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Authors: Emma Jane Holloway

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BOOK: A Study in Ashes
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“Poppy!” Alice shook her. “Run!”

Poppy snapped out of her daze as the snake started on its second course. “Run,” she repeated with an enthusiastic nod, and then set action to words. Running felt wonderful.

Alice led the way, hurrying east. They burst into the square where the market should have been, but it was in disarray. The square was usually bustling with vendors selling fruits, vegetables, flowers, and whatever else a person could want. Now it looked as if the wares had been set up for the day, but then chaos had taken over. Produce was strewn everywhere, and the sharp scent of crushed fruit permeated the air. A handful of people were dodging through the square trying to get to the other side, some of them with weapons drawn. Poppy skirted around a table, her feet rolling dangerously on a scatter of apples. She stooped to retrieve a walking stick that someone had dropped and gripped it like a club.

A snake as long as Poppy’s arm fell from the building above, landing on the cobbles a few yards to their left. It coiled and wound, moving in a weird sideways crawl that ate the distance between them. Alice jerked Poppy away, but she was saved only because the thing struck at a man who tried to push past them. He fell with a cry, immediately paralyzed by the bite. Poppy spun, shocked, but Alice hauled her forward.

There were more serpents oozing out of the windows
above. One dropped, landing nose-first, and its head shattered in an explosion of gears—but the tail kept thrashing. A man shot it with his pistol, the force of the bullet making it flip in the air. But then a serpent shot from beneath a bushel of onions, slithering up the gunman’s leg.

Cold metal brushed Poppy’s leg and she shrieked, slashing out with her stick. It connected with something, but she was bolting too fast to see more. Poppy’s feet were heavy and numb, but panic forced her onward. She could hear herself gasping, her ribs struggling against her stays. Alice looked no better, tears streaking her ashen face, but both kept moving. There wasn’t a choice—until a knot of people milling in panic up ahead told Poppy the west side of the market was no escape. The crowd swirled and eddied like water hitting a dam.

“More snakes,” Alice gasped, pointing. “Straight ahead and north.” She was trembling in panic, her raspy breath starting to catch in terrified hiccups.

Poppy clung to her own self-control. “Then we go toward the river. We have to get away from the buildings.”

Alice gave a sharp nod and they turned left as soon as they could, fighting through the press of bodies. Others had the same idea and it would have been hard to change direction if they’d wanted to. The surge carried them forward, Poppy’s feet barely touching the earth at some points, but she clung to Alice’s hand.

The squash of the crowd got slightly better the moment they emerged onto the Strand. At that moment Poppy realized that the snakes hadn’t been working randomly. Thousands of people were being forced out of the market and toward the Thames, where the Blue Boys waited.

It might have been a massacre, but the Blue King’s army weren’t the only ones there, and the press of civilians pouring out of Covent Garden was the least of their worries. The Yellowbacks had opened fire on the Blue. There was an enormous steamspinner coming in from the west, heading toward the gardens along the embankment, and it was firing on the Blue King and the Gold. And there was another force
straight ahead, led by a giant, smiling caterpillar. She recognized the man at its helm.

Poppy’s heart leapt, and she began yelling at the top of her lungs and waving her stick in the air, not caring if nobody could hear her over the din. “Tobias!”

THE
ATHENA
WAS DROPPING FAST. IT WAS A SUBTLE THING
, but Evelina could feel the deck sinking beneath her feet, almost as if she wasn’t firmly connected to the floor. And the ship wasn’t holding her own against the wind anymore, either; the crosscurrents of air made her shudder and bounce.

Evelina stole a nervous glance through the porthole, and the sight made her recoil in astonishment. The ground was a lot closer now, looking a lot less like a living map. They were over the outskirts of London, streets and houses sliding by beneath.
We’re too close too fast
, Evelina thought grimly.

A sound like a gunshot emerged from the pump, making everyone jump. Striker thumped the side of the pump again and adjusted some valves. “Bubbles in the aether,” he said.

Evelina peered nervously at the lime-green concoction, which seemed to be effervescing. She’d mixed the aether without blowing anything up, but she was still holding her breath that it wouldn’t explode. A large bubble of gas formed and popped, and the ship shuddered again, reminding Evelina of a hiccup. “It’s not supposed to do that, is it?”

“Huh,” Striker said, an odd expression on his face. “Looks like green beer.”

More bangs and pops emerged from the pump, but the ship began to stabilize. Evelina felt the rapid descent slow and then reverse, new lift floating them upward. Striker met her eyes, and they shared a moment of relief.

Evelina went to find Nick, holding on to the handrail of the walkway because the steamspinner seemed to be listing slightly from side to side, her responses sluggish. She
guessed the hole in the
Athena
’s side had done something to her stability.

When Evelina reached the bridge, there was only a handful of people there; everyone else was busy readying arms or repairing damage. Digby and another man seemed in charge of guiding the ship down—a task she knew would be touch and go. Nick and the Schoolmaster were at the very front, the prince pointing out something on the ground.

As Evelina drew near, she could see the green sweep of Hyde Park to the left and the grounds of Buckingham Palace coming up on the right—but nothing looked the way it was supposed to. Armed men were everywhere, but that was only the beginning. The war machines of the makers pushed forward, from Steamers armored like armadillos to many-legged trebuchets, from shambling siege towers to a gigantic drill on steam-powered wheels. Evelina caught a closer glimpse of the enormous dog that had followed them from the laboratories. Though she couldn’t hear, it seemed to sit up on its haunches and howl as the steamspinner flew overhead.

“They look like an undisciplined rabble compared to the Gold King’s army,” said the Schoolmaster. “But no one is truly powerless when they have an idea, a pint of bitter, and a screwdriver.”

The ship lurched, and Evelina stumbled. Nick turned just in time to catch her. “Athena!” he snapped, and then winced as the ship said something back.

“What’s wrong?” Evelina asked, grabbing the wall as the ship clumsily righted herself.

“She’s drunk!” Digby snapped from his position at the helm. “The bloody ship is soused as a sailor. That’s not supposed to happen.”

“We used the scrumpy to mix the aether,” Evelina explained sheepishly. “She’s literally running on fumes.”

Digby gave her an incredulous look.

Another hiccup shuddered through the vessel. “It’s giving me a headache,” Nick said under his breath. He looked as if he already had the hangover while his ship enjoyed the party.
The Schoolmaster was facing the window, but his shoulders shook with laughter.

“You’re not helping, Your Highness,” Nick said sourly.

There was another hiccup and the engines sputtered.

“Losing altitude again, Captain,” Digby said, his voice tense.

The steamspinner dropped lower, coming in to land with a dangerous bob and weave. Evelina gripped Nick’s arm, dizzied by the sudden nearness of the roofs and spires as they rushed toward the ground. He clasped her hand, pulling her around to face him.

“You look afraid,” he said, his dark eyes questioning.

“I got your ship drunk. That can’t be wise.”

He smiled at that, albeit a bit painfully. “Perhaps. But you saved us, and more than once. I know that was your magic that turned those hot harpoons, Evelina. We didn’t lose a single crewman, thanks to you.”

She managed a smile. “For whatever good I did today, you’re welcome.” But she thought of everything she hadn’t done. Captain Roberts was dead and the ship badly damaged. It seemed no matter how much power one had, it was never enough.

The
Athena
bumped slightly as it settled to the earth. The next instant, three armies rushed the steamspinner. Only the desire to capture such a magnificent, magical ship in one piece had kept the cannons from blowing her out of the sky, and now the race was on to seize her as a prize of war. But the first of the Gold King’s troops had barely reached the Embankment Gardens when the regiments that the steam barons had purchased turned on their masters. The cavalry led by Captain Smythe was the first. They cleared a circle around the
Athena
, driving the enemy back to establish a protected zone clear to the river on one side and all the way to the Strand on the other.

As soon as it was even marginally safe, Evelina left the ship, needing to feel green under her feet. Nick was of the air, but she needed good earth. But as she stepped away from the ladder, to stand in the shadow of the
Athena
’s belly, it took a moment to orient herself. The ship had swallowed
a huge portion of the gardens, and the stink and noise of battle stripped away any sense that they were in a park. The constant booming of weapons rolled like restless thunder behind a steady roar of voices. Screams of pain, outrage, and loss swirled around them. Evelina’s magic shifted restlessly, agitated by the tension snapping through the air—and the death. The dark power within her scented prey and rose eagerly, hunger knifing through her.

Nick came up beside her, shading his eyes to see the battle. “What do you think?” His voice was sharp with concern.

Evelina blinked, called back to herself. “I think the rebels are fighting bravely, but I’m no soldier. I can’t tell who is winning.”

“Are you strong enough to do that trick of yours with the devas?” he asked with a lift of one eyebrow. “I think the steam barons’ armies could use some unexpected retooling.”

For a beat she didn’t understand what he meant, her exhausted brain slow to respond. But then she found herself grinning—with both love and an appreciation of his guile. She’d animated the prince’s machines; there was no reason not to do the same with the others. “Captain Niccolo, you are a devious man.”

“Always, but only as a force for good.”

She opened her mind to the surrounding landscape, and was dragged into the alternate landscape of war. Where smoke swirled in the sky, so did a dozen species of passion—the counterpoint to the constant cries and screams. The billows of emotion didn’t have a color, but her mind’s eye translated it as shifting shades of red and orange, snapping sheets of tortured energy rolling against the gray pall of smoke and destruction. Where the red waves gathered to a peak, crackles of blue fire fountained to white. She had seen such fires once before, the first time Magnus had taught her to use a wand. They were lives, escaping as the body that tethered them died.

Time had no meaning in that state, but it felt as if she stared for a long time in horrified fascination.
So many!

And then her dark power rose inexorably to feed—an impulse
far beyond her control. It lunged, and she was suddenly immersed in a sensation that was both hot and cold, as if every nerve was overwhelmed with sensation. And it was delicious—a taste and smell that was intoxicating and yet had nothing to do with her external senses at all. It was like absorbing starlight, or bathing in the sound of rain. Most of all, it was ending starvation. After using so much magic to protect the ship, she had been drained without knowing it.

Cautiously, she took Nick’s hand, preparing to call their shared magic. For a seasick moment, she wasn’t sure it would work—perhaps her magic had grown too dark to summon that pure, brilliant light, or perhaps Nick would push her away in disgust now that he had witnessed her replenish her powers. Slowly, she looked up to see Nick watching her, his dark eyes carefully neutral.

“So that is how death magic works,” he said softly.

Cold seeped through her. With one word of disgust, he could blast her world apart as completely as any aether weapon. She began to shiver. “Are you appalled?”

“No. You saved my ship and crew. It would be churlish to complain now.” He kept his features still, making his thoughts impossible to read.

Evelina’s heart lurched, afraid of the worst. “Nick!”

Quickly, he squeezed her hand. “Evelina, I told you to make this power your weapon and your ally, and you’re doing it.” But the lines around his mouth were tense.

She swallowed hard. “It’s another thing to see it, isn’t it? You were raised by Gran Cooper, too. You can’t help being horrified.”

He shook his head, and his stiff expression melted into one of contrition. “Not horrified. Sobered, because now I see the edge you must dance. I don’t think I completely understood what you were going through. And I’m sorry if I treated anything with less weight than I should have.”

“Don’t be,” said Evelina, finally breathing again. “If you’d coddled me any more than you did, I think I would have crumbled altogether.”

BOOK: A Study in Ashes
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