The Hidden City

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The Hidden City Page 36

by Michelle West


  “Get the door unbarred,” Harald snapped. “If you can. We’ll come up by the window until the door’s open.”

  They hoisted the men at the same time, and glass broke, cracking rather than shattering. Three times, the club hit the window; the third time, and the panes fell, forced inward by the strength of the blow.

  Good damn glass, Rath thought. If he’d had any doubts, they were gone with the windows. This was the place.

  Sorn and Darren disappeared, and two more of Harald’s men stepped up, sheathing their weapons. They were through the remnants of the window when the first cries were sounded.

  The doors swung open, and Rath and Harald almost collided in their race to be through them before they swung again. If their purpose here could be considered—in Jewel’s quaint usage of the word—good, their intent was more practical; they wanted to take advantage of sleeping, unprepared men, and they wanted to do it quickly. Harald’s Northern ancestry did not carry with it the complicated rules of Northern engagements in battle. Or perhaps he considered this less a battle, and more an extermination of vermin. It was hard, with Harald, to be certain.

  Rath didn’t have that problem. There was no honor to be had in fighting; there was no honor to be found in killing. Having made the decision, there was the simple fact of the thing. That and the imperative of survival.

  He was in the foyer—and it was the ghost of what had once been impressive; there was no massive chandelier to light it, no pristine carpets to cover it; instead, there was faded paint, faded wood, and a grand, twisting staircase that rose to the flat of the second floor.

  It was there that Harald’s men headed, and it was there that they were met. Rath, behind them by seconds, saw what he’d feared: a crossbow. He took in the man who wielded it only after. Saw that he was poorly dressed, and unarmored; that his face was shadowed by what might one day be a beard, and his eyes were wide.

  But the bow was steady in his hands as he swung it down.

  Rath’s hand dropped to his leg and he drew a throwing knife; he leaped up the stairs, thankful for the vanity of their width, their open climb, and threw the dagger.

  It struck the man’s shoulder, and the man cried out; the bow wavered and the string twanged. The bolt flew wide. Reloading was not an option. After a few seconds, neither was breathing. Rath didn’t stop to check the fallen man; if he wasn’t dead, he was no longer a threat.

  “Jay,” Arann said quietly, when the cries had died into stillness and Jay had begun to walk the length of the fence.

  She turned and looked back at him without speaking.

  “Rath told us to wait.”

  She nodded, but she looked to Finch. “How many?” She asked quietly. The wrong type of quiet.

  Finch stared at her for a moment, drawing her tunic more tightly around her. “I don’t know.”

  “You had a chance. To run. Someone gave you the chance.”

  “Duster,” she said quietly. You said you didn’t know her name. But if Finch remembered the lie at all, it didn’t show. “She told me her name was Duster.”

  “She was the only one?”

  Finch shook her head. “I didn’t see many others,” she added, eyes scraping the road.

  “How many did you see?”

  She shook her head almost violently. “I heard them. I don’t know how many.”

  Jewel looked at Arann again, and then swung round to Carver. “We have to go,” she said at last, and pointed to the mansion.

  He hesitated. His dagger was a simple, flat blade, and rain fell like mist in the streets, threatening steel with rust. He finally said, “You sure?”

  She nodded.

  “How sure?”

  “Just . . . sure.”

  “I’m in.” He looked at Arann, and then at Lefty and Finch. “Maybe you two should stay—”

  Lefty stepped closer to Arann, which shouldn’t have been possible.

  Finch said nothing. She looked at them slowly. “You can’t fight them,” she said quietly. “They’ll kill you all.”

  “We’re not alone here,” Jewel snapped. “Rath’s in there. With his friends. Who all have swords. It’s not our job to fight; it’s our job to find.” She hesitated again and then spit out a curse in bitter Torra. “We don’t have time, Finch. Arann, you stay with Lefty and Finch. I’ll take Carver.”

  But Lefty caught Arann’s sleeve, dragging his arm down; Arann bent to the side and Lefty said something in his ear. It had been a week since he’d been this spooked, this word-shy. Jewel hated to see it.

  But she understood that here, Arann was the source of comfort; she waited.

  Arann unbent. “We go together,” he said quietly. He looked at Finch. Looked down at Finch. “Stay with me,” he told her.

  She was pale as light on water. But she nodded.

  Jewel began to move.

  Rath was, by nature, a suspicious man.

  There were four bodies in the hall in a handful of minutes, none of them his. None of them Harald’s either; the morning was not kind to the men who dwelled here. Nor should it be.

  But . . . it felt wrong. Too easy. He walked to the first closed door in a wide hall, and tried to open it; it was locked.

  The lock was a pathetic one; Rath could have picked it in his sleep. But putting his weapon down was harder than he would have liked, even surrounded by Harald’s men. He bent, retrieved lockpicks, and opened the lock. Then he motioned them away from the door, and, turning the lock, threw it open, hunching down.

  The room looked empty.

  There was a bed to one side, a small dresser, and, incongruous here, a large, rectangular mirror. The mirror was new; the silvered glass hadn’t tarnished or yellowed. It was also clean.

  Harald entered the room, looked about it for a minute and then pointed, with his sword, to the bed. Or rather, to the floor beneath it. Not empty, no. One eyebrow rose—oddly enough, the brow above the patch. Harald’s way of asking a question.

  Rath shook his head. “Leave the doors open,” he said quietly. “We don’t have the time to gather the occupants; that’s not what we’re here for.”

  He stepped back into the hall.

  “If they’re scared enough,” Harald said quietly, “they won’t leave.”

  “We can worry about that later.”

  Harald gave him an odd look. Rath shook his head in reply. It wasn’t quite signing, but close enough; they’d been in fights before. The large, Northern man snapped an order. One of his men had picked up the crossbow.

  From down the far end of the hall, men emerged. They were better armored than their dead compatriots, and two carried crossbows; the other four carried swords.

  Six men. Harald’s man shot down the length of the hall just before they charged.

  Jewel’s slow walk became a jog, and when she cleared the fence, she began to run. She couldn’t say why, but she didn’t need to; in her old life, it would only have gotten her in trouble. She didn’t precisely forget about the others that followed; Carver kept pace with her, no matter how hers changed. But reaching the manor doors had become, in the brief span of minutes, urgent.

  They knew it. Carver actually out paced her; his legs were longer, and it became apparent that he’d spent a lot of time on the run. From what or who didn’t really matter. Arann was slower; he had Lefty and Finch in tow, and he meant to watch over them.

  But when their gaze met briefly, Jewel understood that part of the reason he did it was for her. To free her from the worry and the fear. To let her think.

  They made their way into the foyer just in time; the doors slammed shut at their backs with enough force to splinter the damn wood. And just for good measure, the bolt dropped.

  They all jumped and spun, and saw . . . nothing. Closed doors, that was all. Carver looked at Jewel. “Should we open them?”

  She shook her head. “We can’t,” she told him quietly. Staring at the doors. At the faint orange light that now ringed them, burning nothing but vision.

>   “Why exactly did we want to be on the inside of the manor?”

  Jewel looked up the stairs. A body lay perched on the flat above, his arm trailing blood down old carpet. “Up there,” she told Carver.

  Carver hesitated, and then nodded. But he let her lead the way, and as she took the steps, she slowed. Not because she felt danger, not precisely; she heard it. The sounds of swords clashing. The sounds of running men. Orders, barked with so much edge they didn’t sound like words anymore.

  “Jay?”

  “We need to get them out,” she told him. She would have whispered had she the choice; she had to speak loudly enough for the words to carry.

  Carver was smart; he didn’t ask her who they were.

  Four men down. One of Harald’s; three of their enemy. Three were standing, and they held the hall. But they weren’t terrified.

  And they weren’t good enough not to be. They faced seven armed men, and they fought, but they fought as if they were waiting. For reinforcements, Rath thought. The hall was wide enough that swordplay was possible; the ceilings were high enough that even Harald could swing his broadsword overhead. They could fight side by side without endangering each other.

  Rath was good enough. He brought a fourth man down, and that left two. They backed down the hall, retreating rather than fleeing.

  It was wrong. Something about it was wrong.

  Jewel saw the first open door, and she ran for it; Carver made it there first. They had to cross the hall, had to step over a body, had to leave the safety of open steps and the promise of flight behind.

  They also had to ignore the men in the hall yards away. Lefty froze; Arann caught him by the shoulder and dragged him into the room. He caught Finch as well, but they left the door open, and Arann was the wedge that would keep it that way.

  Jay looked at herself in the mirror; saw her companions, Arann by the door where the sound of fighting was clearest. He didn’t look out into the hall; he kept watch over Lefty and Finch. Carver whistled at the sight of the mirror, at his face in it; she kicked his ankle, and pointed to the bed.

  But it was Jewel who got down on her hands and knees, as if she were a much younger child, and Jewel who crossed the wooden slats of bare floor until she reached its edge. It was Jewel who looked under the hanging folds of creased, blue counterpane—a color she would always despise after this day—and Jewel who lifted it high, exposing more floor and the child who had taken shelter beneath the bed.

  He was curled up there, watching, and his eyes widened when he saw her face. There was enough shadow beneath the bed that she couldn’t see all of him clearly. But he had no weapon. “I don’t have time to explain,” she told him, keeping her voice level with effort, “but you can’t stay here.”

  His eyes widened further, and then narrowed. “You’re new here,” he said quietly.

  “I’m not here,” she answered. “Or not for long. We’ve come to get you out, but we don’t have much time.”

  The boy covered his face with his hands.

  She would have slapped him if she could have reached him. “We don’t have—”

  She heard shouting from the hall. Adult voices, raised in something that wasn’t quite panic.

  The boy shook his head. “They’re here,” he whispered, his face going pale. “They’re—they’re here.”

  Jewel said, “I know. We have friends,” she added. “But we can’t stay here long.”

  The boy shook his head again, and if the men outside weren’t panicking, he was.

  Before Jewel could shout—and she was close—Finch dropped to the ground. Finch who was smaller, slighter, quieter. She nudged her way past Jewel, almost pushing her to one side. “I was here,” she told the boy quietly. “I was here, and I got out.”

  Jewel saw the boy’s face as his expression transformed it. “You were that girl—the one who ran—”

  She nodded. “I came back.”

  He looked at her as if she were crazy. But fear of that kind of crazy was just a little bit less visceral. “How do I know—”

  “Duster helped me,” Finch said quietly, as if she had expected doubt.

  The boy nodded slowly. Slowly, his face undergoing the contortions of confusion, hope, and a lot of fear. “She didn’t get out,” he whispered.

  “I know. I—” The words failed her for a moment. “I couldn’t wait for her. She told me to run.”

  What Jewel hadn’t managed to do, Finch did; she talked the boy out from under his meager fortress. He unfolded slowly; Jewel thought he was her age, but his face was bruised, and his arms—where she could see them—were scraped raw. His hair had cobwebs in it; enough to add dust and a gray net to a dark brown mess. He was, she thought, a pretty boy. Not in the way that Carver was, though; there was no danger in it.

  She had no room for anger. She had no room for it, but it crept in anyway, darkening her vision. He was wearing a thin tunic, thin pants—poor clothing for the weather. She could see where the cloth had been torn, and through it, could see his ribs, and the bruises that lay there like purple fingers.

  “I’m Finch,” Finch told the boy softly. “Finch. We won’t leave you behind.”

  The boy swallowed. Jewel noted that he didn’t give her—give them—his name. He was still counting the probable cost. It made him shake.

  “Do you know where Duster is?”

  And look away.

  Two men joined the two who were injured and bleeding at the wrong end of the hall. They were good; Rath hadn’t heard them move at all; hadn’t been aware that they were coming. All of his instincts were honed, and if he wasn’t as fast as he had been in his youth, his experience more than made up for it.

  And all of that experience told him to run.

  Were it not for the contents of the letter he’d sent, he would have. Because he’d seen men like this before, and not enough time had passed to dampen the impact of recognition. They weren’t afraid; they were smiling.

  Cold smiles. Their eyes, in halls that were flooded with light at their backs, were dark and unblinking; they walked with a silent grace that Rath knew he had never possessed.

  They carried swords.

  “Harald!”

  Harald grimaced. “Trouble,” he said.

  “Pull your men back.”

  “For two?”

  “Do it.”

  A crossbow bolt flew between them and landed almost dead center; clearly, if Harald’s men were too down on their luck—as they liked to put it when describing the habits that usually deprived them of whatever they’d earned in the shipping season—they’d enough experience with crossbows to know when to fire.

  But if the aim was true, it was also instantly demoralizing; the man staggered back at the force of impact, but that was all he did. He didn’t even bother to remove the bolt; it jutted out of his chest at right angles, an unspoken threat.

  Arann called Jewel, and she nodded grimly. “More doors,” she told them. “I can’t open them all.”

  Carver, quiet until that moment, shrugged. “I can open half of them. Or at least as far down the hall as the fighting.”

  The fighting. Jewel drew a deep breath. Or tried. What she took in was shallow, like a gasp, a series of gasps. Rath was there.

  She was here. It was the here she had to concentrate on. She slipped out of the room, Carver her shadow, and on to the next door. It was locked. Carver broke away, kneeling by the door opposite Jewel’s. She wanted to watch him work; to judge—from the vantage of meager skill—how good he was. She didn’t have time.

  Not even to waste on a thought like that one; her hands were shaking so damn much, Rath would have been Winter itself had he watched her work. But the lock clicked. She pushed the door wide, hoping to the Hells there weren’t any guards in it.

  And there weren’t. There was another boy, who looked up as she entered. He hadn’t the sense to hide under the bed; he hadn’t the sense to hide in the closet—because this room seemed to have one, tucked to one side
and behind the long mirror.

  In fact, he hadn’t much sense left at all, to Jewel’s eye. His stare was dull, almost disinterested. His clothing was clean, but also unseasonal; his feet were bare. His hands were thick hands, and his arms, thick as well; he was shorter than Arann, wider, his eyes a blue that no sky knows. Because when the sky was blue, it contained light, sun’s light; there was none of it here.

  He stood up from the bed as she watched him. The sounds of swords were closer, and there was no Arann blocking the door, nothing to keep it open. But even the sounds of shouting didn’t seem to register on the boy’s face; his jaw didn’t tense. He said nothing, waiting.

  As if this were his life, truly his life; as if all fighting had already been done, and everything lost in the attempt.

  She’d heard the word “broken” before, even heard it used to refer to people, but she’d never seen it so clearly. Not even Lefty, who jumped at the sight of his own shadow, was broken like this; he still had fear to drive him.

  And Arann to care for him.

  Not even the fact that she didn’t have to talk him out from under the bed was a comfort, here. The mirror that she looked into—and away from—was contained in the prominent bones of his cheeks, the squareness of his jaw; a dim little voice said, this could have been me.

  She didn’t even try to argue with it.

  “We have to leave,” she told him.

  He nodded.

  “We have to leave now.”

  He nodded again. When she left the room, he followed, moving slowly and carefully, avoiding eye contact with anything that wasn’t the floor.

  She looked across the hall, saw Carver emerge, dragging someone by the arm. A boy. Another boy. His hair was the color of dark carrots, and his face, pale, showed freckles, but no bruises. He looked bewildered, but not afraid. New here, she thought. Too new.

  But why were they all boys?

  Before she could ask, Carver said, “How many more, Jay?” And he looked down the hall. A man was reloading a crossbow. And cursing. In fact, a lot of men were cursing.

 

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