimmer of light. Suddenly, the door of the coach swung open and there was the driver, holding a lit torch in his hand. The flame from it blew and sputtered in the warm wind, and the way it lit his inadequate face made him appear now more sinister than stupid.
    â€œWhere in Harrow’s hindquarters are we, my good man?” I asked, stepping out into the night. I slid my left hand into the pocket of my overcoat and put my fingers around the derringer. My right hand followed suit with the opposite pocket and found the handle of my scalpel.
    â€œThe entrance to the mines of Mount Gronus,” he responded. “Follow me, your honor.”
    We walked a few paces up a dirt path to the timber-lined opening of the main shaft. “Are you quite certain the Master is here?” I asked.
    He said nothing but plunged into the deeper darkness and forged unhurriedly ahead. I scrabbled to keep up with him, the whole time my mind turning over the possible questions the Master would ask me. “No matter how bad it gets,” I told myself, “if you know what is good for you, you won’t mention

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