by Peter Newman
She feels movement in her arms. Metal feathers slide over one another as wings part. An eye opens, flicks up at the girl, then fixes itself on the infernal outside, narrowing.
Vesper turns back. The kneeling figures wait, letting heads hang, weary. Many are injured. Together they number less than a third of the forces outside. She looks at Duet, one half of the Harmonised standing watchful, hopeful, the other less so, the holes in her chestplate like the sky punched clean of stars.
The sword tugs towards the First, towards battle. To Vesper’s surprise, the motion drags her with it, till her elbows rest on the barrier. Light fizzes where blade and barrier brush, and the First looks up.
Eyes and eye meet.
The sword begins to hum, soft.
The light barrier quivers and the First tilts as if suddenly struck by a strong wind.
Vesper tries to retreat, feels resistance. Young biceps strain, bobbing under sleeves like a pair of apples, and she steps back.
It seems as if the sword wants to fight and she wonders what that might mean. For a moment eyes squeeze shut. No, she thinks. No more fighting. Unable to bear it, she tests the lie in her mind. It feels wrong but anything is better than more bloodshed. She clears her throat. ‘The sword has spoken to me.’
Beside her, Genner lowers his head. ‘We are yours to command.’
It is hard to tell if the sword vibrates or the girl’s hands shake. ‘Gamma … Gamma of The Seven … does not want you to fight today.’
A few look surprised, most simply accept it.
Slowly, an eye swivels away from the barrier and back to the girl, glaring.
From the back, a voice murmurs. ‘And so it was, for Gamma knew when to strike and when to hold back.’
‘And so it was,’ intone the others.
Vesper nods, finding a little confidence. ‘You can’t beat them today. Gamma doesn’t want any more of you to die. If you surrender, you can live on. And when the time is right, you can fight again.’
‘But what about our swords? They cannot be replaced.’
A bead of sweat escapes Vesper’s hairline. ‘I’m sorry, Gamma didn’t say anything about the swords.’ A muttering passes between the assembled knights and she quickly adds, ‘Maybe they can be remade. With The Seven’s grace.’
‘With The Seven’s grace,’ they echo, but another question drowns it out: ‘What about the knights? The First won’t let them go.’
‘They’ll be prisoners, yes, but they’ll be alive.’
One of the older knights looks up. ‘You won’t forget us?’
Caught in the veteran’s gaze, Vesper finds herself speaking. ‘I’ll come back for you. I mean, Gamma will, I promise.’
The old knight salutes and others follow. ‘So be it. But I beg you, give our sacrifice here meaning.’ His eyes hold hers as he speaks. ‘Make it count.’
‘I will,’ she says, meaning it.
Genner stands up. ‘Gamma has shown us the way. The bearer will go south to finish the mission. It is our job to make that possible.
‘We will stall the First here as long as we can while the bearer escapes. Demolitions, we need an exit and we need it now.’
A hand goes up. ‘The moment we start blasting, they’ll be on us.’
‘No,’ the old knight replies. ‘They won’t hear a thing. The death song of our blades will drown you out.’
Genner nods. ‘Good. Go to it then.’ While soldiers spring into action and knights prepare their farewells, Genner kneels before Vesper. ‘I’m sorry things have turned out this way. We have a contact in Sonorous. Another of the Lenses. She will help you to escape.’
‘You’re not coming with me?’
‘No. I need to report to the Winged Eye and communicate with our allies here. They need to know what you’re doing if they’re going to help.’
‘Can’t you do that and come with us?’
‘No. When I send the signal, I’ll draw too much attention.’
‘You won’t …’
‘Die? It doesn’t matter about me. The sword is what matters.’
Vesper bites her lip, blinks hard.
Genner’s face softens. ‘If it makes you feel better, I’m not planning on it. If I can escape, I will. And don’t worry, you won’t be alone. I’m sending Duet with you.’
‘Okay.’
‘Yes. Now get yourself ready. You’ve a long swim ahead of you.’ Genner turns to go but is stopped by a lip, trembling. ‘Here,’ he says, ‘we need to fasten the sword to you. May I?’
‘Yes,’ replies the girl.
‘It’s too big to sit by your waist, you’ll have to strap it to your back. If you wrap it and hold it in place, I’ll secure it for you.’
Vesper does as she’s told, relieved to cover the sword up again. Genner takes his time, careful not to touch the sword itself. ‘There. All done. How does that feel?’
‘That’s fine.’
‘There’s one more thing.’ He takes his pistol from its holster and presses it into Vesper’s hand, singing softly, secretly. Light glows from Genner’s palm, flowing around the grip, growing with the note, then fading with it. ‘I’ve keyed the gun to you now. Keep it safe and out of sight.’ Vesper nods, slipping it away into the pocket of her coat. ‘And do the same yourself, for all our sakes.’
Duet presses the foam into Vesper’s ears, covers them with her hands.
One of the knights raises her sword towards Vesper, then the sky. A final salute.
On instinct, Vesper closes her eyes.
The knight brings it down hard but the angle is wrong. Sparks fly and metal screeches. People flinch and grit their teeth.
Her sword doesn’t break.
She screams and lifts it once more. This time, her aim is true.
Even through the layers of protection, Vesper feels the sound cutting through her, the sensation sharp enough that she checks herself, half expecting to be injured. She also feels the explosion, more mundane, as demolition charges punch through stone.
Outside, the First sits motionless. Within its shell, essence ripples, pleased.
Inside the shelter, more knights come forward, a queue of mourners, faces stiff with grief. Swords are raised in salute.
Vesper manages a quick bow before Duet steers her to the newly made hole, still smoking. She peers down, hears water sloshing in the darkness.
Duet presses a mask to Vesper’s face. Clear plastic that covers her from forehead to chin. The mask adheres instantly, misting over briefly, then correcting, clearing.
Genner smiles at the girl, salutes and jumps down the hole. Red hair waves briefly and is gone.
Vesper mumbles something in return but, through the mask, through the breaking of steel, through the last song of the knight’s weapons, her words are lost.
Duet lowers one of herself into the hole. The other helps Vesper, then follows. They slide and climb their way down, the tunnel trembling around them as more swords are shattered above.
Stone is cold but water is colder, smacking legs in the darkness, stealing sensation. Vesper tries to pause, to prepare herself but Duet’s boots say otherwise, finding shoulders, urging her on.
Rigid with fear and cold, the girl allows herself to be pushed by Duet, pulled by her, handled through the tunnel and out into wider waters. Away from the rock, light finds its way underwater in fingers of red and gold, like two hands reaching from the heavens. They follow the shafts as if lifted by them, up, up and up, until heads break the surface, bobbing at the cliff’s base.
Too heavy to swim easily, Duet drags herself and Vesper along the rocks. It is slow jerky progress, punctuated by bumps, by numb fingers slipping on slick stone, by chattering teeth and unbidden grunts of exertion.
Behind them, perched high on a ledge like a black spider, tiny, Genner begins to signal, shining a light towards the sky that flicks on and off. Code flashes, fast and complex, baffling the uninitiated.
But even the most foolish can understand that a message is bei
ng sent and even the most foolish can trace the signal to its source. Before Genner has finished, a sky-ship rises above the rocks. It rotates slowly, opening a side door. A figure climbs out, dressed in black armour and loose black fabric and throws itself into the air without fear. Another fragment of the First.
It plummets, arms spread starfish wide, getting faster and faster until it passes Genner, plucking him from the rock face.
For a long three seconds, they fall. Water splashes, surging up in a circle. Then nothing.
*
In the streets of Sonorous, in a rusting house, a woman watches a window. She reads the distant winking light, stuttering on the underside of the clouds.
When it is finished, the woman stands up, snatches a bag hidden beneath a dusty sheet and goes to the door. She glances out. It is eerily quiet. People hide in their homes, in their workplaces. Too-calm voices speak at intervals, suggesting people stay safe, reassuring that everything is under control.
The woman smirks at that, then moves into the street, closing the door behind her. As she walks towards the docks, a figure peels itself from the shadows and follows.
She hears the footsteps getting closer. She considers running but checks the instinct. Instead preparing the dart hidden beneath the skin of her wrist.
Gradually, the second figure catches up with her, falls into step alongside.
The woman wraps her arms around herself as if cold. Seemingly by coincidence, her wrist now points towards the figure’s neck.
The new arrival appears weathered, tough as old meat. ‘This may come as a … surprise to you but we have something in common. Both of us pretend to be normal residents of this city when in fact our true loyalties lie … elsewhere. You are in truth, an agent of the Winged Eye and I am the First.’
The woman cannot help surprise writing itself into the curve of her eyebrows.
‘Did you know that there is something that moves faster than light?’
She shakes her head, humouring, thinking, furious.
‘There is. I move faster than light. Not this … shell, though it is certainly fast by your standards. My true self. And that is why I will always be … superior.’
They walk for a few more paces. Despite the cold wind, dark circles grow under the woman’s arms.
‘I know what you are. I know your plans and they will fail. But all is not lost. I am here to make you an offer. Don’t react. Don’t fight. Listen. Think. Decide for yourself how much you want this life.’
Abruptly, the woman stops. She flexes a muscle in her wrist and a dart fires.
Not as fast as light, but fast enough, the First moves.
*
Duet does not bother to hide her weapons. There is no-one around, no crowd to blend with. One of her moves ahead, eyes alert for changes. She checks left, checks right, squints at dusty windows, then beckons. The other follows, pulling Vesper with her.
The houses they pass are faceless cubes, temporary structures never replaced. Simple boxes designed for efficient use of space and little else. Aesthetics trampled in the name of speed and cost. In places the cubes are stacked to make flats, or linked up, for more affluent residents. Since independence, the people of Sonorous have begun to decorate, to distinguish. Childlike efforts to create art, without the ease or charm of childhood.
Where the maths goes wrong, or where the space runs out, pathways are squeezed to accommodate extra habitation, resulting in tiny alleys, accessible only to the small and slender.
Duet and Vesper barely pass, sidestepping through, the walls dragging across their chests. They dare not slow, for the sounds of pursuit have already begun. Tanks whirring back to life, soldiers shouting to each other, marching.
Above them, three sky-ships move, searchlights sweeping the streets. Before they arrive and pick them out, Duet shoulders her way into a house.
As the door splits open, a man is revealed. In one hand, he holds an autohammer. Behind him, tucked under furniture, his children squeal.
The tool is already set to maximum strength. He swings it at Duet’s head.
One of her ducks while the other steps in, sword held high.
The autohammer swings wide, burying itself in the door-frame again and again.
The man falls backwards, clutching his arm.
Duet steps onto him, boots pressing down on armpits, crushing.
The children squeal again.
‘Shut them up –’
‘– Or we will.’
For emphasis, Duet charges her pistol.
Vesper reaches for her but the other’s hand stops her, firm. She tries to reach the Harmonised with words instead. ‘Don’t kill them!’
‘We won’t –’
‘– Unless –’
‘– We have to.’
The family is bound with wire, hidden behind furniture. It is telling how quickly they capitulate. Vesper turns away, goes to the window. Through the grime, she sees lights pass by. The beams point eagerly, hoping to find a target. Once, twice, thrice, they appear, circling, moving on.
Vesper leans against the sill, resting her head on toughened plasglass. Muscles tremble, allow themselves a brief respite.
Time passes while she stares into space, seeing the outside world but mostly not seeing anything. Then, flitting past her line of sight, a small shape, bleating and frantic. Before she knows it, she too is running.
Duet’s voice is a chorus at her back. ‘Wait!’
But she doesn’t. A sudden burst of energy takes her through the broken door, onto the streets and away. She ignores the sword, heavy on her back, ignores the fatigue.
‘Wait,’ she calls. ‘It’s me. It’s Vesper.’
At the sound of her voice, the kid stops and looks round.
Vesper slows, crouches, opens her arms.
Little hooves skip across stones. Bleating becomes lighter and the kid throws himself into Vesper’s embrace.
‘There you are. I’m so sorry, I thought I’d lost you.’
The kid rubs his head against the girl’s. Lips clamp gently around an ear.
‘Come on, we can’t stay here.’
She gets up to find Duet towering over her. Their faces are hidden behind visors but she can guess enough from the two pairs of eyes. She is not afraid though. Compared to her father, their disapproving looks seem amateurish.
‘Are we going back to that house?’
‘No –’
‘– We have to keep ahead –’
‘– Of the search parties –’
‘– And get to –’
‘– The port.’
‘Genner said help would come.’
Duet takes her arm, talking as they go. ‘Help will –’
‘– Find us.’
‘Or the First will,’ adds the injured one, bitter.
Troops spread through the city, a net of people, threading between buildings. Crawler Tanks speed down the Tradeway, joining others already squatting at the port’s entrance. Sky-ships move in random patterns, combing the air.
Harmonised, girl and goat run, hide, run some more.
Slowly, the trap closes around them.
There is no longer time for care and Duet sprints, half dragging, half carrying Vesper between her. The girl tries to keep up, tries to help, but weary legs stumble, unable to find their rhythm again.
Nearby, a door opens and from its shadow, a man gestures, inviting them in.
They take their chances, bundling inside.
Vesper and the kid collapse gratefully into a corner. Duet does not have such luxury. One of her places herself between the stranger and her charge while the second leans against the wall, sword in one hand, the other resting on her injured chest.
The man closes the door quickly, then turns, tanned hands open, empty. ‘You’ll be safe here for a while. Don’t worry, I’m not your enemy.’
‘We’ll be –’
‘– The judge –’
‘– Of that.’
‘Yes
,’ the man replies. ‘Perhaps this will help.’ A bag is placed on a table. Duet investigates, finds supplies. Rations, medicine, money, tools, all marked with the seal of the Winged Eye.
She frowns. ‘You are –’
‘– Of the Lenses?’
‘No. But these things once belonged to one. She would want you to have them.’
Against Vesper’s back the sword begins to stir.
‘Then who –’
‘– Are you?’
‘As I said, I am not your enemy. But I am not with the Empire.’
Duet raises her blades.
The sword hums louder.
‘Is this your … judgement?’
‘For infernals –’
‘– There is only –’
‘– One judgement.’
‘Are you certain? You do not … appear so. How can you be? The very words you speak are not your own. They are simplistic phrases designed to keep you simple. Only one judgement? If that is so, why are The Seven not here in person? Why do the Empire’s people turn away from Their leadership? If there is only one judgement for … my kind. Why was I asked to come here by yours?’
Almost imperceptibly, Duet’s sword wavers.
‘You are called a Harmonised. You are an attempt at a deeper union, a different kind of existence. I understand this … need. This desire to be greater than your physical self allows. Through me, you could experience complete fusion. It is not too late. Lower your weapons and I will give you want you truly want.’
The First takes a step towards Vesper. Duet does not move, one of her blocking the way, the other remaining by the wall.
Duet raises a pistol in her spare hand, points it at the First as it advances. ‘We will not –’
The sentence hangs, unfinished.
Duet looks to her partner, still by the wall, silent. ‘Stay with me!’
The First shakes its head. ‘But you are not … together on this. You’ve never truly been together. You are a pretence of oneness. You are a mockery of it.’
The pistol begins to charge. ‘Shut up!’
‘You would rather fall to violence than admit the truth of your position? How sad.’
She squeezes the trigger. But the First has already stepped aside. Powder explodes from the back wall as she swings the gun round trying to track the infernal.