The Waking Engine
Page 27
“This honor is singular,” Hestor spat.
“What honor, exactly?” Cooper knew, of course he knew—there would be only one kind of honor here, but he had to ask. He had to hope the Death Boys couldn’t be this ugly. He had to give them one last chance.
Marvin nodded at the aesr. “Spilling her blood will mark you as one of us. She’s mad, Cooper, and doesn’t know herself.”
“Grace of form, swiftness of foot, and freedom from the cycle of lives—this is what we gain from the aesr,” Hestor said. “Out there they would have you believe that Death is a gift you must earn. We reject that notion, claim existence as our birthright, and for our induction rites we desecrate their false icons, the pure things of the worlds, and now at last, one of the very founders of their city. Draw her blood and you will never be alone again. Share yourself with us, Cooper.”
“I don’t want to do this.”
“It’s a little late for that,” Hestor said, reaching out to stroke the flail with his fingers, stroking the barbed ends. “Take the lichtail.”
Marvin nodded encouragingly. “Flay her.”
Cooper maintained his self-possession. He didn’t blanch, flinch, squeal, run, cry, or beg, although he badly wanted to do so. He knew he’d gotten off too easily earlier with Marvin and the knife and the carving-up. Oh, if only it could have stopped at kisses. But now, what if he refused? He couldn’t possibly back out now, they wouldn’t allow it—would they? No, Hestor and his boys wanted blood—Cooper’s blood or aesr’s blood—and they were going to get it.
“No,” said Cooper. It was his word.
“Hurt her, Cooper,” Marvin pleaded.
“I said no.”
“You won’t like what we do to those who throw our gifts in our faces, Cooper,” Hestor threatened, taking the rust-razored flail from his lackey and handing it to Marvin. “You wouldn’t want to take the aesr’s place, would you?”
Hestor smiled at the look of understanding on Cooper’s face. “So many of my Death Boys want to see the childborn shaman flay the aesr cow. They want blood. It would be selfish of me to deny them the pleasure.”
Why are you doing this? Marvin begged him in a thought-whisper, his fear amplifying the whisper into a scream. Cooper didn’t even think the answer to himself, worried that he might accidentally brush minds with Marvin. A feral punk like Hestor, driving Marvin to flay him alive? Cooper just hoped that the Death Boy didn’t intend to render him into a pile of bloody ribbons.
“We welcome you to the Undertow, one way or another, CooperOmphale,” Hestor grated, a sick smile plastered over his clown’s face. “You plunged yourself into the underworld by ascending to our overworld, and now we call you back to the living. Once you’ve felt the power of our freedom you will beg to taste it. Maybe you’re onto something, Cooper. There’s wisdom in your refusal to join us without learning our ways from the inside out. Yes, I think you’ll be a stronger Death Boy once you’ve felt the alternative.” Hestor smiled and Cooper almost threw up. “Turn him around.”
Cooper said nothing as Marvin advanced with the lichtail raised. He was spun into the corner and he covered his head with his hands as the rain of razors began to fall upon his shoulders. The aesr nearby cried out and he knew innately that she would feel every shredded neuron in perfectly mirrored agony. The pain was immediate and all-consuming, and as Cooper collapsed to the floor his last coherent thought was an observation—if he survived the torture Sesstri had repeatedly warned him against, this journey through worlds of death and bodily pain, he supposed he might wake up a shaman after all.
9
From above and from below they rage,
Frothing forth to suck at me;
All the work the living do,
And not an hour of it for free.
—Hinto Thyu, “The Sovereign,” Twice Born A Boychild
Your kind is a cancer. Purity thought Kaien looked shocked at the ugliness that had rolled so easily off his tongue. Two score bodies surrounded them, the air perfumed with blood spray from bird beaks, and Kaien’s own mouth shamed him most.
Purity looked at him, thinking that might be the closest thing to an ally she had in this forsaken cage— and she could have him arrested and strung upon a thievespole for a spy with a single word, wasn’t that neatly packaged and tied up in a bow? How had he been foolish enough to tell her who he was? If the Circle discovered a way out of the Dome, things would go from horrible to fucked-beyond-repair: her kind did deserve to be locked away, at the very least long enough for the city to ratify a decent government in their stead.
She stood beside Kaien as he crouched beside the body of the apprentice tailor and rested the boy’s head on the celadon tiles of the aviary floor, unable to bring himself to look at her. The boy stared unblinking at the cyclone of feathers that still squawked overhead, and with the same solemn gesture she’d used before, Purity knelt and closed them forever. Somewhere the boy was waking beneath a new sky, but his world had ended all the same.
“It’s called a prayer,” Purity said, rocking on back on her heels and latching onto Kaien’s arm for support. “You wouldn’t have ever seen one, if you’re a childborn citizen of the city. They bury every prayer at the Apostery as they should, I suppose. I merely wished him well on his first step.”
“Step?”
“Of the dance of lives.” Lifting the dead boy’s shirt, Purity showed Kaien the navel of a childborn. “Someone lost a son today.” Kaien blinked back tears and kneeled over the body.
“So you see, there is some merit to be found even amid the lords and ladies of death, metastases that we are.”
Kaien winced. “Purity, I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to speak to you roughly, I just—”
She shushed him. “I couldn’t disagree with you less, you know— and even if I did, we haven’t the time to debate social justice.” She pulled on his shoulder from behind with surprising force, and Kaien tumbled backward onto the floor.
“Bells, but you’re forward—” he began, when Purity jumped atop of him and pressed her face against his.
“Shut. Up,” she whispered fiercely into his ear, then went limp on his chest at the sound of the lockstepped march of praetorian boots. She tried not to move, or breathe, or think of Kaien’s firm body pressed against her own.
They held their breath as the praetors approached, but to Purity’s astonishment they did not stop in the aviary—the tempo of their marching didn’t slow, and still the alarum rang. Still the birds flew in troubled circles, denied their rest.
Purity made a noise of consternation and pushed herself up a bit, glancing around and then staring down the slope of her pert nose at Kaien. “I really did expect them to take a bit of a look- see, you know.”
Kaien blushed and tried to turn away, but where could he go? Purity’s arms rested on his shoulders—which she squeezed admiringly, then winked. He was so innocent! She rolled off him and stood, smoothing her stained dress down her hips, legs. “So much for the charmeuse. Kaien, you really must learn to be more opportunistic.”
He sputtered, then reoriented himself. “Why didn’t the guards stop?” he asked, sitting up.
“Because the mess here is just ancillary damage.”
“But then what—”
“Kaien, I’m—” The alarum suddenly stopped. Purity covered her ears with her hands before she realized how silly that looked— but the abrupt silence seemed more offensive to her ears than the wailing Klaxon.
“Well, that’s a relief.” Kaien sighed with a little too much emphasis, brushing off his trousers. He stood turned away from her at a discreet angle.
Purity rolled her eyes. Oh, for goodness’ sake.
She cleared her throat and tried not to snicker. “Do I need to excuse myself while you scavenge a fresh pair of skivvies, Mister Mason?”
The back of his dark- skinned neck flushed a deep rust-brown, like the sky during an ammonia monsoon.
Changing the subject by way of a mercy, she asked him, �
��If the guards are going to ignore us, then you might as well tell me just what, exactly, you are doing here in the Dome, Kaien, master spy and journeyman mason? Don’t you think I’ll forget to ask simply because a massacre or two interrupted us.”
At last, he smiles. Purity shook her head. This boy strove for propriety more dutifully than most of her peers. He’d make a good lord, if their circumstances were reversed.
“I’m only a second-degree journeyman, Miss Kloo, but my father is First Mason.”
She nodded airily.
“You have no idea what that means, do you?” he asked.
“Kaien, I’m not stupid. Have we not discussed my education, specifically its thoroughness concerning city affairs? I’d appreciate it if you wouldn’t fib.”
“What?” He seemed genuinely incredulous. “I’m not lying!”
She raised an eyebrow and led him beneath the sheltering branches of a fig tree, well away from the stink of birds and bodies. “Basel Prouk is First Mason, Kaien—or he was when we were sealed inside this lovely little prison. I know that spies are supposed to practice being circumspect, but you really oughtn’t lie to a girl whose father sat on the board of the Guildworks United.”
Kaien looked shifty for a moment. “Now, see, about the Guildworks . . .”
“What?”
“I . . . I’m not supposed to say anything.”
“I’d say it’s a bit late for that, Kaien.” She fingered the head of the hammer looped through his belt, and brushed white powder from her fingertips. “Wouldn’t you agree?”
Kaien swallowed hard, but nodded. “Sure. Yes. Do I have any choice?” Purity shook her head and used her grip on his belt to pull him closer. Kaien tried to keep a clear head as he continued, “But, listen, may I have your word that you won’t repeat what I’m about to say to another soul?”
“You’re choosing this moment to get coy on me, you hairy aurochs?” She punched his arm, then shook the sting out of her fist.
“Masons are a tight-lipped lot,” he said. “Promise me.”
“Oh, for the sake of all that’s dead and gone, Kaien: fine!” Purity raised her hand. “I, Purity Genghis Umptelle Hyacinth Kloo, youngest of Baron Emil Kloo and scion of the Circle Unsung, hereby swear upon pedigree and principle that I shall keep your soon-to-be-revealed secret from any and all, upon pain of Death and general dismemberment. Are you satisfied, or must I open an artery?”
He flashed her an uncertain look, tugging at an unripe fig. “Is that a real oath?”
“Of course it is, Kaien!” she lied. “Are you questioning my honor?”
“Fine. Yes, Basel Prouk was First Mason when your father sat on the board of the Guildswork United, but . . .”
“But?”
“Now, see, that was five years ago. Things have changed since then.”
She put her hands on her hips and skewered him with a skeptical look. “And you would know this how?”
Kaien cleared his throat. “Right. Well, see, it’s like this. The Guildworks United dissolved less than a year after the Writ of Community, when you all were locked up. Without backing from the Circle, First Mason Prouk and the rest of the representatives of the various guilds lost their authority. My father, Cecil Rosa, became First Mason when he led the remains of the organized masons to partner with the plumbics—the Guilds Masonic y Plumbus are the only functional labor organizations left in the city. The only ones cooperating, anyway, although the dockworkers are congenial enough so long as we keep their dikes shored up and the buried chains from clogging up canal traffic.”
“What,” Purity interjected, “does this have to do with anything?”
He held up a meaty palm. “Well, with all the chaos, you see, my father and Head Pipeswoman Grigálie decided to employ certain . . . intelligences. And um, they decided—after some lengthy debating and not a few walkouts—to send one of their number—me, in this case—into . . . um, into the Dome to perform some basic reconnaissance.”
Purity’s flesh went numb. She bit her lip and blinked rapidly. “Pardon me, Kaien, I’m sure I drifted off. It sounded as though you said you came into the Dome after it was sealed.”
He looked at his feet. “Not quite a year ago, in fact.”
Kaien was not prepared for the burst of sudden violence as Purity slammed him and seized his collar with both tiny hands. “WHAT?” She was stronger than she looked and loud as all the bells in bedlam. “Are you saying that you know a way out of this hell?”
“A way in, actually,” he said, unclasping her hands from his shirt one slim steel finger at a time, “although I was hoping I’d be able to use it to leave soon—when my scheduled replacement arrived.”
Purity’s pale green eyes grew even wider. “You bastards are running shifts?” She pushed herself away, raked her fingers through her hair, and exhaled an animal groan of frustration. “Do you have any idea what I’ve been through trying to escape this place for the past five years? Bells, Kaien, I spent two weeks cutting my own throat like a slaughterhouse piglet just to see if I could break the body-binding spells! I’ve been willing to die and move on all alone and you tell me that you—you and the rest of the damned bricklaying bastards have been waltzing in and out the whole time?”
Look how those curls tumble, Kaien marveled. “Well, not waltzing. And not all of us, no, just me.”
“How?”
“That I can’t tell you. I can’t, Purity.”
“Fine. Let’s see.” She rolled her eyes but smiled despite herself, loving a puzzle and not minding a demonstration of her skills for a boy who would flirt with her before the day and deed were through.
“This little group of masons und plumbers or whatever you’re calling yourselves, you lot know how to get in and out, so it must be something fundamental. Something too neglected for servants to bother with and therefore something that the nobles don’t even know exists. And if Fflaen didn’t seal it, it must be old enough for him to forget, which means old. That’s more than enough to solve the riddle, but I shan’t stop there.” Purity slipped into a wry smile. “Something old and basic: if I follow the logic of my own cancerous kind, it will be something utterly essential to our way of life. Food, shelter, clothing— all of that is sustainable without intercession from the city outside. Water, perhaps? No, we’ve got springs aplenty in the Groveheart and the Dendritic cisterns. Cisterns.”
Kaien’s stomach sank. He shouldn’t have given her anything, now she’d taken up the conundrum and he could see that Purity Kloo made a stellar detective. He scrubbed his face with his hands and hoped his father would forgive him—supposing they survived long enough for Kaien to see his father again. He’d hate to be reunited with his family only to be bodybound and bricked up alive for becoming a traitor.
“Water,” she said, zeroing in on the answer. “We’ve got all the fresh water we need but . . . there’s something else. Something I’m in which I’m not fluent. Something . . . something like . . . excrement. Water in, water out.” Purity spat on the floor. “Trade secrets of plumbers and bricklayers. Oh Kaien, Kaien, please tell me you didn’t crawl in here through something as absurdly obvious as a sewer?”
Kaien stared at his feet resolvedly.
“But I’ve checked all the culverts—that was my first thought, obviously. The whole complex is hermetically sealed!”
“The whole complex?” Kaien stroked his whis kers. “It’s an old place, Purity. A funny old place.”
She stalked a few feet away, grabbed a wren from midair and snapped its neck with one pretty hand. “Fuck.” She hurled the dead thing at his chest like a miniature cannonball. It bounced off him and rolled away on the tiles.
“Bells, Purity!” He raised his arms in surrender.
“Fuck!” She elaborated to the lead-paned glass ceiling and the trees above. “Fuck, fuck, fucketty fuck!”
Purity drew a ragged breath and tried to compose herself, but her eyes werewild.
“Dead gods dressed and dried,” Purity cur
sed more eloquently now, “I wish I could go with you.”
“Excuse me?” Kaien’s bewilderment reached new heights. “What are you talking about? Purity?”
“Isn’t it obvious? You need to take word of what’s happening to your father, to the city. Fflaen’s left us here to rot, the rest mustn’t suffer the same fate.”
“Purity . . .” he began. “I don’t think you realize . . .”
“I realize more than you think, bricklayer! You have your duty, and I have mine. There’s a Murderer to bring to justice. I can stop the selfannihilation of the Circle with a ransom like that, I know I can.” She merely had to decide whether or not she should do so.
“Your duty, however, lies with the guilds and the people—ordinarily I wouldn’t presume to bother the world at large with the Circle’s internecine strife, but something larger is brewing, and I don’t think it’s right to leave the city in ignorance of the chaos into which their erstwhile governors have descended. Also: the possibility that the Murderer might find his way out into the city through your fucking drain.” Purity stalked toward the exit.
Following, Kaien reached out with his hands and then snatched them back, worried she might bite off a finger. “You can’t go running around the Dome with a Murderer on the loose, Purity. It isn’t safe! We’ll stick together and take care of things as they come. Nobility and guildsmen working together, as it should have been from the beginning.”
“Just go, Kaien.” Purity didn’t bother to look back as she shook her head. “We’ll build a brand new world after we’ve saved the old one from total obliteration.”
“Absolutely not, Purity—”
“Go.” She turned at the exit, leaning on the archway for support. Bells, she was turning down a way out. “There is nothing you can do to protect me from the Murderer anyway, Kaien, although your gallantry is noted and, I should add, appreciated. Go help the people worth helping.”
“Purity Kloo: shut up.” Kaien took her shoulders, one in each hand, knowing she might interpret it as an act of aggression. “Close your pretty mouth for one single second! The First Mason didn’t send his only son into the tolling Dome to sneak about and eavesdrop on ladies’ gossip, no matter how winsome that lady may be. The City Unspoken needs a government, Purity. My duty is to ensure that nothing remains of the old, failed government that could hinder the formation of the new one.”