by Mike Wild
Kali wasn’t sure whether to be pleased or cheesed that Jakub Freel chose this particularly troubling moment to regain some awareness, staring at her in confusion.
“Kali Hooper?”
“All right, mate?”
The Allantian craned his neck, looking down, and then up, at the pursuing Hel’ss Spawn.
“Erm, we seem to be falling to our deaths while being chased by a... well, by a –”
“Yep,” Kali said. “Trying to deal with it.”
“I’m presuming that, as usual, you’re making this up as you go along?”
“Yep. Sorry.”
“Oh, please,” Freel managed, attempting to be polite but unable to disguise a slight break in his voice, “don’t be, don’t be...”
Kali narrowed her eyes. “I’m thinking,” she said, “that we could maybe separate and dive into those rock pools down there.”
“Yes,” Freel answered, totally unconvinced.
“Or perhaps angle our fall so that we glide – you know.”
“Perhaps.”
“Or –”
“We could pray?” Freel offered.
“That’s the one.”
There were mere moments before the two of them impacted with the water – and rocks – at the base of Horizon Point, and they spent a couple of them staring at the Hel’ss Spawn as it accelerated beyond their own rate of descent, threatening to catch up an instant before the impact came. As a choice between horrible ways to die, it was no choice at all, and both Kali and Freel closed their eyes. With the roaring of the Hel’ss Spawn and the crashing of the waves, neither of them heard the sharp, almost insect-like zzzzzz that played about them for a second before being replaced by a sound something like the lashing of twine.
They did, however, feel something wrap itself tightly about both of their bodies, and then snatch them up into the air. For a few seconds neither of them had a clue what was happening but then they were swinging across the cliff face, out of the way of the Hel’ss Spawn.
They watched as, like some great waterfall that had been severed from the river that fed it, the viscous mass plunged by them with a scream that sounded distinctly elven to impact with and dissipate into the sea.
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
KALI AND FREEL hung suspended for what seemed like an age, the line that bound them tightly together creaking loudly as it swung back and forth across the cliff face like a pendulum on an overwound clock. They might have been rescued from the Hel’ss but they were not out of danger yet. Twisting and turning on the end of the line, waves crashing beneath them, both Kali and Freel had to take it in turns to kick out to avoid being smashed into projecting parts of the rock, or to prevent the line becoming dangerously snared around them. On occasion their kicks sent them into an uncontrolled spin, one or the other of them colliding with or being dragged painfully across the rough rock face, and after a few such impacts both of them were beginning to wish that they hadn’t been rescued at all.
Gradually, however, the creaking softened, the swinging became less pronounced, and they came to a stop. The two of them stared at each other – in the position they were in, having little choice – and after a second the line jerked, and they felt themselves being hauled up.
They rose in fits and starts, their combined weight clearly causing whomever or whatever was doing the hauling problems. The sheer height of Horizon Point meant that they had to wait a good half hour before they found out who or what that was, and in the end they heard it before they saw it.
A deep grumbling, lots of cursing, and a slight jangling of bells.
Kali grunted as they finally reached the clifftop and she grabbed onto solid ground, being helped up by Jerragrim Brundle. He did the same for Freel and then unwound the line from about both of them. The dwarf was breathing heavily, eyes bulging and his face inflamed.
“Thanks,” Kali said.
“Ye can thank me by going on a diet,” Brundle countered. “Startin’ with that unfeasibly well-rounded arse of yours.”
“I’m sorry?”
“The one sticking out of yer troozers.”
“Hey!” Kali shouted, then looked behind her. Dammit, she must have caught her bodysuit on one of the rocks. Double dammit, why was it always her arse? She had to get that part of the suit reinforced.
Normally she would have flattened Brundle but what he had just achieved took the wind out of her sails. “I meant it,” she said, “thanks.”
“Aye, well, I only did the pullin’. The man yer’ve got ta thank for firin’ ya yer lifeline is over there.”
Kali looked to where Brundle’s head inclined, and noticed another figure on the clifftop for the first time, reeling the wire that had saved them into a coil. The black-garbed figure with the scar on his face was familiar to her – and yet at the same time wasn’t.
“Him again?” she whispered. “I saw him in Gransk, and on the ship...”
“If yer expectin’ me to know who he is, ah haven’t a clue,” Brundle said. “All I know is he turned a blind-eye down by the flutterbys at the moment we needed it.”
Kali nodded and, bidding Freel to stay where he was, walked over. Something about the stranger suggested that she should approach him alone. The dark-maned figure continued to patiently wind his wire but he eyed her warily from under lowered eyelids as she approached.
“I wanted to thank you,” Kali said. “For what you –”
She stopped mid-phrase. The line fully wound now, the stranger was twisting himself around to place it in a quiver on his back, and as he did she caught the outline of a bow slung beside it. Partly hidden by his body before now, it was of design uniquely familiar to her. This wasn’t just any longbow. There was only one longbow like it on the whole of the peninsula.
“Where did you get that?” Kali asked suspiciously.
“This?” the stranger queried. “Why do you ask?”
“Because it’s called Suresight and it belongs to a friend of mine. A good friend.”
“Really? Even one who deserted you?”
Kali felt surprise and a slight pull of anger, her mind flitting back to Scholten a year before. But Kali quashed the feeling, more concerned with how the stranger knew what he knew.
“I don’t know what they were but I’m sure he had his reasons,” she replied, tight-lipped. “What I do know is he wouldn’t voluntarily relinquish ownership of that bow.”
“He wouldn’t. And he didn’t.”
Kali’s hand lowered to her gutting knife, interpreting the words as a threat. “So I repeat – where did you get it?”
The stranger looked at her fully for the first time. A slight smile pulled at his lips and, though it was colder than she remembered, Kali recognised it instantly. But more than that it was the eyes. She knew those eyes.
“Slowhand?” she breathed, in disbelief.
The archer regarded her steadily, as if reluctant to admit what she evidently knew, and his smile remained as cold as when it had formed.
“Hi, Hooper,” he said. “How you doin’?”
“Ohhhhh, you know,” Kali said tremulously.
Her mind was spinning, not just with the impossible reappearance of her ex but his look, attitude, the fact that after vanishing from her life without so much as a by-your-leave he could be here, standing in front of her at all.
“It was you – you who killed the archers and the shadowmages. I should have guessed. Killiam, what the hells are you doing here?”
“Long story,” the archer said, and, the line stashed, began to move away across the cliff. As he did, he nodded to Freel who, having overhead the exchange, nodded numbly back.
Kali wasn’t going to have Slowhand abandon her in the same way he had in Scholten, and she trod heavily after him, grabbing him by the shoulder.
“Where do you think you’re going?”
The archer span. “Why don’t you tell me where I’m going?” he barked. “After all, I can’t seem to make a move without you. A successful mo
ve, that is.”
“What the hells are you talking about?”
“Like I said, long story.”
“I’m listening.”
“Nothing to hear.”
Kali’s grip tightened. Her eyes narrowed as she spoke.
“You’ve changed,” she said. “And I don’t just mean physically. Something’s happened.”
“It’s personal.”
“What, and the fact that I’ve spent a third of my life with you, sleeping with you, saving your life and you saving mine, going through all kinds of shit together, means you don’t know me well enough to tell me something personal?”
“There was a girl, okay!” Slowhand barked. “More than a girl.”
“So what else is new? And?”
“She died.”
Kali felt herself reel, but said nothing.
“She died, Kal,” Slowhand repeated, after a moment. The way he spoke suggested a return to their old familiarity and the break in his voice suggested he did want to talk about it, after all. “Her name was Shay and she died because of me.”
Kali stared at her ex-lover, gaze flickering, and then slowly, hesitantly, put her arms about him and pulled him to her. “Tell me,” she whispered in his ear.
Slowhand did. About the carnival, about Shay, about the attack and about Fitch.
“FITCH,” HE GASPED, lying there.
“Fitch,” the psychic manipulator had repeated in that strange, high-pitched voice. It was as if he’d had his voicebox transplanted by that of a child’s, or perhaps a bird’s. “Querilous Fitch. Abandoned Fitch. Dead Fitch.” He’d cocked his head to the side. “Or would have been had that master of destiny, Killiam Slowhand, had his way.”
He – Slowhand – had thought back to their last meeting, a year before, in the Sardenne, when their roles had been reversed. The psychic manipulator, smashed and broken by the juggenath, had lain helpless beneath him, more so when he had rammed one of his arrows cleanly through the bastard, impaling him to the ground.
“Looking good,” he’d said, trying to disguise the fact his throat was so dry.
“Flatterer.” Fitch took a breath and the bladders deflated like tiny lungs. Briny liquid bubbled and popped from the tops of tubes. “Not a pretty sight, am I? Unfit for the eyes of women or children. It’s really quite remarkable how much damage the body can take and yet not die. In my case, as in your’s, the damage was extensive – bones shattered, internal organs crushed – and were it not for the sheer power of my will I would be one more pile of crumbling bones whose flesh had succumbed to the many dangers of the Sardenne.” The psychic manipulator almost giggled. “I thank you, by the way, for the arrow you... left with me. It gave me the means to defend myself while my mind effected sufficient repairs to drag myself to safety.”
“Willpower can achieve remarkable things, I’m told,” Slowhand answered through gritted teeth. “You know, I once stopped – well, dating for a week.”
“I’m not talking about willpower, you fool. If it were simple willpower, stand up!”
“You know I can’t.”
“I can help you do so.”
“How and why in the hells would you do that?”
“The abilities I began to hone in the Sardenne were, sadly, not enough to repair myself. But have since become as precise as a surgeon’s tools. I can restore you to what you were.”
He swallowed. “That’s the how. What about the why?”
“Because I need your help. Against the Final Faith.”
“Excuse me?”
“I realise how that must surprise you, but much has changed within its ranks. When at last I returned from the Sardenne, I found – how do you say – a cuckoo in the nest?”
“The biggest thing that’s cuckoo in that nest is you, you sadistic bastard.”
“I enjoyed my work, I do not deny it. But ceased to enjoy it when I found the whole reason for it was being subverted at the highest level.”
“Subverted? By Makennon?”
“Not Makennon. The Anointed Lord no longer holds primacy over our Church. Instead, it is in the hands of one who would make a dark covenant with the Hel’ss.”
Fitch told him, then, what Kali and he had, by now, learned of Redigor’s duplicity, and his mind whirled as he worked out the identity of the only member of the Faith in a position to do what had been done.
“Freel?” he’d said disbelievingly.
“Your friend is no more. The wheel of destiny has turned.”
“Oh, there’s a wheel, now,” he said with some exasperation. “Newsflash, Fitch. I turned my back on that life for this one because that whole ‘destiny’ thing left me with no choice.”
“Look around you, archer,” Fitch said matter-of-factly. “This life is ended.”
His gaze moved across the Big Top, settled on the pathetically slumped body of Shay. Her eyes were staring right at him, but instead of the support and comfort they once offered, they were not seeing him at all.
“And do you know why this life has ended?” Fitch continued. “Because of the choice you made. Because of that choice, your little sweetheart over there died. The simple truth is all our destinies are linked. Because of you she was destined to die...”
Whether Fitch’s was deliberately provoking him or not, he’d roared. But it was the roar of a declawed beast, and all he was able to do was writhe impotently on the ground.
“... and because of you I was destined to live.”
For a moment, he didn’t realise what Fitch had meant. And then –
“The arrow,” he breathed, and laughed with the sick realisation.
“The arrow.”
He lay there in silence, his breathing becoming shallower, until Fitch spoke again.
“Kali Hooper is once more in pursuit of the Pale Lord,” he said. “Will you help her?”
“Hooper doesn’t need my help. She’ll survive. She always does.”
“Perhaps not this time. And if she falls, someone will need to take her place.”
He laughed again. “What are you trying to put over on me, Fitch? That I could step into her shoes? That in all this talk of ‘the Four’ someone got their sums wrong and I am, in fact, ‘the fifth’? Moolshit.”
Fitch smiled. “I admire your pretensions, but sadly you will always be a supporting player – one of many, whether they know it or not. No, what I attempt to suggest is that if Miss Hooper falls, I will need you as my eyes and ears if I am to defeat the Pale Lord.”
“Why this sudden interest in everyone’s welfare? I thought the whole point of the Filth was to coerce them into surrendering their existence to Kerberos in some kind of... rupture.”
“The word is rapture, archer. And so it is. Not to be taken by the Hel’ss.”
“The way I see it one big blob in the sky is much the same as another.”
“Then you couldn’t be more wrong. Kerberos is our God, our Lord of All, not the Hel’ss. It is with his power that the future of this world lies.”
“Like I said, moolshit. Fundamentalist moolshit.”
“Do you want to stay here and die? Or do you want to find out? Make a choice, archer. Choose your destiny.”
He stared up at Fitch with vision that was already beginning to fade. He was dying, there was no doubt about that, so there was nothing to lose. For Shay, he might even be able to find out what wasn’t letting him go. Sometimes, he guessed, being in league with the devils was better than being in league with nothing at all.
“This is all some kind of game to you, isn’t it? But I’ll play. What do you want me to do?”
“Stay close to Kali Hooper, for wherever she is, Bastian Redigor will be close by.”
He swallowed. “Do what you have to do.”
And so Fitch began. To restore him. But also to change him. It made sense when, later, he saw in a mirror a different body, a different face looking back. After all, if he was to be Fitch’s eyes and ears, it wouldn’t have done to be recognised by the Pale Lord.
Yes, it had made sense. But it hadn’t stopped the screaming.
“IT HAD TO hurt,” Kali agreed. “But not as much as... oh, gods, Liam, I’m sorry. So very, very sorry.”
“I know. But, hey, at least the bad guy is dead.”
Kali nodded. “That’s what bothers me. What are you supposed to do now? Report to Fitch? How? Where? What exactly is it that he wants out of all this?”
“Your guess is as good as mine, better, probably,” Slowhand said. “But in the meantime, I guess there are other things to think about.” He pointed down the slope of Horizon Point, to where Redigor had corralled his hostages. There, among the stilled forms of the Brogmas, Jengo Pim and his men were liberating them all from their chains and, as Kali walked down, three figures emerged from the crowd. Hetty Scrubb and Pete Two-Ties were overjoyed to see her but it was Red Deadnettle who physically demonstrated how much, scooping Kali into his arms and giving her a bearhug that almost made her projectile vomit her thrap. As it was, as she felt herself being squeezed tighter and tighter, she couldn’t help letting out a prolonged fishy burp.
“Oops,” she said. “Sorry.”
“No me,” Red said. “Me sorry.”
“How you doing, Red?” Kali said as she was plonked back on the ground. “You all right? Hetty? Pete? You?”
“We have been prisoners of kunto, but have survived, Kalee,” Hetty declared, somewhat fierily. “We are all fine.”
“Apart from,” Pete Two-Ties said, “‘door also a woman’, eight letters.”