“Some things are more important than freedom.”
“You don’t know that,” Cat said. “Not until you’re much further down this road.”
“My goddess”—and gods, did that feel strange to say out loud—“isn’t dead. She’s up that mountain being tortured. The people doing it won’t stop until she’s dead or mad. And until she’s gone she’ll keep reaching out to the kids, and the priests will chase them down one at a time and kill them or make them Penitents. You can help us stop it all. Get us into the pool. Kai can do the rest.”
“Kai?”
“Hi.” Kai raised her hand.
“Who are you?”
“I work up there.” She pointed up and inland, to the mountain. “Sort of. They trapped me inside a statue. It’s complicated.”
“You,” Cat said, to Teo this time, “are a bleeding heart.”
“I didn’t spend the last month befriending street urchins.”
“We’re wasting time. We planned for you to set the beacon, not to set off every alarm in the mountain.”
“I didn’t expect my priestly friend here”—and at this Teo nodded over her shoulder to Kai—“to use me as cover for industrial espionage. So we’re even. Hells, that bracelet wasn’t supposed to trip their wards in the first place. Make that I’m one up on you.”
Cat crossed her arms.
“Cat,” Izza said. “I don’t think you made the wrong choice. Just the hard one. Like I’m doing now.”
In the end, Cat was the first to look away.
She paced the dock, footsteps heavy, muttering in a Kathic dialect so thick Izza couldn’t pick out more than a few words, most of them curses. She made a fist and cracked her knuckles, her wrist, her elbows and shoulders.
“Shit,” Teo said. “And you call me a bleeding heart.”
“Get the boat back out to sea,” Cat replied, and to Kai and Izza: “Let’s go.”
59
Kai hadn’t expected a mainlander secret agent to look so much like a washed-up Godsdistrikt wreck, strung out in ripped slacks and a loose black shirt, green eyes darting and hungry. But when Cat moved, she moved with purpose: took Izza by one wrist and Kai by the other, and pulled them both toward the stairs. Whatever her appearance, she was strong.
They climbed rotting stairs to the wharf, into the fresh night wind off the ocean. In direct light, Cat looked harder than she had below.
“What’s next?” Kai said.
The woman smirked. “What do you think?”
“Climb the mountain. Rappel down.”
“That’s subtler than I planned.”
“What do you mean?”
“We start,” Cat said, “with a little shock and awe.”
From her pocket, she produced a piece of silver chalk. She wove the chalk between middle, index, and ring fingers of her left hand, and curled her fingers into a fist. The chalk broke.
Nothing happened.
“I’m not feeling much shock,” Kai said. “Or awe.”
She wondered, briefly, why Izza’d closed her eyes and clapped her hands over her ears.
Then the night split open.
Kai picked herself up off the ground, blinking red-bloomed brilliance. Cat reached toward her, a person in vaguest outline. Distant drums beat through the whine of dead sound.
The drumbeats were explosions, she realized. Eyes recovering, she saw pillars of light rise across the island, West Claw, East, and the Palm, choreographed as casino fountains. She could almost see, almost hear again.
“Distractions,” Cat shouted. Kai heard her as a mumble through a wool blanket. “To keep the Penitents occupied. Like a magician’s show.” Her eyes split the lights to a million colors. “Now, hang on.”
“What?”
Cat grabbed Kai’s wrist and repeated herself, louder. “Hang on.”
Quicksilver sparked beneath the collar of Cat’s shirt, and flowed out and over, covering body and shoulders and back and legs. The hand that held Kai changed from skin to steel. Wings sprouted from Cat’s back, and spread.
When the silver reached Cat’s mouth, she sighed, as if setting down a long-borne burden.
Her wings beat, once, and they flew.
Kai’s and Izza’s added weight did not seem to slow Cat’s climb at all—or else Kai could not imagine how fast the woman would have been unburdened. Streets shrank to ribbons, and they swept up and north as searching Penitents’ gazes lit the earth below—scattered, stunned by the eruptions of light, seeking the phantom army that assailed them. Cat’s laugh did not travel like normal sound, but cut straight to Kai’s heart’s core.
Sirens wailed, warning clarions Kai recognized but had never heard aloud. The island cried in pain.
Cat wound between sweeping searchlights like an eel through a coral maze. Not precisely like: there was no truce with gravity, here, no uneasy accommodation between old foes. Gravity was vicious, and Cat fought him with every beat of her rising wings.
They swept up slopes, borrowing lift from currents of reradiated warmth. Blinking tears, Kai spared a glance to Izza, who hung from Cat’s other arm. The girl had a wild rictus grin, skin drawn tight over her skull.
They rose, and rose, and rose, over the volcano’s lip and higher, trajectory hyperbolic, so high Kai wondered if Cat no longer meant to infiltrate the mountain but to steal the stars instead.
Kavekana was a shrinking disk, framed by ocean.
Clouds scudded across the sky.
Cat’s metal skin drank moonlight.
She swept her wings back, and dove.
The ground approached.
Fast.
Time slowed.
They fell through space and worlds, following that unseen beacon. They did not slip from realm to realm so much as burst through. The color of the sea changed, wine red and spreading. Constellations danced and transformed.
The volcano’s mouth approached. At its bottom, pinhead small but growing larger, lay the pool, another sky into which they could fall forever. The size of a cherry now, a fig, lemon orange apple pineapple watermelon—
She braced herself for impact, too late.
They stopped in darkness ringed by light.
Cat’s silver skin glowed in the pool’s black. Kai saw her shock, saw Izza scramble to tread water that wasn’t there, to orient herself toward a surface that did not precisely exist. Kai had felt the same way on her first entry to the pool. Momentum and distance did not work here the way they worked outside.
Which gave Kai the opportunity she needed.
In the pool, strength of will mattered more than physical power. Here Kai could, and did, twist her wrist and slip away from Cat. And before the other woman recovered, Kai swam up, pulled herself out of the nothing, and stood, dripping, on the shore where she had watched a goddess die.
Below, Cat and Izza sank.
Kai crossed her arms.
Penitents ringed the pool—the guardians who’d caught her earlier that day, and one smaller, the Penitent in which Mara was trapped. They watched Kai with gemstone eyes.
Jace stood in front of her.
Her suit was torn and salt-stiff, her hair tangled. Unreality dripped from her, but enough had soaked into her skin and clothes to work her will upon. Her hair slithered straight. Her clothes were clean, pressed, and whole. She slid her hands out of her pockets. Light sparked off lacquered nails. The cut on her face knit, and the pain in her hip faded.
When she was quite done, she smiled at Jace.
“I see you got my nightmare.”
60
“How could I miss it?” For the first time in his years since taking office, Jace stood unbowed, shoulders straight and back, immaculately calm. “You shouted through dreams.”
The smell of dust and rock hung about and between them. Shadows watched from lit office windows overhead.
“You worried me this afternoon in my office, Kai. You didn’t seem to understand the situation. When you disappeared from the Penitent, I feared the wo
rst. That you’d left us for good, that you were working against Kavekana all along. Stupid of me. I know you’re loyal. I’m glad to see that loyalty manifest.”
Mara’s Penitent stood behind Jace, ready for battle. Ready to kill, if needed. “How could I abandon this island?”
“How indeed,” Jace said. He kicked a pebble, and smiled like a boy as it bounced. “What gifts have you brought us?”
* * *
Izza drowned in starlight, and Cat with her. They fell together, and the bright circle of the surface receded overhead. Cat’s silver arms surged against the nothing, but nothing was not water.
She betrayed us, Cat said. Her voice was a razor down Izza’s back.
“No.” She inhaled the darkness, and did not die. “I trust her. And it doesn’t matter, anyway. Let’s do what we came here for.”
As they sank, strange stars assembled into many-colored shapes. Thousands, hundreds of thousands: a crowd of idols. A gaggle of gods.
“Well?” she called. “Here I am.”
Night pressed in on all sides.
“You know me. I know you. I told your stories. Sacrificed to you. Mourned you. Missed you.”
Mute idols watched.
“I’m not leaving.”
The quality of the void changed: a great mass swam between them and the pool’s surface, cutting off all light but the faint glimmer of Cat’s skin.
So this was the end, she thought. Drowning in a pit beneath the world.
Fitting.
Then the darkness shone green.
* * *
“One intruder,” Kai said. “And her hostage.” Jace joined her by the pool, and looked where she pointed, in time to see shadows swallow the pair of them.
“Lost,” he said.
She hoped not. “We can still save them both. Even if we wait, there should be enough left to question.”
“Gods, Kai. You can be vicious when you put your mind to it.”
“Turns out our problems have a single source,” she said. “A bit of living goddess, stuck inside the pool. She contaminated the other idols.”
“But if we remove her,” Jace said, “our problems should stop. Good. I don’t need to tell you how much of a weight this has been.”
“What will you do with that goddess-piece when you find it?”
“Don’t know yet. Melt her down, I suspect. Recast the soulstuff in another form. Or sell it—plenty of market out there for a living goddess, even a piece of one.”
“If your offer’s still open,” she said, “I want my old job back.”
“Better than your old job. You’ve shown your worth in blood. You’ve earned a promotion, even more than Mara.”
“What about Mara?”
“What do you mean?”
“You still haven’t let her out of the Penitent.”
“She’s less understanding than you are,” he said, and turned from the pool. “And she’s seen more than you.”
Kai too turned away. “You mean the poet’s death?”
“Mara’s not an inherently violent person. She has blood on her hands, but she doesn’t know why it’s there. She will understand, eventually. A little island like ours, in the middle of a big ocean, is a garden: it must be carefully managed.”
“Which makes you the gardener?”
“Basically,” he said.
“Uprooting flowers where necessary.”
“Better to prune than to uproot. It’s a shame we can’t put gods inside the Penitents as well. We’ve had to kill those idols that woke up, and use the Craft to reassemble them. People, on the other hand—we can make them do what they must. Like your friend Claude.”
Kai kept her voice level. “What do you mean?”
“Oh, it’s fine. Claude,” Jace said, “you can come out now.”
Footsteps echoed down the cave-passage behind Jace; Claude emerged. He wore his uniform, and walked stiff backed.
“You see,” Jace said, “I find it interesting that, after sending me a nightmare, you sent one to your friend, asking him to come to the pool in secret. He came to me first. He was worried for you, you know. Your sanity. Now. I hope you asked him here to arrest our friends in the pool. Because if you were betting he would arrest me, well. I think you’ll find that of the two of us, you are the greater threat to our island. And Claude is a child of the Penitents first: he must guard Kavekana from threats foreign and domestic.”
Jace stepped back out of Kai’s reach. Not that Kai considered trying to tackle him. The Penitents would reach her before she could do damage.
She thought she saw the beginnings of an apology in Claude’s eyes. He was sorry for what he was about to do, but he would do it anyway.
“So, which is it? Did you come to join us, or destroy us?”
* * *
“Hello, Izza,” the green man said.
Izza heard his voice in her bones. At first she saw him as a collection of stars, no different from the others that filled the nothing through which they fell. As she watched, his outline grew form, as if absorbing the attention she paid him.
She recognized his face.
“Margot,” she said, without moving her lips.
“Something like that.” He nodded to Cat. “Care to introduce me?”
“I don’t even know who you are.”
“A memory,” he said.
“Cat, this is a memory of Edmond Margot, a bard of Iskar. Edmond, this is Cat, from Alt Coulumb.”
Pleased to meet you.
“The pleasure’s mine.”
“I saw you die,” Izza said.
He bit his lower lip. “You said I should hide. I did. In the page, in the ink. Deeper. I found my way here.” He waved his hand at the gods and at the empty space above. “She saved me. Saved part of me. So much I can’t remember. I don’t remember what I don’t remember. Of course.” He grimaced. “But she needs me. Us.”
“What do you mean? Who needs? Who saved?”
He spread his hands, and raised them, and she saw.
* * *
“Neither,” Kai said.
Jace raised an eyebrow. “What do you mean?”
“I hoped you would turn yourself in. Resign. Maybe you meant well at first, but you’ve made bad decision after bad decision. You’ve angered gods and Craftsmen. I hoped Claude would see the threat you pose.”
If a hint of tension crept into Jace’s shoulders, Kai saw none. “I’ve done the best I could. And in a few minutes, the problem will be resolved. The last witness taken care of. The affair remains within our walls, and the danger passes.”
“Except for the Grimwalds’ suit.”
“Which will fail.”
“I think you underestimate their Craftswoman.”
“Ms. Kevarian has suspicions, but no proof. Mara gave her a few scraps, but without evidence those scraps amount to nothing. And if you planned to tell her about this, you’re a greater danger than I thought.”
“I don’t plan to do anything,” she said.
She took her hand from her pocket, and opened it. Two pieces of paper floated to the ground: a business card, ripped neatly down the middle. Half the name landed facing up. The card’s reverse side was eggshell white, marked only by the embossed logo of Kelethras, Albrecht, and Ao.
* * *
They stood on the skin of a goddess. They floated in her blood. They lived in the warp and weft of her.
I know Her, Cat said.
“Of course you do,” Margot replied. “She grew here in silence, for decades, a mind emerging from countless transactions and transfers, as unaware of the human world as you are of the cells in your blood. And then, a few years back, she found within herself a piece of your goddess—a memory of light, of human space, of how it felt to bond with the world and be worshipped. She has her own memories now.” He took from his pocket a piece of paper, which he unfolded into a moon. “I think this belongs to you. Or you belong to it.”
Both.
“Here,” he said. �
�Tell our foster-mother farewell. We don’t need her anymore. We’re ready to stand on our own. To fly.”
He handed the moon to Cat, who received it with both hands.
“What we need,” he said, turning back to Izza, “is you.”
* * *
At first, nothing seemed to happen, and for that brief moment Kai feared she’d miscalculated, that the Craftswoman couldn’t hear or didn’t care.
Jace shook his head. “I’m sorry, Kai.”
But then his smile faltered.
* * *
Izza stared up, around, at the immensity of Her. She’d known her small gods, each in their own way, but how could those compare to this undeniable fact, this curvature of space? “What can I do?”
“Teach her,” Margot said. “How to speak. How to be. She can’t make sense of herself—built from too many myths. She tries on masks, and none fit. She needs a storyteller. She needs a prophet. She needs someone to break open the walls of the world. She needs someone to interpret her to herself. She needs a partner.”
“First though,” Izza said, “she needs a thief.”
* * *
Stars flickered overhead, and an orange shadow fell across the moon.
Ms. Kevarian stood between Jace and Kai, her expression grim and her suit so black it seemed cut from the inside of an unlit cave. She set her briefcase down. “Good evening.”
“You have no power here,” Jace said. His voice quivered less than Kai expected.
Ms. Kevarian cocked her head to one side. “Interesting assertion. I can speak, at least, and words have power wherever they are heard.” She gestured to her briefcase, which rose off the ground and snapped open. An envelope floated to her hand; she removed a few papers. “I’m prepared, based on what I’ve heard, to name you personally, as well as the Sacerdotal Order of Kavekana in general, in a suit for fraud and mismanagement of my clients’ funds.”
Jace kept his balance, and his composure. “You do not frighten us. We have allies.”
“You do not,” she said. “You have clients. And how long will they support you, I wonder, once people learn that you mismanage funds and kill Iskari tourists? Your clients will not risk war in your defense, I think. And without them, what do you have? You are, in the end, one small island.”
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