Book Read Free

Twig

Page 22

by wildbow

A sound behind him almost made him startle, but jumping or jerking could well be a giveaway.

  Dog disappeared into an alley, traveling parallel to him.

  Percy stumbled forward, box in hand, his thoughts a dull roar. There were no good options. Even if Mary or Clyde were here, the best they could hope to accomplish would be buying time. If the stars aligned right, perhaps they could put down Catcher.

  But victory wouldn’t happen. Escape was out of the question.

  Dog revealed himself by making a clatter, three floors above the ground, walking on a nearby rooftop. With each step, shingles broke free and skidded down the roof to sail toward the ground below.

  There were only three building lots between Percy and the war machine. It had stopped at the end of one rooftop, and now strained, head raised, broad, bat-like nostrils flaring.

  Dog almost casually leaped from rooftop to road. Metal braces in and around the legs locked, sprung, and slammed into new configurations, absorbing some of the impact. Muscle and mass handled the remainder.

  Now that Dog was closer, Percy could see how tubes ran up and around the legs, disappearing into metal-framed slits in the side. Two tubes carried blood, while the third carried what might have been water.

  Dog was an ugly piece of work, which was odd, considering that Dog was one of the best known of the Academy’s ‘secret’ projects. There were experiments that were done with care, thought through from the beginning. This was not that. It was a project that had been started, one largely doomed to failure. When structural integrity had failed, crude metal engineering had been set in place. When circulation was poor, things were rerouted, tubes set in place to serve where veins and arteries couldn’t, sometimes outside the body.

  Little doubt there were other problems. The Academy was probably happy that was the case. A Dog couldn’t run if it needed regular drainage or a specialized diet.

  The Academy had overshot. In this case it had made effective use of that fact.

  Dog turned his head, staring at Percy with those eyes that caught the light, the eyelids moved, providing a smile the mouth couldn’t.

  It was fruitless to resist, or even try to run, but it galled Percy to know that it would be this that ended him. He turned and prepared to go, when he saw Catcher drawing near.

  The man toyed with the mancatcher, the collar on a stick. The collar section of the tool spun, whirling so fast it was a blur in the gloom, sending off a spray of water droplets.

  Catcher’s voice was rough-edged, a man who had smoked or was speaking through a bad cold. “You changed coaches twice, walked through deep puddles. Even wore a maggot-ridden blanket.”

  Maggots?

  Percy pulled at the piece of cloth he’d put over his head, but it still took a second for his eyes to adjust. He saw the maggots wriggling, and flinched, casting the cloth away.

  His scalp crawled, now, his neck and face. Once he felt it, every drop of rain he couldn’t verify with his eyes was potentially a maggot, vermin, filth.

  Catcher shifted his grip on the mancatcher, and Percy stumbled back, only to find that Dog was behind him, mouth open, teeth ready to bite.

  But he still held the crate. Using it for Dog would be useless, but—

  Catcher thrusted, aiming for Percy’s throat, and Percy raised the box, the opening facing the weapon.

  The crate was torn from his hands, thrown a distance away by a violent swing of the pole.

  Too strong. Catcher alone would have been enough, but there were two of them.

  Wollstone’s work had caught hold of him from an early age. It had defined his life. Now it would, in a roundabout way, end it.

  He thought of his creations. Of Clyde, and of Mary.

  In the same moment he realized his own mortality, he knew his legacy was gone.

  He felt a flare of anger.

  Percy nurtured the feeling, used it to find courage, and reached into his jacket for his pistol.

  Catcher seized his wrist, then stopped, glancing down.

  “That was…” Catcher asked, trailing off. His head turned.

  Dog growled, then darted off in the same direction.

  A fog was rising around them.

  No, it was a gas. Pea-soup thick, the cloud rose steadily despite the downpour.

  Catcher started using his grip on Percy’s wrist to pull, tugging him away from the swelling cloud. Percy used his other hand to reach across his front for the gun, only to have Catcher move the mancatcher to prod his arm.

  The collar, slightly too wide around for Percy’s upper arm, slammed shut. The hole was large enough that he could have pulled his arm free if he’d been given the chance, but he wasn’t. The weapon rotated, the edges digging into his arm, and the implicit promise was that trying to pull free despite the pressure might see skin scraped away by the weapon’s edges.

  Out of the same flame of anger that had driven him to reach for the gun, Percy found himself fighting Catcher. His opponent was strong enough to lift him, but Percy hauled himself downward, made every step a difficult one with one of his feet braced against Catcher’s thigh. He strained to move toward the gas that had alarmed these two abominations so very much.

  It was stupid, reckless, and it was ugly, everything Percy had worked against. Every step of the way, he’d fought against the current, and every step of the way, he’d done things with care. Not all of it was things he could be proud of, but he’d weighed his options, and had never done a thing he felt he could later regret, in the grand scheme of it all.

  Even his dealings with the children.

  This, he instinctively felt, was something he might very well regret more than anything else, even if it only left him minutes or seconds more of life.

  In the end, he succeeded. His head moved too far back, and the gas washed over his face.

  In an instant, he was blind, seeing through a veil. Foul, acrid tastes and smells flooded his nose and mouth.

  His struggles with Catcher continued, less effective now that he was blinded.

  When he was dropped, he kicked and flailed into the blurry darkness.

  When a hand pressed around his mouth, he struck out, hit flesh. He struck again, and felt long hair.

  His hand moved more gently through the hair, with a degree of caution this time, with care.

  Mary?

  He opened his mouth to ask, but whatever it was that had filled it with foul taste, it was like a thick flour, caking his tongue and inner cheeks, making them stick to his teeth. His lips bound together, cracking and bleeding as he pulled them apart.

  The hand over his mouth moved, until only one finger pressed against his lips.

  The fingers seized his bleeding lower lip and tugged. Leading him like a mutt on a leash, and he knew it wasn’t his Mary.

  He obeyed all the same.

  A few staggering footsteps, not knowing where he was going. A ruckus occurred behind them.

  The hand took his wrist, instead, and he followed, for what seemed like an interminably long time, but was likely only a handful of minutes.

  The hand freed his wrist.

  Another minute passed. He started to feel his heartbeat pick up. Fear, humiliation, worry. He was dirty, covered in maggots, bloody, and except for his silent companion, he was alone.

  He heard a woman’s sigh, not one of exasperation, but relief.

  “It’s water,” she said, and her voice was muffled. “Right in front of you. Rinse your face, try to get your nose and ears as well, or you won’t see or hear very well for a long time.”

  He obeyed, fumbling until he found the rain barrel. He made use of the water, rubbing at his eyes, only to pull away long strings of goop. It snapped before he could get much of it. He pulled away as much as he could, checked his vision, and still found it blurry. His second attempt suggested that absolutely none of it had dissipated.

  “It uses the mucus membranes,” she explained. “Binds to to the mucus itself. You’re going to be congested, and you’ll be pulling
gobbets of the stuff from your nose and mouth for a long time. Give it an hour or two and it’ll be more solid. The rinse is meant to clear things up.”

  “How long?” he managed. He still felt as though his tongue was coated in wax. He blinked and made out a raven-haired beauty in a close-fitting jacket.

  “Long enough you might worry I lied to you and that permanent damage was done. Wash with regularity, it will get better.”

  He looked back over his shoulder.

  “They’re gone,” she reassured him. “It affected them worse than it affected you. They still put up a fight, which I didn’t expect. I had three stitched with me, and Catcher took them to pieces. The Academy will diagnose the problem and mend those two within a day, and then they’ll devise a means to prevent it, but…”

  “But you saved me?” Percy asked.

  He could make out enough of her face to see a smile.

  “You saved me, and you sacrificed three stitched and a trump card to do it. You’re with them.”

  “Yes.”

  For the first time since the anonymous note had informed him the Academy was coming for him, he felt himself relax a touch.

  He dunked his face again, then shook it violently in the water, side to side, splashing, trying to free up any of the substance that might be clinging.

  When he stood straight, he put his hands to his hair and then combed it with his fingers.

  His vision was still only half of what it had been.

  “Come,” she said, smiling.

  The destination, as it turned out, was a nondescript store with an old cowboy’s hat over the door.

  “Ever been to a place like this?” his companion asked, ascending the stairs ahead of him. She shot him a light smile over one shoulder.

  “I, ah, never have, believe it or not.”

  “I believe you,” she said. “You’re more the type to find someone of that calling and invite her to your place.”

  She knew him that well?

  “During daytime, no less,” she said.

  Ah. “You’ve been watching me that well, then.”

  “The man that walks around your home outside of the school hours, pulling the cart? Ours.”

  “I see.”

  They’d reached the top of the stairs, two floors up, and reached a door with another cowboy’s hat above it. Rather than open it, his companion turned around, then wiped at his face, touching his hair.

  His blood still pumping and face already hot from the humiliation of his futile struggle against Catcher, just after hearing intimate topics raised so readily, he felt more than a little flustered.

  From the smile on her face, she seemed to know it. Perhaps she had been watching him even more carefully than he’d known. Enough to know he liked to be in control, to steer things, and she was denying him that chance.

  Before he could ask a question, she opened the door.

  The walls were draped with red velvet or silk or something very close to it, traced with gold. The pillars had branches reaching up and around them, and one branch had a small bird on it. The light was electrical, cast through red glass.

  Scattered around the room, in a very haphazard fashion, there were eight or nine people in chairs, on couches, or standing.

  “Cynthia,” an old man greeted her. “And Mr. Percy.”

  “Catcher and Dog were there. I used my blinding powder, they’ll know what it is for next time. Louis is going to tell you I didn’t let him set the Academy’s Dog on fire, but it seemed too risky. Every time we made a sound, Catcher would charge at us. I let the stitched make all the sounds they wanted, and we left. It was the best option, Catcher wasn’t slowing down.”

  “He doesn’t, that is his design,” the old man said. Percy blinked to try and get a better view. Changing his tone, the old man spoke again, “You did well.”

  Talking to me.

  “I failed. My creations are dead.”

  “Mmm, I’m afraid so,” the old man said. “We confirmed for ourselves. Three boys and a girl, killed by the Academy’s set.”

  Percy felt a wrench in his chest. He managed to keep his expression calm.

  It was good. The deliberate act of control helped to center him. He felt more like himself.

  “What were you doing?” a woman asked. She was surrounded by cages. The shapes within suggested birds.

  Percy opened his mouth to answer, then shut it.

  “You won’t say?” Cynthia asked, and her tone was teasing.

  “You brought me here for a reason.”

  “We did,” the old man said.

  Percy chose his words carefully. “I feel as though I’m being judged.”

  “We all are, always,” the woman with the birds said. “Are you weak, strong, useful, a fitting romantic partner, a friend, an enemy?”

  “I’ll reword. I’m on trial.”

  “No,” the old man said. “Wrong word, that.”

  “It matters, what I say, how I say it. And don’t say it always matters. You know what I mean.”

  “Yes,” the old man said. “I know. Tell us, what were you doing?”

  Percy remained silent, considering.

  When Cynthia spoke, her voice was soft, but it wasn’t uncertain in the least. “There is nothing you can say that is worse than saying nothing at all.”

  Percy didn’t speak right away, but he did make the decision to speak. “I’m not proud. I started out wanting to prove myself to them. I had an idea, I wanted to see it through, and show them that they were wrong to refuse it.”

  “Your clones.”

  “Yes,” Percy said.

  “Your work seemed impeccable, considering your limited access to Academy resources. They protect their texts and charts with a dangerous passion. It’s half of what Dog and Catcher do, rounding up those who have or copy the books. Every academy has projects that do, dressing them up as patriots and protectors of the Crown.”

  “There were teachers who brought sections of the texts to the school. I caught glimpses, and I held phrases and numbers in my head until I could write them down, sometimes hours later.”

  “Impressive,” a man in the corner said. “Why? You started out wanting to prove yourself to the Academy, then you started killings. To hurt Mothmont, and to hurt the Academy too?”

  “To become Headmaster. Once I could dictate policy, I planned to mass produce.”

  “Mass produce clones?”

  Percy managed a smile with his cracked, gummed-up lips. “Imagine, please, a new method of warfare. One where a single man or clone can infiltrate, they can target children, replace them, the clones would educate their new peers in how to act like children, and slowly but silently capture an entire generation. One command or order, all in one night, and an entire city would be brought to its knees.”

  “I do like this sort of imagining,” the old man said. “The Academy likes its weapons, as you saw with it’s pet Dog.”

  “The Academy didn’t like my weapon. Not because of what it was, but because they had a vision in mind, a group of children working together. My idea was too slow for Hayle.”

  “You wanted to make it work. The lives of children meant nothing to you, you sold them without a care as to what we were using them for?”

  Is it a trial after all?

  “The lives of my children mean something to me.”

  “Do you want revenge for them, Percy?”

  “Yes.”

  “Then you’ll have it. You’ll carry out your plan.”

  “They know how I operate. They’ll be checking, to be safe.”

  “Let them waste their time, then. There are other routes.”

  Percy narrowed his eyes, felt the film in them, and rubbed at one with the knuckle of his thumb. “Other routes?”

  In answer, Cynthia reached up and tapped one of the red lights.

  Percy nodded in realization.

  “We’ll be working together,” she said. “To create beautiful pieces of work.”

&
nbsp; “And you’ll be doing it with more resources,” the bird woman said.

  “While staying well out of sight,” the old man said, with a little more emphasis. “I’m sure you understand.”

  Percy nodded slowly, taking it all in. He allowed himself a smile.

  “I’m sure it won’t take much convincing to have you act against the Academy?” the old man asked.

  Percy mused for a moment. “Whenever I think of the Academy, I think of the concept of the Overshoot. You’re familiar with it, I presume?”

  “I was a professor,” the old man said, “you can trust I am.”

  Percy smiled a little. “They’re treading dangerous ground. Verging on collapse. Hayle sees it too, but he thinks he can make minds brilliant enough to solve the problem. I think he’s only going to wind up contributing to it. No, I most definitely don’t have a problem acting against them.”

  The demeanor of the others in the room told him he’d passed his trial.

  “Can I wash my face?” he asked, as others settled in, and the din of conversatino rose. “Again?”

  “This way,” Cynthia said. “You have a room.”

  She led him to his quarters. His eyes went as wide as the blinding film let them.

  A complete set of Academy texts. Large vats, sufficient to house a person.

  “The basin is this way,” Cynthia said. “You have an bathroom adjunct.”

  He almost didn’t hear her. His finger traced the closest vat.

  He would create life, play the littlest of gods.

  Clones, he thought. From Ancient Greek Klon-. Meaning Twig.

  He smiled at the thought, before going to wash his face.

  Previous Next

  Cat out of the Bag 2.1

  “You’re going to get sick, doing that,” Rick told me. He picked up my hood and pulled it over my wet hair.

  A little petulantly, I pulled it back down. I glared at him.

  Rick, one of the older boys at Lambsbridge, only smiled. Back when he’d arrived at the orphanage he had taken me for someone much younger. He’d quickly realized how much I hated it when I wasn’t taken seriously and decided to kill me with kindness.

  He looked the part, too. Where Gordon was big in the athletic sense, Rick was round-chinned, wide-hipped, with a heavy, dense body. He might have looked like a proper Bruno if his face wasn’t so damned innocent; rosy cheeked, bright eyed and clear-skinned for a fifteen year old.

 

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