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Invasion | Box Set | Books 1-7

Page 177

by Platt, Sean


  A tall man, in his thirties, entered the chamber. Sadeem smiled, then nodded toward the attendant near the chamber’s entrance. He drew a curtain, and Sadeem saw his silhouette move before it.

  “Did you have trouble finding us?” Sadeem asked.

  Logan shook his head of long sandy blond hair.

  “Not at all.”

  “Did you see the path?”

  “Do you mean literally?”

  Sadeem cocked his head. It was a tiny test, just to see.

  “There’s no path in the sand. But I could see one with my eyes half-closed. To me it looked like an orange line that branched but always came back together. One line in the many was clearly brightest, and easy to follow.”

  Sadeem nodded. “The bright path is Clara’s. As I understand it.”

  “You still can’t see into it. Into the network.”

  “I’ve never been able to.”

  “I thought maybe now …” Logan looked down at Clara, uncomfortable as if they were deliberately excluding her inert presence. “Now that you’ve broken in …”

  “When a dam breaks,” Sadeem said, “some water always flows both ways.”

  Logan shrugged.

  Sadeem’s stoic face broke, and he almost laughed, despite it all.

  “I’m sorry. I’m supposed to be a sage. I’m the elder here. If I don’t speak in koans half the time, I risk my position.”

  “Would they really—?”

  “It’s was joke, Logan. Do you remember jokes? Has that particular human tradition been lost as well?”

  Logan extended a hand, as if pointing at Sadeem.

  “Hey, Sage,” Logan said. “Pull my finger.”

  “And the jokes have stayed so highbrow. It does my old heart good to see it.” He shifted, better settling Clara’s head. “No, they wouldn’t kick me out. Among the Mullah, I’m the only one who knows what happened before the Forgetting.”

  “What about Peers?” Logan ticked his head toward the portal.

  “Peers is a curious one. Clara says he’s forgotten, and that what he knows today is the same as any of the others: things I’ve taught them, and that they believe. She says that Peers doesn’t remember as we do. But she also says that it’s like he almost knows. When she tunes into his consciousness within the larger network, she sees a nugget buried deep inside his mind — a secret he’s keeping from everyone, yet has probably forgotten he’s keeping.”

  “Could it be something dangerous?”

  “I don’t know.” Sadeem shrugged. “Why don’t you ask her?”

  Logan looked down then up at Sadeem, knowledge dawning.

  “Is that why I’m here, Sage? To try and talk to her?”

  “Allah knows I can’t.” Sadeem ran a hand over her hair, softly, slowly. “But she’s still here, Logan. I’m not like you. I can’t see the minds. I have to trust Clara when she talks about things taking shape beneath the surface.”

  “Then how are you able to work with her to …?” He stopped, unsure what it was that Clara and the Mullah had been doing — on and on and on, since the Astrals had left the second time.

  “Most of it is on faith,” Sadeem answered. “Clara tells me that the network is still alive, even through the Forgetting. She talks as though it’s a puzzle where pieces fit far too well for coincidence. You and the other Lightborn saw how you could turn on the minds of the other, non-Lightborn children, and Clara tells me that even today, now that those children are grown, their altered minds still fit the grid in ways they shouldn’t. And there’s more: linchpin mental abilities that optimize the network. Giving it more branches, like a shot of vitamins for the collective. But you know much of this. What matters more is that I need you now, Logan. And so does she.”

  Logan looked down at Clara. Conflict crossed his face.

  “You always had a connection,” Sadeem said.

  Logan shook his head. “That was a long time ago.”

  “And, what? You’ve shut off your memory? Doesn’t it persist for you and the others?”

  “You know it does,” Logan said, sounding slightly irritated.

  “And?”

  “And what, Sage?” he said, his patience breaking. “You have your memory, but you ran off to live in a cave with a cult of followers. You didn’t stay in the village like we did. Do you think anyone believes we are simply eccentric? The new religions are as bad as some of the old ones. They tolerate us because we teach them how to smith metal and harvest oil for light and how to build their homes so they won’t topple. But they don’t accept us. It’s only a matter of time before someone decides we’re witches or something and begins to capture and burn us. I guess the joke’s on them, though, huh? Because we can see intentions coming. We’ll be able to hit the desert and wander.”

  “I wouldn’t have called for you if it wasn’t dire,” Sadeem said.

  “You know we decided this was the best way. We wanted to fit, in and Clara wanted to stand out. She made her choice. She’s on her own.”

  “Logan,” said Sadeem. “Look at her.”

  He watched Sadeem with hard, defiant eyes. But when the Sage didn’t break his gaze, Logan looked down.

  “This isn’t fair,” he said.

  “She needs you. I can’t reach her.”

  “Then call Stranger. Stranger knows the mindscape. Carl Nairobi spoke to me earlier. About dreams. I sent him to Stranger’s Church”

  Sadeem shook his head. “Stranger was once a maestro, but today he is nearly human.”

  “He hasn’t aged.”

  “That doesn’t mean he can touch her mind anymore. Or any of your minds. It must be you.”

  “Why me?”

  “Because when I called, you came.”

  Logan exhaled. Shook his head. But this was just blustering; Sadeem knew he’d do the right thing. He’d already committed himself and declared his intentions. The crossing wasn’t easy, and even the Mullah courier Sadeem had sent running to Stranger’s church sometimes got lost. Stranger might come and he might not, but he’d already done the important thing and sent word to Logan, corroborating the change he himself surely felt in the air. Clara had managed something, and someone had hit her back hard. They’d been through the end. Now they’d reached the end of the beginning.

  Logan had come when Clara needed him. He wouldn’t turn back now.

  “I can’t.”

  “Logan.”

  “She hates me. She’ll push me out.”

  “Being pushed out is better than what I’m able to do. Look around before it happens. Find out if you can see the grid as she does. Clara’s talked for years about pieces shuffling themselves. They came back once because they felt an itch. Two decades in this cave, I’ve spent trusting the idea that she could make them itch again.”

  “Stupid,” Logan said, looking down at Clara’s peaceful face. “I warned you. I told you something like this might happen.”

  “Maybe. But you know Clara.”

  Logan did. Uniquely.

  Sadeem said, “You loved her once.”

  “That was a long time ago.”

  “I just need you to try. Look into her mind. I believe she succeeded, and broke their wall. I think they hit her back. But it will only work if they can keep her down. You can pull her out.”

  “Why do you think that?”

  “Because I can feel something changing, and see something shifting in the other Mullah — those who know the past because I taught it to them, but whose eyes are already lighting with new reasons to know it.”

  Logan shook his head. His face softened. Sadeem was about to hear the real reason for Logan’s opposition — the truth behind why Clara and the Lightborn had parted ways.

  It wasn’t because Logan felt Clara’s attempt to breach the Astral wall was futile. It was because he believed she could do it, and feared the consequences.

  “They’ve finally left us alone,” Logan said, looking skyward, toward the cave ceiling. “They killed everyone we knew and de
stroyed all that we built, but then they went away so we could at least try to start again.”

  Sadeem shook his head slowly.

  “They never left. They’re still out there, and have been since we came to this place. They can’t leave. Not as long as the Lightborn keep their fingers under the lid to keep the box from closing. It’s not just Clara. It’s all of you.”

  “But the rest of us aren’t trying to meddle. We’re willing to let it all go, and forget in time.”

  Sadeem looked down at Clara, then back at Logan.

  “Are you sure?” he said.

  Chapter Four

  Carl sat in Stranger’s vacated room as attendants ran back and forth outside, staring down at the polished silver sphere in his hand.

  And he thought, Carl Nairobi.

  It wasn’t his name. He was a blacksmith and a silversmith, same as his father. Apparently.

  Although for the first time, as Carl looked down at his distorted reflection in the object Stranger had given him before rushing out to leave him alone, Carl thought how odd it was that he knew how to fire a furnace, forge metal, and wield a hammer.

  And he thought of what Stranger had said, too: that Carl wasn’t strong because he was a smith, but that he was a smith because he was strong. The way Stranger spoke, there was an order to things that escaped Carl. Everyone was where they were because they’d fit their positions rather than being raised in stations and learning to fit them over time.

  That wasn’t how he remembered things.

  In fact, Carl didn’t remember things any particular way at all now that he thought about it.

  His father, who’d taught him the craft and had the last name Smith first? Carl thought he remembered all of that, but after peering deeper inside realized he didn’t.

  And his childhood? Carl didn’t remember that, either.

  He remembered his dream much more vividly.

  Himself, inside the monolith as it crossed vast oceans of open water.

  And peril. Some unknown, unarticulated horror that crept down Carl’s backbone the longer he dwelled upon it.

  Carl Nairobi.

  Had that truly once been his name? Stranger seemed to have been harboring secrets, but Carl found himself recognizing their truth rather than believing it. Same as Carl had known truths when …

  When …

  “Liza Knight,” Carl said aloud.

  There was no more to the thought. But it mattered because his mind was on a different Liza Knight than the old woman who ran the rectory. He couldn’t quite catch the other memory, but he could almost see it, dancing at the edges of his vision: an impression of another Liza Knight in a different place. Someone he’d once almost feared. Or someone that others had. Not the same Liza. The one in his head was many seasons younger.

  When do you believe we met?

  Twenty years ago, Carl. Twenty summers and winters.

  Carl stood. He set the small ball on Stranger’s vacated table. He didn’t need it. He was sure he had one of his own, somewhere at home. Wherever he needed to go, it would take him. Its witchcraft didn’t frighten Carl. He was increasingly sure, now, that he’d followed it once before.

  The person whose spot you’ll be given the chance to take is the man who murdered your sister. And because I need you to refuse.

  Carl didn’t know what it meant, but now he couldn’t stop hearing the voice in his head. It belonged to Stranger. It sounded weathered by time, antiquated, made fuzzy. But it was there, and true — as if the odd holy man had been right, that they’d met once before.

  He remembered another house. Different. A coldbox that didn’t need to be buried in the cool dirt, for meat that didn’t need to be treated with salt. The room from some forgotten past, as Carl’s mind opened to see it more and more, was like a thing born of magic. Lights that didn’t use flame. Every surface smooth, as if sculpted and sanded for hours.

  And in that room, long ago, Stranger had told him not to do something that he’d otherwise have very much wanted — perhaps needed — to do.

  I need you to refuse.

  A mental light went on without needing a flame.

  Carl stood.

  He left the small building and began to walk.

  Chapter Five

  Carl was halfway to his destination, with no clue precisely where he was going, when he stopped to rest in the shade of an outcropping. The sun was still low in the sky, but the heat had already started.

  You’re almost there, he thought.

  Almost where?

  But there was no answer, just as silence met the dozen new questions entering Carl’s mind by the minute. He didn’t know why he remembered Liza Knight poorly, when she’d always struck him as cordial. He didn’t know why Stranger seemed increasingly familiar, despite his certainty, just an hour ago, that he’d never met the man before. He didn’t know why he was sure, when he’d met Stranger during that encounter he didn’t remember, that the man had looked exactly as he did now. And he had no clue why he kept dreaming what he did, other than the simple explanation that the dreams weren’t truly dreams.

  He knew the way because he’d been here before.

  Not just one time to look from a distance in fright but several times.

  Once when the sea had been closer, though these days it was hours away. The first time he’d walked from the wreck with a small group of people he barely knew, all of them survivors of something.

  All of them in some sort of fugue state, practically sleepwalking.

  In that state, Carl was growing sure he’d come here again and again.

  He walked. Across the big dunes then down along a shallow valley where they’d all met. When he’d first encountered …

  Who?

  Carl didn’t know. But the sun was hot, and he had no water, and now so far from the village, the idea of dehydration was starting to bother him. He should go back, maybe, and grab a canteen or sack. But as Carl looked out across the parched desert back toward the village, he knew he wouldn’t. Because if he went back to The Clearing for water, he’d never set out again. He’d lose his nerve, might even lose this new rush of memories, arriving like fragments from an obliterated past.

  Vast cities made of metal and glass. Towers that kissed the sky.

  Magic everywhere, for everyone — a magic that, in vague recollection, struck Carl as having been so common that everyone took it for granted. You could see things that your eyes couldn’t know by themselves. Speak to people who were untold hours distant, across many horizons.

  And people. So many people he’d once known in that place, if it was real, but hadn’t thought of in years.

  No. He wouldn’t go back. He’d move farther into the desert and take his chances. If he got a bit thirsty, that’s how it’d have to be. The thought invited panic, but Carl stood anyway, feeling the sun scorch his exposed skull and arms, and headed where he’d been bound since leaving Stranger’s, with no supplies or guidance beyond instinct. Or buried habit.

  And besides, there must be water there.

  Which was a lie because Carl was headed into the lowlands. The shallow cup in the desert’s floor cut the scant wind and made whatever sat there bake come midday. Just one of many things Carl shouldn’t know, considering that the top of his mind insisted he’d only come here once before.

  Over the next rise, looking down, he saw it.

  The monolith was intact. Entirely whole. Its metal skin was thick and had only begun to brown in the air. As he approached it, Carl noted its smooth sides, the elevated flat areas surrounded by what appeared to be railings. The thing was enormous. There was a part at the top that reflected the sun — pure transparent squares a lot like the glass the strange lot on the village’s perimeter taught others to make. Carl squinted, raised one big arm to shield the glare. But around his own dark skin he could see its gray bulk. The way it was narrower than it was long, if the glass-filled area marked its front.

  Of course it’s the front. There’s the hatch
where you entered. Inside is a gangplank you yourself once raised, when the big waves came.

  Waves?

  Carl looked around as if another person had spoken. There were no waves here. There couldn’t be. And yet it all rang true to Carl.

  The tossing of water, threatening to tip them over.

  The clanging and banging from the thing’s rear as the big metal boxes shifted and broke free, entire blocks of cargo finding the ocean floor.

  Cargo?

  But this time, Carl squashed the mental question. The more time passed, the less foreign this seemed. He reached the monolith and extended an arm to touch it. It was hot from the sun, but moving down to a shaded section gave him the feel of cool metal, far smoother than any blacksmith could ever pound it. Far thicker metal than any forge could ever birth.

  Of course, cargo. This thing is a vehicle, not unlike a cart with wooden wheels. It’s just a very large vehicle, meant for …

  That, he wasn’t quite sure of. Yet.

  On the big thing’s shaded side, he found metal rods secured to its side like the rungs of a ladder. Without stopping to wonder if he should, Carl started to climb. As he did, more familiarity intruded. He’d been on this ladder before. Although unless his almost-memory was failing him, he’d gone down, not up. He’d boarded this

  (ship)

  this ship once before, using a bridge that lowered from the side. And he’d disembarked only once, using the ladder. He’d never returned. By the time they’d all joined the others, everyone was forgetting.

  But now it was coming back in chunks.

  This is where the woman, who’d come out in horror to watch the waves, went overboard.

  This is the way to the bridge, where I slept by the wheel, obeying Stranger’s small metal ball.

  Carl put his hand on a latch, knowing exactly how to work it.

  And this is the bridge. This is where I stayed while the others remained below.

  There was a small box beneath a set of what looked like books — but not the handwritten kind; these were glossy and printed by machines. Carl reached for the handle and pulled it, knowing the box would open like a door. The thing was smooth and made of a material Carl had never seen before

 

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