We all stare at each other, numb with hope and excitement. If we're right, if the whole song started as a smuggler's map to the Valley . . .
âAs star-shine's fair pistol shall gleam,'
says Maisy, pointing upwards. âDo you think . . . do you think that's our next clue?'
I follow her gaze up to the right, where the Pistol constellation shines. Pointing our way forward through the night. And I know, suddenly, that she's right. This constellation is our map. The Pistol will guide us out of these fields. So long as we can see the stars, we will never be lost.
âThere's another verse,' says Teddy. âDo you reckon it tells where to go next?'
All at once, as though by prior arrangement, we recite the second verse of the song.
Oh frozen night,
How the dark swallows light
When the glasses of hours hold on
I shan't waste my good life
I must follow my knife
To those deserts of green and beyond.
There's a moment's pause as we all digest the words.
âWhat does that mean?' says Clementine.
I shake my head. âI don't know. Maybe we've just got to follow the Pistol for now, and worry about the second verse once we've passed Gunning.'
âHey, we don't need to worry about it,' says Teddy. âI reckon Hackel knows what it means, doesn't he? He's a smuggler; he'd know the meaning of a smuggler song.'
Relief fills my belly like warm soup. He's right. We won't be lost forever. If we can just follow the Pistol towards Gunning, and meet up with Hackel . . .
âWe're going to make it,' says Lukas. He gives me another quiet smile. And this time, I return it.
Â
Â
Â
In the morning, we pay close attention to
where the sun rises in relation to the fading Pistol constellation. Maisy stretches her arm to draw a line between the sun and our packs, figuring out the angles.
âRight, I've got it,' she says. âI think I can find our way.'
I hate stepping back into the grass. I feel like a tiny ant, venturing blindly into an enormous carpet. But at least we're not so lost today. Maisy keeps an eye on the sun, using it to guide us forward. Even as it shifts across the sky, she seems able to adjust the angles in her head. I can't help wishing for a bit of her intelligence myself, since I find the grass completely disorientating. On city streets, I'm conÂfident and savvy. Out here, I'm prey.
The day is cold, but also bright. Around noon, the sun is right above us, so I roll up my sleeves to absorb the warmth. It's one of those quiet winter days when the air seems somehow frozen and alight, all at once. My nose isn't stinging too badly, and even Maisy rips off her improvised gloves.
âLook!' says Lukas, pointing up.
I squint. All I see is the sun, blindingly aligned above our heads. Then I spot the movement: a lone hawk, rising against the sky. It reminds me of Lukas's kite, the way it dips and soars in the wind. âCan you borrow its eyes?'
He nods. âYeah, I can. Is it all right if we stop for a minute?'
The others nod. Teddy seems to have a clear idea of what Lukas intends to do, because he jostles the rest of us out of the way. âHe'll need a clear line of sight. I've done this with rats a few times in Rourton, and it's trickier than it looks.'
âRats?' says Clementine, looking disgusted. âWhy would you want to look through the eyes of a
rat
?'
Teddy grins. âHey, rats see more than you'd think. They're experts on breaking into richies' houses.'
Lukas stands stiff and tall, craning back his neck to survey the sky. He's clearly waiting for something, but I'm not sure what, because the hawk is still visible overhead. He must need a certain angle â perhaps a clear view of the creature's eyes â because he steeples his hands together and points them skyward, then peers along the resultant line.
His body jerks and his green eyes flash. He lets out a horrible cry. For a second I think it must be pain, then I realise it's the screech of a hawk. The entire thing might be comical if everyone didn't look so serious, and if Lukas's eyes weren't as empty as gutters. He opens his hands slowly, like unfolding butterfly wings, and stares into his palms.
âWhat's he looking at?' I whisper to Teddy.
âUsing his palms as a screen, I reckon,' says Teddy. âHe can see what the hawk's seeing, reflected down onto his own skin.'
âYou
reckon
? Why, what did you do differently?'
âWell, I use mirrors instead of my hands. They're a lot clearer.'
I glance at Lukas's hands. They look normal to me: just dirty skin and a few scratches from our journey. I certainly can't see what the hawk's seeing, anyway. But Lukas must have noticed something, because his mouth splits into a grin and he lets out another screech.
Teddy rolls his eyes. âAmateur.'
âWhat do you mean?' I say.
âHey, no need to get all defensive,' says Teddy. âI just mean he should learn to control his noises. I would've been caught in seconds if I'd run around squeaking in the middle of burglaries.'
âI'm not defensive,' I say, irritated. âMaybe it's harder to control yourself when you're seeing the world from up there . . . I bet it's much more exciting to look through a hawk's eyes than a rat's.'
âUnless the hawk
eats
the rat,' Teddy grins. âThen you'd get an awesome firsthand look at a hawk's digestive system.'
Lukas's eyes flash again, before returning to their usual green. He looks a little dizzy, like some of the patrons I've seen on the late-night bar circuit, and he sways lightly on his feet.
âWhoa!' I catch his arm. âAre you all right?'
He gives a woozy nod. âYeah, I'm just . . .' He shakes his head, as though trying to clear it. âSorry. Yeah, I'm fine.'
âWhat did you see?'
Lukas lowers his hands, glances between us, then glances back up towards the sky. âI saw a town.'
âWhat?'
âI saw a town, Danika. On the side of a hill, less than a day away â if we hurry, we might get there tonight.' He smiles, letting his news sink in. âWe're going the right way.'
Â
By the time we approach Gunning's hillside, the
grasslands have thinned out into cultivated fields. It's a relief to escape my claustrophobic response to the grass and to breathe some fresh air. I can even see the horizon now.
Unfortunately, this also makes our journey more dangerous. The fields are dotted with farmhouses, and we often see people in the distance. Once, we're almost spotted by a boy with his sheepdog; we throw ourselves into a muddy ditch to hide. Clementine scowls as we clamber back out, ten minutes after the boy has gone.
âCouldn't we just tell him we were here?' She swipes fistfuls of mud from her clothes. âI would hardly think we're the first refugee crew he's seen; he might even have helped us!'
âYeah, helped to turn us in,' says Teddy. âOr have you forgotten the price on our heads? That kid was skinny as a richie's croquet mallet â do you really reckon he'd say no to a big sack of coins?'
âA price on
her
head,' mutters Clementine, throwing me a dirty look.
âIf you still want me to leave the crew,' I say, âthen why don't you just say so?'
âI don't.' Clementine looks away. âI don't want you to leave, all right? Not any more. I just wish . . .'
âYeah, so do we all,' says Teddy. âBut I reckon we'll feel safer when we find Hackel again, right? I mean, you paid the bloke to get us halfway across Taladia.'
We stop near a dam to clean ourselves, scraping as much muck as possible from our clothing. It's important to look respectable; we won't survive long if we traipse into Gunning looking like a battered refugee crew.
âWe can't take the foxary into town,' says Lukas. âEveryone must know your crew rode foxaries out of Rourton. It'll be a dead giveaway.'
Teddy doesn't look happy. âWhat are we supposed to do with him, then? We can't just let him loose â he'll kill someone if he's not restrained.'
âWe should sell him,' says Clementine. âFoxaries are too expensive to just throw away. If we sold him to a farmer, at least I'd get some of my money back.'
âI'll do it,' says Lukas. âI doubt there's been coverage of my face in the papers, so the farmers wouldn't recognise me.'
Teddy shakes his head. âHow do I know you won't just run off and steal him for yourself?'
âHe saved our lives, Teddy,' I say.
âSo what? Maybe he just wanted to nick our foxary. That's what I would've done, anyway.'
âYeah, but not everyone is a thieving pickpocket!'
I can feel myself getting worked up, which is ridiculous, because the most important thing for a crew is to trust one another. But I just want to get this stupid argument over with. The sooner Lukas can dispose of the foxary, the sooner we can get into Gunning and find Hackel.
There is a large farm nearby, with heavily bolted barns and machinery sheds. The walls are stone, not wood, and Teddy lets out a low whistle at the decorÂative bronze window frames. This is the farm of a richie landowner, not a starving peasant. If anyone around here were in the market for a foxary, it would be the owner of this place.
We position ourselves in a scraggly grove and unload our three remaining packs. Teddy insists he should accompany Lukas to sell the beast, promising to stay out of sight.
âToo dangerous to go without me, I reckon,' Teddy says. âI'm the one keeping him under control.'
âYou just aren't ready to say goodbye,' says Clementine.
Teddy laughs and gives the foxary a rub behind the ears. âYeah, maybe.'
I suspect that Teddy's real motive for accompanyÂing Lukas to the sale is that he still doesn't trust him. This idea is oddly irritating, but I remain silent and try to avoid another argument.
âBye, Borrash.' I give the animal a pat on the back. It emits a low grumble, like an alley cat purring, and I'm unexpectedly sorry to see it go.
Lukas and Teddy are gone for almost an hour. By the time they return, I'm pacing in circles and Maisy looks ready to gnaw a branch off a nearby tree.
âWhat took so long?' says Clementine.
âWasn't our fault â that old geezer drove a hard bargain.' Teddy slaps a handful of coins into Clementine's hands. âHere you go.'
Clementine scowls as she counts the money. âI paid three times this much!'
âYeah, but I reckon it's easier to overcharge a spoiled richie than a farmer,' says Teddy. âAnyway, that bloke knew he could bargain down; there's no one else around here who'd pay more.'
By the time we reach Gunning's outskirts, it's twilight. We are exhausted and filthy, worn ragged from another day of traipsing through the wilderness, but at least there's been no sign of hunters.
Despite the fading light, we have a decent view of the surrounding farmland. A dirt road leads from Gunning to the west. In the distance, I can just see the point where it meets a larger road: a wide grey snake under the evening sky.
âIs that . . .?'
Teddy nods. âMust be the main trade route. Blimey, good thing we didn't come that way.'
We all nod, silent. The trade road runs towards the northern horizon, cobbled with enough stone to build a hundred city walls. But despite its size â or perhaps because of it â the route is painfully exposed. I can imagine hunters scouring its surface, or biplanes soaring overhead. Nowhere to run. Nowhere to hide. On a road like that, we'd be as helpless as crickets in a cooking pot.
Clementine lets out a slow breath. âI suppose Hackel was right. The smugglers' route might be harder, but it's safer.'
We stare at the road for a moment longer, before turning our attention back to Gunning itself. The town spills down the hill's southern slope, pouring its streets like treacle. There's a train station on the southern outskirts of town, with a couple of carriages visible beyond the platform. The line itself looks as if it's coated with silver, gleaming beneath the moon. The train must be partially fuelled by alchemy.
âThat looks like the end of the train line,' says Maisy. âThey've extended the line since my encyclopedias were published; I didn't think it came this far north. I thought it was impossible to run a train over the mountains.'
âApparently not,' Teddy says.
I eye the train line appraisingly. The horizon sinks into dusk behind it, but I can still make out the Central Mountains: an alpine belt across the country, dividing the north from the south.
Unlike the Eastern Boundary Range, it's possible to cross these mountains if you're willing to put your life on the line. Back in Rourton, a shortage of oranges in the market usually meant a snowstorm had buried the mountain road â and in all likelihood, a convoy of fruit traders with it. There was even a jump-rope rhyme about it:
âFrost and ice and traders slow: orange juice beneath the snow.'
Standing here, the tune seems a lot less witty and a lot more morbid.
I notice that the others aren't watching the mountains. Their gazes are locked on the train line, with its station at Gunning's southern gate. It isn't hard to guess what they're thinking: if we could sneak aboard a train somehow . . . maybe even hide inside a cargo carriage . . .Â
âMaybe that's Hackel's plan,' says Clementine. âThat's probably why he wanted to meet us in Gunning, of all places. We can hitch a ride south on the train.'