So Below: The Trilogy

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So Below: The Trilogy Page 11

by Matt Whyman


  For a kid like Yoshi, it didn’t just place him in danger, but could threaten all London as well. Having seen the child’s potential, and with his memory of the mute boy’s powers fresh in his mind once more, Julius considers his crew and wonders if any more gifted individuals exist within this city.

  The old man twiddles his fingers as he thinks. He goes through the times he has tried and failed to tap into the energy whizzing around the Faerie Ring. Yoshi may not have restored the power with one touch. Then again, the poor lad appeared to have lost all memory of his gift. Maybe it would come to him in time, decides Julius, and remembers briefly that he has returned to the Bridge in order to retrieve him. Having lost one poor soul with the same extraordinary gift, all those years ago, he is not going to fail Yoshi in the same way.

  “May I please have your attention,” he asks, with a hint of exasperation, only to fall as quiet as his crew. For a thought catches up with him that brightens his eyes. His restless fingers fall still, struck now by a solution to the conundrum that has consumed so many of his years. Then he begins to count, his digits uncurling one at a time: a full hand on his left side, one finger and thumb on the other.

  “Seven!” he declares under his breath, thinking of the times this sacred number has featured as part of the puzzle. “To master the ring, there have to be seven individuals who share the same gift as Yoshi.”

  Looking at it like this made the solution seem so simple. Firstly there had been the plate on his dog tag with the numerical sequence stamped onto it. Then there was the Seven Dials, the name of the monument where Julius had introduced Yoshi to the mystery at the heart of his life’s work. This self-styled archeoastronomer and psychogeographer had shown him some breathtaking patterns that appeared to bind this city to some kind of cosmic order: the seven stars in the sky, the seven steeples aligned to them, and finally one of seven waypoints underneath each church, connecting seven ley lines in the Faerie Ring. Altogether, this amounted to just six elements. The seventh element was the seven gifted souls. So in accordance with the pattern, Yoshi alone was not enough. He might be tuned into the energies encircling the city, but recharging them demanded seven pairs of hands – not one. With all of them trained to connect with a waypoint properly – why, the energy they might conjure between them could protect the city for centuries! Alternatively, they could open up London to the very worst of all possible futures. That, he thinks to himself, depends on who brings them together.

  “Oh dear,” whispers Julius, and carries his gaze from floor to screen.

  This time, he sees the figure up there in a very different light. The trail behind him is of no interest. He knew what was causing it straight away. After all, cameras often captured auras in people who possessed psychic abilities. The nature of the haze depended on the level of their gift, of course. In very rare cases, such a mist of psychic energy is forceful enough to be seen with the naked eye, but Julius has never encountered an individual in possession of such powers. Even if the crew believed him, now is not the time for a lesson in earth magick. This brute is clearly in pursuit of a similar goal, thinks Julius. As soon as Yoshi had identified him from the sketches drawn by the mute boy, he suspected they shared an interest in mining the same hidden seams of superhuman ability. Judging by the way the man had menaced both kids, however, it was likely their intentions for the ring couldn’t be more different. What alarms the old man is the fact that Yoshi is no longer under his wing. This figure captured by the street cameras had clearly returned to Chinatown to track him down. Heaven help us all, he thinks to himself, considering the worst that could happen should the brute catch up with his quarry.

  Mindful of the challenge they face in clawing the boy back to their fold, Julius brings his hands together with a commanding clap.

  “This man is no ghost!” he announces, and is delighted to see everyone turn as if he’s only just swept in. “But his existence could haunt us for a long time unless we act now. Yoshi is at large somewhere. But your so-called spectre is not out to haunt him. Oh, no. He’s out to hunt him. If we fail to get to Yoshi first this bunker could be history for a second time – in a city quite literally on the rocks.”

  “So what can we do?” asks Mikhail.

  “Start by forgetting about the trail he’s left behind for the camera.” Julius strides onto the Bridge with a purpose now, parting the crew as he speaks. “There is a simple explanation, but none of you will accept it until you learn to be more like your audience, and suspend your disbelief. Right now, what matters doesn’t lie behind this fur-lined hulk. Forget about this blur, or whatever you want to call it. For Yoshi’s sake, we need to discover where he was heading!” The last of the crew move to one side as he briefs them, revealing Billy at the controls. “Can you do that?” asks Julius, resting his hands on the back of the boy’s chair.

  The Executive Deck Hand sucks the air between his teeth. “Can I do that?” He cracks his knuckles noisily. It’s a show of confidence that had been badly lacking just a moment earlier. “I could’ve tracked Yoshi down hours ago if this sorry bunch hadn’t spooked themselves so badly. Honestly, you should have heard some of the suggestions. It was embarrassing!”

  “I did,” Julius leans over Billy to find one crimson ear, “and it was.”

  18

  SECOND NATURE

  Out in the open at last, the first thing Yoshi notices are the cameras. He climbs from the open grate, brushes himself down, and is struck by how many he can see. There are traffic cameras on every junction and street corner, and surveillance cameras mounted over office doors and gates, just like those closing behind him.

  Yoshi had caught just a glimpse of the white limousine as it swept past. Unlike the boy, the vehicle had been spotless and gleaming. He might not remember much about this city, but this makes him think it was kind of carved up and divided. There were those at the top, with the finest views and luxuries. Then there were those below. Some stretching so far down it was doubtful that the rich and powerful even knew of their existence.

  “OK,” he says to himself, feeling the cold out here. “Let’s go to work.”

  A girl contained in a building. A prison, perhaps, in the shadow of a dome. With this information in mind, Yoshi steps away from the gate, circling to find his bearings. Businessmen with brollies and briefcases steer around him, barely noticing this kid with the grimy face and clothes. Even the evening traffic is light enough for him to drift across the road with his eyes on the skyline.

  But the dome is nowhere in sight. From ground level, all Yoshi can see are the imposing stone buildings that flank the street, and the early stars twinkling in the strip of sky above. There’s nothing of note here but gated courtyards, stone pillars and steps leading up to dour-looking doors. If these are banks and money markets, the boy thinks to himself, they don’t seem very welcoming. Then again, he decides, maybe that’s the idea. Yoshi hugs himself to keep warm, wishing the world would turn white for a moment, and a vision appear to guide him. There are more pedestrians on this side of the street, heading for a tube station at the far end. A small part of him feels like joining them, heading for the warmth and certainty on offer underground, but this girl and her plight continue to haunt him. He steps back, away from the path of people, and leans against the lower rungs of a fire escape.

  “Where now?” he says to himself, thinking what he really needs is an earpiece and a direct line to the Bridge. At least then he could receive directions. He looks up at a nearby traffic camera, and then lets his shoulders sag. With a thousand and one views of this city, there’s no chance the crew would be observing this very street right now. What is there to draw them to this one, after all?

  Just then, a woman wrapped up for winter walks by. She’s led by three toy poodles on leashes. One of the dogs seems interested in the boy, causing the woman to halt. It sniffs at Yoshi’s feet, growls when the boy dips down to pet it, and then cocks one leg just to finish the insult.

  “Hey!” cries Yoshi, j
umping away just in time. The woman scowls at him, as if the dog has every right to use a street kid like him as a pee-post, and then tugs the poodles onwards with her nose high in the air. Yoshi watches her go. He rests his hand on a rung, shaking his head at such snobbery and rudeness. At the far end of the street, the entrance to the underground station looks more inviting than ever.

  What comes to mind next doesn’t feature a bright flash or a vision, but prompts him to grip the ladder’s cold rung tightly.

  On the street, thinks Yoshi, things just can’t get much worse. Which means the only way from here, of course, is up!

  The fire escape covers four storeys. At the very top, Yoshi crawls over the parapet, and rolls onto his back for a moment. On scaling past the first window, he had felt a shiver drop down his spine. It was one that had suggested it may not be a good idea for him to look down. By the third window, that shiver had spread and turned to outright terror. His fear of falling had been bad enough in the abyss below ground. Out here, he could actually see how far he had to drop. And yet, despite it all, Yoshi claws his way to the top. The sense of peril that might paralyse some was not going to hold him back here. If anything, it leaves him feeling quite alive. At the summit, facing up to the evening sky, Yoshi realises his heart is hammering from the thrill of it all as much as the fear. Gazing at the wheel of stars, it feels almost second nature to be this far from the ground.

  Sitting up on his elbows now, Yoshi takes stock of his new, elevated position. What he sees lights up his face in more ways than one. There it is, beyond the air-conditioning units, weather vanes and water tanks – the one thing he’s been hoping to see. With the last of the sunshine setting in the background, the dome of St Paul’s has an aura all of its own. The boy stares at it long enough for this crescent of light to turn from honey to bronze. It’s such a magnificent view that he has to remind himself why he’s here. Standing now, he regards his new surroundings, and everything seems so much clearer.

  “There it is,” he says out loud. His eyes narrow, fixed as they are on a building tucked away behind this imposing terrace. It’s the one he hopes and prays contains the girl he had seen in his mind’s eye. The location certainly fits in with the one he had viewed remotely. As does the lush greenery spilling over the upper tiles, for he had certainly passed through such a layer on his imaginary rise and fall through the building. “The roof garden!”

  It looks like a little square of rainforest, such is the effect of the bamboo, fern and pampas grass that have been cultivated over there. This time, Yoshi’s heart starts pumping at the prospect of getting inside. Whatever is going on within those walls, he has to see it with his own eyes. The eye in his mind might have led him to this point, but it hadn’t flashed open on the climb. If anything, it leaves the boy feeling like he’s on his own from here. He knows where he’s supposed to go. The problem is reaching it. Yoshi takes himself to the far side of the roof, and studies the gap between the parapet and the building in question. You could fit a bus in there, he thinks. Lengthways.

  “I can’t jump that far,” he mutters. “Can I?”

  From this vantage, it’s clear that such a gap surrounds the entire building. The space below looks immaculately landscaped, with paths and benches, and a snaking water feature with orange segments floating in it that the boy decides must be koi carp. Whoever works here, he thinks, clearly has plenty of perks. It certainly looks like a great deal has been invested in the place. The stonework has been recently cleaned, and the balconies finished with a fresh lick of black, gloss paint. Only one thing stops the boy from heading back down to the street and finding his way in on foot, and that’s the guards. He can see half a dozen at least, prowling the paths, smoking cigarettes in doorways, and several keeping watch at the courtyard entrance. Are these goons here to prevent intruders getting in, thinks Yoshi, crouching now at the edge, or to prevent people from leaving?

  Either way, he decides, there’s only one way to find out. Yoshi sizes up the distance one more time, only to sigh with frustration. It’s no good. Just thinking about attempting such a leap leaves him giddy. He moves away from the edge, turns and sits with his head in his hands.

  “What can I do?” he says out loud. “I’m not brave enough.”

  “You can do it, Yoshi.” The voice floats out of nowhere. He looks up with a start, but there’s nobody there. Just a few pigeons squabbling for space on a television aerial. “I knew you’d come again.”

  The girl. It had to be. The weird one with the fringe and the scowl, not to mention that freaky glow like the sun was permanently behind her.

  “Where are you?” he says, up on his feet now. “Can you see me?”

  “No,” the voice replies, upon which that familiar flare sears into his vision . . . and there she is once more. Looking to the upper corners of the room she’s in, with a faint but certain smile. “I can’t see you, Yoshi. But I sense that you can see me.”

  Still standing close to the edge, but blind to his surroundings, the boy grins to himself. “I’m close,” he says, viewing her clearly in his mind again, “but not close enough.”

  He sees her tip her head to one side. The glow around her brightens once more. “I wish you were here,” she says. “All I can do is sense your presence, but something tells me there’s a problem. You’re close, I can feel it, and yet you might as well be a million miles away. That’s what I’m picking up from you.”

  “I’m on the roof of the building,” says Yoshi, aware now that she can’t hear him, but speaking his mind in the hope that it helps. “The gap is too far for me to jump. What do you suggest?”

  She doesn’t respond. Just keeps on switching her gaze between imaginary points in the room. Yoshi shifts his weight from one leg to the other, waiting for her to direct him. He sees her stand now, as if in greeting, and that’s when the vision turns white once more.

  “Nothing can hold you back, Yoshi. The way you escaped pretty much defied the laws of gravity. Wherever you are, I have every faith that you can make it back again.”

  The flash fades with her voice. Yoshi blinks, his eyes smarting. When his focus returns, he finds himself looking down at his feet. It takes a moment for him to realise that he’s perched on the lip of the building by his heels, and steps back with his heart in his mouth.

  “Ohmygoodness!” he cries, windmilling his arms for balance. Despite the shock, he doesn’t back off any further. The drop might be deadly, but something tells him he’s been here before. That prickling sensation is back again, along with a giddy kind of thrill. Altogether, it makes him feel, well . . . complete. It’s as if this kind of acrobatic stunt is something he’s pulled off in the past. He levels his gaze across the divide, thinking back to what the girl had said about the nature of his escape. Yoshi may not recall what he was doing in this building, but to seemingly defy gravity meant only one thing – he must have fled via the rooftops. And if he’d made it to the aerial garden over there, somehow he would’ve had to cross this same divide.

  Acting on impulse now, Yoshi steps forward. As the path and the pond appear below, he feels like he’s about to go into a somersault, especially when the ball of one foot finds nothing underneath. Carefully, he returns one heel to the edge of the parapet, followed by the other. There, he takes a deep breath and stands to attention, seeking to find both calm and balance.

  Across from this lone figure on the skyline, beyond the drop before him and the roof garden opposite, a faint glimmer of light remains over the dome of St Paul’s Cathedral. Without it, this central London landmark, designed by the great architect Sir Christopher Wren, would be shrouded in darkness. Elsewhere around the city, sensing darkness approach, floodlights fire up to illuminate a jagged ring of churches constructed by Sir Christopher’s apprentice – a mysterious young visionary by the name of Nicholas Hawksmoor.

  Feeling strangely calm, Yoshi steps away from the ledge. He turns, takes ten paces across the roof, then comes around to face the dome again. And there, w
ith the cycle from day to night complete, he prepares to test his strange angel’s belief in him. With his sights locked on the far ledge, softened with ivy and palm fronds, the boy sprints for the abyss.

  19

  WITHOUT WINGS

  With every footfall, Yoshi feels closer to his former life. His calf muscles work like pistons, and a sense of determination and poise flow through him. It’s a charge that keeps him focused, stops him from pulling up. I have done this before, he tells himself. This is not going to be a big mistake . . .

  The edge of the building rushes up so quickly that it feels like the roof is being whipped away from under his feet. He lengthens his final stride, keeps his head high and springs from the parapet with all his might.

  Should a guard in the gardens below chance to look up at this moment, they’d see stars filling the void between the two buildings. If this was enough to capture their imagination, they’d be rewarded by another breathtaking sight – a boy without wings in flight. At first his arms and legs are behind him, but midway through this brave leap he swings them forward. From ground level, had any of them actually noticed, such a stunt might seem perfectly executed. For the boy disappears from sight just as abruptly as he had appeared.

  Yoshi doesn’t arrive in this rooftop rainforest with the same grace and ambition that accompanied his launch. In fact, he crashes into the undergrowth as if a slingshot has hurled him there. All the foliage serves to soften his landing, however, as well as swallow him completely. When he surfaces, spitting out soil and picking twigs from his hair, it takes a second for him to realise just what he’s achieved.

 

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