The Scarlet Star Trilogy

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The Scarlet Star Trilogy Page 10

by Ben Galley


  ‘Must you always sharpen your sword this early in the morning?’ he asked in a muffled voice.

  ‘Best time to do it,’ came the equally muffled reply. Merion felt Rhin’s words reverberate in the centre of his back. ‘Never know what’ll happen after breakfast.

  The very mention of food stoked a fire in Merion’s belly. He was ravenous after emptying his stomach into the bucket the night before. The whiff of eggs and bacon sneaking through the cracks in his door did not help matters. If he concentrated, he could hear his aunt whistling in the kitchen. Before Merion braved the sunlight, he turned his mind to his day and what he would accomplish. Was he sure he wanted to do this, to brave the rail and the high seas all over again? Merion was not truly sure, but that sounded all too much like giving in—and Harks did not give in. The only way out was through. Merion spent the next five minutes with his eyes scrunched up tight, devising a plan, tiptoeing along the edges of slumber at the same time.

  Rhin’s voice brought him abruptly back to reality. ‘You getting up or not?’ he asked.

  ‘Yes indeed.’ Merion said, and via his strength of purpose and hunger, he threw himself out of bed and onto the wooden floor. He was surprised to find the planks were warm under his bare feet, in contrast to the cold rug and marble of his vast bedroom in Harker Sheer. Merion grumbled as he reached for his shoes.

  Rhin poked his head out from under the bed. ‘Bacon and eggs. Sounds great.’

  ‘Yes, yes, I’ll see what I can do. You just worry about your sword,’ Merion said, mumbling around a yawn.

  ‘And beans too, if there are any. I hear Americans like their beans.’

  ‘And just where did you hear that?’

  ‘On the train.’

  Merion shrugged. They had heard a lot of things on the train. ‘Fine. Keep quiet.’

  ‘Aye aye, sir.’

  Merion opened the door and was instantly enveloped in a wall of grey smoke. He grimaced and put a hand to his mouth. ‘Aunt Lilain?’ he yelled. ‘Something appears to be on fire!’

  ‘Only me!’ came the reply, from the right. He could see a shape moving about in the smoke. ‘Now, I don’t normally cook, so my apologies if it ain’t what you’re used to.’

  Merion’s stomach didn’t care. It dragged him forwards into the smoke and into a chair at the small round table in the centre of the kitchen. Lilain busied about the room, checking pans and stirring the contents of assorted bowls. A plate landed in front of him. Its edges were so hot they burnt Merion’s fingers when he tried to move it closer. The breakfast came slowly at first, in little bits and pieces, splatters and splotches. Soon enough it became a landslide. Bowls began to gather around his plate, full of porridge and jam and milk and sauces. Sausages rained. Beans spread like oil slicks. Slices of toast began to tower around him. Merion could barely get his fork in edgeways as the food kept coming. It wasn’t long before he was staring at a fortress of a plate. Merion didn’t even know where to start.

  ‘Er …’ was all he could muster.

  ‘Enjoy,’ Lilain clasped her hands together. She was beaming. ‘I can rustle us up some more toast if you—’

  ‘No, thank you.’ Merion held up a hand, busy examining an intersection of mushrooms and fried onion. ‘I think this may be enough.’

  If the sheer quantity of the breakfast didn’t kill him, he suspected its quality might just finish him off. Some of the sausages were more charcoal than meat, the egg nearest to him looked as though it could be employed as a plate, and it actually seemed as though the beans were trying to run away, rather than just wanting to see the world. An eager Aunt Lilain watched on as Merion gingerly raised his fork. He couldn’t decide which morsel to stab first. The closer his fork got to the mountain of food, the more Lilain leant over the table, and the tighter she clasped her hands.

  But it seemed that today Merion had some good fortune, for once. There came a loud knocking at the kitchen door, and then in burst the rotund Eugin. His face was redder than a beetroot and sweat dripped from his chin in great globules. Merion found his hunger suddenly waning.

  ‘Lilain! Has there been a fire?’ he gasped, noting the smoke.

  ‘No, I’m just cooking! What on earth is it?’

  ‘Another dead on the railroad.’

  ‘You joking with me, barrel-boy.’

  Merion barely suppressed a laugh.

  ‘Lordsguard’s honour, ma’am.’

  ‘That only works if you’re a lordsguard, Eugin.’ Lilain thumbed her nose. ‘Two in two days. That ain’t normal.’

  ‘Workers won’t go back out there today. Whole town’s full of them. Unofficial holiday, they’re calling it.’

  ‘Yeah, ‘cept for those who have to look after the bodies.’

  ‘Are you coming, Mister Hark?’ asked Eugin.

  Lilain shushed him as she reached for her hat and gloves. ‘Don’t be silly, Eugin. Boy’s just sat down for breakfast. Leave him be,’ she said, and promptly pushed him out of the door. She turned back to Merion. ‘By all means, go wandering, but promise me three things. Don’t wander outside the town limits. Don’t go into any taverns, and don’t get on a locomotive. If you are going to leave, then it’ll be me seeing you off, you hear me?’

  Merion nodded, pretending his mouth was full of food.

  ‘Good. Oh, and don’t go downstairs.’

  He nodded again.

  ‘And your luggage will be dropped at the door at noon.’

  More nodding.

  Lilain stared at him a bit more, narrowing her grey eyes. There was a slight sheen of bacon grease on her nose. ‘You do understand me, don’t you, Merion?’

  One last nod.

  ‘Good. Then I’ll see you back at the house this afternoon if not earlier.’

  The door slammed, and Merion was left alone. Several seconds passed before Merion put down his fork and got up from the table. He could no longer hear Lilain’s footsteps or Eugin’s panting. He was well and truly alone. And as all children do when they suddenly find themselves alone, Merion went exploring.

  *

  The old house was, simply put, far from special. The upstairs was a creaking mess, where the bare floorboards were strewn with clothes and bits of paper. There was a small study over the kitchen, full of ageing furniture covered with books and old scrolls. Merion let his fingers wander their pages, tracing the lines of the detailed drawings, sketches of dissected eels and body parts. He grimaced, and moved on.

  The main bedroom was equally untidy. The curtains were thick cotton, and they transformed the room into a dark cave. A single bed sat in one corner, a chest of drawers in another. More books were on the floor, along with more clothes.

  The outhouse, which Merion found at the bottom of a dusty garden, was almost not worth mentioning. It was a tall wooden box standing upright in the ground, looking more like a coffin than a privy. He opened the creaking door and the smell hit him in the face like a brick. There was a seat and a hole, and that was it. A few sheaves of soft paper had been folded and left on the side.

  Back in the house, the ground floor consisted of the kitchen, a set of grimy stairs, a storeroom full of stretchers and shovels, and his measly bedroom. All in all it was a shambles, but the heat of the morning sun and a glimpse of the town had doused his disappointment and disgust. Merion itched to see the rest of this doomed little town, to come face to face with whatever fates he had been lumped with.

  Merion found Rhin waiting patiently on his bed. The sheets had been folded and the pillows punched. ‘We’re not staying, remember.’

  Rhin just smiled. ‘I’ll believe it when I see it.’

  ‘Don’t do that,’ Merion scowled as he rummaged through the rucksack for a fresh shirt. ‘Don’t just smile me aside like Lilain does, as if I’m joking. I assure you, I am deadly serious.’

  Rhin snorted and drummed a quick rhythm on his knees. ‘So, did you get the answers you wanted?’

  ‘Some, but not all. She’s holding something back, I can tell.


  ‘What did she say?’

  ‘She told me about my father, and why she lives here. Kept talking about olden days as well.’

  Rhin tilted his head. ‘Did she now?’

  Merion clapped. ‘I knew that would interest you! Why haven’t you ever told me about these olden days? She told me she got lessons on the subject when she was my age.’

  ‘Because such times go by a different name to the Fae. The golden days, not olden. A few of your kind have kept the stories alive; singing the old songs all these years. Maybe she was taught by them.’

  Merion shimmied out of his shirt as he thought aloud. ‘But why would my grandfather care about such things?’ he asked.

  Rhun shrugged. ‘Looks like you need to ask some more questions. In the meantime, let’s go exploring.’

  ‘I’m going exploring. You are staying here.’

  Rhin’s face fell. ‘What?’

  ‘It’s too dangerous with you in the rucksack. I’ll go alone and scout it out. In return, you can have my breakfast.’

  This seemed to get Rhin’s attention. The faerie was a greedy sort. ‘You don’t want it?’

  Merion nodded and pointed to the kitchen. ‘Aunt Lilain’s quite the … er, cook, but I’m not in the mood for eating.’

  Rhin hopped down from the bed and looked around the doorframe. He spotted the pile of steaming, smoking food instantly. ‘Have fun in town,’ he muttered, as he strode towards his newly acquired feast.

  Merion paused on the doormat, door half-open, the heat from the morning already spilling inside the dark house. ‘Don’t eat too much and pass out again. Remember last time?’

  ‘Never fear. I’m not keen on going through that again.’

  Rhin was already murdering the first sausage before the door closed.

  *

  Blast if it wasn’t hot. The sun had barely risen over the eastern hills and already the ground was shimmering underfoot. Merion could feel the moisture pouring out of him with every step he took down the rocky, dusty trail into town. He was genuinely concerned that his boots would fill up with so much sweat he would have to empty them by the side of the road. Wouldn’t that be embarrassing, his first day in town? But it could also possibly be his last.

  He soon came to a small row of dusty gardens and a familiar alleyway. It was mercifully cool between the houses. Merion leant against the wall while he caught his breath. He could hear the hustle and bustle of a main street at the end of the curving alleyway. It sounded hot and dusty, and, he guiltily confessed, rather exciting. Merion followed the alleyway and stepped out into the heat once more. He was almost instantly knocked down by a large man carrying a heavy sack.

  ‘Watch it, boy!’ he barked, as he sauntered on down the street, hat low and beard bushy.

  Merion did indeed ‘watch it’. He watched it as carefully as he could for the next few hours.

  The streets of Fell Falls were not the streets of London; that was clear. They were simply tamed stretches of bare desert, kept in line by buildings and fences. But they teemed and buzzed and thundered like London’s; that was for sure. The combined hubbub of hooves and carts and feet churned the air, making Merion’s heart pound. Conversation was rife. Large groups of people had congealed on the steps of each and every building, busy swapping hot words. Everybody was talking, and death was the topic of the day.

  ‘Two deaths in two days.’

  Merion heard those words repeated over and over as he roamed the streets, dodging men on horseback and rumbling carts full of iron and wood. He took a short break between two piebald horses so that he could watch the world pass by, and take it all in. If Merion thought he had seen the wildest bunch of people that America had to offer, he was instantly proved wrong by the citizens of Fell Falls. He had never seen such a stranger breed of stranger.

  From the men with brimmed hats and triple-barrelled guns at their belts, to those covered in dust and hauling heavy sacks to and fro, the citizenry both thrilled and scared the young Hark. Once again, it seemed that no town could be without its whores. Those that were not leaning out of high windows and whistling at men stood in the alleyways and doorways, chatting idly to passers-by. Like the taverns that dominated every corner Merion could see, they served to keep mankind distracted from the fear of the wild, of the unknown. He was starting to realise that now.

  It seemed that business had also managed to find a toehold at the edge of the world. People needed to shop, of course, no matter how many fanged and terrifying beasts lay just over the hills. Blacksmiths, butchers, tailors, farriers, jewellers, stables, banks, barbers, general stores, and even a pet shop; the streets bristled with their signs. It did not take Merion long to find the post office. It had been thoughtfully placed at the very centre of town, and had even been painted a bright blue to help it stand out. He marched right up its steps and pushed through the swinging doors.

  Now, unfortunately for Tonmerion Hark, there is a certain method behind using a swinging door, and he was completely unaware of it. The basic mechanics involve pushing the door forward, stepping through aforementioned door, and then releasing it, remembering to step clear of its return swing, lest you get struck in the back. Some of the more vicious swinging doors have been known to do this.

  So it was that Merion followed steps one through three of this method to the letter, but sadly failed to remember step four. The door sent him staggering forwards to sprawl rather ungracefully over the post desk.

  As Merion regained his balance, he heard somebody sniggering. He looked up to find a short bald man sat behind the counter. He was wearing a clerk’s uniform so bleached by the sun it was almost grey, and for some reason he had thought it a good idea to cultivate a moustache under the balloon-like growth he called a nose. Merion wasn’t surprised to see that he was lacking several of his teeth.

  ‘I want to send a letter,’ Merion stated.

  The clerk regained his composure and laid his hairy hands flat on the counter. ‘Well, you’re in the right place for it. Where’s this letter of yours going to?’

  ‘To London, please. To Constable Pagget’s office on Gibbet Street.’

  The clerk puckered his lips and emitted a low whistle. ‘Empire-born, are you? Gonna cost you.’

  This man was already beginning to irritate him intensely. Merion took a breath. ‘I imagined it might. How much?’

  Now the clerk began to suck at his teeth. Merion wondered how many more annoying noises he had in his repertoire.

  ‘One sil’erbit,’ he said.

  Merion shook his head. ‘I don’t know what one of those is.’

  The clerk laughed so hard and so suddenly that he wheezed instead. Merion clenched his fists and forced himself to be polite. Manners.

  ‘A silver bit, son. A silver coin with Lincoln’s face on it.’

  ‘I don’t have one of those …’ Merion mumbled as he dug into his pockets.

  ‘Well then, we ain’t sending your letter now, are we?’

  ‘… but I do have one with the sigil of Queen Victorious on it.’ Merion held a silver coin up to the sunlight streaming through the windows and then placed it on the counter. He left his finger on it, pointing straight down at the queen’s mark.

  The clerk sniffed, and coughed, and then shuffled in his seat. ‘Don’t normally make a habit of taking Empire coin,’ he finally said. ‘It’ll have to be two.’

  ‘But you just said …’ Merion spluttered.

  The clerk just shrugged. ‘Exchange rate,’ was his only excuse.

  ‘Fine.’ Merion dug out another silver coin and slid it across the desk to sit beside the other. A finger was placed on that sigil too. ‘How long?’ he asked.

  ‘How long what?’

  ‘How long does it take to get there?’

  ‘A month, at best.’

  Merion rubbed his forehead. ‘Do you have a pen or a quill?’

  The clerk sniffed again. ‘One sil’erbit.’

  ‘Not to buy! To borrow.’
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br />   The clerk shook his head, trying to give his mouth an officious slant. ‘We ain’t in the habit of loanin’ pens to strangers. ‘Specially Empire ones.’

  Merion wanted to take a pen and shove it up the man’s nose, but he managed to stay calm. Well, almost. ‘I’m not a stranger,’ he snapped. ‘I am Lilain Rennevie’s nephew, I’ll have you know.’

  The clerk raised his greasy eyebrows. ‘Are you indeed?’

  Merion nodded firmly. ‘I am. Now, may I have a pen?’

  An ink-stained finger was waved at the doorway. ‘Over there. On the desk.’

  Merion scowled. ‘I’ll be back momentarily.’

  The clerk sniffed once again. ‘Very well then, I’ll see you, momentarily.’

  With his shoulders well and truly hunched, the boy stalked over to the desk and snatched the pen from its little glass jar. He stuck a hand inside his shirt and pulled out a few of the blank sheets of paper he had swiped from his aunt’s floor. With purpose, and a dwindling supply of ink, Merion bent over the paper and scribbled until his arm ached. He recounted his whole journey, going into detail on the conditions of his past and current accommodation, and making sure to convey exactly how dissatisfied he was with the transfer of information from London to America. Finally, just as the pen offered up its last obsidian drops, he demanded to be updated on the capture of his father’s murderer, and insisted on being sent a return ticket.

  When Merion was finished, he held the paper up to the light of a high window, like a trophy of his utter dissatisfaction with the world.

  ‘You done?’ grumbled the bald dolt behind the counter.

  ‘Yes,’ Merion replied. ‘Yes, I am.’ He returned to find his two silver coins had been already been pocketed. ‘To the office of Constable Jimothy Pagget, Gibbet Street, London, the Empire of Britannia.’

 

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