by Nina D'Aleo
‘Not tonight,’ she murmured.
Ev’r slid her machete from its sheath – the black blade by the name of Morsus Ictus. Though it was forged an eternity ago, the handle fit her hand perfectly, as though made just for her. Ev’r ran her fingertips along the metal, over familiar notches and etchings. The weapon hummed, alive to her touch. How long would it be before she had to turn the blade on herself? Was it too much to hope for to just lie down in the midnight desert and die while she slept? Perhaps so. She wanted to live too much to go quietly.
Ev’r reached into her pocket and dragged out the vial of green antidote – liquid time machine. For a while, the shaman-made medicine had been worth its immense cost and turned back her body’s changes, but now, just like all the others before it, its potency was fading. The slight relief it gave her from her affliction no longer justified enduring its side effects. There was no cure for a Ravien bite, and this antidote was the absolute last type of restorative potion produced by any physician or shaman in Aquais. It was only a matter of time now before the changes took over. It was this knowledge that had driven her here, to the edge of desperation, throwing off her fear like unwanted baggage in a final attempt to survive, though she knew there was no hope. She was the walking dead.
Ev’r clenched the vial in one hand, toying with the idea of hurling it into the desert. Just one day without vomiting, without itching and blistering, without earth-shivering dizziness and sweating rivers. Just one day, before the final day. The decision tore her one way and then the other, to the point where her hand raised, ready to throw, but then it dropped. She couldn’t bring herself to give it up. Instead she tipped the antidote down her throat. Instantly she coughed and gagged. Burning pins and needles spread out from her stomach and a tidal wave of sickness broke over her, making her collapse to one side and vomit until there was nothing left inside her. Ev’r rolled onto her back and the earth rocked around her like a storm-struck ship. Grabbing handfuls of cooling sand, she let the grains slip gradually between her fingers until the sickness lessened and she could sit up.
Ev’r dragged her bag in front of her and unzipped it, laying flat the tools of her trade – electrifier, blades, nuclear grenade, light-blaster, hackaxe, rope – all equally useless against the magics she’d have to confront beneath the sand. A strangled, disbelieving laugh escaped her, and for a moment her courage faltered in a way it hadn’t since she was a child, lost and alone in this desolation: an outcast, torn apart by desert freaks. That day, the devil had been her saviour.
The Mocking Witch of O’Tenery Asylum had taken her in, along with the other throwaways, runaways and screeching crazies. She saw herself in her mind, walking silent as a shadow through the asylum building, the labyrinth of rooms haunted and lurking in a permanent state of semi-darkness. Low ceilings pressed lower and constricting walls crept closer until she felt as though she was sliding on her belly, suffocating in the rancid air of rotting waste and a thousand unwashed bodies. Eyes peered at her from behind rusted bars that were now no more than grisly reminders. Scorpia’s government, the Standard, had long since abandoned the derelict building and its broken wards. Now only their minds kept them prisoner, and Ev’r knew the truth better than anyone: there was no escaping yourself, no matter how far or fast you ran.
As she walked through the building, she passed many rooms and places where the Mocking Witch had shown her terrors that had aged her mind ten years for every day, and taught her with a cruel sort of kindness to live a life in opposition to domination, caged in body but never in mind. She’d taught her to fly. It was the second biggest mistake the witch ever made. Ev’r’s mind dragged her through the hallways of her memories to the great black stone door engraved with the runes of Ignatius, translating to ‘Thou Shalt Not Enter’. It was the witch’s quarters. Shadows shuffled beneath the door. Ev’r’s thoughts ventured towards them, then scurried back in terror at what they saw.
Ev’r jolted into the present. She was so distant from that girl of the past that she barely recognised her or her pain and fear. That person, that child, was dead. She had died in a cave in the Lava Diavol Mountains, leaving just a stone husk, with a heart too hard to break. Ev’r gathered up her weapons and stowed them in her bag, all except her electrifier and the Morsus Ictus, which she slid into sheaths at her hip. Drops of acid rain sizzled into her skin, but she ignored the ravenous downpour, shutting her eyes and preparing her mind to sink into the Murk, the grey drift behind the mask of reality. Here, in the birthplace of magics, time, space and distance held no power and physics and chemistry were forgotten. Ev’r pulled her scarf up over her nose, her night-vision glasses down over her face and hauled her bag onto her shoulders. She released one long breath with whispered words embedded in the rise and fall of the life-air. Then she was slipping backward, falling in slow motion, but she didn’t fight it. The darkness around her greyed and the land and sky lost their definition, distorting and bending, blending together. Her body became a flowing mist; once the sensations stopped she prepared herself to travel down deep into the sand, where the asylum now lay buried – some would say buried alive.
Before she could begin sinking through the sand, a sound echoed out into the Murk, a word that froze her limbs and stopped her heart. Ev’r sucked in a breath and held it, waiting. Couldn’t be – surely not. The word sounded again and Ev’r bit her lip. Instead of travelling down, she flew out, moving through the Murk towards the sound. She glided across the Matadori Desert with incredible speed, shrinking distance in her stride, until movement ahead halted her flow. Forms shifted the greyness ahead of her. It wasn’t unusual for others with learnt skill to use the Murk, but the shapes Ev’r saw, drifting in and out of focus, made her body tremble with a primal terror that she couldn’t hold back. What she saw was impossible, but undeniable.
They had risen.
A face with terrible, sunken eyes blurred by the mist turned her way. A mouth opened and she smelt a burning stench. Gasping, Ev’r pushed away with all her strength, hurtling backward through the Murk, just barely avoiding the death-curse that was thrown at her by the creature. She tumbled out of control and heard herself shouting the words of release. They catapulted her into reality and she skimmed along the ground like a skipping stone before smashing against something solid that brought her to a dead stop. She struggled to breathe, her dazed mind spinning madly. After a moment’s recovery, panic pushed her to move. With her stomach churning, Ev’r dragged herself to her feet.
A voice called out of the darkness in front of her, ‘United Regiment – identify yourself.’
Ev’r’s head snapped up and she saw the form of a soldier. She grabbed for her electrifier holstered at her side, but before her fingers found the weapon, the soldier drew his stunner and fired. Ev’r had a second to marvel at the speed of his hands, a moment to feel the sting of rage and horror at capture – and then she was thrown backwards into darkness.
3
Copernicus Kane stood at the top of the Greenway breakwall, the immense structure of fortified stone that quartered off the gangland from the rest of Scorpia. Gangster-built over generations, it crept upwards from the age-blackened rock of its first foundations to the newest-laid bricks that were red and fresh and reached all the way through 512 of the 997 living levels of Scorpia. In real terms, the gangster nation laid claim to a very small part of the city, yet their push to expand outwards and upwards was relentless and bloody.
Copernicus crossed the viewing platform built above the breakwall. He looked out, following the line of the wall as it intersected the 512th level, Ayar, and continued on and down as far as he could see. The levels of the city had been constructed to step out from each other like a mammoth staircase, all the way down to Rim, where the sunlit levels ended and the perennial darkness of the subterranean levels began. In the underside, it was disturbingly easy to forget the existence of the suns, but here in the upper levels, Copernicus could feel the memory of the day’s heat radiating from the rock wal
l below. In the open sky above, the last of the sunset’s peach-and-wine red was fading to darkness, turning the towering structures of the upper levels into a galaxy of lights, glittering like neon stars. At this time of year, known as noctus-renium, the hours of night doubled those of day, and the nocturnal breeds celebrated with extended festivals. Copernicus breathed in, sensing the people moving in the streets around them. He memorised the identity of each by the vibration of their footfalls, their body-heat signature, the shape of their thoughts. He widened the scope of his mind outwards to the crafts and smaller domestic transflyers speeding everywhere, across, over, up and down the buildings in buzzing lines of light. Public transporters circled the perimeter of the city, bypassing the outer-Rim towns full of Blue-Ten addicts, scullion-gypsy outlaws and masses of renegade Androts, rejects from an already outcast race. Where the last wasteland shanty ended, the Matadori Desert began. Copernicus watched the darkness spreading across this dead land, where the suns did not fall, the night rose and smothered them – starless, freezing and silent, but for the lunatic howls of the cannibal masses and slither of Skithers swimming through the sand. Beyond the Matadori, the Boundary Wall separated civilisation from the unknown Brine, a place of damaged evolution, where logic was meaningless and hope absurd. Of those who had ventured beyond the boundary, none had ever returned. This night, a fury of storm clouds lurked behind the night darkness, and the air bit with the chemical tinge of acid rain – and with something deeply wrong.
Copernicus turned the ring from the crime scene over in his pocket, his thoughts crowded by dead faces. In the past few months the city had seen an overwhelming increase of unexplainable murders and vanishings, bringing disorganisation and unpredictability to a world he usually found highly predictable. Christy Shawe had been his prime suspect, but this was the first and only piece of evidence linking the so-called King of the Gangland to the crimes. This ring had belonged to Christy’s father, Hamish ‘Ironfist’ Shawe, and been passed down to Christy when he died. Knowing Shawe the way he did, Copernicus understood that surprise confrontation was the best chance of getting the gangster to slip up. So now they had to wait.
The commander straightened his back, more scar than skin, and glanced at the new recruit Headquarters had sent him. Silho Brabel stood motionless, facing the darkness, looking upon it without expression, though her eyes held the searching, injured stare of a person who has seen horrors young.
From some angles she appeared familiar to him, though he couldn’t place why. An intricate pattern spread across half her neck and chest. To Copernicus it was strangely incomplete, as though someone had started to paint a thousand tiny pictures on her skin and stopped suddenly, leaving her forever unfinished. Bandages wrapped around her arms, concealing her bloodline marks and genetic heritage. This kind of concealment was not uncommon for military personnel in dangerous positions wanting to maintain some level of anonymity.
According to Silho’s military file, her parents, now deceased, had been human-breeds of mixed descent, part-Ivory Condor, part-Nightcat. Both had been middle-class, with normative academic and social achievements and no criminal records. Yet something about Silho denied such an average background. In her military exams, she had scored far higher than any other new recruit he’d ever heard of, even smashing Jude’s records. Brilliance in training, however, did not always equate to brilliance in the field. Other factors always came into play, such as personality. This was why Copernicus had always recruited his own soldiers. Brabel’s nervousness and social ill-ease had hindered her significantly at the crime scene, and cast doubt on the actual depth of her knowledge and skills. It troubled him that Silho may not be psychologically ready for this level of work, but it troubled him even more that his actual sense of her from her body-heat and thought patterns had been extremely mixed. He found most people straightforward to read, but she was a maze of complex lines and conflicting flares. This suggested deception, though not necessarily criminal, perhaps just personal. In any case it was abundantly clear to him that Silho was uncommon, an unknown island in a sea of sameness, her surface just a suggestion of what lay hidden underneath. And he intended to find out whatever she was hiding.
‘He’s coming.’ Jude’s voice broke into Copernicus’ thoughts.
‘How close?’ the commander asked.
Jude blinked, seeing through the eyes of his arachnid robot, SevenM, whom he had sent out to search for Shawe.
‘Two flights down and climbing, with a company of three.’
As expected, Shawe and his companions were using the steps, carved in the gangland side of the breakwall, to access the platform.
‘Let them come up all the way, then put them down. I’ll deal with Shawe,’ Copernicus instructed Diega and Jude, then looked at Silho. ‘You just stand back there and observe.’ He indicated a building behind the platform. She nodded and backed up.
‘One flight and they’re here,’ Jude said. He and Diega moved to separate spots out of sight of the top of the steps. Copernicus sank back into the shadows.
Slurred voices, heavy with the Greenway accent, grew louder, until Christy Shawe appeared at the top of the wall. The musclebound fighter stomped across the platform to survey his kingdom as he always did at nightfall. No traces of anxiety or uncertainty pinched Shawe’s scarred face, dominated by a large, repeatedly broken nose. His knuckles were white and thick with scars, and his red hair shaved down to skin too tough for blades to pierce. Shawe was a walking armoured tank. A stink emitted from the gangster that Copernicus could only describe as pub stench – unwashed armpits and old alcohol.
As Shawe’s companions moved to follow their boss, Jude and Diega leapt out, threw them down and drew weapons on them. Copernicus lashed out with viperous stealth and grabbed Shawe’s arm, twisting it behind his back. The gangster yelled and bucked with enormous strength. They struggled for a moment before Copernicus slammed him into the wall close to where Silho stood. Instead of leaping aside, she got in the way. Shawe threw a punch with his free arm and clipped the side of her head, knocking her to the ground. He shook off Copernicus and spun around with his fists up – to stare down the barrel of Copernicus’ electrifier.
Shawe lowered his hands and cursed. ‘What the trutt do you want, you podsucking gadfly?’
Copernicus replied with quiet control, ‘Just a word.’
‘Didn’t know the carnival was in town,’ one of Shawe’s men sneered. Diega booted him in the gut and he doubled over, cursing her.
‘A word about what?’ Shawe spat, red-faced and staggering drunk.
Taking the ring out of his pocket Copernicus held it up in front of Shawe’s eyes. To his disappointment, he didn’t see the realisation and guilt he was hoping to find in the gangster’s expression, just confusion.
‘Where did you get that?’ Shawe asked, a sober change in his tone.
‘Crime scene in Moris-Isles. Six tortured and killed. Two of them gangsters from Kelly’s Crew – rivals of yours.’
‘They’re rivals alright,’ Shawe admitted, ‘but I haven’t set foot in that hole in five year-cycles at least. Why would I?’
‘If you weren’t involved, then how did this get there?’ Copernicus turned the ring over in his hand.
Shawe said nothing. The commander realised it was because he didn’t know, and that the gangster was feeling something else, something foreign to him that he hated – worry.
Copernicus pushed the ring back into his pocket and Shawe’s eyes darted up to his.
‘Give that here,’ he demanded and held out his hand. He was wearing, on his middle finger, an identical ring to the one they had found.
‘This is evidence,’ Copernicus said, hiding his confusion. During his time in the gangs, he had only ever seen one ring of this type in Ironfist Shawe’s possession. He’d believed it was unique, but obviously not. He gestured with his electrifier. ‘Get lost – for now.’
Shawe stared at him, lips snarling. He stepped forward and purposely pressed his c
hest against the tip of the electrifier. He spoke so only Copernicus could hear. ‘I was the one who broke you out of your grave and I’m going to be the one who puts you back under – I swear it.’
The threat, well worn over the years, barely caused a ripple in Copernicus’ flowing stream of thought. If Shawe had his ring then whose was this one? He gestured to his trackers to release Shawe’s men. They immediately started to retaliate, but the gangster king barked, ‘Leave it!’ He spat at Copernicus’ feet then hurried back to the steps with a speed that suggested an agenda, his men close behind.
The shadows shifted and Jude’s robot, SevenM, scurried out from his hiding place and up the soldier’s body to perch on his shoulder. Copernicus disarmed his electrifier and pushed it back into its holster. He walked with the others to where Silho was sitting holding her head.
‘A piece of advice,’ Diega snapped at the new recruit. ‘Next time someone tries to hit you – move.’
‘He wasn’t trying to hit me.’ Silho spoke with restraint, but Copernicus could see the angry flares of her body-heat. ‘He was trying to hit Commander Kane.’
‘And you thought you could – what? – save him?’ Diega sneered.
‘I thought I could assist my commanding officer.’
Diega gave a nasty laugh, ‘Well done.’
‘Go easy. It’s her first day,’ Jude intervened in the escalating dispute. He offered Silho his hand and helped her stand. She swayed unsteadily on her feet and almost fell. Red blood trickled down the side of her face.
‘I don’t believe this!’ Diega snarled. ‘Look at her! She can’t even follow the simplest instructions and now she can hardly stand. She’s a liability.’
‘Are you fit for duty?’ Copernicus asked her, interested if she would tell him the truth.
She nodded and he saw the lie, though it was well hidden.
‘She’s fine,’ Jude said. ‘I’ll patch her up. She’ll be okay.’