For his own part, Morrow did not care to imagine what Pinkerton’s unnaturally imbued hex-hunger — like that of a born magic-user, yet somehow more venomous, eroding his very humanity along with his health and strength if not constantly fed — would look like, after “worsening.” He was only grateful he hadn’t yet had to find out.
“What the Professor’s tryin’ to say,” he interposed, “is how Mister Pinkerton’s needed particularly close to hand in camp these days, ’specially in times of war.”
“Huh.” Langobard leaned back, with a disgusted noise. “’Tween honest folk and hexes, war’s like men versus little red ants on a hill, with them the men in this equation.”
“Not so.” This last came from Captain Washford. “They’ve power, sure, but comparatively few have imagination or the discipline enough to wield it optimally, whilst we have numbers and persistence. Plus, we know full well what we fight for: Our entire world’s survival.”
“Oh, Hex City’s Lady don’t seek to destroy that,” Morrow remarked; “it’s hers already, by her lights. And she’ll need us, too, after — as fuel, for that Machine of hers.”
Catlin said hopefully: “Yet, to paraphrase Matthew 7:12 . . . if we leave them alone, might be they’ll leave us alone?”
“Uh huh. And might be pigs’ll learn to live shit-free, but I somewhat doubt it.”
Langobard scowled. “Gentlemen . . .”
“No, Mayor; Agent Morrow’s right, impoliteness aside.” Sophy’s mouth twitched, shaped a ghost of a smile. “Those to the north won’t let us be, not so long’s they do the Rev’s bidding, or he does hers.”
“Exactly.” Morrow glanced from the Widow to Langobard, then Washford. “All of you have a chunk of the truth, and we need to parse it out proper. Though we don’t dare wait much longer to take the fight toward Hex City once again, we can’t afford to do so unarmed.” He gestured to Asbury, who opened the heavy hide rucksack slung at his waist. “Now, the Doc here’s worked hard preparing the tools we need, in order to steal at least some hope of victory. So, with your permission . . .”
Asbury cleared his throat, turning the glass-faced device he’d withdrawn from side to side, so all could see. “This, which you may have already heard of, is the Manifold,” he said. “I shall not waste time explaining its construction, save to note that its clockwork incorporates gears of magnetized metal and a silver-iron-sodium alloy.” He twisted the fob several times, setting its gears a-whirl. “Once activated, the interaction of these kinetic-magnetic energies with the arcane conductivity of the alloy creates a field capable of disrupting hexacious input. While active, this device may be used as a shield against witchery and a weapon to dispel standing enchantments — merely strike the object or creature in question, and its efficacy will be dispersed.”
“Very clever, Doctor,” Langobard began. “Yet I fail to see what use one gadget might possibly be. . . .”
Here he trailed off, however, when Asbury upended the rest of his baggage onto the stage with a great cascading metallic clatter. Dozens of Manifolds slid out, shining in the light of the hall’s lanterns, and the crowd’s manner — hitherto that of bemusement — sharpened, with electrical fierceness, to an excitement so palpable it made Morrow grin.
“One to any who think they need one,” Asbury declared. “A charitable donation to our Bewelcomite fellow travellers in the War on Hex, care of Mister Pinkerton . . . and myself, of course.”
“Amazing.” Washford rubbed his chin. “Delicate mechanisms, though, Doctor, am I right? Not amenable to direct impact, grit in the gears — or being dropped?” As Asbury flushed: “Not that I mean to belittle your contribution, but we must know its limits. Will this truly work on any hex? Even ones such as Reverend Rook, or his Lady?” Adding, with a sidelong look at Morrow: “Or that other demi-deity we all know of . . . can we speak his name aloud, without inviting his participation?”
“Chess Pargeter’s no part of this,” Morrow replied, perhaps a bit too quickly. “Not anymore.”
“But reports put him all over the battlefield — at its edges, in the thick of the fray. He’s been seen at the station, watching trains come in. Hell, he’s been seen in people’s dreams.”
Here Catlin shook his head, smiling stupid-wide. “Wouldn’t place much trust in those tales, Captain — we’re none of us Daniels. People dream of what they fear.”
“And they fear what they have reason to. Don’t they, Mister Morrow?”
Suddenly, everyone was looking Morrow’s way.
Knowing Asbury in particular awaited his reply, he took the time to draw breath, before allowing:
“It’s true enough that something wages a campaign ’gainst the Rev and Herself, wearing . . . Pargeter’s shape, then turns the hammer ’gainst us, whenever we interfere. Take it from me, though — it ain’t him. I’ve been close enough to tell.” People fell silent, embarrassed by the implications. “For my money, he died in your town square, bringing y’all back from Beyond.”
Looking to Sophy, he was obscurely heartened to see her nod, albeit reluctantly. But Washford, who — like all the newest arrivals — hadn’t witnessed that particular anti-miracle for himself, stayed sceptical.
“The point still stands,” he said. “Regarding our biggest guns, and theirs — ”
“Doc might have a thing or two to say ’bout that,” Morrow replied, looking to Asbury, who nodded.
“At Mister Pinkerton’s request,” he began, “I have improvised a mechanical analogue to the Hex City Oath, which — according to our information, gleaned mostly from deserters — apparently prevents those hexes who consider themselves its citizens from parasiting each other and yet still allows them to use their powers individually, though not against either the Lady nor her sworn consort, Reverend Rook. I had previously thought to shield our former ally Miss Yu Ming-ch’in — or Songbird, as she prefers to be called — from contagion by giving her a prototype version of the neutralization bracket we now distribute to all Camp Pink hexes. In her case it proved ineffective, but not in any way through the item’s own fault.”
Nope, Morrow thought. All that was on “Mister” Pinkerton’s head, for breaking it off her and swallowing the pieces, ’fore they had the chance to take permanent effect — chawing ’em down like jerky, to suck up all the sweet hex-juice inside. ’Cause when the fit’s on him, he can’t keep himself in check at all . . . and seein’ how you were one of the last to see him that-a-way, Missus Love, I’d say it’s no longer a great mystery why he shuns your company. Since he can glimpse the shadow of his monstrous self in your eyes, same way he does in mine, he keeps us both at arm’s length, dealing with us through middlemen; simply happens I’m the one in the middle, this time.
As though his words were bleeding over, Sophy Love’s clean white forehead wrinkled prettily. “And this restrains any secret hostility they may harbour toward the Pinkerton Detective Agency, as well? For with so many hexes under his command, I don’t doubt but Mister Pinkerton must sleep with one eye open, always ready for attack — ”
“Oh, the Thaumaturgical Law of Replication sees to that,” Asbury assured her. “All our brackets are cast from the same mold as Miss Songbird’s first shackle, with that close-held by the boss — Pinkerton — himself. And he who holds the master prototype may also use it to reverse the flow, de-powering every bracket-wearing hex who thinks to stand against him.”
“So you do keep your wild dogs leashed, then — that’s a mercy. For lo, One of themselves, even a prophet of their own, said, the Cretians are always liars, evil beasts, slow bellies; Titus, 1:12.”
“More collared than leashed, ma’am. But accurate otherwise, to a point.”
Morrow shut his eyes, unable to dismiss the immediate rush of memory: saw witches and warlocks, volunteers and prisoners alike, lined up knee to knee to wait their turn at the striking iron; with each fresh collaring a groan went up, along with a blast of heat, the slight smell of singed hair or flesh, th
e wince and stamp of pain. After which the blacksmith’s apprentice would douse their necks in a bucketful of water and move them to where the healers stood, charged hands already outstretched for a mighty laying-on, with the raw assault to everyone’s spiritual dignity left completely untreated.
Though Morrow hadn’t had occasion to sit down with their mutual “boss” for some time now, he found himself nevertheless already convinced of the scenario Asbury had occasionally let slip hints about, late at night, in his cups. For the idea that Pinkerton’s ultimate goal might be to make the Agency the States’ predominant outfit of internal control, sole wielders of the only arcane branch of technology allowing mere humans to police and identify hexes — to break them like horses, groom them like dogs, put them down like sick pets if and when they exceeded their purviews — was both a truly horrifying one, and all too easy to believe.
Strange how it’d taken the War, that dreadful upheaval pitting neighbour ’gainst neighbour, culling an entire generation at one swoop, to convince a divided America that centre-driven unity was better by far than state-to-state autonomy. In a way, it had become their own version of the Oath: a commitment to Missus Love’s Law, instead of that wild, God-given justice the first colonists had supposedly fled England in order to regain. And now, with the constant spectre of fresh Division hanging low over all their heads, Pinkerton was right in thinking how any nation who could use hexes like tools instead of having to deal with them like weather might expect to write its own ticket from now on, both at home and — eventually — elsewhere.
It could never be forgotten that staying within siege distance of New Aztectlan also kept Pinkerton close to a source of hexation he could sample at will, distilling it like the tinctures Asbury had once used to fend off his curse-pollution. Which might explain why all his strategic decisions hitherto seemed to suggest his aspiration was to take the city wholesale, thus enslaving the largest concentration of hexes in America — magicians already used to working together, if only under an oath of loyalty so stark that to break it would kill them outright.
To do so, he would have to dispose of Ixchel, Rook and probably the Enemy as well, a triple coup of spectacularly crazy proportions. Yet Morrow could well imagine that in his hex-juice-drugged state, Pinkerton might think this ambition more easily fulfilled than not.
Asbury drank a lot these days, for a man so patently unused to doing so; did it late in the night and early in the morn, with little pause for full recovery in between. His pleasure was gin, poured into a teacup with the pinkie extended, then chugged straight down without wincing. Sometimes he probably cut it with other things — Morrow’d heard tell that laudanum in red wine would give you horrors so bad you’d think you saw a woman’s nipples wink at you, and as manager of Pinkerton’s medical stores, the Professor sure had access to that. But for all Morrow could really prove, he might’ve been rolling the Red Weed and smoking it the way he claimed those old Mexes used to, or chewing it up like peyote buttons.
Didn’t much matter, either way. Though Asbury’s hands seldom shook and his voice remained slur-free, he did keep himself well-lit. From where he was sitting, for example, it was obvious to Morrow he’d already had a few nips today; luckily, no one else seemed to recognize this fact except perhaps for Langobard, who was probably willing to let it slide on account of being in a similar condition. And once past a certain point in his routine, Morrow’d lately had cause to observe that if you asked Asbury something straight out — no matter what, or what about — he’d just go right on ahead and answer it.
“That first bracket, the bracelet I made for Miss Yu, wasn’t right,” he’d told Morrow, a week back. “Untested. To lock it on a mere girl, in such primitive conditions . . .” He shook his head, sadly. “What right have I to call myself a scientist, after that sort of behaviour?”
“Much right as any here, I s’pose. More right than most, still.”
Asbury shook his head. “Pinkerton’s idea. Wanted a demonstration of its efficacy; demanded I use it just as soon as opportunity presented itself, and on Miss Yu too, if at all possible. Left to my own devices, I would never, but — he insisted. And . . . circumstances were exigent, at the time.”
“No doubting that,” Morrow had assured him.
“Yes. Grateful as he was to reap the rewards, though, he was equally quick to inform me that the effects fell markedly short of his true ambitions.”
Morrow forced a laugh. “What’d he want,” he made himself ask, lightly, “for it to make him turn hex altogether and rule America, like Rook and Chess might’ve planned? Or be President, then, after he’d made short work of Johnson — hell, what about king?”
Asbury muttered something into his collar, the only part of which Morrow heard sounded like “uh guh” — followed by another long swallow, to compose himself. After which he eventually managed to eke out: “No. For Pinkerton, you see, wants more. Desires, in short, to be . . . a . . .”
And here things took on a far darker filter, like looking through a pebbled storm window. Because what the word in question turned out to be was “god.”
After all, if Asbury’s theories held true — which they certainly had, thus far — even the “gods” of Old Mexico were once no more than hexes, just as all hexes were once mere humans, thus suggesting that any human charged with hex-power could (in theory) become a god. How, though, exactly? This was the question Morrow most dreaded, hoping devoutly to never see it answered — yet fearing, more and more, that he was doomed to do so.
“Can’t be done,” he’d replied. “Right?”
Asbury regarded his booze-filled teapot, bleakly. “Such a transition requires sacrifice, obviously, from what we saw happen to your Mister Pargeter — that the applicant himself be sacrificed, in point of fact. Yet sacrifice is simply death, placed in special context. And when we speak of creatures as powerful as Lady Rainbow, let alone that Other, are we even really speaking of death, per se? Disruption alone might suffice, if it lasted long enough. The resultant backwash of released mantic energy, horrifyingly strong as it would have to be . . . I see no reason why Mister Pinkerton might not use it to elevate himself to their power status, if only temporarily.”
Temporarily’d be bad enough, Morrow didn’t have to say, since he could only suppose they were both thinking it. And a few minutes later, Asbury put his head down on his folded arms for “a short rest,” never lifting it up again ’til morning.
And here I am, stranded right in the middle of a pile of shit, just like effin’ always, Morrow concluded, his long musing over. Sure hope Yancey and the others have found the real Chess by now, wherever the Enemy might’ve stashed him — that they have a plan to go with that idea, too, if and when . . .
Up on stage, Langobard raised “his” new Manifold to the light, admiring its shine. A second later, however, he almost dropped the thing as though burned — for it had begun to twist in his hand, buzzing waspish, mercury popping like it wanted to escape.
“The hell — ?” was all he had time for.
Outside, the thunder cracked like God’s own whip, shaking Nazarene Hall to its foundations. And between them, on the table, a noise rose up that Morrow’d hoped never to hear again: ticking and chattering, magnified by fifty-odd. The Manifolds themselves, rattling like bees in a sack.
“. . . what?” This from the Reverend Catlin, still left off to one side, pathetic in his lack of practical understanding. But the rest of them knew better.
“Hexation,” was all Sophy Love said, folding her little boy close. While Morrow just shifted back into fighting stance, one hand automatically going to his gun.
It’s on, he thought. And ran for the door.
CHAPTER FIVE
Atop Hex City’s southernmost ramparts with Fennig at his elbow, Reverend Rook looked down on a four-foot-wide bowl that had been made by hexation-gloved hands digging up the stone like wet clay, tossing it pell-mell over the edge to shatter. Then filled by bucket afte
r bucket hauled laboriously up from the city’s wells — that part had to be done without magic, the man who’d designed it had told them, or the reflections it cast would be false, and therefore impotent.
The water must be a mirror, the mirror an eye, without flaw or artifice. It is known, barbarians. Everywhere, it is known! All civilized places, at least.
Have you truly no system of traditions here, in this empty pigsty of yours, this bone-kennel? Do you not at the least strive to educate yourselves, knowing no one else will do it for you?
The voice in Reverend Rook’s mind didn’t much sound like Songbird’s except in terms of tone — that damnable Celestial arrogance, a thousand years of Chinee witchery made literal flesh. For the Emperors and mandarins had done with both their ancestors what Auntie Sal’s Marse Followell had only dreamed on: in- and out-crossed ’em generation after generation like any other owned creature, culling their bloodlines for potential, power and amusement-value deformity — as pets and slaves, equally. Living weapons used ’til they broke, then bred again and again ’til their children outstripped them, or died trying.
And here he was now, the man himself — the Honourable Chu, squatting over that same pool like a snapping turtle. He was short and broad, black eyes narrowed, the water below him rippling in red circles as he stirred it with a handful of long yarrow stalks. With his frayed black cotton pyjama pants and callused bare feet, he looked most like what he’d once masqueraded as: a scholar reduced to beggary, escaping his inherited yoke by slipping on the uniform of a simple railway-labour coolie. One thing alone marked him out as maybe more — the tatters of a royal blue silk tunic, faded almost lavender.
When Chu spoke, threads of light writhed in that silk like the worms which had birthed it, showing him for what he was: New Aztectlan’s war-master, born of a culture with millennia invested in the arts of battle and hexation. No matter how worn the garment became, Chu never removed it, and answered no questions about how it had been ruined. But Rook, thinking back on his own black-covered Bible — long gone now — and of Songbird, so trapped in her sacred whore’s gilded red lacquer cage that the earthquake he’d called down on her must’ve seemed less a disaster than a freedom-spawning miracle, thought he could guess.
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