City of Golden Shadow (Otherland, #1)
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It started in mud, as many things do.
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Red fog, gray earth, sky the color of old bones: Paul Jonas was in hell—but it was a very special hell. Not everyone in it was dead yet.
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Try to think about getting out. About really getting out.”
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“Try to think about getting out,” the yellow-eyed man had said. “About really getting out.”
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Things became even more complicated after Paul died.
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He was dead, but his head hurt. He was alive, but a red-hot shell fragment had ripped through his helmet like a knife through cake frosting.
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Paul Jonas sighed. He had walked around the tree five times, and it showed no sign of becoming any less impossible.
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Memories were swimming just below the surface of his conscious mind, closer than ever but still as strangely unfocused as the many-towered vision before him.
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“Ad Aeternum.”
SpookyBoogie
Latin: to eternity
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It was all a dream, of course—perhaps just the last hallucinatory moments of a battlefield casualty—but as her voice crept into him and settled itself like something that had found its home, he knew that he would never forget the sound of it.
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Butter-ball and Nickelplate—they are the cruelest.”
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And the grail, whatever it might be—he could feel the idea of it, swimming just beyond his grasp like one of the bright fish. . . .
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He lifted the object and let it catch the last rays of the sun. The green feather sparkled, impossibly real, impossibly bright, and completely untouched by mud.
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There were some people in whom weakness, once it had appeared, grew like a cancer.
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If politicians ever find a way to tax light, she thought sourly, they’ll probably set up waiting rooms for sunbeam inspection, too.
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Christabel Sorensen was not a good liar, but with a little practice she was getting better.
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“If I’m very, very good,” he had told her, “someday they may let me get into that Cadillac, little Christabel. I’ll close the garage door real tight, and drive home.”
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That was the problem about lying—if people started checking up, things got very complicated.
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He exited, and was Orlando Gardiner once more.
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He had seen . . . a city, a shining, majestic city the color of sunlit amber.
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This vision had been alien but relentlessly modern, a metropolis with elaborately decorated buildings as tall as anything in Hong Kong or Tokyokahama.
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What was a fourteen-year-old kid supposed to do after he’d been touched by the gods?
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Sometimes medical science does not have answers, only guesses.
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Trenchsoul. When all that makes you a person festers and dies.
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Things had made sense once. He couldn’t quite remember such a time, but he could not let himself believe anything else. The world had been an ordered place.
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It was the Slough of Despond. It was the ninth circle of hell. And if there was no salvation at the end of it, then the universe was a terrible, ill-constructed joke.
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Coming forward out of the blanketing mist were two shapes, one large, one small.
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Mullet came nearer. He seemed bigger than before, immensely round and strangely muscled. His mouth wouldn’t close all the way because there were too many teeth.
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The two figures before him wavered and distorted, Finch growing even leaner and more spidery, Mullet swelling until his head disappeared down between his shoulders.
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“The wisdom of our parents, grandparents, ancestors. In each individual life, it seems, we must first reject that wisdom, then later come to appreciate it.”
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Sometimes people need reasons for things, even when there are no reasons.
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is your two servants, Tefy and Mewat, who trouble your worshipers with their evil behavior.
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All that’s upright will turn out wrong. .
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The fourth was not quite as tall but monstrously bulky, as though someone had dressed a hippopotamus in a white suit and given it a round, bald, human head.
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Long has paled that sunny sky: Echoes fade and memories die. Autumn frosts have slain July.
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Ever drifting down the stream— Lingering in the golden gleam— Life, what is it but a dream?
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But he hadn’t, really. And that was part of the problem.
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“Everything must be hidden in plain sight. But I despair sometimes—I can only speak to them in whispers, half-truths, bits of tattered poetry. I know how the oracle felt. . . .”
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“I think the people of the Early Race are near. Or perhaps it is the Hungry One, the one burned by the fire.”
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Here in this horrible place, children were being used to catch other children.
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The warm air still surrounded him, but he felt a moment of inner chill. Where had he been? He had a memory of a dark, terrifying place, but what he had been doing there or how he had left had slipped from his mind.
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The very lack of things to remember meant that their absence did not worry him long.
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The bird never came close enough for him to see it completely clearly, but neither did it disappear from sight.
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The voice, when it came, was smooth and almost childishly sweet, but it raised the hairs on the back of Paul’s neck.
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The voice was full of kind reason, but something else moved behind the words, something greedy.
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A blind fear gripped Paul. He wanted to scream at whatever stood outside to go away and leave him in peace.
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There was another creak and the latch rattled in its socket. The invisible stranger continued calmly, as though the rattling were something quite unconnected.
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Joiner and Tusk, those are our names.
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An image came bubbling up through his panicked thoughts, a picture of an empty place, a vast expanse of nothingness in which only he existed—he and two things that hunted him. . . .
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“It’s not so easy to travel through the Squared,” said Gally.
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