She coughed, her eyes wild. She lifted up her cut line. “That rope’s expensive.”
“How can a flyer weigh so much?” He said.
Kara blinked. “You may have saved my life, but if you don’t shut up I’m gonna have to slit your throat, and – oh…” She rose to her feet unsteadily, then pointed behind him.
David turned. Cadell’s situation had grown far more precarious. He had lost his footing and hung in the air, dangling from the edge of the ship by his fingertips.
Cadell slowly pulled himself back up, and slid again to the iron ship’s cockpit window; steam rising in sudden dirty grey bursts from the cracks that scarred it.
David heard the distant retort of the iron ship’s guns, and then something struck the nearby gondola wall, shattering the outer layer. A thin pale liquid ran from the wound.
The guns blazed again.
This time one of the bioengines was hit; it rumbled rather than whined. Above them the Aerokin groaned. The Roslyn Dawn veered to the right. Black smoke streamed from the cracked nacelle. David turned towards the pilot seat where Margaret sat hunched over and cursing at the controls.
Down below, Cadell shook his head, all the while shouting something and gesturing at the glass as though he could break it with words and will alone.
The iron ship dipped and bobbed, then dived, all at once. The rope hissed as it played out the door, the fibre smoking. David wanted to stop it, to yank it back in and Cadell with it. But he also wanted to survive. Cadell knew what he was doing, he hoped.
Below, Cadell appeared unperturbed. He waved his hands palm out over the shattered glass once, twice, three times.
The iron ship frosted over with a sudden explosion of ice: a kind of frozen fire. It hovered jerkily, a last burst of flame spluttering in its engines. Cadell ran to the edge of the craft and leapt smoothly into the air, clinging onto the rope. But it was a moment too late. The iron ship flipped up and struck him on back of the head. Even from the Roslyn Dawn, David could see the blood spray.
The frozen ship fell away punching through the clouds. Not long after, and far below, the sky flared, became almost clear. A distant detonation followed like a muted thunderclap.
Dizziness welled within him, staring at that explosion, so far below. He needed to sit down, or throw up then sit down, and then he realised he could not see Cadell anywhere.
“He’s gone. He’s gone,” David said.
Kara drove an elbow into his side.
She looked half-dead, but her face was set with a grim and awful energy. Her shaking hands gripped the now taut line. The biceps of her lean arms bulged.
“Hey, idiot,” she snapped. “This rope, Cadell’s on the other end, remember.”
Kara Jade had wound it around a pole by the doorifice, her arms straining.
“Sorry,” David said.
Kara Jade’s jaw clenched. “Don’t be sorry, just help me.”
He sprang towards her and grabbed the rope.
“I’m ready,” he said.
They pulled it in, foot by tedious foot. After ten minutes, sweat stinging his eyes, hands bloody, muscles burning, he wondered just how much rope had played out.
“Pretty heavy for a scrawny old geezer, isn’t he?” Kara panted. “Of course the air’s thin at these altitudes. Doesn’t make it any easier. Nor do head injuries.”
“At least it means that he’s at the end of it,” David said.
They worked until David thought his arms were going to drop off and his lungs pop out of his mouth. Finally, Cadell’s hands clamped around the edge of the doorifice.
Cadell was awake, the Old Man was awake. He pulled himself up and through the doorifice, his skin bloodless, his lips blue, one of his eyes had swollen shut.
His body was cold, David could see ice forming where his feet touched the Roslyn Dawn. The doorifice reacted by opening wide. Wind whistled through, and Cadell stood there, unsteadily, the empty sky behind him.
“Quick, get him inside,” Kara shouted.
“I’m quite all right, madam,” Cadell said and nearly toppled back out the opening. David grabbed him, pulling him in and away from the opening. It snapped shut behind them.
“Let’s not do that again,” Cadell said, his words coming between wheezes. “At least not for a while.” His eyes rolled up in his head, and he was out.
David gently set him down on the bunk, not liking the deep wound in the back of his head, nor the patches of soft brittleness around his back, beneath the skin, as though bones were crushed.
“Don’t worry. He’s an old warhorse, sure his reserves have been taxed, but he’ll recover,” Kara said. “He has to, doesn’t he?”
Margaret looked down at Cadell, and shook her head. David could see that it was bad, shallow cuts on the scalp bled fiercely but thinly, this blood was thick and dark. Margaret released a breath with such heart aching weariness that David’s first instinct was to offer comfort. She stepped beyond his reach.
“I’m no doctor, but I’ve seen this sort of injury before.” And she paused as though remembering them, and it came to David that her background was not at all like his, and that she had entertained a very different sort of horror all her life. “David, there’s a real chance he may not wake again.”
Chapter 49
Perhaps we should have never warred with the Cuttlefolk. But then again, War and Industry, what else do we do so well?
• Stade – Minutes of a Mayor.
THE GATHERING PLAINS
The Cuttlefolk led them west, away from the tracks for a good half a day, Messengers flying to and from them with increasing frequency, their sharp wing beats signalling a moment or two of rest. The Cuttlefolk did not speak, though their intentions were clear, and while they performed no brutalities upon their prisoners (water was distributed among them, even food, and it was palatable) they forced a hard march across the plains.
Twice Medicine demanded to speak to whoever was leading them, and both times he was gently and definitely dismissed.
Slowly the Cuttle city of Carnelon was revealed to them.
Built around a small range of hills, they ringed it in narrow streets, the buildings low, unlike anything Medicine had seen in Mirrlees or Chapman. They had eschewed the sky, reaching not into the heavens but deep underground. The sky was dark with Messengers, as disturbing a sight as he had ever seen. It was one thing to observe the occasional Messenger skirting over Mirrlees or Chapman, but to see them descending from the sky en masse was terrifying.
Medicine and his wards were led along narrow curling streets open to the sky, the whole place smelled sickly sweet; the scent of Cuttlefolk and the sugars they produced. Pleasant, perhaps, as an additive in perfume, but here it clawed at the throat. Reminding Medicine of those times he had drunk too much Cuttlewine, and there had been far too many of those, though now he rather expected the outcome of this journey to be far worse than any hangover.
Cuttlefolk watched them silently. The ground beneath their feet rippled, shivering to movements and masses below that Medicine didn’t want to consider all that much.
Finally, they stopped at pens where, much to Medicine’s surprise, a human greeted them. He seemed almost embarrassed.
“I’m Dreyer,” he said. “You do know you were trespassing on Cuttlefolk lands? They’re not at all happy with you.”
“I didn’t know there were humans in Carnelon.”
“There’s a few of us. We are tolerated, I suppose just as the Cuttlefolk are tolerated in Mirrlees,” he said. “I am studying Cuttlefolk sociology.”
Good for you, Medicine thought.
“Can you help us?” Medicine asked.
Dreyer shook his head. “Good heavens, no! You’ve broken Cuttlefolk law, and Cuttlefolk alone can deal with that. But I can translate for you, and even that threatens to tar me with your association. There will be a meeting tomorrow. I will do what I can.”
The Cuttlefolk left them in their pens. There was an explosion of wings an
d half a dozen of their messengers flew north and west.
A little while later a lone messenger took to the air, hovering high above the city for a moment before shooting south.
“What are they doing?” Medicine asked.
“Isn’t it obvious,” Agatha said. “They’re gathering an army.”
That night something flew over the city. An iron ship unlike anything Medicine had ever seen. Medicine watched as canisters dropped from its belly.
Smoke descended on the city. There were cries, howls, the stomp of feet. Locked in the pen, Medicine was as good as blind.
Then, just before dawn, there was silence.
Half the morning they waited and nothing in the city stirred.
At last Medicine pulled a blade from his boot and worked on the lock. It was a stubborn thing, but it gave way to his promptings. He and Agatha stumbled through the city.
The entire city was deserted.
“They’re gone,” Medicine said. “I do not understand it at all.”
“Let’s just get out of here while we still can,” Agatha said. “In case they come back.”
And he did not bother arguing with her, they returned to the pens and freed the others.
Silently they moved through the empty city. Not one of the Cuttlefolk or their Messengers was in evidence, but in the square, outside the many-bannered building that Medicine guess to be the Cuttlelord’s residence, humans had been strung up, their organs removed, and their eyes.
Medicine stared at Dreyer’s corpse, wondering how close they had come to that. The Cuttlefolk had forgotten about them or, more chillingly, thought them not worth the effort.
GATHERING PLAINS DISTANCE FROM ROIL: 1200 MILES
“Where are they going?” Medicine asked, pointing at the ruined earth. This was the fourth such two-hundred yard wide furrow in the ground, extending in either direction as far as he could see. It was as though someone had torn a path across the land, using only claw and tooth. And that was pretty much what had happened. This was the spoor of a race on the march to battle.
“South,” Agatha replied, crouching and sighting along the broken earth. “Like all the others.”
“And what lies south of here?”
“Mirrlees.”
All day, they found evidence of the Cuttlefolk’s passage, skin casings, midden-heaps, even egg sacks gently pulsing. These Agatha’s soldiers had taken a grim delight in shooting, until she ordered they cease. There were so many, and their ammunition so limited.
“We’ve missed the party,” Agatha said, running her fingers through the earth.
“I think it’s the Roil,” Medicine said. “That ship, those canisters. The Roil’s reach has extended considerably.”
They returned to the great iron-beast that was the Grendel and Agatha sent her best men to check over it. There were engineers and mechanics enough in their numbers that it would be a truly ruined train for them not to repair it. As it was, the damage was limited, the equipment necessary for repair on board the engine, and those skilled enough to fix it in abundance.
Agatha could not conceal her delight. “With this we can reach the Underground in a day, nor more than two, if the tracks hold up.”
“Let’s do it,” Medicine said. “I’ve had more than enough of trudging.” He lifted a ruined boot. “These were my best pair, you know.”
There was room enough for the workers and essential equipment; barely, but enough, and everyone was crammed in.
The Grendel built up its steam, a process that took longer than Medicine would have liked, but was assured was absolutely necessary. The engine, really a series of linked engines run in tandem, was huge and it’s carriages packed to capacity. He was mad with boredom before they had even started but finally the Grendel moved.
Agatha and Medicine sat in the front cabin, hardly a common carriage at all, but a room. Agatha cheered at the sight of the bar there, quickly opening a bottle of Hardacre Donaldson Whisky no doubt intended for some dignitary. She took a quick swig and passed it to Medicine.
“This is a fine, fine thing”, he said, letting the drink burn the back of his throat.
Agatha took another sip. “I do believe our luck has changed.”
The sky was blue, no rain or Cuttlefolk to darken it.
“I hope so,” he said, passing the bottle back to her. “I really hope so.”
Chapter 50
Little is known of just what happened to those fifteen ships lost in the Chapman Exodus. But the highest number of casualties occurred on that first night of flight. Signals and tracings disappearing into the dark.
Cadell, sighted on the Roslyn Dawn, may well have been responsible. Ever he delighted in destruction, the old texts say.
• Molc – The City in the Air
THE AIR OVER SHALE, DISTANCE FROM ROIL: VARIABLE
Cadell was out for hours and David watched over him feeling even more helpless than he had watching his father’s death. He knew this dying would be far more protracted and one he couldn’t run from.
“He’s not going to wake up,” Margaret said.
“Now, that’s real helpful,” Kara Jade said. “Real sensitive.”
“Sensitivity or truth, what do you prefer?” Margaret snapped.
“We need him,” David said. “All of us. Cadell alone knows what has to be done, what the next step is. Without him we’re all just waiting to die. We might as well turn around now, fly into the Roil and get it over and done with.”
“Our need isn’t enough to bring about a miracle,” Margaret said.
“That we’re still alive is a miracle,” Kara Jade said. “The options as I see them now, I can still take you north. Cadell paid for that, and he saved the Dawn. Or you can come to my city.”
The thought of Drift held a moment’s attraction to David.
“And what would we do there?” Margaret said. “Fly until we die?”
“It’s what we all do,” Kara Jade said. “No point denying it. The damn Roil’s going to swallow every one of us.”
Starting with Cadell, David thought. The Old Man’s breath came shallowly, and there was almost no blood in his face, but lying as Cadell did, David could almost imagine that he was only sleeping. The back of his skull belied that. Kara Jade had packed it with the same gel she had used on the hull of the Roslyn Dawn, but it couldn’t conceal the missing piece of skull or the brain beneath.
“He’s not going to wake up,” Margaret said, pacing the cabin like a caged beast.
Kara Jade, after a few choice words concerning Margaret’s piloting skills, kept her eyes and her concentration on the controls.
Somewhere along the way, David fell asleep to nightmares of iron ships launching fire and screaming gulls being torn out of the air by hordes of Hideous Garment Flutes.
In the middle of the night someone shook him awake. David blinked, grateful to have escaped such dreams.
Kara smiled almost shyly at him.
“What’s wrong?” He rubbed at his eyes.
“Quick,” she said, pulling him up. “Quick or you’ll miss it.”
“What are you doing? Are we under attack?” He let her drag him to a currently translucent section of the gondola.
“Look,” she said, jabbing a thumb down at a wide break in the clouds.
Lights were scattered thickly on the ground beneath, a winding band of brilliance at least three miles wide, though from up here it looked scarcely broader than his wrist.
“What is it?” he asked. Then his voice caught in his throat: all that beautiful light.
At last he managed: “It’s Mirrlees, it’s home.”
Kara nodded. “Much prettier from on high, isn’t it? They say they modelled it on the stars in the sky, the spiralling arms of galaxies. Doesn’t look much like stars to me, but what do I know? I thought you might want a glimpse of your city.”
Homesickness swelled inside him, everything he had forced deep burst free. Tears ran down his face.
“Here,” K
ara said, gently, handing him a bottle. “Have a belt of that.”
“What is it?” David asked.
“Drift rum, the good stuff. It’s our only export.”
He took a swig from the bottle and gasped as it burned its way down his throat. Belt was right!
“You export that?” He managed at last.
Kara gave him a look of mild amusement. “It grows on you, trust me.”
David nodded; his eyes still fixed on the city beneath them. Half a dozen Aerokin circled far below – military class, troop carriers – but even they could not spoil the vision.
Every time you see something you love, and you think it’s for the last time, it becomes perfect, painfully and utterly flawless. He stared and stared at that glittering perfection, at the crowded streets and the white scar of the stopbanks, and the great bulk of Downing Bridge until the clouds closed over again and there was no hint of the city ever having existed at all.
“Thank you,” he said.
Kara looked almost embarrassed.
“Seriously, nothing to thank me for,” she said staring down at her boots. “Just part of the service and all that. Now I better get back out there and check the ropes.”
“Be careful,” David said, staring at the side of her head, the hair there still sticky with blood.
Kara Jade’s left hand went up to the wound, almost touching it. She swung the hand away dismissively. “Take more than that to stop me looking after my Dawn.”
She slipped on a mask and went out into the night.
Margaret lay on one of the sleeping benches; legs curled up, watching David and Kara Jade, a slither of jealousy playing in her belly. She thought about her own city and the last time she had seen it. Images surged back of Chapman and its swift collapse. She had no desire to view another city from above unless it was Tate, whole and unaffected by the Roil.
Sometimes when Margaret slept she dreamt she was flying, hurtling over Tate, suspended on the wire way, wheels whistling, the wind racing around her. She would wake to a foreign place and a sadness that would almost destroy her: until the rage returned.
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