Ketty Jay 04 - The Ace of Skulls (57 page)

‘Too kind,’ Crake said uncertainly.

‘Cap’n, you can’t!’ Malvery was aghast. ‘They’re gonna destroy the Coalition! Don’t you get it? Daemons are gonna rule this land!’

‘And adding our corpses to the pile is gonna achieve exactly
what
?’ Frey cried. ‘Listen, Doc, I get it. You’re noble. You, Crake and Harkins, you’re all very noble. But the fairytale’s over now. I risked my neck for your principles, and those sons of bitches almost hung me by it. Well, I’ve got principles too, and they’ve kept me alive a lot longer than yours will. So I’m going. You can come with me, or you can piss off.’

The crew exchanged uncertain glances. They’d all been on the end of one of the Cap’n’s rants before, but rarely with this level of bitterness and spite.

‘What about Trinica?’ Crake said.

Her name hit Frey like a blow, and took the wind out of him for a moment. The rage left his eyes, and something worse took its place. ‘It’s finished,’ he said quietly. ‘It’s over. Everything’s lost. And I’m done with the lot of it.’

Malvery strode over to the chest where Silo stood. ‘Gimme my shotgun,’ he said, holding out a hand. Silo slapped it into his palm. ‘Shells,’ he said, and Silo slung him a bag jangling with them. He pressed a shell into the chamber and primed it with a crunch.

‘You’re not coming, Doc?’ Frey asked.

The tone of his voice caused Malvery to stop. The resignation there. This man was his friend. They’d been through so much together. Without the
Ketty Jay
, Malvery would likely have drunk himself to death. He knew Frey, knew exactly why he was acting this way. He wanted to be there to support him, to help him through it.

But here, now, there were more important things than Frey.

‘I ain’t coming,’ he said.

Frey took the news without emotion. He turned to Crake. ‘You?’

‘Frey,’ said Crake. ‘Don’t do this.’

‘I’m leaving, Crake. Are you staying or coming?’

Crake met his gaze levelly. ‘I can’t leave.’

‘Thought not,’ said Frey. ‘Your woman, eh?’

‘It’s more than that,’ he said. ‘And if I’m staying, Bess is too.’

‘Naturally,’ said Frey. ‘What about you, Harkins?’

Harkins looked distraught. ‘Cap’n . . . I mean . . . Shouldn’t we oughta stay?’

‘I’m not staying,’ said Frey. He was adamant. ‘Are you?’

Harkins turned to Malvery and Crake, as if they could help him out of his predicament. But they had no help to give him. He wavered a moment, and then his face hardened, he straightened his back and raised his head. He looked Frey in the eye and saluted.

‘It’s been an honour serving with you, Cap’n,’ he said.

Frey nodded listlessly to himself. An agonising silence followed. They pitied him, standing there. Frey was a man who’d gambled on a losing hand, and he just kept on gambling bigger to get himself out of it. They’d lost crew members before, but nothing like this. This would split them apart for good. Nobody wanted to see the dissolution of the
Ketty Jay
’s crew, but the Cap’n had forced the issue. He’d dug in his heels, and made them choose between loyalty to him and loyalty to their country. Maybe, if he’d known the outcome, he’d never have tested them that way. But it was too late to back down now.

‘Alright, then,’ he said dismissively, turning away to ascend the stairs. ‘Grab your guns and get off my aircraft. The rest of you—’

‘I’m not coming,’ said Ashua.

Frey stopped, his shoulders bunched with tension. ‘You too?’

‘Me too.’

‘You’re a traitor,’ he said, and by the sound of it his teeth were gritted. ‘You’re a child of the slums and you spent most your life in Samarla. They’ll probably hang you anyway if you survive. What in rot’s name do you owe them?’

‘It’s not them I owe,’ she said. She turned her gaze to Crake, then to Malvery, and held it there with unexpected defiance. ‘I’m no traitor,’ she told him. ‘I made a mistake. You ever made a mistake?’

The way she said it, it was as if she knew. About his friend Henvid Clack, about that night when Malvery operated while drunk, about the death that he’d never been able to forget. He looked at her then, with her muddy ginger hair spiky with rain, and she seemed so damned
young
. Just a girl, really. She’d gone her whole life fighting her own corner. Everyone she’d ever known had dropped her in the end. And it made him ashamed that he was on the verge of doing the same.

‘Yeah,’ he said. ‘I made mistakes.’

‘I thought they were Thacians,’ she said. ‘I was giving them information about the Sammies at first, the Awakeners later. Not the Vards. Doesn’t make it right, but it makes it better.’ She was trembling; he could see it. There wasn’t much that scared her, but pushing the words out was harder than anything. ‘I’ll make it up to you. I’ll fight with you here. If you want.’

Malvery swallowed. His throat had gone tight, and there were tears in his eyes. He turned away to hide it.

‘Malvery?’ said Crake.
What do you want to do? It’s your call.

Malvery waved a hand. ‘Aye,’ he said thickly. ‘She’s alright.’

Frey had turned round on the stairs to face them. He seemed like a man who’d taken too many blows, and was waiting for the
coup de grâce
. ‘What about you, Silo?’

The Murthian had been watching the proceedings without visible emotion. Weighing things up, the way he did. Who knew what went on behind those eyes?

Go with him
, Malvery thought.
For rot’s sake, go with him. Don’t leave the Cap’n alone after all he’s done for us.

Silo took a long time with his decision. No one rushed him. He wouldn’t be rushed. At last he stirred and opened his mouth.

‘Where we goin’, Cap’n?’

Malvery let out a small sigh of relief. By now he’d mastered the swell of emotion that threatened to embarrass him. He fished green-lensed glasses from his breast pocket and popped them back on his nose.

‘We’ve all made our choices, then,’ said Frey, and his voice was dull with loss. ‘I’m leaving right now, before the Awakener fleet gets here. Going north to Yortland, in case any of you change your minds. I suggest you get off the
Ketty Jay
while you still can.’ He made to turn his back on them, but he hesitated. With some effort, he swallowed down pride and bile, and said ‘Good luck, all of you. We had some times, didn’t we?’

‘We had some times,’ Malvery agreed gravely.

‘Frey . . .’ said Crake. He was about to plead with the Cap’n to reconsider, but Malvery put a hand on his arm to stop him. It would do no good, and they both knew it.

Frey put his head down and walked on up the stairs. Malvery watched him go with a sense of desolation. Something had been done here that couldn’t be undone.

He briefly wondered what would happen to his meagre things, his doctor’s supplies, all the accoutrements of his old life. He wondered if he would have time to say goodbye to Jez, sewn up in a bag on the infirmary’s operating table. He decided it didn’t matter. None of it did. Nothing mattered but right now.

‘Come on,’ he said to them all. ‘Get your guns.’

‘But my books . . .’ said Crake weakly. ‘My equipment . . .’

‘Don’t reckon the Cap’n’s in the mood to wait,’ said Silo.

‘Leave ’em,’ said Malvery. ‘Bess is what’s important.’

Crake nodded reluctantly. He put his brass whistle to his lips and blew a silent note. In the dark, hollow depths of the armoured suit in the corner, two bright points like stars appeared. Bess stretched as she awoke.

They heard Frey powering up the engines as Silo handed them their weapons. The bombs were getting closer now. Crake reluctantly took a pistol and some ammo. When it came Ashua’s turn, Silo held up her pistol and looked at her hard.

‘Time was, Cap’n didn’t want you on his crew,’ he said. ‘Only reason you got to stay was ’cause I vouched for you. Don’t make no fool of me.’

Ashua took his words as seriously as they were intended. ‘I’ll make it right,’ she said.

‘See you do,’ said Silo, and slapped the pistol into her hand.

The
Ketty Jay
creaked underneath them, and they felt the floor rise slightly. Time had run out. Malvery, Crake, Harkins, Ashua and Bess hurried down the ramp and off the
Ketty Jay
.

Outside, the rain was still pouring hard. Some of the pilots, attracted by the sound of engines, were heading across the landing pad towards them, evidently wondering why a craft with Awakeners sigils was taking off when they couldn’t. They stopped being half so curious when they caught sight of the eight-foot metal golem coming out of it.

The
Ketty Jay
was lifting from the ground even before they’d hopped down. Silo pulled the lever to shut the ramp as soon as the last of them were off. Malvery looked back at the Murthian, and their eyes met through the closing gap.

I’ll never see him again
, he thought to himself.
Him or the Cap’n
.

Then the ramp closed, and he was shut out.

He caught an acrid whiff of aerium gas as the
Ketty Jay
’s skids left the landing pad. They stepped back as she drifted up into the air. The Coalition pilots raised their guns, uncertain whether to shoot at it or not. Frey didn’t give them the chance. He engaged the thrusters while the
Ketty Jay
was still recklessly low. A blast of hot air shoved at the crew, blowing their coats and hair about.

Then the
Ketty Jay
roared off into the cloud and the rain and the storm, and dwindled until they saw it no more.

The pilots had turned their guns on the crew now, still unsure as to what had just happened. ‘Point them guns elsewhere, you bunch of idiots! We’re on your side!’ Malvery bellowed. He won them over by sheer volume. ‘Your aircraft ain’t gonna work while the Awakeners are in the sky, and they’ll be dropping troops on us any minute, like as not. Ain’t you got anywhere more useful to be?’

The troops didn’t argue with that. They dispersed, casting uneasy glances at Bess, who lumbered about restlessly. The fear in the air had set her on edge.

‘I have to find Samandra,’ said Crake.

‘Sounds like a plan to me,’ Malvery replied. ‘Anyone’s gonna be in the thick of it, it’s her.’

‘Not me,’ said Harkins. ‘I’ve got somewhere else to be.’

Malvery was surprised. Harkins’ face was set and grim beneath his patched-up pilot’s cap. ‘Where are
you
going?’

Harkins pointed at the Firecrow, sitting silent in the hissing rain. ‘There’s one more aircraft that can still fly.’

Crake gaped. ‘Harkins! You’re not going up there?’

‘I mean . . . I don’t think I’ll be much use down here, will I?’

‘It’s one against hundreds! It’s suicide!’

Harkins had the look about him of a man walking on a frozen lake. Only the thin ice of discipline stood between him and the freezing depths of terror. But he was determined; Malvery saw that. And Malvery knew how much courage it took for a man like Harkins to make a stand.

‘Malvery!’ Crake said. ‘Tell him! He can’t go up there alone in that one little fighter!’

Harkins’ gaze went nervously to Malvery.
Maybe he’d change his mind if I persuaded him,
Malvery thought.
But how much would it cost him if he backed down now? Better to live a coward, or die a hero? I know what the Cap’n would say. But he ain’t here any more.

Remembering his time in the Army during the First Aerium War, Malvery stood up straight, put his heels together, and saluted smartly from the elbow. ‘Do your country proud, soldier,’ he said.

Harkins had expected an argument. The doctor’s unexpected support firmed his resolve instead. He returned Malvery’s salute, gave him a quick and grateful smile, and then scampered off towards the Firecrow. Crake looked at Malvery, aghast.

‘Man’s gotta do what he’s gotta do,’ said Malvery. ‘Seems like it’s the day for that.’

‘Turns out he really
isn’t
a chickenshit,’ said Ashua, almost to herself.

Malvery looked over at her. It still hurt him to do so. Forgiveness wouldn’t come easy: there was a lot of disappointment and anger still to dilute. But she’d stayed with him, and she’d come as close as she ever would to an apology. She wanted to make it up to him. He had to let her try.

‘The four of us, then,’ he said. He hefted his shotgun. ‘Let’s get to it.’

Samandra found them, in the end, rather than the other way around. They were being held at gunpoint and surrounded by soldiers in a cobbled quad overlooked by an elaborate clock.

‘Can’t leave you alone for two minutes, can I?’ she said as she strode through the circle of Coalition guards, rain pouring off her tricorn hat. ‘Guns down, fellers. You don’t want to make Bess nervous.’

It was good advice. Bess didn’t like guns, and despite Crake’s best efforts to soothe her, he wasn’t sure he could do it much longer. Samandra had arrived just in time.

‘They were asking for you,’ said the sergeant. ‘We didn’t know who they were, but they had no uniforms, so . . .’

‘Don’t worry, you did good,’ she told him. She put her hands on her hips and turned an exasperated face on her lover. ‘Did you think you could just go running about the Archduke’s palace with that walking junkpile in tow?’ Then she broke into a smile and grabbed him by the lapels and kissed him.

All the sadness and distress he’d felt at the
Ketty Jay
’s departure melted away then, and he knew he’d done the right thing by staying. He was supposed to be here with her, he thought, as he tasted rainwater on her lips. Whatever happened next, this was where he belonged.

The moment was all too brief, and she let him go. ‘Where’s the rest of you?’ she asked.

‘It’s just us,’ said Crake.

‘Ah,’ said Samandra. Her face fell a little as she grasped the situation. ‘Then you all better stick with me, if you don’t want to get arrested again.’

She was evidently in a hurry, and they followed her through the palace grounds at a jog. Groups of soldiers ran past in the other direction; commanding officers shouted orders. Over the walls they could see the Awakener feet closing in from the east. They could hear the enemy’s engines now, and the explosions were near enough to shake the ground beneath their feet.

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