Arkwright (38 page)

Read Arkwright Online

Authors: Allen Steele

BOOK: Arkwright
5.73Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

To the east, the first scarlet haze of dawn had appeared upon the horizon, tinting the curled gauze of the high clouds with shades of orange and red. He'd hoped that, with the passing of night, the danger of being noticed by an ocean monarch would pass, as well. But this one hadn't yet descended to the channel's lowest depths. It was still prowling the waters midway between Providence and Cape Exile in search of prey.

And now it had found them.

There was a harpoon lying on the deck at his hinds. Sanjay started to reach down to pick it up, but Teri shook his head. “No need,” he said, his fores steady on the tiller. “Just wait.” He glanced at Aara. “Move to the center of the boat, Aara. Everyone, hang on.”

Sanjay stared at him in disbelief. Surely he didn't think they could possibly outrun a monarch. Many had tried to do this, but they'd only succeeded if they were already far enough away that it couldn't catch up … and this one was pacing them. Their only hope of survival lay in using a harpoon against it when it attacked.

He began to reach for the harpoon again, but then his mother, who'd walked back from the bow, laid a fore against his wrist. “Just watch,” she said quietly. “The same thing happened to us on the way over.”

“A monarch attacked you last night?” He had trouble believing her. “How did—”

“Wait and watch.” Aara smiled as she squatted across from him and Kaile and then nodded toward Nathan.

The stranger remained in the bow. Until then, Sanjay hadn't taken much notice of the long object wrapped in waterproof bambu cloth that lay on the deck before him. Picking it up, Nathan removed the covering, revealing something the likes of which Sanjay had never seen: a slender, rodlike thing, broad in the center but tapering to what appeared to be a hollow tube at one end, with a handle fitted with a small ring projecting from its lower side. Its surface gleamed dully in the wan light of the coming dawn, and Sanjay realized to his surprise that it was made entirely of metal: very rare and almost never found in such a quantity.

“What is that?” Kaile asked.

No one answered her. Nathan rose from his bench and, hinds firmly planted against the gentle rocking of the boat, cradled the object in his fores. Turning away from them, he lowered his hood and pulled down his veil. Sanjay couldn't see his face, though, only the short-cropped red hair on the back of his head.

“Coming at us!” Teri snapped.

Sanjay looked in the direction the captain pointed. The monarch had veered toward the catamaran, its fin creating a frothy furrow through the water. Fifty rods from the boat, the fin abruptly disappeared beneath the surface. Sanjay knew that the monarch was diving in preparation for an attack, but even as he grabbed the harpoon and stood erect to do battle, he heard a faint, high-pitched whine from the object Nathan was holding. From the corner of his eye, he saw that the stranger had raised it level with his shoulders and appeared to peering straight down the length of its tube.

Sanjay barely had time to wonder what Nathan was doing when the monarch breached the surface. A massive wall of flesh, gray on top and white across the bottom, the leviathan shot up from the water only a few rods from the starboard side. Large as the boat itself, its mouth was wide enough to swallow a human whole and lined with rows of serrated teeth. Sanjay caught a glimpse of black eyes, small yet malevolent, and with an angry scream, he raised the harpoon in both fores …

It was if a beam of starlight had erupted from the hollow end of Nathan's object, a thin white ray that briefly and silently erased the darkness. It lanced straight into the underside of the monarch's mouth, and for an instant, Sanjay saw it reappear within the creature's jaws. A smell like fish being broiled as the beam burned through the monarch's head and a loud, agonized groan, and then the monarch fell back into the water, making a tremendous splash that threw a wave over the side of the boat.

The monarch was still spasmodically flopping on the surface, its fins and tail thrashing back and forth, when Nathan pointed his weapon—for this was obviously what it was—at it again. Once more, the thin beam cut into the creature's head, this time between the eyes. The monarch jerked and then became still, a dying mass floating on the water.

“A gift from Gal,” Kaile whispered.

“No.” For the first time since they'd left shore, Nathan spoke. “Not Gal. A plasma-beam rifle.”

Sanjay hadn't the slightest idea what Nathan meant by that, but as Nathan turned to him, he suddenly didn't care. Nathan's cloak had fallen open, and now he could see the rest of the stranger's body: forward-jointed legs and slender hinds, a waist that was a little thicker, a neck not as long as his own. The breeze caught the robe and pulled it back from the stranger's shoulders, revealing long-fingered fores that lacked webbing between the digits.

But it was his face that startled Sanjay the most. Except for his red beard, the open nostrils of his nose, and eyes that possessed visible pupils, Nathan's face was nearly the same as that of the Teacher.

Kaile whimpered, clutching Sanjay's shoulder in fear. Sanjay stared at the apparition before them, not knowing what to say or do. When he glanced at Aara, though, he saw the calm and knowing smile on her face. She'd been aware of this all along.

“Who are you?” he asked.

“You won't believe this”—Nathan stopped and then corrected himself—“but I hope you eventually will. Sanjay, I'm your cousin.”

 

7

Nathan refused to say any more about himself for the rest of the journey across the channel. He spent the remaining hours sitting quietly in the bow, rifle propped up on his forward-jointed knees, an enigmatic smile on his face as he politely listened to the younger man prod him with questions. He finally raised a fore and shook his head.

“Enough,” he said. “You're just going to have to wait until we reach shore. Once we're there and we meet up with my friends—”

“There are more of you?” Sanjay stared at him.

“—then I'll tell you everything you want to know.”

“So there are other Teachers like you.” Kaile was no longer as fearful as she'd been, but she continued to hold tightly to Sanjay's fore.

A dry laugh. “I'm not a Teacher, and neither are they. We're human, just like you … only a bit different, that's all.”

“Then why do you look like—”

“Be patient. All will be explained.” He then turned away and spoke no more.

Sanjay looked at his mother, and Aara silently shook her head. Neither she nor Teri would tell them anything. They would just have to wait.

Calliope came up a little while later, revealing the mainland before them. By the time the sun was high above the channel, they could clearly make out the black forests that lay beyond the coast, gradually rising to meet the inland mountain range known as the Great Wall. This was the most anyone could see of Cape Exile from Providence, and although it soon stretched across the visible horizon, Sanjay was surprised to see how much the eastern peninsula of Terra Minor resembled Providence. He'd been told since childhood that anyone who dared to approach Purgatory would hear the mournful cries of the banished, but instead, the only sound that reached his ears were the screech of seabirds spiraling above the coastal shallows.

And once they were only a couple of kilms away, he saw more than that.

The white sand beach had just become visible when sails came into view, fishing boats plying the offshore waters. The men and women within them raised their fores in greeting as their catamaran sailed past, and Teri did the same in return.

“Wave back,” Aara quietly urged her son. “We're among friends.”

Sanjay gave her a doubtful look but did as he was told. He noticed that Nathan made no effort to hide his features or misshapen limbs. His hood remained lowered as he smiled at the fishermen, and although a couple of them stared at him, no one seemed surprised by his appearance, let alone regarded him as an emissary of Gal. Indeed, they treated him as if he was what he'd claimed to be: just another person, albeit one who looked a bit different.

There was no settlement visible from the water, yet canoes and sailboats were lined up on the shore, with nearly as many people around them as there would be on the Providence waterfront. A couple of men waded out to meet their boat; they grasped its sides and pulled it the rest of the way onto the beach, and one of them helped Nathan climb out. As before, Sanjay noticed that Nathan walked with a stiff, almost arthritic gait. It occurred to him that the stranger not only wouldn't walk on all fours but in fact could not. He always stood on his hinds and never used his fores for anything except grasping and holding objects. Yet it seemed as if there was a heavy load on his back, for he walked with a perpetual slump, shoulders hunched forward and head slightly bowed.

Aara caught him staring at Nathan and walked around the beached catamaran to stand beside him. “He was born that way,” she murmured, “but he's not a freak. It's not polite to stare.”

“He's … not from here, is he?” he whispered, and Aara shook her head. “Then where is he from?”

“You'll find out soon enough. Come.”

With Kaile walking behind them, Aara led Sanjay from the beach. There were no structures on the shore, yet a trellis gate at the edge of the tree line marked the opening of a raised boardwalk leading into the woods. Nathan was already ahead of them; he'd just reached the gate when a bearded older man emerged from the boardwalk. He rose up on his hinds to greet Nathan; instead of the customary exchange of bows, they clasped each other's right fore, a gesture Sanjay had never seen before. Then he turned to Aara, Sanjay, and Kaile.

“Aara … so glad to see that you've returned. Any trouble along the way?”

“Not at all.” Apparently, Aara didn't think that a close encounter with a monarch was worth mentioning. They exchanged bows, and then she raised a fore to Sanjay and Kaile. “Let me introduce my son, Sanjay, and his betrothed, Kaile Otomo. It was necessary to bring her along, I'm afraid.”

“I'll trust that it was.” A kindly smile. “No worries. I'm just happy you managed to get away safely.” The older man dropped to all fours to approach Sanjay and Kaile. “Welcome to First Town. I'm Benjam Hallahan, the mayor. Pleased to meet you both.”

“An honor to meet you.” Sanjay rose to offer a formal bow, as did Kaile. “I'm sorry, but I don't understand … where did you say we are?”

“First Town.” Benjam's smile became an amused grin. “We don't use the name Purgatory. In fact, it's what this place was called before the Stormyarn. The Disciples…” He shrugged. “Let's just say for the moment that most of what you were taught is wrong.”

Hearing this, Sanjay instinctively glanced about to see if anyone was listening. Aara noticed this and laughed. “Don't worry, there are no Guardians here. No deacons, either. In fact, I don't think you'll find any Galians in First Town.”

“We have a shrine,” Benjam added, “but only a few people worship there. Mainly older folks who've come here from Providence as exiles and still have trouble accepting the truth.”

“What truth is that?” Kaile asked.

Benjam started to reply, and then he paused to gaze over his shoulder at Nathan. The stranger shook his head, and the mayor looked back at her and Sanjay again. “That's a question with a long and difficult answer,” he said, and his smile faded. “I'm afraid some of us have recently learned a few things we ourselves didn't know before.” His eyes met Sanjay's. “One of them involves you, my friend.”

“Me? How am I—?”

“Maybe we should find a place where we can speak a little more privately.” When he spoke, Nathan seemed a bit wearier than he'd been before they'd come ashore. “And more comfortably.”

“Of course. You must be exhausted.” Benjam went down on all fours to lead them toward the boardwalk. “This way, please.”

 

8

First Town was located deep in the forest, on a low plateau that had been cleared of the surrounding trees. When Sanjay reached the stairs leading to it at the end of the boardwalk, he was amazed by what the forest and adjacent marsh concealed from the channel. The settlement was larger than Childstown and, if anything, more prosperous. The houses and workshops were bigger, more solidly constructed; they had glazed windows, and quite a few even had second floors, something he'd never seen before. Elevated aqueducts supplied the town with fresh water from mountain springs; he saw waterwheels turning millstones and lathes, and Benjam told him that a buried network of ceramic pipes fed water into individual homes and businesses. It was the last day of summer, but there seemed to be no anxious rush to prepare for the cold weeks ahead. He smelled wood fires and drying fish, heard chatter and laughter. Townspeople were calmly going about their daily affairs, and there seemed to be no shortage of children playing in the schoolyard.

He'd been expecting a crude camp filled with starving peasants mourning their banishment from Providence, not a content village inhabited by happy, well-fed people. There was a Galian shrine, just as Benjam said, but it was small and neglected. The genesis plant that grew beside it appeared to be regularly tended, but it wasn't cordoned off by a ring of stones. One look at it, and it was clear that the Disciples had little or no authority there.

What was more surprising was a row of pens near the community gardens. Inside the pens were flocks of what appeared to be large, flightless birds, fat and white, which incessantly clucked and pecked at the soil. Never having seen the like before, Sanjay and Kaile stopped to stare at them, causing the others to come to a halt.

“Chickens,” Benjam said as he walked up behind them. “And those are turkeys.” He pointed to another flock of larger and even fatter birds in another pen. “We raise them for food.”

Other books

An Unexpected Song by Iris Johansen
Mr. Wilson's Cabinet of Wonder by Lawrence Weschler
The Ghost Walker by Margaret Coel
Secrets After Dark by Sadie Matthews
NLI-10 by Lee Isserow
Shattered by Carlson, Melody
Never Too Late by Julie Blair
Pieces by Mark Tompkins
The Marriage Contract by Katee Robert