Coram creaked his way across the wooden flooring, and turned a handle to revolve a long timber that stretched across the sub. The long pigskin bladders fastened to it bulged as seawater from outside the sub flooded into them. The skimmer began to descend.
The crash of the waves grow more indistinct. The leather walls bulged gently inwards and became taut as the water pressure increased.
Coram took his seat at the oars, and both smugglers began rowing hard. They had been doing so for several minutes when the relic hidden in Hark’s bag sent a pulse through the sub. The two smugglers flinched and swore.
‘What was that?’ Coram stared at Hark.
‘It’s only a blast of healing power!’ Hark yelled from under the table. ‘It won’t do any harm! I can’t control it, though, unless my friend’s helping.’
After some muttering, the two smugglers continued rowing. They watched the great compass above the map table, and kept up a whisper song to keep track of strokes. However, sometimes Hark noticed Coram looking at him, as though trying to bring him into focus.
They had been travelling for only quarter of an hour when Coram manned the scope and began calling directions to his crewmate. Then the long timber was revolved again to empty the pig-bladders and raise the sub. The turret-hatch was opened, letting in daylight and sweet air.
When Hark put his head up through the hatch, he found that the sub had settled in a very small, sheltered inlet, next to a couple of rowing boats and a larger submersible. A cloud of gannets wheeled about the low red cliffs and quiet red beach.
Beyond a narrow corridor of sea, he recognized the eastern shoreline of Nest. He realized he must be on a little isle he had seen from the hilltops, crescent-shaped and barely a hundred feet across. Apparently this was Wildman’s Hammer.
On the shore, Rigg and Jelt stood waiting. Jelt looked ill and grey-faced, but at least he was alive. To Hark’s surprise, Jelt was also rather better dressed than before, in decent boots and a coat without patches.
Hark was hauled out of the sub, and after a slithery scramble down a gangplank, found himself hobbling up the slick rocks.
‘Come on, brats – your patients are waiting!’ said Rigg, nodding towards a huddle of figures at the far end of the beach. She seemed to be in rather a good mood. ‘There’s only four of them today, but we’ll see more when word gets out about this.’ She reached out and tweaked at Coram’s right ear. ‘Mind you, next time don’t do any extra healing without our say-so. I’ll let it go this time, but no more surprises.’
The upper curl of Coram’s ear was flawless, apart from two very faint, pale streaks. Hark began to understand. Coram’s ear had been clipped in two places, and now it wasn’t.
‘Who are the patients?’ Hark peered at the distant figures.
‘The one with the bandaged arm is one of Skeeler’s boys – they’re spice-runners based on Drymouth. We’re doing some jobs with Skeeler, so we said we’d stop his man dying.’
‘What’s wrong with him?’ asked Hark, alarmed.
‘Nasty accident,’ Rigg said, deadpan, ‘involving somebody else’s sword. Now the wound’s poisoning his blood. The fever’s already taken hold.’
Once again, Hark and Jelt had to save a dying patient. Hark didn’t fancy their prospects if they failed.
‘The one with the walking stick is a fixer who got his leg crushed years ago in a rockslide,’ Rigg continued. ‘He’s willing to pay well to get his knee untwisted. The other two are crew of mine. They’re not injured, but their ears are triple-clipped. If either of them get seen in the wrong place, they’ll be gibbeted or hanged. Get rid of those notches, and you take that noose from round their necks.’
‘Healing those four clears the debt, does it?’ Hark asked, but without much hope.
‘You’re a very funny lad,’ said Rigg, without a hint of mirth. ‘You two stole a godware bathysphere from us. It was worth a fortune. When you boys have earned us a fortune in return, then you’ll start getting your cut of the fees.’
‘Don’t worry, Hark,’ said Jelt. ‘It’s all sorted out. Rigg and me shook on it. We’ll clear the debt in a year, you’ll see.’
A year. Jelt wanted Hark to keep sneaking away to heal strangers for a year. How could he manage that without Vyne finding out? He was clever, but he wasn’t invisible.
‘You boys ready?’ asked Rigg.
‘We need some time alone in our healing cave first,’ said Jelt, with his usual blunt confidence.
‘Yeah – to let our spirits flow together,’ Hark agreed quickly.
‘You can have five minutes.’
Jelt led Hark away down a gap between two huge crags. It formed a natural corridor, with high rocky walls on either side, and the sky above. At the end, Jelt tugged aside a sackcloth curtain and beckoned Hark into a small cave.
‘Tell me you brought it!’ whispered Jelt, once they were concealed by the curtain. Hark nodded, and Jelt’s face went slack with relief. ‘Give it to me!’
Hark took the relic out of his cloth bag and passed it to Jelt. As it changed hands, a throb went through the air, and Jelt physically twitched and let out a long breath, as though he were lowering himself into water on a hot day.
‘Jelt,’ whispered Hark, ‘I think I know what this is.’ He peeped quickly through the curtain to make sure nobody was nearby. ‘It’s the heart of a god. And . . . it’s alive.’
Jelt gaped at him for a few seconds, then snorted with laughter.
‘I’m serious!’
‘I know! That’s why it’s so funny. It’s not a god’s heart, Hark! Look at it! It’s too small!’
‘Maybe it was a little god!’ Hark felt stupid, but even Jelt’s mockery couldn’t shatter his certainty.
‘It’s ali-i-ive!’ Jelt waggled the relic in Hark’s face. ‘Hark, it’s a godware machine, that’s all.’ He tapped a fingernail against its surface. ‘Dead bone.’
Nonetheless, Jelt continued staring at the relic and turning it over in his hands. He had always been hard-headed when it came to godware, teasing Hark for his dreamy-eyed love of the gods’ legends. It was unusual to see him hypnotized by anything but the promise of wealth.
‘It does make a better story if it’s the heart of a god, though, doesn’t it?’ Jelt murmured. ‘Wouldn’t that be something?’
CHAPTER 17
The first patient to pull aside the curtain was the man with the bandaged arm. He gave a little yelp of shock at discovering Hark standing stock-still two feet from him, sallowly illuminated by the solitary whale-oil lamp. The man’s jowly face wobbled nervously as he stared at Hark’s ominous mask of grey rags.
Despite himself, Hark felt a rush of excitement. He wasn’t some runty little chancer right now; he was a mysterious being with arcane powers. Hark was only wearing the mask to avoid being recognized, since he couldn’t risk rumours reaching Dr Vyne. Now he saw the visitor hypnotized by the grey, shapeless shell of a face, barely noticing the human eyes behind it.
Everybody in the Myriad knew in their gut that true power could only come from something twisted. If Hark and Jelt were soothing or friendly, nobody would believe in their healing for a moment. The two of them needed to be frightening. Uncanny. Frecht, like the old gods.
Hark carefully pulled back the stranger’s bandages, trying not to wince at the sight of the dark, oozing mess underneath.
‘Was this hurt taken in the darkness or the light?’ he asked in a soft, sibilant whisper. He suspected his ordinary voice would sound too young to impress.
‘What does that matter?’ asked the patient in confusion.
‘Night air is more poisonous.’ Hark was sure he’d heard that somewhere.
‘Draw closer,’ Jelt demanded coldly from the shadows at the back of the cave. Arrogance and menace came naturally to him.
As the patient approached unwillingly, a pulse issued from the god-heart hidden under Jelt’s tunic. The patient flinched and cried out.
‘We’re making your bones talk to us,’
Hark whispered, the rags of his mask tickling the man’s ear.
‘And your blood,’ said Jelt.
‘There’s too much night in your blood,’ said Hark. ‘If we don’t work fast, you’ll die. Stay as still as you can. We need to put moon into you to flush you out.’
‘If it hurts, don’t scream,’ said Jelt.
In the stranger’s frightened eyes, hope slowly dawned. The promises of peril reassured him.
Now and then, the hidden god-heart beat. Hark watched each change with nauseated fascination. The edges of the wound bulged with pearly blisters. The blisters spread like pale, molten wax, which then inched inwards over the raw flesh. By the time the wound finally closed, the patient was looking less feverish.
The man turned over his arm, looking uncertainly at the faint, pearly sheen of the new skin. Then he frowned, opened his hand and stared at it.
‘What the . . .?’ he asked, holding out his hand towards Hark. Scattered across the palm and fingers were five small, yellowish discs, looking at first glance like calluses. As the translucent ovals flexed slightly, Hark realized that they were suckers, like those found on octopus tentacles.
Oh, scud o’ the winds, he thought.
‘You’ll find out in the future why you have been given these,’ he hissed, trying to hide his disquiet.
‘For now,’ said Jelt, ‘it’ll be a reminder of the day your life was saved.’
‘Storms!’ Hark muttered, once the patient had tottered away. He had wondered what the god-heart considered a problem to be fixed. Apparently ‘not enough squid-suckers’ was on the list.
‘What are you upset about?’ asked Jelt. ‘That went fine, didn’t it? The rest will be even easier.’
To Hark’s frustrated relief, Jelt was right.
The straightening of the maimed leg went well, though it was painful to watch. Each pulse from the relic caused unnerving bulges and shifts under the skin of the knee. By the end, the leg was straight, and the fixer could walk without his cane. Whatever subtle engine of bone now lay beneath the flesh looked and behaved a lot like a knee.
The clipped ears healed smoothly, with only faint traces of scar tissue. Hark could only hope that no exciting side effects would be discovered later.
‘That was a good morning’s work,’ said Rigg, as she walked Hark back to the sub. ‘Very good.’ In spite of her words, she sounded preoccupied. Hark and Jelt waited while she chewed at the inside of her cheek, as if the words she wanted to spit out were sour-tasting. ‘Tell me, do you only patch up bodies?’
‘We can’t fix holes in a sub, or mend clothing, if that’s what you’re asking,’ said Hark. As far as he knew, this was true.
‘I’m not talking about things!’ Rigg said impatiently. ‘I mean what’s inside people’s heads. Sometimes people’s heads go a bit wrong. Not a lot wrong, just a bit. Can you fix that?’
‘So it’s a mad person?’ Jelt asked with his usual bluntness. ‘One of yours, is it?’
‘I didn’t say mad!’ Rigg glared at him. ‘And don’t you say it either!’ She let out her breath through her teeth. ‘It’s my daughter Selphin. She’s a good girl, good crew apart from this – one of my best lookouts. I just want to sort her out!’
Hark recognized the name at once. Coram had called the freckled girl on the beach Selphin.
‘She never had a problem when she was little,’ Rigg continued. ‘Bold as anyone, swam like a fish. She and the other kids used to take turns diving with a suit and hose, the others working the pumps. I let ’em borrow the equipment, get ’em used to it. She was the youngest of them, but always the bravest. One day when she was down in the suit – three fathoms – there was a run-in with the local scavengers. They cut her hose.’
Hark winced, and swore under his breath. He could imagine it all too clearly – being nearly twenty feet down in the dim greenness, in a diving suit too heavy for a quick ascent, then feeling the terrible hiss of air leaving the helmet. The valve would stop water running into the helmet from the hose, but the next intake of breath would strain the lungs, heaving in only thin, stale air. Any hole in a hose was bad, but ‘surface sucks’ pulled out the air much faster. The change was too brutal, too sudden, and he’d seen the way divers’ bodies could suffer as a result.
‘What happened?’ Hark asked.
‘They had a rope on her, so they pulled her up fast. She had the helmet-squeeze pretty badly. Bleeding from the ears, eyes red as berries, wheezing for a while. Most of that sorted itself out. Her eyes are fine, her lungs got better. The holes in her eardrums won’t heal, but that’s not the problem. Some of my best crew got their ears sea-kissed when they were kids, and they’re all the better for it.’ Sea-kissed deafness was like a duelling scar or ship tattoo: proof of boldness and belonging.
‘Then what do you want us to heal?’
‘She’s not a coward,’ insisted Rigg. ‘And she’s not mad. But since that day . . . she’s been afraid of the sea.’
Hark stared at the smuggler. It was like being told that somebody was afraid of the sky, or thoughts, or the colour brown. How could you live like that?
‘What?’ Jelt looked incredulous. ‘What do you mean, afraid of the sea?’
‘Won’t go underwater,’ explained Rigg. ‘Won’t even go out in a boat unless she has to. She’ll wade, but she won’t swim. I thought she’d grow out of it, but she’s fourteen now. Fourteen! She should be real crew now, maybe learning a bit of leadership! How can she do that if I can’t get her in a sub? I can’t have a daughter of mine afraid of the sea. Something went wrong in her head that day. Maybe that hose sucked out some of her sense. I need you to fix it. Fix her. Sort her out.’
Hark hesitated, choosing his words carefully.
‘We haven’t been healers for long,’ he said, ‘and we’re still learning how it works. We haven’t done any brain-wound healing before—’
‘But we can try,’ Jelt interrupted, keenly watching Rigg’s face. ‘What’s it worth to you?’
‘You fix Selphin,’ said Rigg slowly, ‘and you’ll have paid back your debt for the bathysphere. You can start getting your cut from our partnership.’
‘Then we’ll do it,’ said Jelt, and held out his hand to shake Rigg’s.
No! screamed Hark silently. Jelt, don’t make another promise we can’t keep!
But he saw the mischievous triumph in Jelt’s eye, and he realized that Jelt had been expecting his response. Stop making a fuss, said the look. You’ll manage it if you have to. And now you have to.
CHAPTER 18
Back in the dark little sub, Hark watched ghostly outlines of jellyfish billow past the portholes, and tried to think. Rigg would never release him from healer duties until she considered his debt paid. If he played along, however, it was only a matter of time until Dr Vyne found out.
We do need to cure this Selphin girl’s fear. Jelt’s right, whether I like it or not. It’s the only way out. I don’t know if the god-heart works on minds, but maybe there’s some other way to fix her. She just got scared, didn’t she? It’s not like she thinks she’s a lobster. Perhaps I can talk some sense into her.
As promised, the little skimmer sub dropped Hark off at Dunlin’s beach. Selphin was waiting for him there, but in an unexpected place.
She was standing barefoot at the water’s edge. After hearing Rigg’s description of Selphin’s fear, Hark had not expected to see her near the sea. Yet there she was, letting the foam of the little waves rush over her feet and ankles. She seemed utterly absorbed in watching the ballet of the gulls and terns over the water, the skitter of red crabs at the water’s edge, the gleaming rattle of pebbles drawn back by the waves’ withdrawal.
As soon as he entered her peripheral vision, her head snapped around to look at him. Selphin jerked her head towards his basket, which was resting on the pebbles further up the beach. As arranged, it was full of samphire, mallow flowers, sea beet, wild fennel and flabby seawrack. She had been thorough.
You’re Rigg’s d
aughter, aren’t you? he signed. He didn’t know Selphin’s sign name, but the sign for ‘Rigg’ was well known all over Lady’s Crave.
She nodded.
I thought you were afraid of the sea? Hark gestured at the wavelets splashing over her toes.
Selphin put her head on one side and gave him a look of weary, withering contempt. She glanced pointedly at the inch-deep water around her feet, then met his eye again.
‘Terrifying,’ she said aloud. ‘I expect I’ll drown immediately.’ Her voice was measured and level, with no weakness in consonants, not even the s sound. Either she could still hear her own voice a little, or she had a good recollection of how to use it. ‘So Rigg has talked to you about me, then?’
Not ‘Mother’, just ‘Rigg’. Hark wondered how well they got on, and what it was like having Rigg as a mother.
He nodded. There didn’t seem to be any point in lying.
I heard what happened to you. Hark kept his signs small and confidential.
Selphin rolled her eyes.
Everybody has heard about it, she signed bitterly, her ‘everyone’ a great circular gesture that seemed to suggest the whole of the Myriad and beyond. She tells everyone I’m broken.
I wanted to talk to you about that, Hark signed carefully.
Why? signed Selphin suspiciously, then her face darkened in horror. Rigg asked you to fix me, didn’t she?
She wants to help you! Hark signed. She wants you to be great!
I know what Rigg wants, Selphin answered sullenly.
‘But . . . think of all the things you could do if you stopped being afraid of the sea!’ Hark blurted out aloud. Hark wasn’t as fluent in sign as Selphin was. He could get his meaning across, but without the same vividness or verve. With words he was a storyteller, but with signs he lacked the skill to make the images sparkle. ‘Do you never want to swim down and chase fish? With the sand grains sparkling in the water? Do you remember what it’s like? It’s . . . flying!’
Again Hark was getting a contemptuous, incredulous glare, as if he were missing some obvious point.
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