by M. E. Parker
The Nethers
Frontiers of Hinterland
M.E. Parker
Copyright
Diversion Books
A Division of Diversion Publishing Corp.
443 Park Avenue South, Suite 1008
New York, NY 10016
www.DiversionBooks.com
Copyright © 2016 by M.E. Parker
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or locales is entirely coincidental.
For more information, email [email protected]
First Diversion Books edition July 2016
ISBN: 978-1-68230-073-2
“In the country of the blind the one-eyed man is king.”
—Desiderius Erasmus
For Charlotte
Chapter One
The bridge was a tightrope with handrails. It spanned a muddy valley where the swollen tide had receded, and, though not as high as she’d flown in Myron’s airship, it was lofty enough to make her stomach twirl when she looked down. The old woman leading the way urged Sindra across the bridge with a wave of her hand that made the loose flesh of her arm jiggle.
They arrived at a wooden building that was longer than the dwellings clustered around it. “It’s late.” The door creaked when the old woman pushed it open.
She yanked on a string dangling from the ceiling. A bulb cast a faint yellow haze, illuminating a row of cots and an open door at the other end of the room. Sounds of sickness echoed from a dark chamber beyond the door. The old woman pocketed the key and slammed the door closed, muffling the retching on the other side.
“Rest here.” The old woman kept her distance from Sindra and sprinkled a handful of red dust at her feet. “We’ll figure out what’s to be done with you at sunup.”
Sindra eyed the rows of cots, ten of them, five along each side of the room, each covered by a tattered blanket. A bucket sat between the cots. Shuttered windows allowed only a sliver of lamplight from the village to penetrate the room.
Sindra searched for the blanket with the fewest stains, and as soon as she sat down, the woman hung a bag of herbs over the doorway and pulled the light cord. The bulb dimmed, glowing gray for a moment before it died. She locked the door as she left, leaving Sindra to the sounds of vomit hitting the bottom of a bucket on the other side of the wall. She hopped up and tried to turn the doorknob. “Let me out.” She waited for the click of a lock, but none came.
She plopped back down on the nearest cot with worries about where she was, what would happen to the child she carried, and whether the ocean outside would swallow her in her sleep. The heaves of the ill, who sounded as though they could drop dead at any moment, kept her awake, so her thoughts found Myron, a reassuring face in her jumbled mind.
When Myron had spoken of flying, her imagination had not done justice to the real experience, the sensation of hanging in the sky in defiance of the earth, the tingle on her skin, the crisp air in her eyes, the panorama so wide it had stolen her breath. In the darkness of the infirmary, she stood on the cot and spread her arms. Eyes closed, she watched the orange mountains pass below, cliffs that looked as though an artist had painted them. Myron had given her such a gift—the joy of flight, of freedom. The thought that she might never see him again made her chest ache.
As the night dragged on, she bedded on one cot after another, finding no comfort that would let her sleep. Her arms dangled to the floor, scraping residue off the wooden planks, her eyes wide open to soak in the shapes of objects in the darkness, her imagination filling in the faces of the ill—only a wall away. Her stomach growled. She wondered if she would get rations, if these people had allegiance to Industry or Agriculture, or to someone else, how many people lived here, and whether a single wooden wall could keep the illness on the other side from finding her.
Sindra tiptoed to the door that separated her from the sick. After hearing them vomit at different intervals, and recognizing their coughs after a time, she counted three of them. She knelt and closed one eye to peer through the keyhole. Rays from the morning sun entered the room through the narrow lines where the shutters met. She caught the outline of shapes on the cots when a voice behind her startled her.
“Time to rise.” The same old woman Sindra had met the night before put her hands on her hips. “Get back from that door.”
Sindra stood up, her bones aching from her journey spent coiled in the small basket of Myron’s airship.
“I am Pinkerton. If we are alone”—the old woman’s voice softened—“you may call me Pinky. I’m guessing you don’t have a name yet. What did people call you?” She paused. “Before.”
Sindra yawned, now wishing she’d managed to get some sleep. “Before what?”
“Before you arrived in Orkin’s Landing.”
“Sindra. But on the rails they used to call me—”
“That’ll do for now. Come.” Pinky clapped her hands twice and turned for the door.
Sindra followed her outside and up a winding staircase to a workshop. “What are you wearing?” Pinky pushed a pair of glasses up the bridge of her nose as she examined Sindra. “Those markings on your hands?” She pointed to Sindra’s Industry tattoos. “And your hair is a tangled nest. You can’t traipse around the village looking like a Netheride conjuror.”
“I—”
“Shush.” Pinky lumbered behind a curtain and returned with a measuring string. She put it around Sindra’s neck, marked the length, then extended it down Sindra’s arm, first from her shoulder to her fingertip, and then from her armpit.
When Pinky lifted Sindra’s smock to get a waist measurement, she stepped back, eyeing Sindra’s abdomen. “What is this sorcery?” She placed her hands on Sindra’s belly.
“I’m pregnant. Going on four or five months now.”
“What?”
Pinky rubbed her eyes, muttering and pacing. “Wait here. I’ll be back.”
While alone, Sindra explored the adjacent room, filled with large skeins of yarn and a loom. Stacks of fabric leaned against the opposite wall next to a sewing machine. Pinky emerged through a door on the other side, accompanied by another woman covered in wrinkles and sags.
“Somerville is going to perform a test on you—to make sure you are still chaste.”
“What do you mean? What is that?”
Pinky made a circle with her hand and inserted her other index finger into the hole, pulling it in and out. “To make sure a man has never entered your womanhood.”
“Oh, I can save her some time. How do you think this happened?” Sindra rubbed her protruding abdomen. “Those sorry worms that pass for men have been forcing themselves on me since I was a kid.”
Somerville’s eyes widened, and her lips pursed. She pushed Pinky aside, and pulled a knife from her pocket. She grabbed Sindra’s fingers and slashed the back of her hand.
“Ouch.” Sindra tried to yank her hand back, but Somerville pressed her thumb in the blood and drew a red line on Sindra’s forehead just above her eyebrows.
Pinky stepped between Somerville and Sindra. “You do not have the authority to mark this girl.” She handed Sindra a strip of cloth to wrap her hand.
“I’m not taking any chances.”
“Dromon will make a judgment on her. Until then, we may as well work on a suitable wardrobe for her.”
“Don’t waste cloth on this witch,” Somerville said.
“I can always put them to good use—even if it turns out she can’t.” Pinky cut her eyes to Somerville and dug through the pile of fabric. She pulled out a
piece and unfolded it, pressing it to Sindra’s waist. “Here in Orkin’s Landing, a woman has a set of prescribed garment patterns. I’ll find you some gloves. To cover that defilement on your hands.” She rubbed the backs of Sindra’s hands, trying to smudge off the Industry tattoos.
“So, there’re no ghosts in Orkin’s Landing?”
“Ghosts?”
“Yeah, orange shirts.”
“Only one ghost in Orkin’s Landing, dear. The Holy Ghost. Never heard about no orange shirt, though.”
Sindra straddled a stool next to the sewing machine and watched Pinky position bobbins and thread the needle. Following a pattern laid out on a work table, Pinky constructed a pair of pants. For the rest of the day, and most of the next, Pinky helped Sindra sew her remaining prescribed articles of clothing required of all women in Orkin’s Landing, and with each article Sindra had to do more of it herself, pumping the machine’s foot pedal, watching the needle rise and fall as it stitched the fabric.
The hum of the machine reminded her of Jonesbridge, the turbines and the thrum of the conveyor belts. Standing back at her salvage station, in her mind, she reached for her needle-nose pliers and glanced up, as she often did, to catch Myron looking back at her, a silent conversation that made the work day more bearable.
“Sindra!”
She jumped in her seat.
“What are you doing?” Pinky pushed her aside from the sewing machine and repositioned the fabric. “Look what you’ve done.” She worked the stitching out of the seam. “You must pay attention. Cloth is very valuable—and these articles of clothing, well, they must look like the patterns.”
“I’m sorry. I was—thinking about something else.”
“Here, come try on this hat.” Pinky reached for a wide, flat disc topped with a white dome.
“I’m to wear that—on my head?”
“Yes, like this.” Pinky situated the hat such that it sat at a slight angle on Sindra’s head and gave the crown a thump.
Sindra eyed the garments spread out on the table. They had a peculiar look to them, not formed to address function like the clothes in Jonesbridge. The fabric, soft and pliable, soothed her skin, unlike the burlap, but the clothes didn’t make sense. The blouse had six large buttons, three down each side, that performed no other function than to sit there for show. The pants hugged her waist and legs, making it hard to walk, and she wondered how anyone could traverse those rope bridges wearing them.
Before they completed the final garment, Somerville interrupted them, sliding back the curtain over the doorway. “It’s time.” Her somber face drew taut as she spoke.
Pinky escorted Sindra to a tightrope suspension bridge connecting the main hill to the surrounding islands of Orkin’s Landing. Standing high above an ocean inlet full of Old Age debris provided her a view of the settlement. As the bridge swooned with each step, swaying from the wind, she gripped the ropes that served as handrails to keep her footing.
Orkin’s Landing encompassed a large area of waterways and islands, visible from the largest hill that was topped with the white H---L-L-Y-W-O---D letters in the center. Most Orkinites dwelled on the main island in a sprawling, multilevel arrangement cobbled together from salvaged materials, mostly nonseaworthy ship carcasses, interspersed with a maze of tight courtyards and alleyways.
At the end of the bridge, Sindra entered an ornate room that overlooked the village commons through a bay of windows. The structure had once been—according to Pinky—the forecastle of a great masted vessel run aground more than four hundred years ago. A gust of wind whipped through the room when the door opened. Sindra pushed the hair from her face to see a man standing in the doorway, glaring at her. Behind him, the scent of turnip cakes baking in the market below reminded her of how far she’d come from Jonesbridge.
“This is Dromon.” Pinky lowered her head at the man who followed Somerville into the room. Their shadows rose up the wall opposite the windows. “One of Orkin’s presbyters.”
With his index finger, Dromon summoned Pinky to join him in the corner behind a long table flanked by chairs on both sides. The two of them whispered with their backs to Sindra.
“She’s a hexer. Just look at her.” Somerville joined them in the corner. “Her witchery must be cleansed by the depths.” She pointed through the window to the ocean.
“No.” Dromon shook his head. “Our numbers have dwindled greatly from the rot. We need new initiates.” He peered over Pinky’s shoulder with his eye on Sindra and held out his palm in her direction. “And the Great Above has delivered us one—from the sky, no less.”
“But chastity is a moral imperative before her joining.” Somerville crossed her arms. “She’s unclean.”
“For now, no one has to know she’s here.” Pinky strode over to the windows and yanked the shutters closed. Her face faded to gray. She cloaked Sindra in a blanket to cover her up and escorted her out of the room.
At the center of the village, a stone tower acted as the hub for the network of swing bridges. They radiated from the tower, spanning pockets of water, low-lying areas, and the inhospitable skeletons of the Old Age city that once sprawled around them. Sindra looked down into eddies. Water splashed around boulders and withdrew, leaving a mire behind. A hillside met them on the other side of the valley, where a young woman tended a fire in the shadow of a four-story cluster of dilapidated hovels.
“This is the Outback. Plenty of privacy out here.” Pinky opened the door for Sindra. “Chemist makes remedies for what ails, and useful solutions, but he’s been known to set things on fire—by mishap, of course.” She nodded to the other structures. “These houses have been abandoned—on account of the fires.”
Dromon awaited them in the sparse room that had a cot, a wicker chair, a basin, a hole where she could relieve herself, and a window that had been boarded shut. A boy, eleven or twelve, with a poof of black hair on his head and a sash around his neck, stood beside Dromon.
“This is Nico.” Dromon placed his hand on the boy’s shoulder. “He’ll come by with your meals and read to you from the holy books.”
“Holy books?”
“That’s right.” Dromon nudged Nico toward Sindra. “You must learn the true path.”
Nico reminded Sindra of a younger, cleaned-up version of Bug and Nap, two of the railwalkers she’d clanned up with on the rails when Old Nickel found her. This kid, Nico, wore a shirt with buttons on it and trousers that cinched up with a belt—such fineries wasted on a kid. Clothing that fragile wouldn’t last an hour in Jonesbridge.
Pinky stopped in the doorway, eyeing the room, as Dromon led her and Somerville outside. She avoided eye contact with Sindra and pulled the door shut, locking it with a click.
The wicker chair creaked when Nico sat down. He clutched a bundle of worn paper bound with twine along one edge.
“Does everyone in Orkin’s Landing know how to read?”
“Certainly not.” Nico shook his head. “Men”—he patted his chest—“are tasked with guardianship of the written word.” He pointed to the sky. “Women are tasked with nurturing the spirit.” Nico wore an empty gaze as he recited. He cleared his throat.
“What if I’d rather be a word guardian instead of a spirit nurturer? Or maybe both?”
Nico ignored Sindra’s question and flipped through the pages. “There are seven downfalls. The abominations are: witchery, technology, mutation, sodomy, fornication, apathy, and narcissism.” He glanced up to gauge Sindra’s reaction. “You will need to memorize these, along with why they caused the Old Age society to collapse.”
Sindra didn’t know what any of the words meant except technology and witchery. She’d known some who practiced the arts of the earth. Old Nickel, the leader of the railwalker clan, was one of them, but she couldn’t imagine what role witchery could have played in the demise of the Old Age.
“Any idea what the white letters on the hillside mean?” Sindra asked of the giant H---L-L-Y-W-O---D sign that had welcomed her when she’d
climbed out of the airship.
“It says holy word. That’s where Orkin found the texts.”
Sindra sounded out the letters, noting the sound that each made, determined to learn how to read while she was cooped up in the chemist’s attic for the next four months.
“What’s wrong with those people?” Sindra nodded toward the edge of the village, where she’d spent her first night in Orkin’s Landing.
“What people?”
“In the infirmary. Is it wet lung?” Sindra had never heard so much vomiting.
“Oh, them. They have the rot.”
“What is that?”
“That’s what happens to some followers that stray from the true way. It’s the Great Above’s way of culling the bad spots off the village bread. That’s what the presbyters say.”
“The rot?”
“Enough questions. I am to read to you for an hour each day.” Nico held the papers up. “I’ll start from the Gospel of Judas.” He followed a few lines with his index finger and began, “‘It is impossible to sow seed on rock and harvest its fruit. This is also the way of the defiled generation and corruptible Sophia to the hand that has created mortal people, so that their souls go up to the eternal realms above.’”
Sindra held up her hand for Nico to stop reading. “What does that mean?”
He scratched his head. “In school they told us it means that our spirits are like seeds and plants. Seeds won’t grow on rocks. Our spirit won’t grow in a life of depravity.”
Nico spoke with a smooth tenor. Though he still had the voice of a child, he put Sindra at ease. Nico read a few more passages and vowed to return the next day at the same time, after his own schooling. Determined to do whatever she had to for a healthy baby, even stay jailed in an attic, Sindra placed her hands on her abdomen when she felt a kick.
When Nico did return the next day as promised, he brought a pork strap sandwich smeared with a bitter yellow paste called mustard. As she ate, Sindra schemed ways to learn to read.