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Tim Powers - Declare

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Tim Powers Declare

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TIM POWERS
DECLARE

To Fr Gerald Leonard SVD And with thanks to Chris Arena John Berlyne John - photo 1

To Fr. Gerald Leonard SVD

And with thanks to Chris Arena, John Berlyne, John Bierer, Jennifer Brehl, Charles N. Brown, Beth Dieckhoff, J. R. Dunn, Ken Estes, Ben Fenwick, Russell Galen, Patricia Geary, Tom Gilchrist, Lisa Goldstein, Anne Guerand, Varnum Honey, Fiona Kelleghan, Barry Levin, Marion Mazauric, Andreas Misera, Ross Pavlac, David Perry, Serena Powers, Ramiz Rafeedie, Jacques Sadoul, Sunila Sen-Gupta, Claire Spencer, Tom and Cheryl Wagner, and Eric Woolery


and especially to Jennifer Brehl and Peter Schneider and Serena Powers, for that long discussion about Kim Philby, over dinner at the White House in Anaheim.

Birthdays? yes, in a general way;
For the most if not for the best of men:
You were born (I suppose) on a certain day:
So was I: or perhaps in the night: what then?


Only this: or at least, if more,
You must know, not think it, and learn, not speak:
There is truth to be found on the unknown shore,
And many will find what few would seek.


J. K. Stephen, inaccurately quoted
in a letter from St. John Philby
to his son, Kim Philby,
March 15, 1932


Where wast thou when I laid the foundations of the earth?
Declare, if thou hast understanding.


Job 38:4

Contents

PROLOGUE
Mount Ararat, 1948

BOOK ONE
Learn, Not Speak

ONE
London, 1963

TWO
London, World War II

THREE
London, 1963

FOUR
Paris, 1941

FIVE
Paris, 1941

SIX
Paris, 1941

SEVEN
Kuwait, 1963

EIGHT
Ain al' Abd, 1963

NINE
Berlin, 1945

TEN
Berlin, 1945

BOOK TWO
Know, Not Think It

ELEVEN
Beirut, 1963

TWELVE
Beirut, 1963/Wabar, 1948

THIRTEEN
Turkey, 1948

FOURTEEN
Mount Ararat, 1948

FIFTEEN
Beirut, 1963

SIXTEEN
Beirut, 1963

BOOK THREE
Mount Ararat

SEVENTEEN
Mount Ararat, 1963

EIGHTEEN
Mount Ararat, 1963

EPILOGUE
Declare


from behind that craggy steep till then The horizons bound, a huge peak, black and huge, As if with voluntary power instinct, Upreared its head. I struck and struck again, And growing still in stature the grim shape Towered up between me and the stars, and still, For so it seemed, with purpose of its own And measured motion like a living thing, Strode after me.

William Wordsworth, The Prelude , 381389

The young captains hands were sticky with blood on the steering wheel as he cautiously backed the jeep in a tight turn off the rutted mud track onto a patch of level snow that shone in the intermittent moonlight on the edge of the gorge, and then his left hand seemed to freeze onto the gear-shift knob after he reached down to clank the lever up into first gear. He had been inching down the mountain path in reverse for an hour, peering over his shoulder at the dark trail, but the looming peak of Mount Ararat had not receded at all, still eclipsed half of the night sky above him, and more than anything else he needed to get away from it.

He flexed his cold-numbed fingers off the gear-shift knob and switched on the headlampsonly one came on, but the sudden blaze was dazzling, and he squinted through the shattered windscreen at the rock wall of the gorge and the tire tracks in the mud as he pulled the wheel around to drive straight down the narrow shepherds path. He was still panting, his breath bursting out of his open mouth in plumes of steam. He was able to drive a little faster now, moving forwardthe jeep was rocking on its abused springs and the four-cylinder engine roared in first gear, no longer in danger of lugging to a stall.

He was fairly sure that nine men had fled down the path an hour ago. Desperately he hoped that as many as four of them might be survivors of the SAS group he had led up the gorge, and that they might somehow still be sane.

But his face was stiff with dried tears, and he wasnt sure if he were still sane himselfand unlike his men, he had been somewhat prepared for what had awaited them; to his aching shame now, he had at least known how to evade it.

In the glow reflected back from the rock wall at his right, he could see bright, bare steel around the bullet holes in the jeeps bonnet; and he knew the doors and fenders were riddled with similar holes. The wobbling fuel gauge needle showed half a tank of petrol, so at least the tank had not been punctured.

Within a minute he saw three upright figures a hundred feet ahead of him on the path, and they didnt turn around into the glow of the single headlamp. At this distance he couldnt tell if they were British or Russian. He had lost his Sten gun somewhere on the high slopes, but he pulled the chunky .45 revolver out of his shoulder holstereven if these survivors were British, he might need it.

But he glanced fearfully back over his shoulder, at the looming mountainthe unsubdued power in the night was back there, up among the craggy high fastnesses of Mount Ararat.

He turned back to the frail beam of light that stretched down the slope ahead of him to light the three stumbling figures, and he increased the pressure of his foot on the accelerator, and he wished he dared to pray.

He didnt look again at the mountain. Though in years to come he would try to dismiss it from his mind, in that moment he was bleakly sure that he would one day see it again, would again climb this cold track.

Of my Base Metal may be filed a Key, That shall unlock the Door he howls without.

Omar Khayym, The Rubiyt,
Edward J. FitzGerald translation

From the telephone a mans accentless voice said, Heres a list: ChaucerMalory

Hales face was suddenly chilly.

The voice went on. WyattSpenser

Hale had automatically started counting, and Spenser made four. I imagine so, he said, hastily and at random. Uh, which being dead many years, shall after revive, is the bit youre thinking of. Its Shakespeare, actually, Mr. He nearly said Mr. Goudie, which was the name of the Common Room porter who had summoned him to the telephone and who was still rocking on his heels by the door of the registrar clerks unlocked office, and then he nearly said Mr. Philby; Fonebone, he finished lamely, trying to mumble the made-up name. He clenched his fist around the receiver to hold it steady, and with his free hand he shakily pushed a stray lock of sandy-blond hair back out of his eyes.

Shakespeare, said the mans careful voice, and Hale realized that he should have phrased his response for more apparent continuity. Oh well. Five pounds, was it? I can pay you at lunch.

For a moment neither of them spoke.

Lunch, Hale said with no inflection. What is it supposed to be now, he thought, a contrary and then a parallel or example. Better than fasting, auhsandwich would be. Good Lord.

It might be a picnic lunch, the fools, the bland voice went on, and here we are barely in Januaryso do bring a raincoat, right?

Repeat it back, Hale remembered. Raincoat, I follow you. He kept himself from asking, uselessly, Picnic, certainlyraincoat, rightbut will anyone even be there, this time? Are we going to be doing this charade every tenth winter for the rest of my life? Ill be fifty next time.

The caller hung up then, and after a few seconds Hale realized that hed been holding his breath and started breathing again. Goudie was still standing in the doorway, probably listening, so Hale added, If I mentioned it in the lectures, you must assume its liable to be in the exam. He exhaled unhappily at the end of the sentence. Play-acting into a dead telephone now, he thought; youre scoring idiot-goals all round. To cover the blunder, he said, Hello? Hello? as if he hadnt realized the other man had rung off, and then he replaced the receiver. Not too bad a job, he told himself, all these years later. He stepped back from the desk and forced himself not to pull out his handkerchief to wipe his face.

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