Authors: Beth Cato
“Neither have I. Well, Papa was supposed to be pretty powerful, but Mr. Sakaguchi says my knack is stronger.”
“Your fever. The quake in Chinatown caused that? Gave you the power to do this?”
“Yes.”
“It's my understanding that a geomancer isn't supposed to hold energy that long; it'll make him too sick to function.”
Nor were they supposed to expend energy the way she was doing. She ground her teeth together to prevent them from chattering. They needed help, and fast. They were too far out in the bay now, and the pressure of the water kept nudging
them along. If she lost consciousness, they were doomed for sure. Even if Cy could swim, he'd die trying to do so with her soggy carcass in tow.
“I can hold far more than most, but it still affects me. I was very sick in Chinatown right after the earthquake. Addled my brain for a few minutes, until I let some power go.”
“We need to get you more kermanite. Maybe we can go to the bank again andâ” A violent chill convulsed through her. “Ingrid?” His fingers spanned against her ribs.
Through the murk, a gray ghost moved, sinuous and lean. Ingrid and Cy stopped. She practically hunkered over his arm at her waist. Sand clouded the water at their feet.
“Is that a seal?” asked Cy.
“A harbor seal, yes, but . . .” Pinpricks against her skin told her this was something more.
The creature's mottled gunmetal-gray fur blended in with the world beneath the waves. It tilted its head to the side, black pebble eyes unreadable. The seal wiggled. It was a slight motion, like a cat stretching as it stood up after a nap. The fur curled back. A human head emergedâa woman's head. Silver hair the same speckled color as the fur fanned out in the water. Her face was neither old nor young, beautiful with languid eyes. Her somewhat flat nose was reminiscent of a seal's snout, while her dark skin looked like that of a native tribe. A shade not that different from Ingrid's, really.
“A selkie. A fantastic in the wild.” Ingrid's eyes brimmed with tears of joy. She had always loved it when she spied unicorns in the city, most often harnessed to sulkies driven by Nob Hill nabobs' wives or daughtersâbut she always felt
guilty at that delight, too, at seeing a fantastic made domestic.
This selkie was old magic. Free, as it should be.
Oh, if only she had a camera as Victoria Rossi did, to be able to capture this moment! Not that it would matter in the long term. They would likely be dead soon, but this was a blessing, here at the end.
The woman's shoulders wiggled as the pelt continued to work downward. Ingrid stiffened in alarm. “Um, Cy, I do believe she's going to . . .”
“I'd say I won't look, but there's not much choice.”
A slight giggle masked another violent shiver. “Well, I suppose this is more forgivable than you going to see some burlesque show down on the Barbary Coast.”
“Forgivable?” Cy sounded amused. “Quite generous of you, Miss Ingrid.”
Sure enough, a breast emerged, small and buoyant, and along with it a freed arm. Ingrid couldn't help but gawk at the selkie's chest. The only other bared breasts she'd seen were Fenris's, and they'd been painted in blood. She'd never even seen Mama unclothed.
The selkie reached out and touched the bubble.
“Oh.” Ingrid gasped.
The motion rippled through her as a tiny pressure wave, the heat of it painful in contrast to the cold. It took everything Ingrid had not to lose focus and crumple to her knees. Sensing something, Cy tightened his grip, and he rooted her in place. Through pain-dazzled sight, she saw the selkie gesture up, then at the bubble, and back up. Behind Ingrid, Cy shifted to point up as well. The selkie nodded.
More ghostly bodies undulated through the darkness. They worked down their furs enough to expose full, human arms while keeping strong tails below the waist like merfolk.
Tales of fantastics always spoke of beings like selkies, djinn, and fairies as pretty ideals. These selkies were beautiful, but not in the willowy way of a Howard Pyle illustration. No, they were stocky and strong. Their arms rippled with both muscle and fat. One man's jowls bulged around his face and concealed his neck.
The selkies surrounded the bubble, their eyes on Ingrid. Oh God, they were all going to touch the shielding. What would her pain do to the earth? Was saving her worth the potential destruction?
But if she died, would that cause something far worse?
Ingrid didn't want to die. She gave them a curt nod. “Cy. Hold me up whileâ”
Even expecting the pain of their power, it burned. She screamed. The sound bounced back at her, foreign and strange.
Blackness swarmed her eyesight but she knew she couldn't let the cold consume her, couldn't let go of those last traces of heat. The magic of the sea felt so different from what she knew. It flashed a palpable taste on her tongueâsweet salt, overbearing, gagging. Cy's presence, physical, emotional, was the only thing that moored her to consciousness.
With everything so hazy, it took her a moment to realize they were being hoisted up. Bubbles of movement trickled past as a beam of sunlight glinted against the shielding around them.
She had prayed for help, and it was as though the selkies had come to rescue them. “Thank you,” she whispered.
The selkie woman's eyes, so impenetrable and black, met hers then flared in alarm. Bubbles flooded by in a veil as the selkies wiggled frantically toward the surface.
That's when Ingrid sensed the earthquake.
It felt different when filtered through the water. The tremor rocked the bubble and brought heat in sharp contrast to the salty cold. She half closed her eyes and let bliss quiver through her. This was the power she knew and craved, even if it was tainted by the thickness of the sea.
The selkies wailed, and it wasn't a sound of joy. The earthquake pained them as if they'd been dropped into a fire. She
knew,
their powers of earth and sea twined as they were. Marine magic pierced the bubble and gouged her with a thousand prickles. She screamed, her own power rising in response.
Fierce cold smashed into her, and weight, and the full brine of the bay.
Whatever power the tremor brought her, it hadn't been enough. The bubble was gone. So was oxygen, warmth, and Cy's secure presence at her back. Water welled in her throat, her chest. All she knew was blackness and pain. Then suddenlyâlight. Piercing.
Was this death?
Something slammed into her back. Again, again. She retched, her throat afire as if all of the bay was being expelled from her lungs and stomach and various other internal nooks and crannies. Her fingers dug into sand. Dry sand. Her face burned with grit. The weight of her dress dragged her down.
“Ingrid. Ingrid. Stay with me.”
“Cy.” His name emerged with another eruption of seawater. He was alive. A warm, broad hand girthed her waist, while another hand held up her right shoulder.
“It's all fine. We're on land. Get the water out.”
She let her eyes close. The sunlight glowing through her lids didn't bother her. Sleep. Sleep would be mighty fine right now.
“No.” Those strong hands shook her. “Stay awake, Ingrid. Christ Almighty, you're too cold.”
The earth shivered. Power filtered into her as if the ground itself tried to warm her. Not with a delugeâshe wasn't in excruciating pain anymore. Cold, soreness, and exhaustion rooted in her very bones. Somehow, the earth differentiated between them all, only responding to agony.
Her body shifted and she turned around and floated upward. An arm hooked beneath her buttocks while another had her back. The body next to hers was cold, the warm ground far away. All the world turned to ice.
“Help! Help!” Cy yelled. “Over here!” The next words puffed heat against her nose: “Stay with me, Ingrid. We didn't go through all that for you to die here. Come on, stubborn girl.”
As though straining to lift a steel beam, she worked open her eyelids to see Cy looming and blurry above her.
“Not girl.” The words slurred. “Woman.”
“You . . . you . . .” His laugh was sharp. “I will never understand you.”
“Good. Mys-tery. Lasts longer. Where . . . we?”
“Hey!” That was a different voice, distant and drawing closer.
“I think we're on Goat Island,” said Cy.
Goat Island, located halfway between San Francisco and Oakland, smack-dab in the middle of the bay. Ingrid's awareness
bobbed like the tide as she was carried inside a building. Another voice rang out, feminine and shrill. The heavy dress was peeled away. A fire crackled. Water boiled. Ingrid found herself wrapped in blankets, hot-water bottles heavy against her. Heat trickled into her skin. It wasn't the warmth of the earth's power, but the radiating force of life itself. A small spout was held to her lips as a hand tilted back her head. Molten lava poured into her sore throat. She choked and spat.
Close by, a man burst out in raspy laughter. “Aye, she'll make it. Whiskey's the stuff of Christ and Lazarus.”
The drink created a cozy ball of warmth in her gut that seemed to fizzle out her ears. Ingrid blinked away the crustiness of salt and sand as she took in her surroundings. White walls, fairly austere. An askew print of an English country sceneâa sheepdog, lambs, and a Porterman above.
“Ingrid?” Cy's voice was soft.
Her fingers probed the blanket. “Cy. The oilskin. Whereâ”
“Shush. Everything's fine.” In other words, don't draw attention to the parcel. She had enough wits to recognize that.
She blinked at him as he came into focus. “Your glasses are gone.”
He touched the bridge of his nose as if checking again himself. “Ocean waves are strong like that.”
“Oh, I'm so sorry, Cy. Can you see at all?”
He bowed closer to her, so close he could have easily kissed her. “I have to be about this close to read something, and the rest of the world is a mite blurry, but it's nothing to fuss about. Here. Have another drink.”
No argument there, though she was a bit disappointed that he didn't sit quite as close again.
She sipped more whiskey as Cy conversed with the lighthouse officer and his wife. It seemed she and Cy had washed up on the southeast corner of Goat Island, within sight of the peninsula.
“No surprise to me, that earthquake knockin' you outta a boat,” said the man. “That wave was particularly high, 'twas.”
“Haven't even seen any of our cats since it happened,” added the woman.
A thin blue fog clung to the ground. The color was weak but contrasted with the white walls. Ingrid wormed a foot free of her swaddling blanket so she could dip it near the floor. No energy pull. Frowning, she tucked her leg closer again.
It's like the earth was tense with readiness of her pain, but wasn't provoked enough to vent power. Had her near death done this?
“We need to get back to the city,” Ingrid said, voice raspy.
“You can't! You both still look like drowned rats, and with that wind off the water . . . !” The wife scowled. “You'll catch your death of pneumonia, dearie.”
The city would catch a lot worse than that if Ingrid didn't figure out what was going on, but now one thing was absolutely clear: she had to assemble her meager belongings and leave with Lee as soon as possible.
“We really do need to get back,” said Cy. “Our families must be all afright after seeing us go overboard.”
The couple protested mightily, but Cy's smooth ways won them over. Ingrid had privacy to pull on her wrung-out dress and squeaking boots. Cold lingered in her skin, the sort that didn't just come from exposure to the bay.
A fisherman on a stopover to the island was kind enough to ferry them. Ingrid kept a wool blanket wrapped around her, but it didn't quite block the fierce wind off the water. The fishing boat bounced across the waves, its vivid red triangular sails rippling. The reek of fish drenched her senses.
The oilskin-wrapped box was tucked in the curve of her lap. How she had held on to the box in the water, she didn't know. She prayed the contents hadn't been destroyed by the harsh exposure.
They docked near the airship frontage South of the Slot.
“Grazie!”
Cy called to the fisherman as he scooped Ingrid up in his arms.
She pressed her forehead against the stripe of buttons down his shirt, not wanting to see the curiosity of onlookers. She couldn't miss that the trace of colored fog was here, too.
“I can walk,” she growled. She had to say it, for the sake of her pride.
“You can fall, too.”
“I'm not an invalid.”
“Ingrid,” he whispered, the word almost lost against the rumble of wheels. “You walked me underwater. You don't need to prove your strength to me.”
She closed her eyes briefly, rocking against him, and smiled. Her strength. She'd been told she was strong as she hauled laundry, as she shifted dormitory mattressesâbut this was different.
“What happened after the bubble burst?” she whispered. “The selkies . . .”
“The surge of water from the earthquake hit us and the bubble popped. Peculiar thing, that. That first wave warmed you like a light bulb, and then the heat snuffed out. The next water was like ice. We began to plummet, but then the sealsâthe selkiesâwere there, two grabbing each of us.” He stopped, and traffic thrummed by for a moment before he walked on.
“They touched us?” Ingrid craned up her head, voice soft in awe. Cy's jaw was lined with reddish stubble. He dipped his chin so he could look her in the eye.
“Yes, but that wasn't a good thing, not for you.” His Adam's apple bobbed as he swallowed. “You were still unconscious and didn't scream, but they held you up out of the water to breathe and you . . . you were hurting. From their touch. Your neck, your back, you were arched like a man in the thrall of lockjaw, like some circus contortionist. I thought . . .” He took in a shuddering breath. “They acted pained, too. You hurt each other, without even trying.”
“Different magic. It hurt when they touched the bubble, too. I remember that.” She shivered from memory as well as cold.
“Even unconscious, you never lost grip of that oilskin. I sure hope whatever's in there was worth all this.”
“Me, too.”
He tripped, falling forward. She yelped slightly as he caught himself against a pole. “Sorry, I missed that curb.”
Why had the selkies come to their aid right after her prayer? It was strange, especially since earth and sea magic clashed in such a painful way. The selkies had been outright eager to get her and Cy out of the water. Maybe Ingrid's very presence in the ocean had pained them. Or maybe it was simple
kindness on their partâselkies had been known to save drowning sailors, after all.
Whatever their motivation, Ingrid still had a sizable stash of money with her things in the workshop. Next opportunity, she was heading to the fishmonger to buy a wheelbarrow of fish to throw to seals along the piers.
Cy and Fenris's warehouse was quiet. Cy set Ingrid down just inside the office, and it took all her willpower not to collapse into a puddle on the floor. She hobbled a few steps and sat down on a wooden bench.
“I'll start up the heater,” he said. “And getâ”
“Cy. I can stoke the fire.”
“âcoffee going and grab some food. I know how hungry geomancers get after working kermanite, so you must be about ready to eat a roc trussed up like Thanksgiving turkey. And. Um. Miss. You have to get out of those clothes so you don't catch ill, and nothing of Fenris's stash will fit your, um, body type. I . . . I do have some long shirts that might work, if you don't mind.”
Ingrid paused in the midst of prying off her boots to look at him in exasperation. “Do I seem like the sort of woman who'd prefer to freeze to death rather than wear a man's clothes? Food and coffee sound like manna from heaven, and anything dry will do.”
He tucked his chin, cheeks flushed, and scurried away.
Ingrid let the wet blanket fall to the floor. Despite being shaky, she had plenty of practice in starting a fire, and soon enough she had the kindling ablaze in the little iron stove behind the desk. The thing looked like an artifact from Gold Rush days.
After locking the front door, she set about removing her damp dress again. Shedding that dank weight made her gasp in relief. Like a snake working out of its old skin, she shimmied her legs from her ruined stockings. The water had made a snarled bird's nest of her hair and stolen half the pins, so she undid the rest, wincing as she pried out the remaining bobbies. It'd be torture to brush it out later.
There she sat, indecent in her bloomers and camisole. The white fabric certainly didn't leave much to the imagination. She picked up the damp blanket again and draped it over her shoulders, and scooting close as she dared to the stove, she reached for the oilskin.
Thank God that Mr. Sakaguchi had stored it in a pond. She pulled away the final layer of oilskin to find a familiar wooden box. More than once, she'd seen it on Mr. Sakaguchi's desk over the years, but never paid it any heed, or wondered where it went. It was about as basic as a box could be. Polished golden pine, no ornamentation. It didn't even require a key to open. With trembling fingers, she lifted the lid.
There were two stacks of letters, each bound in twine. The top postmark read
Hawaii-Vassal Territory
. She worked the top envelope free and unfolded the sheets within.
The top sheet was gibberish. A made-up alphabet colored in red, blue, and black covered the page, with very few gaps between words. Some kind of code? Frowning, she went to the second sheet. Mr. Sakaguchi's handwriting was usually quite easy to read, but here he wrote in cramped, miniature script as he deciphered the message.
Dear Old Friend,
read the salutation. Impatient, she
skipped over the two scant paragraphs to the bottom.
As always, thanks for tending to the child. With sincerity, A. Carm.
Ingrid froze. Abram Carmichael? Her father? She moved her thumb to find the date.
June 16, 1905. Ten months ago.
The box and letters tumbled onto the pile of oilskins on the blue-hazed floor. The cloth deadened the impact, but a thud still echoed throughout the room.
“Ingrid!” Cy burst inside, but she didn't look at him. She could only stare at the letter on the floor. The page and its words curled inward as if hiding in shame. “What is it?”
“I . . .” She pressed both hands to her mouth.
“Bad news?”
“I don't know.” She continued to stare at the floor. “The letter . . . It doesn't make sense. My father. He's supposed to be dead. This . . . he wrote it last year, in some code, and Mr. Sakaguchi . . .”
Mama. She couldn't have known. It's not that she ever spoke fondly of Papa. In her brusque way, she accepted that he was dead and gone and she had a life to live. Ingrid didn't even know what he was like; from what she gathered, Papa had essentially abandoned her and her mother before he died. All she knew was that he was a warden, well traveled, and how he looked as depicted in that portrait in the auxiliary. A portrait utterly destroyed as of yesterday.
Mr. Sakaguchi never proposed marriage to Mama because he knew the truth. All this time, Papa was alive.
“I set everything down when I heard that racket. I'll be right back,” said Cy.
He returned with a filled coffee carafe and the entire breadbox. His eyes politely averted, he set the box on the desk and the carafe on a woven mat. He opened a drawer and pulled out two coffee mugs, their interiors stained muddy with use. He filled them with steaming brew.
“Drink. Eat.”
Numb, she followed his orders, not even caring how the blanket shifted as she moved her arms to chew and drink. She absorbed the welcome heat of the mug in her hands and solidness of food in her stomach, but took no pleasure from taste.
Cy came and went from the room. He set a tidy stack of clothes on the desk. “Something's bound to fit,” he said. “I'll wait just outside. Fenris fell asleep, wrench in hand, so I'm leaving him be.”