Read River of Blue Fire Online
Authors: Tad Williams
“But there's a . . . a gateway here?” Renie pressed him.
“Was. Or rather still is, if you don't mind wading through about two hundred more of those goddamned mechanical men. It's in my throne room, behind the wallscreen. But Tinman's wind-ups have got it nowâthey have just about everything. Why do you think I dragged my sorry behind all the way over here?” He lifted a few of his tubes and rattled them sadly. “I can't believe after all this time, it's over.”
“I hear the clicking men close by,” !Xabbu announced. “In the big room beneath us.”
“They won't get in here,” Scarecrow said dismissively. “Once those doors are closed, it would take them days to break through.”
“So how do we get out?” Renie demanded.
The Scarecrow, his neck still a bit overfull, had to turn his whole body to look at her. “I'll have to think about that. And you want a gateway, right?” He cupped his shapeless chin with one hand and set his forefinger against his pale temple.
“God damn it!” Azador shouted from the corner of the room. “Get this creature away from me!”
Renie turned to see Emily take a step backward, lip quivering. The girl finally seemed to have realized her attentions were unwanted. Renie interposed herself between the two of them. “Just stay close to me,” she told the girl.
“But he was my special henry,” Emily said tremulously. “He called me a pretty little pudding.”
“Yeah?” Renie shot Azador a disgusted look. “Well, here's some news from RLâsometimes men are full of shit.”
The subject of this description rolled his eyes and folded his arms across his chest.
The Scarecrow clapped his flabby palms together. “Ah! Of course! You can go to the Works. There's a gateway there, where the River runs through the treatment plants.”
“The Works?” Azador asked. “That is where the Tinman is strongest.”
“Yeah, but he's not watching his own backyard, he's watching
here
. Where the endgame is playing out.” The King of Kansas was beginning to deflate. His puffy features took on a worried expression. “But you can't let him catch this girl. If he gets the Dorothy, the whole game's over.”
“This is a
game
to you?” Renie shook her head in frustration. “All of this, people dead, suffering, and it's still just a game?”
Scarecrow was struggling now to hold his head upright. “Just? Are you uttermostly scantagious? I've barely been out of this simulation for two yearsâlong enough to change my fluids and filters back in RL and that's about it. I've lost at least fifteen percent of my bone-mass, for God's sake, atrophied muscles, you name it! I've given everything I had to this simworld, and held onto it even after those whatever-they-are floated in from some other simulation and bumped out my partners. Now I'm going to blow up me and this whole building so that Tinman bastard and his fat crony don't get their hands on itâwhich means it will take me weeks to figure a way back inâand you say it's âjust a game'?” He rubbed his slack face. “You're the one who's out of her mind.”
“Have you been out recently? Offline?”
He squinted at her. “Not for a couple of days. But I guess I'll get a little vacation now, like it or not. Why do you ask?”
Renie shrugged. “No particular reason.” But she thought,
You've got a surprise coming, fellow
, then realized how callous that was. This person's life might be at riskâthey still had no idea what the apparently changed rules of Otherland meant. “No, that's not true,” she said. “There's an important reason. We think something might be wrong with the entire network. People have . . . have been having very strange problems. Unable to go offline. And . . . things that happen here might be affecting them offline, too.” There was no way to explain her worries quickly, but she had to try to warn him. “I think if I were you, I would try to get offline the regular way before I committed virtual suicide.”
The Scarecrow opened both eyes wide in a look of mock-astonishment, but behind him, Azador appeared disturbed. “Ooh, thank you, little lady. And when I happen into
your
world, I'll be sure to give you a bunch of unneeded advice, too.” He turned to Azador, as though deciding that he was the only one worth addressing. “There's an air-shaft running above this roomâjust behind that grille, there. You can follow it all the way to the roof if you want, or down to the basement, although you probably don't want to get stuck in a vertical shaft if you can help it. Got me?”
Azador nodded.
“Once you're out, you can make your way across the city to the river, and reach the Works that way. Or do whatever the hell you want. But you'd better get going, âcause I can't wait forever. About fifteen minutes after I see the last butt disappear into the airshaft, this place is going to go up like a United Nations Day fireworks show. I can't wait any longer than that. I'm falling apart.”
!Xabbu walked forward and stood on his hind legs before the straw man, who was sagging badly. “Can you not breathe more air into yourself?” the Bushman asked.
“I don't think the seams on this body would hold through another fill-up, and if they rip before I do what I want to do, it's all over. So get the hell out of here, will you?”
“Just tell me one thing,” !Xabbu said. “What is the Dorothy you spoke of? You said we must keep the girl safe.”
“Part of the way this simworld is set up.” Scarecrow's voice was growing squeaky and thin. “Post-apocalyptic. Nuclear war. Survivors can't breed. Lots of Auntie Ems, Uncle Henrys, all sterile. So the myth of a girl-child who will be born to one of the emilys. The Dorothy, get it?” He peered from sunken, painted eyes at !Xabbu, who clearly did not. “Oh, go on,” he trilled. “Get out of my face.” He flicked on the wallscreen, which displayed a vision of New Emerald City under siege, a few of its squat buildings on fire and tiktoks rumbling through the damaged streets like two-legged tanks.
As first !Xabbu then the others struggled into the ventilation duct, Scarecrow raised his flabby arms high. “
I've seen things you people wouldn't believe
,” he declaimed in a helium squeal. He appeared to be talking to himself, or to the screen. “
Attack ships on fire off the shores of the Nonestic Ocean. I watched magic blunderbusses flash and glitter in the dark near Glinda's Palace. All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in the rain
.” His head sagged with an audible hiss of escaping air. “
Time . . . to die
. . . .”
Last into the vent, Renie paused to try once more. “Scarecrowâwhoever you areâI'm not just making this up. I think people might be dying from things that happen online. Really dying. There's something very wrong with the network.”
The straw man had exposed a hidden panel in the wall, and with great effort was using his wobbly fingers to throw toggle switches, one after the other. “Jeez,” he sighed. “You sure know how to screw up a good exit speech.”
“But this is important!”
He shut his eyes and clapped his gloves over the place where ears would have been. “Is someone talking? Because I'm not hearing anything. . . .”
Renie sighed and turned to crawl after the others.
Minutes later they tumbled out of the vent and onto the gravel-strewn roof. It was day outside, but just barely. The sky was restless with ugly black clouds, and the hot, damp air smelled of electricityâRenie guessed there had been more tornado attacks while they had been inside. A steady trickle of sweat dripped between her breasts and down her stomach.
The river appeared to be a good distance into the Works, a dark clot of storage tanks, industrial piping, and lumpish low buildings. After a hurried argument, they decided to make their way across the railyard and then cross the Works at as direct an angle as possible, spending only as much time on Tinman's territory as they had to on their way to the river. Although they could see small knots of dispirited henrys being herded by tiktoks near the front of Scarecrow's concrete palace, the service yard below them was empty, so they clambered down a drainpipe to the ground and sprinted toward a siding away from the main line where several railway cars had been abandoned.
They were sheltering behind the tall wheels of a flatcar, and had just recovered their breathâor !Xabbu had, and the others were getting closerâwhen a loud but muffled
whump
knocked the ground from underneath them. Even the massive flatcar bounced, its wheels scraping against the track; for a terrifying moment Renie thought it might tip over and crush them all.
When the earth had stopped shaking, they crawled past the end of the flatcar and looked back. The innermost section of the Scarecrow's headquarters had been completely leveled, and much of the rest was hidden by a rising cloud of dust and dark smoke. Bits of ash and debris were beginning to filter down around them in a fine rain.
“Jesus Mercy,” Renie said. “He did it. He blew himself up.”
“So?” Azador spat. “Only idiots waste their time on games. We will go now, while Scarecrow's enemy is trying to find out what has happened.” As if to illustrate his words, those Tiktoks not caught in the blast had already begun swarming toward the ruined palace, beams from their belly-lamps crisscrossing in the murk. “We will slip through the Works without Tinman even noticing us.”
“How do you know about the Works anyway?” Renie demanded. “In fact, how do you know so much about this whole simworld?”
Azador shrugged. “I get around.” He scowled. “Enough with questions. If I were you, I would be nice to me. Who took you out of that cell? Who knows the secrets of this place? Azador does.” He pulled out a cigarette and felt for his lighter.
“We don't have time for that.” Renie pointed at the sky. “Look at those cloudsâthere could be another tornado any moment, and we'd be caught in the open.”
Azador grimaced, but tucked the cigarette behind his ear. “Fine. So lead the way.”
Like it's some kind of treat for me
, Renie thought.
Thanks so much, Mr. Azador
.
Crossing the vast railyard took more than an hour. The open spaces were particularly perilous, and several times they reached shelter only moments before they would have been spotted by one of the roving gangs of mechanical men. As the sky grew darker, orange safety lights smoldered into life around the yard, throwing boxcars and switching stations and derelict engines into stark relief. Renie could not see why Scarecrow and his friends had wasted processing power on a place like this, even if they did get the ingredients cheaply. She could understand building Ozâbut a Kansas railhead?
That was one of the differences between the rich and everyone else, she decided. These Otherland people could lavish money and attention on anything that struck their fancies. Unlike ordinary people, they could afford to be crazy.
The fugitives stopped to catch their breath in a covered freight car. The murk from the destruction of the Scarecrow's headquarters had spread across the horizon, although it was hard to tell where the cloud of dust left off and the threatening skies began. Despite the growing darkness, the air was hotter now than it had been half an hour before.
Shielded from spying eyes by the freight car's walls, Azador had lit a cigarette, and was blowing smoke rings at the low ceiling. He was also pointedly not talking to or even looking at Emily 22813, who crouched a short distance away, watching his every move with naked misery.
“He knows things,” !Xabbu said quietly to Renie. “Even if you do not like him, we should discover whether he can help us find our friends. To remain separated from them, I think, will only endanger us all.”
Renie watched as Emily sidled over toward Azador, her hand balled in a pale-knuckled fist. At first Renie thought the girl was going to hit him (which did not bother her in the least, except for the possibility of violent reprisals) but Emily only thrust her hand in front of Azador's mustached face. Something glittered in her outstretched palm.
“Do you see?” Emily asked him pleadingly. “I saved it. You told me not to lose it, and I didn't lose it.”
“Of course,” Renie breathed, staring at the small golden object. “I completely forgot about it.
He
gave it to her, didn't he? That's what she said.” She stood. “Where did you get that, Azador?”
He did not look at either of the women. “Get what?”
“That gem. Where did it come from?”
He rounded on her, smoke streaming from his mouth and nostrils. “Who are you? Who are you, crazy woman? I do not have to answer your questions! I go where I want, I do what I please. I am of the Romany, and we do not tell our stories to
gorgio
.”
“Romany?” Renie ransacked her memory. “You mean a gypsy?”
Azador snorted and turned away. Renie cursed herself for her impatience. !Xabbu was rightâthey could not risk losing what he might know. It burned like fire to apologize, but she knew it had to be done. “Azador, I'm sorryâI do ask too many questions. But we are strangers here and we don't know what to do. We don't know all the things you know.”
“That is the truth,” he muttered.
“So help us! You're right, you don't have to tell us anything, but we need your help. This placeâthis Otherland networkâdo you know what is happening here?”
He looked at her from the corner of his eye, then took a long drag on his cigarette. “What always happens. Rich idiots play games.”
“But that's not true any more. The system is . . . changing somehow.” She wondered how much she could tell him without giving away their own situationâthey could not assume he had come by the gem innocently. “You heard what I said to the Scarecrow. I know you did. I'll ask you the same question. Have you tried to go offline?”