GRADUATION
In a way it was a disaster of a vacation. They
hardly even went outside except for a few walks (undertaken at a
brisk trot) through the freeze-dried Urbana suburbs, so flat and
empty it felt like at any moment they could fall off into the
immense white sky. But in other ways it was perfect. It brought
Alice and Quentin closer together. It helped Quentin understand why
she was the way she was. They didn’t fight once—if anything the
terrifying counterexample of Alice’s parents made them feel young
and romantic by contrast. And after the first week they’d finished
all their homework and were free to lie around and goof off. By the
time two weeks were up they were thoroughly stir crazy and ready to
start their last semester at Brakebills.
They’d heard almost nothing from the others since
last summer. Quen tin hadn’t really expected to. Of course he was
curious about what was going on in the outside world, but he had
the idea that Eliot and Josh and Janet were busy ascending to some
inconceivable new level of coolness, as far above Brakebills as
Brakebills was above Brooklyn or Chesterton, and he would have felt
let down if they’d still had the time and inclination to bother
keeping in touch with him.
As far as he could deduce from their scattered
reports, they were all living together in an apartment in downtown
Manhattan. The only decent correspondent among them was Janet, who
every couple of weeks sent the cheesiest I ❤ New York
postcard she could find. She wrote in all caps and kept the
punctuation to a minimum:
DEAR Q&A
WHAT IT IS WE 3 WENT TO CHINATOWN LAST WEEK 2 LOOK
FOR HERBS, ELIOT BOUGHT A MONGOLIAN SPELLBOOK ITS IN MONGOLIAN DUH
BUT HE CLAIMS HE CAN READ IT BUT I THINK IT’S MONGOLIAN PORNO. JOSH
BOUGHT A LITTLE GREEN BABY TURTLE HE NAMED IT GAMERA AFTER THE
MONSTER. HE IS GROWING A BEARD JOSH NOT GAMERA. U GUYS [the rest
was in tiny, barely-legible script overflowing vertically into the
space for the address] HAVE GOT TO GET HERE BRAKEBILLS IS A SMALL
SMALL POND AND NYC IS THE OCEAN AND ELIOT IS DRINKING LIKE A FISH
STOP IT ELIOT STOP IT I KEEL YOU FOR THIS I KEEL YOU 1000 TIMES . .
. [illegible]
SO MUCH LOVE
J✶
Despite widespread popular resistance, or possibly
because of it, Dean Fogg entered Brakebills in an international
welters tournament, and Quentin traveled to overseas magic schools
for the first time, though he didn’t see much of them beyond the
welters court, and once in a while a dining hall. They played in
the emerald-green courtyard of a medieval keep in the misty
Carpathians, and at a compound bushwhacked out of the seemingly
endless Argentine pampas. On Rishiri Island, off the northern coast
of Hokkaido, they played on the most beautiful welters court
Quentin had ever seen. The sand squares were a searing white and
perfectly scraped and leveled. The grass squares were lime green
and clipped to a regulation 12 mm. The water squares steamed darkly
in the chilly air. Frowning, uncannily humanoid monkeys watched
them play, clinging to wiggly pine trees, their bare pink faces
ringed with nimbi of snowy-white fur.
But Quentin’s world tour was cut short when, to
Professor Fogg’s acute embarrassment, the Brakebills team lost all
six of its first six matchups and exited the tournament. Their
perfect losing record was preserved forever when they were crushed
at home in the first round of the consolation bracket by a
pan-European team captained by a tiny, fiery, curly-haired
Luxembourgeoise on whom Quentin, along with every other boy on the
Brakebills team, and some of the girls, developed an instant
crush.
The welters season ended on the last day of March,
and suddenly, Quentin found himself staring at the end of his
Brakebills career across a perilously slender gap of only two
months of time. It was like he’d been wending his way through a
vast glittering city, zig-zagging through side streets and
wandering through buildings and haunted de Chirico arcades and
little hidden piazzas, the whole time thinking that he’d barely
scratched the surface, that he was seeing just a tiny sliver of one
little neighborhood. And then suddenly he turned a corner and it
turned out he’d been through the whole city, it was all behind him,
and all that was left was one short street leading straight out of
town.
Now the most insignificant things Quentin did felt
momentous, brimming over with anticipatory nostalgia. He’d be
passing by a window at the back of the House, hurrying between
classes, and a tiny movement would catch his eye, a distant figure
trudging across the Sea in a Brakebills jacket, or a gawky topiary
flamingo fussily shedding the cap of snow on its little green head,
and he would realize that he would never see that particular
movement ever again, or if he did he would see it in some future
time as some unimaginably different person.
And then there were the other moments, when he was
violently sick of Brakebills and everything and everyone in it,
when it felt lame and pokey and claustrophobic and he was desperate
to get out. In four years he’d barely even set foot off the
Brakebills campus. My God, he was wearing a school uniform. He’d
essentially just spent four extra years in high school! Students
had a particular way of speaking at Brakebills, an affected, overly
precise, quasi-British diction that came from all those vocal
exercises, like they were just freshly back from a Rhodes
scholarship and wanted everybody to know it. It made Quentin want
to lay about him with an edged weapon. And there was this obsession
with naming things. All the rooms at Brakebills had the same
identical desk, a broad-shouldered black cherrywood hulk that must
have been ordered up in bulk sometime in the second half of the
nineteenth century. It was honeycombed with little drawers and
cubbies and pigeonholes, and each of those drawers and cubbies and
pigeonholes had its own precious little name. Every time Quentin
heard somebody drop a reference to “the Ink Chink” and “the Old
Dean’s Ear” he rolled his eyes at Alice. Sweet Jesus, are they
serious? We have got to get out of this place.
But where was he going to go, exactly? It was not
considered the thing to look panicked or even especially concerned
about graduation, but everything about the world after Brakebills
felt dangerously vague and under-thought to Quentin. The bored,
bedraggled specters of Alice’s parents haunted him. What was he
going to do? What exactly? Every ambition he’d ever had in
his life had been realized the day he was admitted to Brakebills,
and he was struggling to formulate a new one with any kind of
practical specificity. This wasn’t Fillory, where there was some
magical war to be fought. There was no Watcherwoman to be rooted
out, no great evil to be vanquished, and without that everything
else seemed so mundane and penny-ante. No one would come right out
and say it, but the worldwide magical ecology was suffering from a
serious imbalance: too many magicians, not enough monsters.
It made it worse that he was the only one who
seemed to be bothered by it. Lots of students were already actively
networking with established magical organizations. Surendra
lectured anybody who would listen about a consortium of
wizards—whom he hadn’t actually heard from yet, but he was pretty
sure they’d basically guaranteed him an internship—who spent their
time at suborbital altitudes keeping a weather eye out for stray
asteroids and oversize solar flares and other potential
planetary-scale disasters. Plenty of students went in for academic
research. Alice was looking at a post-graduate program in Glasgow,
though the idea of being separated didn’t particularly appeal to
either of them, nor did the idea of Quentin’s aimlessly tagging
along with her to Scotland.
It was considered chic to go undercover, to
infiltrate governments and think tanks and NGOs, even the military,
in order to get oneself into a position to influence real-world
affairs magically from behind the scenes. People devoted years of
their lives to it. And there were even more exotic paths. A few
magicians—Illusionists in particular—undertook massive art
projects, manipulating the northern lights and things like that,
decades-long enchantments that might only ever have an audience of
one. There was an extensive network of war-gamers who staged annual
global conflicts over arbitrary tactical objectives, just for the
fun of it, sorcerers against sorcerers, in teams and free-for-all
battles royal. They played without safeguards, and it was well
known that once in a blue moon someone got killed. But that was
half the fun of it, the thrill.
And on and on, and it all sounded completely,
horribly plausible. Any one of a thousand options
promised—basically guaranteed—a rich, fulfilling, challenging
future for him. So why did Quentin feel like he was looking around
frantically for another way out? Why was he still waiting for some
grand adventure to come and find him? He was drowning—why did he
recoil whenever anybody reached down to help him? The professors
Quentin talked to about it didn’t seem concerned at all. They
didn’t get what the problem was. What should he do? Why, anything
he wanted to!
Meanwhile Quentin and Alice plugged away at their
mandatory senior theses with steadily diminishing enthusiasm. Alice
was attempting to isolate an individual photon and freeze it in
place, halting its headlong light-speed flight. She constructed an
intricate trap for it out of wood and glass, interwoven with a
hellishly complex spherical tangle of glowing indigo gramarye. But
in the end nobody was quite sure whether the photon was in there or
not, and they couldn’t figure out how to prove it one way or the
other. Privately Alice confessed to Quentin that she wasn’t totally
sure either, and she was genuinely hoping the faculty could settle
it one way or the other, because it was driving her insane. After a
week of increasingly fractious debate that settled nothing, they
voted to give Alice the lowest possible passing grade and leave it
at that.
For his project Quentin planned to fly to the moon
and back. Distance-wise he figured he could get there in a couple
of days, straight shot, and after his Antarctic adventure he was
pretty solid on personal warmth spells. (Though they weren’t his
Discipline either. He’d just about given up on his Discipline.) And
the idea had a certain Romantic, lyrical savor to it. He took off
from the Sea on a bright, hot, humid spring morning, with Alice and
Gretchen and a couple of the more sycophantic new Physical Kids to
see him off. The protection spells formed a clear bubble around
him. Sounds became distorted, and the green lawn and the smiling
faces of his well-wishers took on a surreal fish-eye warp. As he
rose, the Earth gradually changed from an infinite matte plain
below him to a radiant, bounded blue sphere. Overhead the stars
came out and became sharper and steelier and less twinkly.
Six hours into the trip his throat suddenly clamped
shut, and iron nails stabbed his eardrums. His eyeballs tried to
pry themselves out of their sockets. He had drifted off, and his
improvised space bubble had started to fail. Quentin waved his arms
like a frantic conductor, prestissimo, and the air thickened
and warmed again, but by then the fun had gone out of the whole
thing. Bouts of shivering and wheezing and nervous laughter rattled
him, and he couldn’t calm down. Jesus, he thought, was there ever
anything less worth risking his life for than this? God knows how
much interstellar radiation he’d already absorbed. Space was full
of angry little particles.
He reversed course. He considered hiding out for a
few days and just pretending he’d gone to the moon. Maybe he could
score some moon dust off Lovelady, present it as evidence. The air
got warmer again. The sky grew lighter. He relaxed as a cocktail of
relief and shame filled him, one generous part of each. The world
spread out again underneath him: the fractally detailed coastline,
the blue water textured like beaten metal, the beckoning claw of
Cape Cod.
The worst part turned out to be walking into the
Great Hall for dinner that night, two days early, with a sheepish
yeah-I-fucked-up grin plastered on his face, which was sunburned a
flaming red. After dinner he borrowed Alice’s key and retreated to
the Prefects’ Common Room, where he drank too much sherry, sipping
it alone in front of the darkened window, even though all he could
see was his own reflection, picturing the Hudson River moving past
in the darkness, sluggish and swollen with cold spring rain. Alice
was studying up in her room. Everybody else was asleep except for a
lone weeknight party that was racketing on in one wing, spinning
off drunk students in pairs and groups. When he was thoroughly
smashed on self-pity and alcohol and the dawn was threatening to
leap up at him at any moment, Quentin walked gingerly back to his
bedroom, climbing the spiral steps past what used to be Eliot’s
room. He weaved a little bit, swigging directly from the sherry
bottle, which he’d liberated on his way out.
He felt his intoxication already turning into a
hangover, that queasy neurological alchemy that usually happens
during sleep. His abdomen was overfull, swollen with tainted
viscera. People he’d betrayed came wandering out from the place in
his mind where they usually stayed. His parents. James. Julia.
Professor March. Amanda Orloff. Even old dead Mr. What’s-his-name,
his Princeton interviewer. They all watched him dispassionately. He
was beneath their contempt.
He lay down on his bed with the light on. Wasn’t
there a spell for making yourself happy? Somebody must have
invented one. How could he have missed it? Why didn’t they teach
it? Was it in the library, a flying book fluttering just out of
reach, beating its wings against some high window? He felt the bed
slipping down and away, down and away, like a film loop of a Stuka
sheering down into an attack run, over and over again. He’d been so
young when he first came here. He thought about that freezing day
in November when he’d taken the book from the lovely paramedic, and
the note had blown away into that dry, twisted, frozen garden, and
he’d gone blithely running after it. Now he’d never know what it
said. Had it contained all the riches, all the good feeling that he
was still somehow missing, even after so much goodness had been
heaped upon him? Was it the secret revelation of Martin Chatwin,
the boy who had escaped into Fillory and never returned to face the
misery of this world? Because he was drunk, he thought about his
mother, and how she’d held him once when he was little after he’d
lost an action figure down a storm drain, and he smooshed his red,
smarting face into his cool pillow and sobbed as if his heart were
broken.
By then there were only two weeks left until
graduation. Classwork ground to a halt. The Maze was a vivid
verdant glowing green knot, the air was full of floaty little
motes, and siren-like pleasure craft came drifting down the river
past the boathouse, laden with oblivious sunbathers. All anybody
talked about was how great it would be when they could party and
sleep in and experiment with forbidden spells. They kept looking at
each other and laughing and slapping each other on the back and
shaking their heads. The carousel was slowing down. The music had
almost stopped.
Pranks were organized. A decadent,
last-days-of-Pompeii vibe swept through the dorms. Somebody thought
up a new game involving dice and a lightly enchanted mirror that
was basically a magical version of strip poker. Desperate,
ill-advised attempts were made to sleep with that one person with
whom one had always secretly, hopelessly wanted to sleep.
The graduation ceremony started at six in the
afternoon, with the sky still heavy with fading golden light. An
eleven-course banquet was served in the dining hall. The nineteen
graduating Fifth Years regarded one another with awe, feeling lost
and alone at the long, empty dining table. Red wine was served from
bottles without labels; it was made, Fogg revealed, using grapes
from Brakebills’ own tiny pocket vineyard, which Quentin had
stumbled on in the fall of his First Year. Traditionally the
vineyard’s entire output was drunk by the seniors at graduation
dinner—had to be drunk, Fogg stressed, hinting darkly at what would
happen if a single bottle was left unconsumed. It was a cabernet
sauvignon, and it was thin and sour, but they quaffed it lustily
anyway. Quentin declaimed a lengthy tribute to its subtle
expression of the unique Brakebills terroir. Toasts were
drunk to the memory of Amanda Orloff, and the glasses hurled into
the fireplace to ensure that no lesser toast would ever be drunk
from them. When the wind blew, the candles flickered and dropped
molten beeswax onto the fresh white tablecloth.
Along with the cheese course they were each
presented with a silver bee pin, identical to the ones the prefects
wore—Quentin was at a loss to imagine any occasion on which it
would be even remotely appropriate to wear it—and a heavy black
two-toothed iron key that would permit them to return to Brakebills
if they ever needed to. School songs were sung, and Chambers served
Scotch, which Quentin had never had before. He tipped his little
tumbler of it from side to side, watching the light drift through
this mysterious amber fluid. It was amazing that anything in liquid
form could taste that much like both smoke and fire.
He leaned over to Georgia and started to explain
this fascinating conundrum to her, but as he did so Fogg stood up
at the head of the table, strangely grave, dismissed Chambers, and
asked the Fifth Years to follow him downstairs.
This was unexpected. Downstairs meant the cellar,
where Quentin had almost never been in his whole time at
Brakebills—just once or twice to sneak a particularly coveted
bottle from the wine cellar, or when he and Alice had been
desperate for privacy. But now Professor Fogg led them in a loose,
bantering, occasionally singing flock back through the kitchen,
through a small, unassuming door in the pantry, and down a flight
of worn and dusty wooden stairs that changed midflight into stone.
They emerged into a dark, earthy subbasement.
This wasn’t where Quentin had thought the party was
going. It wasn’t a party atmosphere at all. It was cool down here
and suddenly quiet. The floor was dirt, the ceilings were low, and
the walls were bumpy and unfinished. They devoured sound. Voice by
voice the chorus of a traditional Brakebills song—an elaborately
euphemistic number entitled “The Prefect Has a Defect”—died away.
There was a grave but not unpleasant smell of damp soil.
Fogg stopped at what looked like a manhole cover
embedded in the dirt floor. It was brass and densely inscribed with
calligraphic writing. Oddly, it looked as shiny and new as a
freshly struck coin. The Dean picked up a heavy manhole tool and,
with an effort, levered up the brass disk. It was two inches thick,
and it took three of the Fifth Years to roll it to one side.
“After you,” the Dean said, panting a little. He
gestured grandly at the inky black hole.
Quentin went first. He felt around blindly with his
Scotch-benumbed feet till he found an iron rung. It was like
lowering himself into warm black oil. The ladder took him and the
other graduates straight down into a circular chamber large enough
for all nineteen of them to stand upright in a circle, which they
did. Fogg came down last; they could hear him screwing the manhole
cover back into place behind them. Then he descended, too, and with
a crash he sent the ladder retracting back up, like a fire escape.
After that the silence was absolute.
“No point in losing our momentum,” Fogg said. He
lit a candle and gamely produced two fifths of bourbon from
somewhere and set them going in opposite directions around the
circle. Something about this gesture unnerved Quentin. There was a
certain amount of sanctioned alcohol consumption at Brakebills—a
fairly large amount, really—but this was a bit much. There was
something forced about it.
Well, it was graduation. They weren’t
students anymore. They were grown-ups. Just peers, sharing a drink.
In a secret underground dungeon, in the middle of the night.
Quentin took his swig and passed it on.
Dean Fogg lit more candles in assorted brass
candlesticks, making a circle within their larger circle. They
couldn’t have been more than fifty yards down, but it felt like
they were a solid mile beneath the earth, entombed alive, forgotten
by the rest of the world.
“In case you’re wondering why we’re down here,”
Fogg said, “it’s because I wanted to get us outside the Brakebills
Protective Cordon. That’s a defensive magical barrier that extends
out from the House in all directions. That inscribed brass hatch we
opened was a gateway through it.”
The darkness swallowed his words as soon as he
uttered them.
“It’s a little unsettling, yes? But it’s
appropriate, because unlike me you’ll be spending the rest of your
lives out here. Most years, the point of coming down here is to
scare you with ghost stories about the outside world. In your case
I don’t think that will be necessary. You’ve witnessed firsthand
the destructive power that some magical entities possess.
“It’s unlikely you’ll ever see anything as bad as
what happened on the day of the Beast. But remember that what
happened that day can happen again. Those of you who were in the
auditorium that day, especially, will carry the mark of it forever.
You will never forget the Beast, and you can be sure it won’t
forget you either.
“Forgive me if I lecture you, but it’s the last
chance I’m going to get.”
Quentin was sitting opposite Fogg in the
circle—they had all taken seats on the smooth stone floor—and his
mild, clean-shaven face floated in the darkness like an apparition.
Both bottles of whiskey reached Quentin simultaneously, and he
gamely took a sip from each, one in each hand, and passed them
on.
“Sometimes I wonder if man was really meant to
discover magic,” Fogg said expansively. “It doesn’t really make
sense. It’s a little too perfect, don’t you think? If there’s a
single lesson that life teaches us, it’s that wishing doesn’t make
it so. Words and thoughts don’t change anything. Language and
reality are kept strictly apart—reality is tough, unyielding stuff,
and it doesn’t care what you think or feel or say about it. Or it
shouldn’t. You deal with it, and you get on with your life.
“Little children don’t know that. Magical thinking:
that’s what Freud called it. Once we learn otherwise we cease to be
children. The separation of word and thing is the essential fact on
which our adult lives are founded.
“But somewhere in the heat of magic that boundary
between word and thing ruptures. It cracks, and the one flows back
into the other, and the two melt together and fuse. Language gets
tangled up with the world it describes.
“I sometimes feel as though we’ve stumbled on a
flaw in the system, don’t you? A short circuit? A category error? A
strange loop? Is it possible that magic is knowledge that would be
better off forsworn? Tell me this: Can a man who can cast a spell
ever really grow up?”
He paused. No one answered. What the hell would
they say? It was a little late to be scolding them now that they’d
already completed their magical education.
“I have a little theory that I’d like to air here,
if I may. What is it that you think makes you magicians?” More
silence. Fogg was well into rhetorical-question territory now
anyway. He spoke more softly. “Is it because you are intelligent?
Is it because you are brave and good? Is it because you’re
special?
“Maybe. Who knows. But I’ll tell you something: I
think you’re magicians because you’re unhappy. A magician is strong
because he feels pain. He feels the difference between what the
world is and what he would make of it. Or what did you think that
stuff in your chest was? A magician is strong because he hurts more
than others. His wound is his strength.
“Most people carry that pain around inside them
their whole lives, until they kill the pain by other means, or
until it kills them. But you, my friends, you found another way: a
way to use the pain. To burn it as fuel, for light and warmth. You
have learned to break the world that has tried to break you.”
Quentin’s attention wandered to the tiny glimmery
points of light here and there on the curved ceiling above them,
pricking out the shapes of constellations he didn’t recognize, as
if they were on another planet, seeing the stars from an alien
angle. Someone cleared his throat.
Fogg went on.
“But just in case that’s not enough, each one of
you will leave this room tonight with an insurance policy: a
pentagram tattooed on your back. Five-pointed star, nicely
decorative, plus it acts as a holding cell for a demon, a small but
rather vicious little fellow. Cacodemon, technically.
“They’re tough little scrappers, skin like iron. In
fact, I think they may be made of iron. I’ll give you each a
password that sets him free. Speak the password and he’ll pop out
and fight for you till he’s dead or till whoever’s giving you
trouble is.”
Fogg clapped his hands on his knees and looked at
them as if he’d just told them they’d all be receiving a year’s
supply of attractive and useful Brakebills stationery. Georgia put
up her hand tentatively.
“Is . . . is this optional? I mean, is anybody else
besides me disturbed by the idea of having an angry demon, you
know, trapped inside their skin?”
“If that bothers you, Georgia,” Fogg said curtly,
“then you should have gone to beauty school. Don’t worry, he’ll be
grateful as hell, so to speak, when you set him free. He’s only
good for one fight though, so pick your moment.
“That’s the other reason we’re down here, by the
way. Can’t conjure a cacodemon inside the Cordon.
“Why we need the bourbon, too, because this is
going to hurt like a bitch. Now, who’s first? Or shall we go
alphabetically?”
The next morning at ten there was a more
conventional graduation ceremony in the largest and grandest of the
lecture halls. It would be difficult to imagine a more miserable
and visibly hungover group of graduating seniors. It was one of the
rare occasions when parents were allowed on campus, so no displays
of magic, or mentions of same, were allowed. Almost as bad as the
hangover was the pain from the tattoo. Quentin’s back felt like it
was crawling with hungry biting insects that had stumbled on
something especially delicious. He was exquisitely conscious of his
mother and father sitting a dozen rows behind him.
Quentin’s memories of the night before were
confused. The Dean had summoned the demons himself, scribbling
concentric rings of sigils on the old stone floor with thick chunks
of white chalk. He worked quickly and surely, with both hands at
once. For the tattooing the guys took off their shirts and jackets
and lined up naked to the waist, as did the girls, with varying
degrees of modesty. Some of them clutched their crumpled clothes
over their chests. A few exhibitionists stripped down
proudly.
In the half darkness Quentin couldn’t see what Fogg
was using to draw on their skin, something slim and glinting. The
designs were intricate and had strange, shifting, optical
qualities. The pain was astonishing, like Fogg was flaying the skin
off their backs and dressing the wounds with salt. But the pain was
offset by the fear of what was coming, the moment when he implanted
the demon. When they were all ready, Fogg built a low dome of loose
glowing embers in the center of the sigil rings, and the room got
hot and humid. Blood and smoke and sweat were in the air, and an
orgiastic fever. When it was the first girl’s turn—going
alphabetically that was Alsop, Gretchen—Fogg donned an iron
gauntlet and rummaged around in the coals till he got a grip on
something.
The red glow lit up Fogg’s face from below, and
maybe it was just the distortions of memory and alcohol, but
Quentin thought he saw something there that he hadn’t seen since
his first day at Brakebills—something drunken and cruel and
unfatherly. When he had hold of what he was looking for he heaved,
and out of the embers it came: a demon, trailing sparks, heavy and
dog-size and pissed off. In the same motion he crammed it wriggling
into Gretchen’s slender back; he had to go back and stuff one
flailing, sticking-out limb back in. She gasped, her whole body
tensed, like she’d had freezing water dumped over her. And then she
just looked puzzled, twisting to look over her shoulder, forgetting
for a second and letting everyone see her slight, pale-nippled
breasts. Because as Quentin discovered when it was his turn, there
was no sensation at all.
It all felt like a dream now, though of course the
first thing Quentin did that morning was check out his back in the
mirror. There it was, a huge five-pointed star in thick black
outline, raw and red and slightly off center to the left; he
supposed it must be positioned more or less exactly with his heart
at its center. Segments of the star were dense with fine squiggly
black writing and smaller stars and crescent moons and other less
easily identifiable icons—he looked like he hadn’t been so much
tattooed as notarized, or stamped like a passport. Tired, achy, and
hungover as he was, he smiled at it in the mirror. The overall
effect was completely badass.
When it was all over, they shuffled out of the
auditorium into the old hallway. If they’d had caps, they might
have thrown them in the air, but they didn’t. There was a low hum
of conversation, a couple of whoops, but that was really it; it was
over, there was nothing else. If they hadn’t been graduated last
night, they sure were now. They could go anywhere, do anything they
wanted. This was it: the big send-off.
Alice and Quentin drifted out a side door and
wandered over to a huge spreading oak, swinging their held hands
between them. There was no wind. The sunlight was too bright.
Quentin’s head throbbed. His parents were in the vicinity, and he’d
have to go look for them in a second. Or maybe they could come
looking for him for once in their lives. There would be parties
tonight, he supposed, but he was already pretty much partied out.
He didn’t feel like packing up his things, didn’t feel like going
back to Chesterton, or Brooklyn, or anywhere else for that matter.
He didn’t feel like staying, and he didn’t feel like going. He
stole a glance at Alice. She looked peaked. He performed a mental
search for the love he was accustomed to feel for her and found it
strangely absent. If there was anything he wanted at that moment it
was to be alone. But he wasn’t going to get that.
These were bad thoughts, but he couldn’t or
wouldn’t stop the flow, stanch the cerebral hemorrhage. Here he
was, a freshly licensed and bonded and accredited magician. He had
learned to cast spells, seen the Beast and lived, flown to
Antarctica on his own two wings, and returned naked by the sheer
force of his magical will. He had an iron demon in his back. Who
would ever have thought he could do and have and be all those
things and still feel nothing at all? What was he missing? Or was
it him? If he wasn’t happy even here, even now, did the flaw lie in
him? As soon as he seized happiness it dispersed and reappeared
somewhere else. Like Fillory, like everything good, it never
lasted. What a terrible thing to know.
I got my heart’s desire, he thought, and there my
troubles began.
“We have our whole lives ahead of us and all I want
to do is take a nap,” Alice said.
There was a soft sound behind them. A soap bubble
popping, an intake of breath, a wing beat.
Quentin turned around, and they were all there.
Josh with a fringe of blond beard that made him look more than ever
like a genial smiling abbot. Janet had gotten her nose pierced, and
probably other parts of her. Eliot wore sunglasses, which he had
never done at Brakebills, and a shirt of amazing, indescribable
perfection. There was somebody else with them, too, a stranger: a
serious, slightly older man, tall and darkly, bookishly
handsome.
“Get your stuff together,” Josh said. He grinned
even more widely and spread out his arms like a prophet. “We’re
going to take you away from all this.”