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'It's just the driver' Aria said. 'He's meeting us here.' She took Ianthe's hand, opened the door, and led her through.
It wasn't the driver at all. The door opened into a small round cell with a concrete floor and walls. A drain occupied a depression in the centre of the floor. The s.p.a.ce was bare but for a metal chair and a coil of hosepipe connected to a tap. Torturer Mara waited beside a large soldier in Guild uniform. The man was loosening his shirt collar. In one hand he clutched a wooden baton. Ianthe heard a click behind her.
Aria had closed the door.
'What is this?' Ianthe said.
The other girl just lowered her head.
Torturer Mara cleared his throat. 'It's the start of a very long process,' he said. 'Please take a seat.'
CHAPTER 18.
AN EXPECTED DEATH.
Dear Margaret,I can't imagine that this letter will ever find its way to you, which is, in itself, enough to give me the courage to write it. I've been lying to you all this time. I never did escape from my Ethugran cell. I don't know why I lied it was a moment of weakness and euphoria when everything seemed possible. Over the years it seems as if I have forgotten who I was. Desperation can do that to a man. It looks as if I'll die in here, and I didn't want to leave you with false hope. If the truth is crueller, then I'm sorry. You don't need to send any more money. Mr Swinekicker has taken charge of another jail, and his replacement has more resources at his disposal.Love,Alfred The covered wagon b.u.mped along the forest trail, rocking the four soldiers in the rear to and fro. One of the two men up front slouched over the reins; the other leaned back and warmed his face in the sunlight filtering through the trees. This was old woodland, a tangled landscape of roots and weary oaks draped with veils of eidermoss. b.u.t.terflies fluttered across the green verges on either side of the dirt road. Swarms of midges hung in the air like puffs of smoke. Maskelyne closed his eyes and breathed in deeply. He smelled wood smoke long before they reached the checkpoint.
The Guild soldier standing beside the barrier raised his hand.
The wagon creaked to a halt. 'Lazy day,' Maskelyne said.
'Don't let the sergeant hear you say that,' the checkpoint guard replied. 'He's determined to scrub a promotion out of all this.'
'And where's he now?'
The guard grunted. 'Sleeping. Where you headed?'
'Eagle One.'
'What's in the back?'
'Disgruntled men,' Maskelyne replied. 'Commander Rast volunteered us to help with the search.'
'Lucky you.' The guard wandered to the rear of the wagon, lifted the flap, and peered in. 'I need to check this trunk,' he said.
Maskelyne called back, 'You think our man is trying to sneak back in?'
'I just work here,' the guard said.
Maskelyne heard the man unbuckle the trunk in the wagon bed and throw back the lid. Then he heard the guard whistle softly. 'Looks like you fellows have a long night ahead,' he said.
'You're welcome to join us,' Maskelyne said.
The guard strolled back to the front of the wagon. 'I don't like heights,' he said. 'You know the strangest thing about gem lanterns. Moths never circle them. Why do you think that is?'
Maskelyne frowned. 'You know, I can't say I've ever thought about it before. Maybe they've just got better things to do?'
The guard laughed. He lifted the barrier and waved them through. 'Good hunting.'
The driver snapped the reins, and the horses clopped forward. Once they were out of sight of the checkpoint, he turned to Maskelyne and said, 'Why don't don't they circle gem lanterns?' they circle gem lanterns?'
'Truthfully, Mr Mellor,' Maskelyne replied, 'I don't know. But I suspect it's one of those mysteries where the answer either means nothing at all, or else holds one of the fundamental truths of the universe.'
'Like the keys of the Drowned?'
'Exactly, Mr Mellor. Everything warrants investigation.'
They pa.s.sed through two more checkpoints. Closer to the palace, the army encampments became larger and ringed with palisades and razor-wire. Acres of forest had been burned to scrub to make way for the barracks, bunkers and gun emplacements. Guild soldiers drilled on quadrangles of dirt. Steel warmed in patchy sunlight. Pickets watched the road and the skies from wooden towers.
In places, the trail joined others circling the palace. Towards the end of the afternoon, the wagon reached one such junction, where Maskelyne ordered them to leave the Port Awl road and head north. The road became rougher, gouged by heavy use and then filled with rock. Occasionally through breaks in the forest he spied the palace towers and pinnacles rearing up like some great black crown. A quarter of a league beyond the junction the road came to an end.
Here a flat outcrop of rock overlooked the valley to the north. A wooden palisade ringed the whole area, encircling a group of low earthen buildings and a huge cannon set against the very edge of the precipice. As the wagon drew up before the encampment barrier, a soldier came out of a nearby hut and hailed them.
'If you want the captain,' he said, 'he won't be back till seven.'
Maskelyne climbed down from the wagon and stretched his arms. 'Commander Rast sent us to a.s.sist with the search. We'll be tramping the road tonight from here to Eagle Three.'
The soldier came over. He was a middle-aged man with a thin moustache and a nervous demeanour. 'n.o.body told me anything about that,' he said, eyeing Maskelyne's uniform with distaste. 'Kind of old to be a lieutenant, aren't you?'
'Reserves,' Maskelyne said. 'I shouldn't even be here.'
'What do you do in town?'
'Mostly, I keep to myself.'
The soldier looked between Maskelyne and Mellor. 'I know a lot of Guild reserve men. You two don't look familiar.'
Maskelyne yawned. 'Your captain will vouch for us,' he said. 'Let us through so we can unload this gear.'
'What gear?'
He jabbed a thumb towards the back of the wagon. 'Lanterns.'
The moustached soldier wandered round to the back of the wagon and checked the cargo in the trunk, before returning to the barrier. 'n.o.body and nothing gets in here without advance notice,' he said. 'You'll need to wait until I can verify this with the palace.'
Maskelyne sighed. 'Where's your telepath?'
'She's with the captain,' the man replied.
Maskelyne raised his eyebrows. 'And where would we find them?'
The soldier said nothing.
'Maybe we should go and ask Commander Rast if he he knows where they are?' knows where they are?'
The man folded his arms. 'You don't think the commander knows what goes on?'
'What's your name, soldier?'
He didn't reply.
Maskelyne turned to Mellor. 'Turn us around. The commander can get this man's name from the Haurstaf. Let them ask why Eagle One's captain leaves one cannon unattended to attend to another.' He climbed back into the wagon.
The soldier shook his head. He hesitated a moment, then strode over to the barrier and raised it. 'I want your attachment verified as soon as the telepath gets back. You can put your gear in the store.' He pointed at one of the earthen buildings, then turned around and marched back towards his hut.
'You heard him, Mr Mellor,' Maskelyne said.
The wagon moved forward into the encampment and into the shadow of the gun.
'The Haurstaf abandoned you,' Torturer Mara said. 'Which, I am sorry to say, means you are now under the protection of the Guild military.' He inclined his head at the large soldier, who lifted his baton and struck Ianthe across the face.
Ianthe fell off her chair and hit the floor. She couldn't stop sobbing. The soldier picked her up again and shoved her back into the chair. Perspiration covered his broad forehead and dripped down his heavy jaw. He had taken off his jacket and shirt, and his muscles shone like marble under the harsh cell lights.
'Your friend abandoned you,' Mara went on. 'Aria chose to deliver you here in exchange for an a.s.sured future with the Haurstaf.' He glanced at the soldier again, who struck Ianthe across the face a second time.
Her jaw cracked against the floor. She clutched her spectacles to her face and wailed miserably, her whole body convulsing with sobs. The concrete floor swam behind a haze of blood and tears. Through the ringing in her ears, she heard them turn on the tap. They hosed her down, blasting her body with freezing water until her limbs were numb.
'Briana Marks abandoned you,' Mara said. 'She ordered me to carry out this procedure. The faster we get to the end, the faster we can proceed with your dissection. For me, that's where the real interest lies. I expect to find some Unmer in your brain.'
The soldier picked Ianthe up from the floor with one hand. Then he stove his forehead into her nose. She heard the cartilage snap. Her spectacles flew off, and she was plunged into darkness. He let her drop.
She jumped into his mind only to see her own miserable body scrambling across the wet floor. Her robe hung from her like a torn rag; her elbows and knees were bruised and b.l.o.o.d.y. She picked the spectacles up again and fumbled to put them back on.
The torturer peered down at her, his face expressionless. 'Your own father abandoned you,' he said. 'Did you know he arranged to sell you to the Haurstaf? I've seen the letter myself. Of course the Guild does not negotiate with people like that.'
The soldier kicked Ianthe in the stomach.
She felt his boot break her rib. The pain made her vomit. Her lenses shifted to one side, and she felt herself slipping into darkness. She reached up and dragged them back over her streaming eyes. She coughed and sputtered and drew in a shuddering breath. The air tasted of bile.
'Your mother abandoned you,' Mara went on. 'Didn't she fail to protect you when the Hookmen came?' He made a sweeping gesture with his hand. 'She simply allowed herself to slip under the brine.'
Ianthe screamed. She tried to crawl away, but the soldier dragged her upright once more. He punched her in the face, then let her drop. Pain filled every fibre of her body. She couldn't move, but simply lay on the floor and stared at the drain, shivering uncontrollably.
'Even Maskelyne abandoned you,' the Torturer said. 'Like everyone else, he saw you as a means to an end, a tool to increase his personal fortune. Up until now that's really all you've ever been, Ianthe something to be used by others.'
He crouched down beside her and spoke softly. 'But I'm not like them, Ianthe. Can't you see that I'm the only one who wants to understand you?' He brushed back her hair. 'I want to help you achieve something with your life. I'm finally giving you a purpose.'
She closed her eyes.
Mara sighed. 'Again,' he said.
While his men unloaded the trunk of gem lanterns from the wagon, Maskelyne went to explore the three earthen buildings within the cliff-side compound. The first held stores of food, water and ammunition. The second turned out to be a small barracks in which he found the gunnery sergeant asleep on his bunk, while two other soldiers played dice on top of a crate. Maskelyne nodded amicably. He tapped the metal door lightly and then ducked back outside and wandered over to the last building. Here he found a tidy chamber containing a single bed, table and chair, and a wardrobe full of pressed linen evidently the captain's quarters.
He returned to his men. 'All good,' he said. 'Howlish deserves a medal.'
Mellor looked up from the contents of the trunk and inclined his head in the direction of the hut beside the barrier. 'What about him?'
Maskelyne puffed out his cheeks. 'It will have to be done quietly.'
One of the four others slipped a knife from his belt, but Maskelyne shook his head. 'I'll deal with it.' He walked over to the hut and opened the door.
The soldier with the thin moustache was seated at his desk, writing out a report. He put his pencil down when Maskelyne came in.
'Your gunnery sergeant wants a word,' he said.
The soldier hissed. He got up and followed Maskelyne out. They walked over to the earthen bunker, whereupon the soldier ducked inside. Maskelyne pulled an ichusae from his jacket pocket, unplugged the stopper and tossed it into the building after the man. Then he closed the door and locked it with the padlock he kept in his other pocket.
'Watch the door,' he said to Mellor, 'in case they try to shoot out the lock.'
His first officer nodded.
The men in the bunker screamed for the first six or seven minutes and then fell silent. Soon afterwards, an endless stream of brine flowed out through the gaps between the door and the frame. Countless gallons of the toxic water surged over the rocky ground and washed along the bottom of the palisade wall, before leaking through and cascading over the edge of the precipice in a honey-coloured waterfall.
'So much for Awl,' Mellor said.
'All good things, Mr Mellor,' Maskelyne replied.
As two of his men opened the trunk and began lifting out gem lanterns Maskelyne, Mellor and the others dismantled the wagon bed with crowbars. They ripped up planks from the floor, revealing the hidden compartment where they had stored the gas tanks and cutting torches. And then they carried the lot over to the cannon.
Ianthe lacked the courage to return to her body and so she drifted in a sea of ghosts. She floated through a darkness patterned by the things that other people saw. She was a pa.s.senger, riding in carriages that didn't belong to her, a thief who stole moments from other people's lives, and that knowledge filled her with shame. Deep down she knew that Mara was right. The world she inhabited had never embraced her. She'd never really been a part of it. She would return to him in time and beg him to end her life quickly. By sifting through the wreckage of her life, they might even find some purpose.
But not yet. Her fear held her back, even as it deepened her shame. And so she wandered on through the darkness, a ghost afraid of her own death. She saw the Haurstaf scattered throughout their grand palace, the thousands in the woodland camps outside and the nebulous haze of the millions in the world beyond. She drifted down through the unseen s.p.a.ces between occupied rooms, past the bright arena of the Unmer rat maze and down to the gla.s.s-roofed suites in the foundations.
She found him kneeling on the floor beside his bed, sobbing into his hands. Sc.r.a.ps of a letter littered the floor around him. The shock of seeing him like this almost broke her. All of his armour had gone. He was naked before her, naked before the gaze of the Haurstaf witch in the high-chair above. He had covered his face, as if that could somehow hide his despair.
A sudden fury gripped Ianthe. What gave the Haurstaf the right right to preside over the lives of others? Over to preside over the lives of others? Over his his life? Over life? Over hers hers? They weren't mankind's liberators but its new enslavers. Ianthe reached out into the mind of the witch, gathering together all of the woman's perceptions and thoughts into a single all-enveloping embrace.
And then she snuffed them out.
'If you knew how much money I've spent on that pirate Howlish,' Maskelyne said, 'then you wouldn't have sold yourselves so cheaply.'
The gunnery captain shrugged. He put his arm around the young Haurstaf telepath. 'I think we got a bargain, Mr Maskelyne.'
Maskelyne eyed them both. She couldn't have been older than sixteen, and him eighteen. If he was smart enough to attain his rank at that age, then he was smart enough to know he could have taken Maskelyne for much more. Which meant his reasons for helping them had to be personal. Or was she she the one with the reasons? The two of them looked on as Mellor and his men cut through the last of the cannon's securing bolts. the one with the reasons? The two of them looked on as Mellor and his men cut through the last of the cannon's securing bolts.
'You know Ianthe?' Maskelyne said to the girl.
The telepath hung her head.
'You don't need to know why we're doing this, Mr Maskelyne,' the captain said. 'The money is enough to give us a fresh start.'
Maskelyne grunted.