“Azror’jir. Valon uru danik-es,” It was some form of ancient Deific.
Realizing the door wasn’t going to open, Taro summoned the strength to speak. “What are you?”
Kadia crept along the walls, leaving a trail of shadows behind her. She was now so close, it could’ve reached out and touched him. Her teeth were like razors, and her face was like a bottomless pit.
“Don’t hurt me,” Taro said. He was a hair away from begging. “I work for Vexis. I’m on your side.”
It stopped and tilted its head. “Ith-harus.” It got into a stance, like it was about to pounce, but before it could, the door opened and light poured into the room. Someone pulled Taro out by the arms, while another slammed the door.
Taro felt like he’d come up from a deep-sea dive. His chest heaved, and his skin regained its color. The nurse checked his pulse and helped him up.
Dr. Halric smacked Taro’s cheek with his wrinkled hand. “Snap out of it, boy.” When he settled, Halric glanced at the nurse. “Leave us. You didn’t see anything.”
She didn’t hesitate to comply, as if she was used to such requests.
“Do you have a death wish?” Halric asked.
Taro’s eyes were still in a haze.
“She’s a paranoid schizophrenic and a tribune-level artificer,” he continued. “I don’t know how you found out about her, but had I not been here, she would’ve ripped you apart.”
“I didn’t know Vexis had a sister.”
“I’ve been working with her to try to bring her back from her madness. If Vexis knew you were here, I doubt she’d be very forgiving.”
“Are you going to tell her?”
Halric crossed his boney arms. “Not this time. I will give you one warning and one warning only: forget about her. Forget about this place. Never return. Is that clear?”
Halric didn’t need to ask. Why would anyone want to come back to a place like this?
“I trust you know the way out,” he said.
Taro staggered down the hallway, passing wailing patients.
“Wait,” Halric called. Taro turned to face him. “Did she say anything?”
The words blazed through Taro’s mind. Though he didn’t understand them, he’d never forget anything that awful voice said.
“No. Nothing.”
Chapter Thirty
Proper Endrans
Taro woke to his bedroom walls shaking under the weight of someone pounding at the door. He slid out of bed in a weary daze and searched for a clean shirt. It had to be four o’clock in the morning.
The knock came again, louder this time. Three warders waited for him on the other side. Taro fumbled to get his shirt on and look slightly presentable.
“Can I help you?” he asked.
“You’re Taro?”
He nodded. “Is there something wrong?”
“We’re to escort you to the Magisterium for court-martial.”
Taro felt like he’d just downed a gallon of coffee. He was now completely awake and his mind raced. Had his connection to Vexis been discovered? His cheating in the trial?
He forced himself to appear calm. “What are the charges?”
“Everything will be made clear once we get to the Magisterium.” The head warder moved from the doorway. “Please follow me.”
The warders were strangely polite and made no attempts to restrain him. Taro even got to ride in the unlocked window seat of their carriage. The court-martial chamber was arranged like a circular theater; there were four rows of wooden seating on an incline, overlooking a single chair in the center. The chair had restraints on the arms and legs, and a strap that went around the chest.
The outer rows were packed with tired magisters, finishing off tall mugs of coffee. Ross sat at a raised podium, leafing through mountains of papers.
The Sun King sat tucked between two warders. His face was gray and his eyes bloodshot. Kyra was two rows in front of him, craning her neck to check on him.
Ross stared down at Taro. “Take a seat.”
Taro’s body shook as he approached the chair in the middle of the room.
“Not there,” Ross corrected. “You may sit with the magisters.”
Kyra made some room for him to sit beside her.
Ross cleared her throat. “Bring in the accused.”
A warder escorted Sikes into the antechamber. His hands and feet were in shackles, and he looked like he’d taken quite a beating. The warder unlocked him from his restraints, only to force him to sit and latch him into new ones.
“Mr. Sikes is accused of high treason,” Ross said.
“It’s the Vexis fiasco all over again?” Magister Briego said.
“I’ve long suspected a cancer in the Magisterium. I believe Mr. Sikes has been working for Vexis all along.”
“You have evidence of this?” the Sun King asked.
“Vexis and Mr. Sikes are both Helian. Sikes is, in fact, the only Helian currently in the Magisterium.”
Kyra looked incredulous and spoke out of turn. “That’s not a crime.”
Ross ignored her. “Taro, you and Mr. Sikes are both from Ashwick, are you not?”
“Yes, Imperator,” Taro said.
“Did you know him before his admission into the Magisterium?
“I’d seen him around town.”
“Did he have a job?”
“Not to my knowledge.”
“In fact, according to the authorities in Ashwick, not only has Sikes never held work, but his parents have been dead for many years. Despite this, he was somehow able to afford a fifty-crown tuition. I don’t know about the rest of you, but that strikes me as odd.”
“I’ve had financial troubles, too.” Taro realized that maybe drawing suspicion to himself wasn’t the wisest idea.
“I know about your troubles,” Ross said. “And you’ve certainly not been legitimate in some of your dealings—pawning a book that didn’t belong to you, for example.”
Taro’s face went red. He was suddenly very glad Moira wasn’t there.
“Or your aurom. Yet, you acquired work at Crissom Foundry. You pushed to pay off your debts. These things are not uncommon amongst recruits of lesser means.”
Ross fished the promissory note Mr. Mathan gave Sikes. “Tuition paid for, in full, by a man named Victor Mathan.” She held up another piece of vellum. “This was promissory note during her time here. They’re identical.”
Taro finally understood something Mathan had said long ago: “You both look like fine, upstart children. Those Helian slum-kids attract too much attention, but you’re clean, you’re well-spoken. Proper Endrans.”
Mathan’s entire reason for choosing them was that they wouldn’t attract attention. If that were the case, why would he allow a Helian to come along? Why pay for his tuition but not theirs? The reason was frightfully simple: Sikes was the fall guy.
“Maybe you should bring Mathan in for questioning, then,” Briego said.
The Sun King leaned forward in his chair. “This seems like flimsy logic, to accuse a promising young artificer of treason.”
“We haven’t gotten to the meat of the evidence yet.” Ross stepped from her podium, clutching the same orb she’d shown the recruits at the beginning of their trial. She unlatched a tiny opening on the side, slid out a smooth green crystal, and replaced it with a new one.
Rays of light shot from it and reproduced the trial area in remarkable detail: Taro stood opposite of Sikes. Sikes held the blade to his neck and just before he could stab himself, Taro smashed the artifact. This was the point that Taro had lost consciousness.
The image paused, and Ross spoke again. “As you can see, at this point Mr. Sikes has been released from the effect of the artifact. Can you confirm that, Taro?”
“I can’t tell you what his state of mind was,” Taro said.
“What about your own?”
“The hallucinations I saw disappeared when the artifact was destroyed,” Taro conceded.
The re
cording continued. Sikes walked up to Taro’s unconscious body, checked his pulse, and went straight to the back of the room. He yanked a panel off the wall, exposing power nodes and crystalline circuits. He slipped an object out of his pocket and attached it to the nodes. The recording ended.
Ross pulled the mouth strap off Sikes. “We recovered the device you planted. It caused the blackout that facilitated escape. Do you have anything to say for yourself?”
Sikes kept his mouth shut.
“No defense? Then I have a question.” Ross held up the device Sikes had used to sabotage the power node. It had a smooth white case, and two copper bars jetting out the sides. It looked very much like the device Aris had given him to break into Ross’ office. “Where did you get this?”
For a fraction of a second, Sikes’ eyes met Taro’s. Sikes was many things, but he was no idiot. By now, he’d already figured out everything Taro had. This was the way Mathan designed it all to unfold, and there was nothing either of them could do to change it.
Sikes swallowed hard. “I have no idea what you’re talking about.”
Chapter Thirty-one
The Duplicity of Mr. Crissom
A plate of Crissom steel weighed four thousand pounds and took twelve men to hitch and secure for transport to the Magisterium. It was grueling and thankless work. Taro’s knuckles ached and his ears rang with the constant shouting of the foreman. On precious few occasions, the plates from cooling pools came late, and he’d get a short moment to catch his breath.
Taro pressed his back against the dock and slid to the floor. Today, his team was shorthanded; four had called off, all on the same day.
“Where the hell is Lon?” Tomin said. He was the muscle of the group and had worked at the foundry for fifteen years. He was a burly man, covered in tattoos from his time as a warder. He was the type of person Taro’s father would’ve gotten along with.
“It’s not like Lon to miss a shift,” Taro said, wiping sweat from his forehead.
“He was hacking up blood yesterday,” Rin said. Rin was the youngest besides Taro, only twenty-three, but after five years in the foundry, his skin was leathery and he looked much older.
“He could have had the decency to get someone to cover his shift,” Tomin said.
Rin took a messy gulp from a water skin and tossed it to Taro. “There were call-offs in the furnace, too. Overseer’s furious.”
While Taro drank, two people passed the corner of his vision. When he realized it was Mathan and Dr. Halric, he almost hacked up the entire water skin.
“Slow down, the water ain’t going nowhere,” Tomin said.
“I’ll be right back.” Taro tossed the skin to Tomin and fast-walked across the packing floor. He peeked over mountains of racks and crates, and almost had his head taken off by a swinging crane. Mathan and Halric slipped up a metal stairway into the offices on the second level. Mr. Crissom greeted them at the top.
Taro hurried up silently. The offices were laid out in a square, overlooking the packing floor. Crissom’s office was the farthest from the stairs, and just as Taro got to the top, the door shut.
He peered into an uncovered window. The walls inside were covered with airship memorabilia. Above Mr. Crissom’s desk were blocks of steel from fourteen famous ships (all neatly cataloged and engraved with their registry numbers), an award for being wounded in the line of duty, with even a letter signed by the Sun King himself.
Just as Mathan was going to light up a cigar, Halric pointed to a No Smoking sign on the wall.
Mathan gave Halric a death glare and put it back in his cigar box. “That’s going to be the first thing I change, when I buy the place.”
“That’s no longer an option. With Sikes discovered, anything you do will be scrutinized.” Halric unpacked a briefcase-like package. Inside were three long vials of viscous red liquid.
Crissom paced his office. “Selling to him was one thing. What you’re asking me to do is treason.”
Halric set one vial upright. “There’s no other way. You wouldn’t want to disappoint Vexis, would you?”
“I-I need to talk to her,” Crissom stammered.
Taro’s attention was broken by a faint brush of air on the back of his neck. Vexis crouched behind him and set her chin right on his shoulder.
Taro scrambled to his feet. “What are you doing here?”
“I was invited. What are you doing here?” She poked him on the nose. She looked different somehow. Older. Her eyes were bloodshot, and there were hard lines on her face. The veins on her wrists were bright, and her skin clammy and gray.
“I’m sorry, I—”
“Why don’t you join us?” She took Taro by the arm. “Look what I found outside,” she said as they entered.
Mathan greeted Taro like an old friend.
“Taro, my boy. Congratulations on a job well done.” Mathan shook his hand. “Not only freeing Vexis, but not getting caught is no small feat.”
“Sikes wasn’t so lucky,” Taro said bitterly.
“A necessary casualty,” Halric said.
“Once we’ve gotten control of the Magisterium, he’ll be freed. You have my word,” Mathan said.
“Did you give Sikes your word, when you baited him to help you?”
“It’s just business,” Mathan said.
Mr. Crissom was meandering in the corner, twisting the hem of his shirt. He and Taro’s eyes met. So much was exchanged in that one look. ‘You too?’ his eyes said. ‘I have my reasons. You couldn’t possibly understand.’
Dr. Halric inspected Vexis. He pulled her eyelids up, checked her pulse, and inspected her neck and arms. “You’re taking your elixir regularly?”
Vexis’ chest heaved. “I need more.”
“Stress will only accelerate the symptoms.” Halric placed his hands on her cheeks and got her to smile. “Just a little while longer.”
Vexis took the elixir from the desk and upended it into her mouth. The lines on her face faded and her eyes returned to their vibrant green.
Taro inspected the residue in the vial and rubbed it between his fingers. “Is that...blood?” He smeared it on a chair.
“The blood of a god. Well, the closest thing we’ve got to one.” Vexis exhaled hard, and the color in her skin returned. “What if I told you there was a man who never aged, who couldn’t be injured, and could never die?”
“I’d say you were crazy.” He’d probably say this either way.
She raised one finger. “He’s an ancient—and I do mean ancient—magister. He calls himself Aris.”
Dr. Halric repackaged the other vials, retrieved a new one from his coat, and handed it to Vexis.
“He’s got a curious streak in him,” Vexis said. “We had his memory burned some time ago to keep him out of our hair, but we’ve spotted him snooping around.”
“His mind is remarkable. It’s actually repairing itself,” Halric said.
Vexis shook the green liquid. “So this is your next task, find Aris and get him to drink this.”
Taro took the vial. “Is it poison?”
“Gods, no. It’ll give him some peace of mind.”
“Why can’t you do it?”
“He’d recognize us.”
After all that had happened, a chance to speak with Aris again was appealing. “Where is he?”
“We spotted his wagon in the Downings,” Mathan said. “The words Magister Extraordinaire are engraved on it. I wouldn’t expect him to stay there for long.”
Taro tucked the vial into his pocket. “I have a shift to finish here. When I’m done—”
Vexis glanced at Mr. Crissom, then back to Taro. “I think it’s safe to say you have the day off.”
Taro didn’t bother changing or cleaning himself up. On the contrary, looking as he did would help him fit right in. The Downings was even more depressing than Taro remembered. Last time he’d visited, he was so single-minded that he didn’t realize just how much of a shithole it was.
This was rock
bottom. Along the curvature of the underground wall were wooden packing crates with CRISSOM FDY stamped on the side. They were packed with the homeless; not just men and women, but children. Their clothes were filthy, their hair was nappy and unkempt, and they stank.
These were the lucky ones. As there weren’t enough crates for all of them, many slept directly on the cold ground.
Before the Arclight was damaged, the entire countryside was an eternally warm summer’s day. Because of this, winter clothing was largely unheard of. The best these people had were burlap sacks, rags stitched together, or repurposed blankets.
Aris’ wagon shouldn’t have been hard to spot, but as Taro wandered the crates and burning trash bins, he found it hard to focus. If you’d asked him months ago, he would’ve said he was poor, but as he stared into the wide eyes of four-year-olds picking through dry bones and mothers wrapping their newborns in crumpled paper, he realized he’d never known what true poverty was.
There was a line of six wagons and long wooden tables not far from one of the Lower City’s exits. This was apparently a soup line provided by the Magisterium, and it stretched for what seemed like miles. Aris could’ve easily been hiding amongst the hundreds of people crowding the square.
The crowd moved along like an assembly line. A fat man with a crooked nose wiped his face with his sleeve and filled Taro’s bowl with a cup of the grayish muck. The smell was repulsive.
Taro winced. “Is this supposed to be meat?”
“Don’t like it, don’t eat it,” the fat man said gruffly.
“Something tells me you eat better than this.” When he said this, the children in front of him snickered, and their parents shushed them.
Taro was given a glass of water and a cold dinner roll, and herded to a dirty table with the same family.
He stared down at the gray beef chunks and almost threw up. The boney children (a boy and a girl, younger than Nima) scarfed their stew down like they hadn’t eaten in days. Their parents scraped a bit of their own food into their children’s plates.
Taro slid his bowl toward them. “Here.”
“Thank you,” the mother said. She had shaking hands that she didn’t seem to be able to control. “But you really should eat.”
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