Of Books, and Earth, and Courtship

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Of Books, and Earth, and Courtship Page 3

by Aliette de Bodard


  "My name is Emmanuelle. My lord."

  She punctuated the end of the sentence with a confidence she didn't feel. What was she thinking–she'd hid in the archives all those years, away from his gaze, away from his attention–what was she thinking, standing there and contradicting every sentence he spoke–how dared she, the least among those of House Silverspires–how dared she....

  "Is it." Morningstar's smile was no longer mocking, simply that of a parent indulging a child. "A word of warning, then, before we leave. Magic... is a single-minded pursuit. Something to which you have to give everything. Else how will you protect the House?" He was addressing... her, Selene? It wasn't clear; but his meaning was appallingly transparent.

  "I'm the archivist," Emmanuelle said, simply. "My magic doesn't protect the House. My books do. My knowledge does."

  Morningstar's eyes were blue, the colour of the deepest reaches of the sky: a maelstrom that held her, dared her to speak. "Perhaps," he said. "But that's not the case for Selene."

  Selene–Selene hadn't moved–she was at attention, her whole body rigid, her face cast in a mould of arrogance that–Emmanuelle could now see–she had taken straight from her master.

  Emmanuelle had been wrong. Of course there was no future for them; for anything they might do. Of course... "What happened in Harrier... I would have taken a chance of going further," she said, to Selene. "But I see that you have... other pursuits. " Surely she was going to speak. Surely she was going to say something, anything to protest against that. But there was only Morningstar's awful presence, that desire to abase herself, to agree with him; to do anything that would gain his approval–and in Selene's gaze was nothing but cool, calculated arrogance. Fear. She was afraid of him.

  Of course. Who wouldn't be afraid of Morningstar–who wouldn't desire to be his favoured student, rather than his enemy–to learn magic and its secrets, to be taken and remade until nothing else but the hunger for power remained?

  "Your books await, archivist," Morningstar said.

  Selene. Selene. Please say something, anything. But Selene was silent.

  "Then I will leave you both to your magic, so that we may be kept safe," she said, stiffly. "My lord."

  She turned to leave; walked past Selene, willing herself not to look back–they were suited to one another, those two–games and games and merciless discipline, and anything else dismissed as weaknesses.

  But a hand slipped in hers, and held her firm.

  "Wait," Selene said. Her face was still cold, remote, but her eyes shone with a feverish intensity Emmanuelle knew all too well. She... she couldn't.

  "Selene–" Her voice trailed off, running against the weight of magic in the air.

  Morningstar's expression didn't change; didn't even crack. "You would defy me? You think you know better than I?"

  Selene stood with Emmanuelle's hand in hers, and said nothing. The moment stretched; time hung still, as if encased in diamond.

  "I can... always find another student. A more pliant one."

  "But not a more talented one," Selene said, softly. "Do you truly think puppets are what the House needs, for its future?" She held Morningstar's gaze, and magic roiled in the air between them–power against power, until every single colour seemed sharper, from Morningstar's brocade shirt to the grey colour of the river beneath them–until a vague tang like the smoke of a distant fire filled the air, and Emmanuelle's hands stiffened against the rising pressure.

  At length, Morningstar shrugged. The wings at his back moved as he did so, a soft, silken sound like blades being drawn. "Backbone," he said, almost wonderingly. "You're growing up, children." A silence, that stretched uncomfortably. Selene's hand hadn't moved, was the only thing Emmanuelle could cling to, the only thing that felt real.

  "We..." She swallowed, convulsively. "We're no longer children. My lord."

  He laughed, then; a sound that seemed to shake the foundations of the bridge. "Are you," he said. Then he bowed, a fraction. "I will see you in the teaching rooms this afternoon," he said to Selene. And, as he left, to Emmanuelle: "And you in the library, Emmanuelle."

  As he moved away, the sense of his presence receded; and Emmanuelle's much-solicited legs gave out under her. "Selene–"

  Selene moved, to catch her weight in both arms, effortlessly–no, not effortlessly, her hands were shaking, and her face was nothing more than a mask stretched over sheer terror. "Shut up," she said; and bent down again, and kissed Emmanuelle.

  She– The world had shrunk to her grey gaze–like the river, depths into which Emmanuelle drowned. Her lips were scalding-hot, like liquid fire–and a feeling of contented warmth took root somewhere in Emmanuelle's belly and climbed upwards until it had filled her to the brim; a moment that could have lasted forever.

  At length, Selene pulled away, and glared at her. "Did you have anything to say?"

  So many things–that it was never going to work, long term; that they were ill-suited to each other, that Morningstar would find his own way, in the end–that they might well be torn apart anyway, by Selene's growing hunger for power, her arrogance that would soon match that of her master–that...

  But for now, there was only the bridge, and the sunlight; and that exhilarating feeling they could do anything, face anything together. "No," Emmanuelle said. "Kiss me again."

  And she did.

  Afterword

  This is a short story featuring characters from my novel, The House of Shattered Wings (out now from Roc in the US, and Gollancz in the UK/Commonwealth). It is... pretty light-hearted compared to the novel (which has the Houses vying for power in a very different version of Paris, a city devastated by a magical war which is still to come, insofar as this story is concerned). That said, if you've enjoyed this, and want to see more of Emmanuelle and more of Selene dealing with political intrigue, dead bodies, and magical attacks on the House ... then I would urge you to give the novel a try. I've included Chapter One, if you want to take a look.

  Thank you for reading!

  Bonus: chapter one of The House of Shattered Wings

  The Falling Star

  It is almost pleasant, at first, to be Falling.

  The harsh, unwavering light of the City recedes, leaving you in shadow, leaving only memories of relief, of a blessed coolness seizing your limbs. Nothing has turned yet into longing, into bitterness, into the cold that will never cease, not even in the heat of summer.

  The wind, at first, is pleasant, too--softly whistling past you, so that you almost don't notice when its cold fingers tear at your wings. Feathers drift off, blinking like forgotten jewels, catching fire and burning like a thousand falling stars in the atmosphere. Some part of you knows you should be experiencing pain; that the flow of crimson blood, the lancing pain in your back, the fiery sensation that seems to have hold of your whole body--they're all yours, they're all irreversible and deadly. But you feel nothing: no exhilaration, no relief, not the searing agony of your wounds. Nothing but that sense of unnamed relief, that knowledge you won't have to face the judges in the City again.

  Nothing, until the ground comes up to meet you, and you land in a jumble of pain and shattered bones; and the scream you didn't think you had in you scrapes your throat raw as you let it out--like the first, shocked breath of a baby newly born into a universe of suffering.

  It was Ninon who first saw her. Philippe had felt her presence first, but hadn't said anything. It wasn't a wish to protect the young Fallen so much as to protect himself--his status in the Red Mamba Gang was precarious as it was, and he had no desire to remind them how great a commodity he could become, given enough cruelty on their part. And Heaven knew, of course, that those days it didn't take much for cruelty or despair to get the better of them all, when life hung on a razor's edge, even for a former Immortal.

  They'd been scavenging in the Grands Magasins--desperate and hungry, as Ninon had put it, because no one was foolish enough to go down there among the ruins of the Great Houses War, with spells that
no one had had time to clean up primed and ready to explode in your face, with the ghosts and the hauntings and the odor of death that still hung like fog over the wrecks of counters and the faded posters for garments and perfumes from another, more innocent age.

  No one, that is, but the gangs: the losers in the great hierarchy, the bottom feeders surviving on the carrion the Houses left them. Gangs could be huge, could number dozens of people, but they were fractured and powerless, deprived of the magic that made the Houses the true movers of Paris. And as far as gangs went, the Red Mambas were small; twenty or so members under Bloody Jeanne's leadership; and Philippe, on the bottom tier of the bottom tiers, just doing his best to survive--as always.

  He and Ninon had been under the dome of the Galeries Lafayette, crossing over the rubble in the center--what had once been the accessories department. On the walls were fragments of advertisement posters, colored scraps; bits and pieces of idealized human beings, of products that had long since ceased to be manufactured; and a fragment promising that the 1914 fashion season would be the headiest the city had ever seen: a season that, of course, had never been, swallowed up by the beginning of the war. Ahead were the stairs, blocked by debris; the faces of broken mannequins stared back at them, uncannily pale and expressionless, their eyes shining like cats' in the dim light.

  Philippe hated the Grands Magasins--not that he was as superstitious as Ninon, but he could feel the pall of death hanging over the place, could almost hear the screams of the dying when the petrification spells had struck. Like any Immortal--even a diminished one, far from his home and his people--he could feel the khi currents, could sense their broken edges rubbing against him, as sharp as serrated knives.

  "Ninon--"

  Ahead, on the stairs, she'd turned back at him, her face flushed with the excitement of it all, that incomprehensible desire to flirt with danger until it killed you. A wholly human thing, of course; and he was meant to be human again, now that he had been cast out of the Heavens; but even as a mortal in Annam he'd just never had that kind of reckless death wish. "We should go--" he'd started, and then he'd felt it.

  It was pure and incandescent, a wave of stillness that seemed to start somewhere in his belly and spread to his entire body--a split second when wind ran on his arms and face, and darkness stole across his field of vision, as if night had unexpectedly fallen in the world beyond the dome; and a raw sense of pain rose in him, a scream building in his lungs, on the verge of forcing its way out . . .

  And then it was gone, leaving him wrung out, panting on the staircase as if he'd just run for his life across Paris. The pain was still at the back of his mind--a faint, watered-down memory that he would recognize anywhere--just as he would unerringly be able to find its source.

  A Fallen. A young one, barely manifested in the world, lying in pain, somewhere close; somewhere vulnerable in a city where young Fallen were merchandise, creatures to be taken apart and killed before they became too powerful and did the taking apart and the killing.

  "You okay?" Ninon asked. She was watching him, eyes narrowed. "Not going to go all mystical on me, are you?"

  Philippe shook his head, struggling for breath--couldn't show weakness, couldn't show ignorance, not if he wanted to survive . . . At last he managed, in something like his usual flippant tones, "No way, sis. This is about the worst place in the world to get an attack of the mystical."

  "Doesn't mean you idiots wouldn't get one," Ninon said, darkly. "Come on. Alex said there was good booty on the third floor, perfumes and alchemical reserves."

  The last thing Philippe wanted to do was go upstairs, or hang around the place any longer than he had to. "And they've remained miraculously untouched for sixty years? Either Alex is misinformed or there's some pretty heavy defenses. . . ."

  Ninon grinned with the abandon of youth. "That's why we have you, don't we? To make short work of anything."

  "Sure," Philippe said. He could cast some spells; call on some small remnants of who he had been, drawing from the khi fields around him. He would, however, have to be seriously insane to do it here. But he daren't protest too much, or too loudly; he was, as Ninon had reminded him, only useful as long as he could provide magic--the conscious, mastered kind, one cut above the lures of angel essence and other adjuncts. When that ceased . . .

  He forced himself not to think about it as he followed her upstairs--past landing after deserted landing, under the vacant eyes of models in burned posters, past the tarnished mirrors and the shards of chandeliers. As he had feared, the pain at the back of his mind grew steadily, a sign they were approaching the Fallen's birth site. Ninon herself wasn't a witch--the magical practitioners had long since been snapped up by the Houses--but for all that, she was uncannily, unerringly headed toward the newly manifested Fallen. "Ninon--" he said, as they rounded a ruined display promising exotic scents from Annam and the Far East, a memory of a home that was no longer his.

  Too late.

  She'd stopped, one hand going to her mouth. He couldn't tell what her expression was, from behind, if it was horror or fascination or something else. As Philippe got closer, he saw what she saw: a jumble of crimson-stained feathers, a tangled mass that seemed to be all broken limbs and bleeding wounds; and, over it all, a gentle sloshing radiance like sunlight seen through water, a light that promised the soft warmth of live coals, the comfort of wintertime meals heated on the stove, the sheer relief just after the breaking of a thunderstorm, when the air was cleansed of all heaviness.

  Philippe recovered faster than Ninon. While she still stood, gaping at the vision, he cautiously approached, circling the body with care, just in case the Fallen turned out vicious. But Philippe didn't think it would.

  Close up, the body was a mess: bones broken in several places, not always cleanly; the hands splayed out in abandon, loosely resting above dislocated wrists; the torso covered with blood and unidentifiable fluids. There was no smell, though; no stench of blood or ruptured guts; just a tang to the air, an acridity like a remnant of burning wood. Young Fallen never smelled like much of anything, not until the light vanished. Not until they joined the mortal plane like the rest of their kind.

  The face . . . the face was intact, and that was almost the most gruesome thing about the Fallen. Eyes frozen in shock stared at him. The gaze was somehow ageless, that of a being that had endured beyond time, in a City that had nothing human or fragile about it. The cheekbones were high, and something in the cast of the face was . . . familiar, somehow. Philippe glanced back at the mess of the torso, noting the geometry of the chest: this particular Fallen manifested as female.

  He hadn't expected to be so . . . detached about things. He'd thought of a thousand ways she could have reminded him of the Great War, of the bloodied bodies by his side; but in some indefinable way she seemed beyond it all, a splayed doll rather than a broken body--he shouldn't think that, he really shouldn't, but it was all too easy to remember that it was her kind that had torn him from his home in Annam and sent him to slaughter, that had gloried in each of the dead, that had laughed to see his unit come back short so many soldiers, covered in the blood of their comrades--her kind, that ruled over the ruins of the city. . . .

  "Awesome," Ninon said. She knelt, her hands and arms bathed in the radiance, breathing in the light, the magic that hung coiled in the air around them. Fallen were magic: raw power descended to Earth, the younger the more powerful. "Come on, help me."

  "Help . . . ?"

  Ninon's hand flicked up; it came up with a serrated knife, the wickedly sharp blade catching the light.

  "Can't carry her. Too much work, and there's only two of us. But we can take stuff."

  Stuff. Flesh and bone and blood, all that carried the essence of a Fallen, all that could be inhaled, put into artifacts, used to pass on magic and the ability to cast spells to others. He put his hand in the blood, lifted it to his mouth. The air seemed to tremble around his fingers as if in a heat wave, and the blood down his throat was as sweet
as honey, warming his entire body, reminding him how it had been when he'd been an Immortal; and a flick of his hands could have transported him from end to end of Indochina, turned peach trees into magical swords, turned bullets aside as easily as wisps of vapor.

  But that time was past. Had been past for more than sixty years, turned to dust as surely and as enduringly as his mortal family.

  Ninon's face was bathed in radiance as she knelt by the body--she was going for a hand or a limb, something that would have power, that would be worth something, enough to sustain them all . . . It-- the thought of her sawing through flesh and bone and sinew shouldn't have made him sick, but it was one thing to hate Fallen, quite another to cold-bloodedly do this.

  "We could take the blood," he said, forcing his voice to come back from the distant past. "Use the old perfume bottles to mix our own elixirs."

  Ninon didn't look up, but he heard her snort. "Blood's piffle," she said, lifting a limp, torn hand and eyeing it speculatively. "You know it's not where the money is."

  "Yes, but--"

  "What's the matter? You feeling some kind of loyalty for your own kind?"

  She didn't need to make the threat, didn't need to point out he was as good a source of magic as the Fallen by her side.

  "Come on, help me," she said; and as she lifted the knife, her eyes aglow with greed, Philippe gave in and pulled his own from his jacket; and braced himself for the inevitable grinding of metal against bone, and for the Fallen's pain to paralyze his mind.

  Selene was coming home to Silverspires when she felt it. It was faint at first, a chord struck somewhere in the vastness of the city, but then she tasted pain like a sharp tang against her palate.

  She raised a hand, surprised to find she'd bitten her tongue; probed at a tooth, trying to see if the feeling would vanish. But it didn't; rather, it grew in intensity, became a tingling in the soles of her feet, in her fingertips--a burning in her belly, a faint echo of what must have been unbearable.

 

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