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John Clark Smith |
3 Poison
Wherein we learn of
hidden weapons,
the message in Devanagari
alphabet,
Carina and Hut├бn escaping
the pirates,
the shame of wounding
marble,
the seven possibilities
and five signs,
how Carina and Aaron
viewed Pitworthy,
the deadly tubes,
and the many ways to kill
Hut├бn.
He recorded each inch of the room with the belief
George
might spot with its undistracted lens what eyes might
ignore.
As Hut├бn was filming, he focused more than usual
on the subject and noticed first, in the long straight
sections
of the counter, the girth was much deeper than in the
curved
sections and under these straight sections was a
covering,
a camouflaging material that looked like marble.
When he focused on a section in front of him, he saw
—so that he could never miss it—an aesthetic blemish,
a mark like a wound on the skin of a lovely woman,
and the sight bothered him because he saw marble as skin,
and who would want to “scar that beautiful skin,
smooth as the finest
marble?”[1]
yet someone had etched marks in this obvious place
—obvious to someone sitting where he was now sitting—
on the corner of the counter, with a cutting device,
possibly a dinner knife, thick hair pin, or a nail
file,
—like the nail file he had used when pirates took
Carina and him
aboard and tied them up and she secretly transferred
it
to Hut├бn as they sat in the brig and before they took
her up on deck, removed her clothes, and quickly
demanded
she sing “Happy Birthday” nude to their captain, this
event
proving to him three things. (Here begins one of many
lists
that anyone who worked with Hut├бn had to tolerate,
for such was his mind that never only one choice
occurred
to him.) First, that Carina had a pleasant singing
voice,
Second, what an ideal escape nakedness and a song
could offer, and Third, Herodotus’ titillating tale
of how Gyges obtained the throne of Sardis could be
true,[2]
since Carina warned the quite fearsome but
superstitious
crew before she sang that, if the captain saw her
naked,
either they must murder their captain or they would
all die.
Later, after they both escaped by jumping overboard,
the ship and all crew were reported as missing at sea.
Perhaps not a nail file, but the markings were fresh,
no doubt
because someone somewhere on its way was doodling on
it.
But on George’s examination the etching was shown
to display Devanagari not Latin alphabet,
which led him to Carina, since Carina often wrote
in Spanish using that script, a habit he often found—
though an effective system, combining different
scripts—
an annoying and strange approach. In the unexpected
original invitation, which of course at the time
he assumed came from Pitworthy, Carina agreed to meet
him on the island to scheme how they would rescue
V├нhaan,
whom she assumed Hydra or Dvorak now was holding.
Next Hut├бn transcribed the letters and uncovered some
Spanish words,
“Mire para un
pescado o bama,” which would mean
“look for a fish or bama,” which was a simple code for
both Gillian of Dvorak and Selma of Hydra—
Alabama in the United States was her home state.
But the cryptic note left unexplained when and how and
why
did Carina get to scratch these letters into the long
black
marble counter unless she had already arrived here
and had taken the time to laser for him the letters
with her favorite handy pocket laser tool shaped like
a lipstick holder; a doubtful event unless she learned
or gained what she sought already from within the
castle
and had to leave suddenly; unlikely too since she
would
never desert her team without a reason; or she
arrived,
had an urgent call elsewhere—perhaps someone or
something
drew her away—alerted Mustfarris she’d join Hut├бn
later somehow, somewhere. Other options would make
less sense
unfortunately, unfortunate because it involved
for him at least seven different possibilities,
each with its own dilemma. The First, that Mustfarris
was late
already without an indication how long Hut├бn
must wait; the Second, proceed perhaps without
expecting
Carina at all, realizing she may be handling
something urgent, leaving the war to Mustfarris and
him—
he intuitively could see signs of a coming war,
or at least a struggle by how deserted the room was
and the absence of a Remnant colleague and Pitworthy—
with hope that Carina or one of his team arrives soon;
the Third, that despite Hut├бn’s tacit approval of her,
Carina’s ethereal beauty—which some compared
to Botticelli’s Venus, whom Florentines then called
the most beautiful woman, while others, like
Mustfarris, the artist
among them, compared her to any of Robin Eley’s
hyper-realistic portraits, since there was an unreal
angelic yet enigmatic aspect to Carina
wrapped in an earthy, sexual, and threatening
charisma.
Mustfarris, as lover of Asian literature, saw
three sides to Carina: acting like Daiyu in her love
for Hut├бn with waif-like appearance, yet with
Baochai’s strength
and character that fooled many an avid opponent,
plus a third side like the quick-tempered manager of
men
and “perfect beauty” Jinlian, minus Jinlian’s hearty
lust.[3]
If not for her astounding skills, intelligence, and
gifts,
her magnetism could often be ineluctably
a strong distraction, a potent allure that could
derail,
delay, if not reverse the success the team might
achieve.
The Fourth, the expected and common communication
between the members hadn’t happened and nobody else
had received an invitation. The Fifth, since his blood
was
here, Mustfarris could be here, and if signs of blood
were here,
he could be bleeding here, though Hut├бn found blood
nowhere else,
and Carina did ask Mustfarris to come directly
to the island. The Sixth, Carina had met Pitworthy,
had experienced Pitworthy’s groping—she once stabbed
him
in the arm with a hairpin at a public gathering
in Hong Kong after a drunk Pitworthy had said, I own
you, and pinned her up against a wall, reached to
unbutton
her blouse while climbing his hand up her skirt when
she shouted,
touch me and
you’ll burn.[4]
And Seventh, suppose Carina never
came to the island and somebody used or knew of her
secret way of writing and was trying to confuse him.
All of the seven possibilities were troubling him,
any could happen here but none was supposed to happen.
But regardless of these dilemmas Hut├бn felt certain
a battle was imminent or perhaps had already
been fought, since The Schedule and V├нhaan warranted a
war,
and Pitworthy seemed in no rush to see him—where was
he?—
though Pitworthy, he had to admit, would usually
ask for Aaron, one of Pitworthy’s favorite movie
stars, while Aaron explained often and firmly to Hut├бn
he had no wish ever to be important or a friend
to a man such as Pitworthy, from whom, Aaron had said,
importance may sometimes be purchased too dearly,[5]
and asked
instead that Carina, Hut├бn, Mustfarris, or someone
else deal with Pitworthy—none, especially Carina,
would have ever wanted to socialize with him—plus he
was a patron; agents never befriended a patron,
for no patron could have any knowledge of their real
work
or how any of them came to join. But even Aaron’s
disdain for Pitworthy would never hold back Aaron
if he had foreseen either the cause or the likelihood
of a battle. He waited on Hut├бn’s confirmation.
Yet besides these possibilities there were certain
signs:
the First, that nothing was proceeding according to
plan,
a serious problem for anyone, but even more
for Hut├бn whose life depended upon accurately
forecasting future patterns, recognizing catalysts
and obstacles and preparing for workable answers.
The Second, he honestly now expected a conflict,
but an encounter within his plan not despite his plan.
The Third, that completely new and unstable elements
were appearing—death by counter slime poison—as if
there
was another plan within which he now was a factor.
The Fourth, that he was alone, and when he felt truly
alone
or isolated, someone usually was planning
an attack of some sort and was at least a step ahead.
And finally, the Fifth, that too many of his comrades
were at least implicated, which led to one conclusion,
as if it was not obvious to his intuition:
a potential conflict was brewing or an already
tragic event had transpired. Neither of them would
Hut├бn
avoid or ignore but only wish he had prepared more
and not assumed first that this invitation might only
be a routine meeting. Beyond these obvious factors,
he noticed when George saw small holes underneath the
counter,
each in carefully hidden equidistant locations—
how much this intruder must have despised this black
marble
to deface the incredible stone—and when examined,
these holes had tiny devices, accessories, and tubes
attached to them, paraphernalia that, when he came
close enough and opened the tubes, an odd odor seeped
out
—Wink his ever-alert dog quickly barked a loud
warning—
which George identified as a curry that reminded
him of his mother’s stew, but this distraction about
his
mother was temporary, since the more he inhaled this
smell
and heard Wink bark, the more another image of pungent
curry aroma arose—from a small empty London
flat on Queens Gardens where the Pakistani internal
security leader met him—Wink accompanied
Hut├бn—to ask about a new leak in security
that led them to London, to Hut├бn, to a secret meeting
with an embassy employee who was a liaison
with international security for Great Britain,
to ask Hut├бn the question security officials
everywhere asked, Why do you keep turning up?,
while the smell
of curry from an open pan on the empty kitchen
counter wafted and as his mind wandered to Proust
and pondered the singularity of odor[6]
and its
many questionable sources and connections, he snapped
to the present and the long marble counter, saw Wink
rush
to the windows, closed the tubes, ran to the window,
opened
it to its fullest extent, and stuck out his head as
far
as possible to clear his nostrils, lungs, eyes, skin,
and brain
of an acrid smell that—he could never forget—masked
an undetectable drug that either would induce sleep
and then, while sleeping, the victim helpless, calmly
at peace,
slowly paralyzes the lungs until the poor victim
could no longer breathe; or slowly kills them, as it
killed
Rohan at the San Sebastian fountain. When Hut├бn’s air
was fresh, he complained to himself that he to
Pitworthy
was a poor stand-in for Aaron. (Aaron he would fete,
Aaron he would ask advice.) Yet this train of thought
was
false, he realized, since Pitworthy wouldn’t have
knowledge
of the effects of this smell and the slime on the
counter
or even the green liquid, at which point he hurried
back
to the counter—Wink was fine and had escaped the odor—
and tried to use George to vitiate all the devices
and burn off the slime, hoping that another member had
not preceded him and fallen victim to the Devil
and his ways to get others to do his scandalous work
—as Goethe cautioned about the witch’s brew: “It’s
true,” he
wrote, “the Devil taught her, but the Devil cannot
make it”—[7]
Though someone did concoct a curry poison so potent
that it wouldn’t dissipate easily by George’s
attempts,
so potent that Hut├бn again rushed to the window—Wink
had never left—to fill his lungs with fresh air, his
soul
with fresh virtue, and his mind with fresh insight,
till the smell
left and he stared intently at the full glass of green
juice
sitting on the counter, a juice he hadn’t requested
or wanted, and though he never intended to drink it,
he decided, after the odor had finally left
the room, to return to the long black counter and let
George
analyze it. George confirmed it contained, besides
lime, gin,
and apple juice, snake venom and, so as not to
blunder,
an appropriate amount of hydrochloric acid,
a drink, with different fruits for color and taste,
that was
the favorite lethal cocktail invented by Hydra,
the group that lived by its own rules, and later more
often
a poison of that other nemesis of the Remnant,
the cartel Dvorak, named for its leader Nicholas
Dvorak, who preferred the factitious royal title
Benchin II, even though there never was a Benchin I
or even a Nicholas—his birth first name was Farley—
a name he adopted from Charles Dickens’ character
Nicholas Nickleby, a puzzling choice indeed for those
who have bothered to read the novel, since this
Nicholas
Dvorak ran his affairs more like the Nicholas I
of Russia and in character like Chaucer’s Nicholas
or Dickens’ Wackford Squeers.[8]
Dvorak did use this potion
to eliminate rivals and those suspected of real
or potential betrayal, though some believed advisors
used it against him, or that’s what some people
suspected
originally when Nicholas disappeared for a
month;
either Nicholas was quite alive—most people assumed
he had simply retreated because he was very ill,
needed some surgery and then rehabilitation,
or roamed about in some disguise to mix with the hoi
polloi, like Pope John the XXIII did—or that someone
was using his modus operandi with the green juice,
all of which led to one thought, that Hut├бn had been a
fool
and target long enough, and this castle hall, always
used
as a platform of humiliation by Pitworthy,
dreaded by anyone doing business or conferring
with him, had clearly morphed into something more
portentous
and predatory, a staging for something quite deadly,
with the odor and the counter slime and the green
liquid,
perhaps to kill Hut├бn himself and if so, they must be
be observing or nearby; but in the end, regardless
who was responsible for this scheme, Hut├бn was the
bait
in this game of death, each step brought another step
toward doom.
Hut├бn’s first concern was for his team—he quickly
texted
each of them—though Carina almost certainly had been
in this room, had lasered her message, and then
decided
she had to leave, escaped, or someone had defeated
her—
a most doubtful event because Hut├бn had never seen
anyone, even the skilled warrior Mustfarris, beat
her one on one—assuming she could leave; and if
someone
did leave or escape, he’d remain as long as necessary
to know what happened, let the plan roll out, react in
time
hopefully, though he sensed The Schedule and V├нhaan
were now
at the heart and he was almost certain that Dvorak
or Hydra had arranged it, leaving only one question:
if Hydra or Dvorak did lure him to the island,
why here, why this island of Pitworthy, and, as he
asked
himself the question, he had an answer; because only
three powers on earth knew of the island’s
significance:
Dvorak, Hydra, and The Schedule. Only they would
choose
to defeat the Remnant in its most special and historic
place where they had many meetings and established
their goals
and principles. Hut├бn was betting now the ultimate
source was The Schedule, leading to the final query,
more like a tocsin: how would someone know what The
Schedule
knows unless V├нhaan had informed them, a prospect that
made
Hut├бn at first ask himself if any choice was only
the result of fortunate circumstances or bad luck.
[2] Herodotus (ca. 484-425 BCE), Histories, Book I.
[3] Daiyu and Baochai are two female characters from the novel Hong Lou Meng (Dream of the Red Chamber) (mid-18th century). Jin Lian (Gold Lotus) is from the novel Jin Ping Mei (The Plum in the Golden Vase)(late 16th century).
[4] From “Helen of Troy Does Countertop Dancing” by Margaret Atwood (1939 - ).
[5] From Jane Austen (1775-1817), Pride and Prejudice, end of Chapter 26.
[6] The importance of smell is a key device in Proust’s novel, ├А la recherche du temps perdu (In Search of Lost Time).
[8] See Canterbury Tales, “Miller’s Tale,” by Chaucer (ca. 1343-1400), and Nicholas Nickleby by Dickens (1812-1870), where Wackford Squeers appears.
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