From the Deep of the Dark (39 page)

‘On the contrary, my dear,’ said Lord Trabb, producing a small metal device the size of a shoebox. As he brought it near the sea-bishop’s chameleon crystal, a dial in the device started twitching. ‘Where you detect the energies of a chameleon crystal, you detect a sea-bishop. Along with the list of names you procured from the prison camp’s graveyard, Daunt, these detectors will serve as a functional method for winkling out the tallywackers hiding within our ranks in the Kingdom.’

The obituaries section of the newssheets back home was, Daunt suspected, about to lengthen by a couple of column inches if Lord Trabb had his way. Lots of shut casket funerals where a rash of accidents left the great and the good vaporized or incinerated beyond recognition.

‘And with such chameleon crystals,’ continued Lord Trabb, ‘we have the answer to where the gill-necks developed the knowledge to cultivate their crystalline cities and other knickknacks. Doubtless pillaged from the wreckage of the sea-bishops’ last attempt to invade our homeland. I wonder what wonders of science and engineering the Court shall divine from their technology with all of our resources?’

‘A way to hold off a big gill-neck armada would be favourite,’ said Charlotte.

Lord Trabb didn’t seem to notice Charlotte’s lack of faith in the Court, wandering off deep in conversation with his technicians.

Daunt looked at Charlotte. ‘It will take more than the beauty of a perfect equation to keep the key out of the sea-bishops’ hands. I rather fear we don’t have months. Days, perhaps, if we are lucky.’

‘You’re right,’ Charlotte sighed. ‘Elizica says she is going to call in an old marker with a friend.’

Charlotte said no more, and Daunt got the feeling that she didn’t know any more herself. She walked over to the far side of the chamber, gripping the rail that overlooked the busy engines inside the next chamber.

Daunt came up beside her. ‘I’m sorry myself and Boxiron couldn’t protect you better, Damson Shades. I did rather promise you back in Fidelia’s parish when we first met.’

He had the feeling she wasn’t used to being looked after by anyone; nor the ancient spirit haunting her, for that matter.

‘Just look after my sceptre,’ said Charlotte. ‘If I can’t melt it down for gold scrap, maybe Parliament’s posted a reward for its return.’

‘I fear no amount of money will help us now,’ said Daunt.

‘That’s where you’re wrong,’ said Charlotte, fingering the Eye of Fate thoughtfully and staring out across the rooftops of a thousand rumbling thinking machines. ‘The money helps, it always helps.’

‘Are you still experiencing nightmares?’ asked Daunt.

Charlotte nodded. ‘It’s hard to separate all the memories sometimes. Which are mine, which are Elizica’s, which belong to the Eye of Fate’s previous owners. It’s always worse at night.’

‘I used to suffer something similar myself, I don’t envy you. The curious thing is that since we escaped from the prison camp, my own dreams seem to have been stilled. It’s as if they’re in abeyance until Boxiron returns. Damson Shades,’ said Daunt, glancing around to make sure they weren’t being overheard. ‘I need to talk with you, or more accurately, the passenger you are carrying in your mind.’ He indicated the corridor back to the surface of the volcano. ‘I have some questions about the prior invasion – a quiet state of meditation should prove conducive in winkling the answers out.’

‘Honey, I’m usually wary about men trying to get me alone.’

‘You can trust me,’ smiled Daunt. ‘After all, I used to be a parson.’

‘Yes. You did.’

 

Boxiron was only dimly aware of Daunt’s presence inside the large vaulted chamber, dozing in a chair next to the healing tank. The steamman’s sensory levels were set to the bare minimum, as much to protect him from the burning web of pain that was his half-grown body as any results of the damage that had been inflicted on his frame by the Advocacy soldiers. None of the Court of the Air’s scientists were in attendance now, in the middle of the night. None of them were there to see the strange luminescent shape coalescing into existence off to the side of the tank. In the presence of the ghostly child-like outline, Boxiron’s nervous system began to reawaken, a brief hot surge of pain, before easing like balm as the ethereal silhouette reached out to touch the tank’s accelerant gel. Inside Boxiron’s intact skull, a private channel opened on a very special frequency. One reserved for the creator. Reserved for King Steam.

Why have you come?
Boxiron signalled.
None of the people of the metal have given me succour, all have shunned me. The Loas have forsaken me, my ancestors abandoned me.

‘It is a hard law,’ said King Steam, the bronzed child-like machine’s image growing more distinct. ‘But you know why it must be. We cannot allow our race’s sentience to be copied by the fast-blooded creatures of our world. We cannot allow them to pick apart our corpses like carrion and reanimate our people as their zombie-machines. If the race of man learns how to copy our pattern, they will create a race of sentient slaves, and down that road lies perpetual warfare between the softbodies and the people of the metal. I favour the way of peace and friendship, not war.’

And I choose death
, signalled Boxiron.
I have tired of stumbling through life as a pale shadow of my former self, of being an outcast among the people of the metal and a brutish curiosity among the race of man. Let me honour my vows as a steamman knight; let me pass into the great pattern.

Boxiron sensed a wave of sadness from the steamman ruler washing over him.

‘It would be the right thing to do,’ said King Steam. ‘Wherever our pattern has been corrupted by outsiders, self-termination is the only honourable course of action.’

Then help me
, pleaded Boxiron.
Burn away this softbody gel that sustains my wounded corpse. Melt my soul-board and let me walk at last with the Loas.

King Steam’s astral projection drifted above the tank. ‘One day, Boxiron. But not today.’

Why?

‘Expedience. The cruellest of masters, and one before even I must sometimes bow my knee. I have been visited by an old acquaintance, Elizica of the Jackeni, and she has helped me travel the threads that lie before us. They were not comfortable precognitions to entertain. If you die here tonight our race dies too.’

No!

‘The enemies that walk hidden among the softbodies are as foul a race of monstrosities as creation is capable of producing and they have a deep loathing of our kind. They cannot drain our bodies for nourishment or rip memories from our encrypted minds, so terror of the steammen is their sole refuge. On all the worlds along the infinite string they have visited where they have found sentient people of the metal, they have burnt us out like a farmer pouring oil over a wasp’s nest discovered hanging inside his barn.’

This is your law,
yelled Boxiron.
Suffer not an abomination to exist. My pattern has been corrupted, end me!

‘My law to waive. And your sovereign to obey, by your rites of birth and your knightly vows.’

Please.

‘I created you once,’ said King Steam. ‘And now I will do something I have never done in all the history of the people of the metal. I shall create you anew.’

The astral projection cascaded into the tank and the pink gel began to change colour. Without sound it began to glitter and spark, a constellation of a million burning lights.

Exhausted, Daunt slept in his chair, which was probably just as well. Bearing witness to a resurrection was not a matter that would sit easily with a man who had once been a Circlist parson. It was always easier not to believe in gods when they didn’t come calling on you.

CHAPTER THIRTEEN
 

D
aunt stood on the edge of the Isla Furia’s u-boat pens, the hull of one of the Court of the Air’s strange sleek submersibles swarming with crewmen making last minute maintenance checks before she dove. Above the pens, on the slope of the volcano, part of the mountainside had been drawn aside, camouflaged doors retracted to reveal a dark sphere, an urban legend – the gas-filled globe of an aerosphere ready to lift off when Dick Tull and Sadly boarded.

‘You shouldn’t dally,’ Sadly warned Charlotte and the commodore. ‘We’ve detected a darkship approaching the island. They know the sceptre is here and it’s only a matter of time before more of them show up to test the island’s defences.’

‘It’ll make our job easier,’ said Charlotte. ‘If they’re here, they won’t be protecting the seed-city.’

The commodore still looked ill at ease with the plan. ‘This is where we are, then. Not even waiting for the wicked demons to come and try and winkle us out of the Court’s well-defended lair, an island where a man can secure a warm berth for the night and a drop of hot totty to stave off the terrors of war. No, poor old Blacky must go out and uncover a whole nest of monsters and poke them with his sabre until they swarm out to sting him to death.’

‘That’s all you can ever choose,’ said Sadly. ‘Where you’re going to die.’

‘What do you care, Blacky?’ said Dick. ‘We’re all dead men walking now, same as you. Home, here on the island, or their hole at the bottom of the sea, the odds aren’t exactly in our favour are they?’

‘Ah,’ said the commodore. ‘All the adventures and terrible scrapes I’ve been in over the years. My luck’s dwindled away and left me beached here. Curse my mortal stars. All my luck’s been used up and this is my last throw of the dice.’

Dick Tull shrugged. ‘How’d you think it was going to end, you old pirate? Jared Black propped up on a swan feather pillow, surrounded by tearful grandchildren levering open the mansion’s windows so he can take one last peep at the stars in the sky above? This is how men like us go. A sabre in one and hand a pistol in the other and surrounded by all the enemies we haven’t outlived. At least you’re going out rich. My pension’s good for an evening’s gratitude at an alehouse and one cold meal a day at Sadly’s dung hole of an eatery.’

‘Let us rather focus on that life we have left before us,’ said Daunt. ‘And what we might achieve with it.’

Dick Tull didn’t look convinced. ‘Let me know how that goes for you, amateur, when the entire gill-neck fleet’s anchored off the coast. Maybe we’ll meet again on the Circle’s next turn. Maybe not. You used to be a churchman; you tell me where we’re going.’

No heaven, no hell.
The Circlist mantra echoed in Daunt’s mind.

‘You owe me a drink after this, Blacky, in that escape hole of an alehouse you’re got at the bottom of your grounds,’ said Dick.

‘If I’m around to serve it, you better check it for my bladder water,’ whispered the commodore. ‘What’s the blessed world coming to when some State Protection Board man is as much a friend as an enemy?’

A sedan chair emerged from the entrance to the u-boat pens, borne with ease by two of the clanking mechanicals the Court used in its gas mines. They knelt down, lowering the chair to the ground. Silk curtains along its side were pulled back revealing Lord Trabb, the acting head of the Court swinging his legs out and dismounting uncomfortably, working the age out of his joints before approaching the group. He had two Jackelian style gentlemen’s canes in his hand, but he wasn’t using them to steady his gait. Instead, he tossed one to Dick Tull, the other out to Sadly. ‘A departing gratuity for you both.’

‘Sword cane or shotgun, sir?’ asked Sadly, examining his. Made of stout rosewood, they had copper boar’s heads as handles.

‘Neither,’ said Lord Trabb. ‘We have fitted a working prototype of our sea-bishop detection device inside each of the canes. Rotate the handle counter clockwise and push it down and the boar’s eyes will glow when you are in the presence of a sea-bishop wearing one of their mesmerism crystals. The fuel source is only rated for twenty minutes of continuous operation and once the detector is activated, it cannot be turned off, so only use the cane when you absolutely need to.’

‘No room for a shooter, then?’ said Dick. He sounded disappointed.

‘Only a suicide pill. If you pull out the detection apparatus you will find it concealed underneath. I trust you won’t be requiring it, or we shall all be royally tallywacked.’

‘Only when I absolutely need to,’ said Dick.

Charlotte stepped in and kissed Dick Tull on the cheek, whispering a quick goodbye in his ear. The State Protection Board agent looked at her with surprise, as if he didn’t quite believe his luck, then Dick and Sadly walked away towards the mountainside and the waiting aerosphere.

‘You make sure your old steamer gets better,’ Charlotte told Daunt. ‘I’m going to need Boxiron to keep my sceptre safe. I have a feeling that the Court’s engineers aren’t going to be much use in a fight.’

‘It’s not my place to put faith in what you’ve got whispering away in your head,’ said Daunt. ‘But if I did, I would ask it to keep you safe.’

‘Goodbye, Jethro Daunt, from myself and Elizica.’

‘My sabre, lad,’ said the commodore, exchanging a quick handshake with the ex-parson, just before he followed Charlotte along the gantry out to the Court’s submersible, Maeva and the survivors from his crew mixed in with the Court’s sailors across its sleek shining decks. ‘That’s what you can place your faith in. It’s kept us alive this long, hasn’t it?’

Only just.

‘My Lord Trabb,’ said Daunt, as the acting head of the Court was reclining back into his sedan chair. ‘I trust you have been factoring our schemes into the transaction-engines running the simulation of the Kingdom’s future.’

‘Yes of course,’ said the man.

‘What do they say about our chances of success?’

Lord Trabb sighed, a look of deep melancholy settling on his features. ‘Well, dear boy, let’s just say if you’d recently received an inheritance, now would be an excellent time to blow the lot on fine brandies, games of chance and large tips in the most expensive hotels.’ The chair lifted up into the air, its poles settling on the mechanicals’ shoulders, then bobbed back towards the u-boat pens.

Well, at least the gambling I’m doing doesn’t cost money. Just bodies and blood, you hypocritical fool.
Daunt watched his friends leave, the u-boat sinking in a gush of foam and the aerosphere drifting like a black sun into the sky, growing smaller and smaller, until it was swallowed by the smoking volcano’s smoke. Daunt had a terrible premonition this was the last time he would see any of them again
. Is it because they aren’t going to be around, or because I won’t?
My fate is my own, created through right actions.
He tried to shrug off the feeling of superstitious dread, yet still it lingered. How strange. The Court of the Air’s hidden support base, with an ancient town built beyond the submerged wreckage of an even more ancient marvel. It should have felt like a lost world. Instead, it seemed to Daunt as if the world beyond was lost, and this, here, was all that was real. The horrors that lay outside would be intruding soon, though. There was no getting away from that. Daunt just had to hold on long enough for his friends to do the impossible. That wasn’t so much to ask, was it?

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