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Authors: Jay Lake

Escapement (48 page)

BOOK: Escapement
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The sea. The Indian Ocean.

She realized she’d been alone all day, without taking mess or encountering any of the other passengers. Even the few crew she’d seen had kept their distance.

Everyone aboard
Star of Gambia
knew who she was now. Not by name, but as the object of the British searches. The focus of the ship’s diversion. Paolina hugged herself briefly. It did not matter. There were few betrayals left. She merely had to stay aboard as the ship steamed west of south toward Mogadishu; then she would be almost back to
a Muralha.
Far, far from home, but it was her native place.

The British and their dogs in the Silent Order would never find her there.

As she retreated to her cabin, Paolina wondered what her life would have been like if she’d followed the music ashore back in Alexandria and cast away her name. She had no notion, none at all. That thought brought tears to her eyes.

AL - WAZIR

Midday passed without any sign of Boaz or the smiths. Al-Wazir continued to study the walkways and trams of this waterfall city, letting himself get soaked to the skin as he paced the ledge.

There was no point in leaving. He wouldn’t know where to go, wouldn’t know where to look.

He searched the hut three times. Perhaps he’d missed a trapdoor or secret exit to a workroom somewhere within the living rock of the Wall. There was nothing that he could find. So he walked the ledge some more and stared up and down.

Once again he was struck by the impressive beauty and bizarre engineering of the city. Water foamed and roared and fell like a sea upon the move. Cables stretched between the larger buildings and major islands, sometimes braced on great towers to hold up the midpoint of their spans. The metal trams trundled along irregularly. He realized after a while that they must not be a service, like the omnibuses of English cities, but rather transport that ran at someone’s whim. People walked the bridges, climbed stairs and ladders, moved about on balconies. Few wore the brass armor he’d seen the day before. This was not a city of soldiers.

No one came to his ledge. No one bore Boaz amid their number. No one even stopped to look at him.

He wondered, too, what he had met splashing the night before. It was big, with vasty, pale eyes—a thing that wanted to live in darkness.

As afternoon passed, al-Wazir realized that he could not remain idle. He and Boaz needed to be eastward bound. He stepped onto the bridge they crossed last night. The treadway was slick, the guide cables crusted with moss, but it was not much worse than working the ropes of an airship in heavy weather.

Still, somehow this was different, crawling across the stone face of the Wall.

Halfway over the bridge, he turned and looked back at the beehive hut. Almost directly below the small building was a cave mouth visible only from out here. Something flashed within.

“Devil take me,” he shouted. “And all of you as well.” Al-Wazir realized he must have been above Boaz’ head all morning.

He walked carefully back, scanning the cliff face for a downward path or ladder. It wasn’t hard to see from out here, behind a boulder he had passed a dozen times in his morning’s pacing.

Off the bridge, on surer footing, he scrambled behind the boulder and downward.

 

The cave was indeed a smithy. There were a pair of forges, bellows, racks of tools, anvils, benches, pigs of iron, copper, brass, and bronze—everything that someone with the right skills might need.

Boaz lay on one of the benches, torn down like an engine under repair. His arms and legs had been removed. His chest gaped open. Two of the smiths worked on a leg at a nearby table. The third examined small parts through a lens bolted into a frame.

None of them looked at al-Wazir as he entered their kingdom. Torn between worry and fear, he approached Boaz.

The open chest revealed not a hollow, as he almost expected, but rather a compacted arrangement of clockwork—gears, wheels, escapements. The mechanisms drew the eye into a web of brass built as tightly and closely as any engine. It was a forest of parts, as obscenely compelling as the torn-open chest of a man of flesh. Al-Wazir had seen enough casualties to know the look of liver and lights when they came spilling out. This had the same eerie fascination, though without the blood.

He reached forward to touch a large wheel with detents along its face.

Boaz’ eyes popped open.

Al-Wazir jerked his hand back, startled. He felt more than a little embarrassed as well. There was a half-heard hiss as the Brass man tried to speak, his head twitching and clicking.

“No,” al-Wazir said. “Quiet. They will repair you.”

He glanced once more at the cavity, wondering where the seal might be—in Boaz’ head? In that laid-open chest? It didn’t seem that the magic had yet been stolen away. Otherwise Boaz would be nothing more than silent metal already, rather than a man straining without breath to speak.

Al-Wazir went to watch the smiths. They continued to ignore him. The
two with the leg were repairing Boaz’ knee, extending and tightening the joint while adjusting a complex of springs and guys within. The third worked on some small mechanism that must have come from within the laid-open gut.

Al-Wazir knew he should stay away. This was dangerous, delicate effort. So he climbed back up to the hut. There he laid a fire and cooked a pot of beans. When that was done he filled a clay bowl and carried it back down to the cave.

This time Boaz had his legs reattached, though his chest still lay open. Now his arms remained separated. Al-Wazir put the steaming food down on a bench. These people were silent, eerily so, but he was willing to presume that their noses were in working order.

Soon enough they came one by one to eat. The shy smiles and quick glances he received by way of thanks were the first acknowledgments he’d had from the people of this city.

“Does no one here talk save your king?” he asked aloud. There was no response.

He had purchased some goodwill for his efforts, and perhaps earned a place at Boaz’ side. With that thought, al-Wazir found his way back to the metal man.

“How are you?”

Boaz blinked at him but did not try to speak this time.

“We must go soon. This place is being kind to us, but it is more than passing strange.”

Another blink.

“I will not take you until these smiths are done, or they prove hostile.”

Boaz managed to turn his head, his neck clicking and whirring, to look toward where one of the smiths was eating the last of the beans.

“Exactly.” Al-Wazir touched the Brass man’s forehead. “I’ll watch out. We’ll leave soon. East, my friend, we must head east.”

 

That evening they closed Boaz’ chest. One smith tapped him gently on the forehead. The metal man sat up with a swift jerk. The Brass opened his mouth and began to speak in a tongue al-Wazir did not recognize, babbling for several minutes. Eventually Boaz stopped, then stared at his hands.

“I am better than I might have thought possible,” he said in English. He carefully climbed off the bench to stand, then addressed the smiths in the other, strange language.

They nodded. One answered in a slow, soft voice. Boaz glanced at al-Wazir, whose hackles were beginning to rise, then back at the smiths.

“I owe a debt,” he explained to al-Wazir. “This city is held in dire thrall. They would have me set them free.”

“In thrall to what?” Al-Wazir thought he already knew the answer.

“They are under the aegis of the Inhlanzi King.”

“We met him.”

“I do not remember. I recall little of what has transpired since I was taken aboard the Chinese airship.”

“As when Ophir erased your memory crystals?”

“Yes.”

“You do not remember what you are about, but now we will seek out the Inhlanzi King and do exactly what, laddie?”

“We shall cast him down from his high seat.”

“Ah. Fair enough.”
Deranged, actually.
Crazed, cracked, and doomed. Now was the time to depart. But he couldn’t leave Boaz. He took a deep, shuddering sigh. He’d been a dead man since departing Ottweill’s camp, properly speaking. Why find concern now? “We owe them your life.”

Boaz gave him a long look. “I do. Your debt is different.”

Al-Wazir refused to consider it further. “How do we do this thing?”

“We will find a way.”

Without a word to the smiths, they climbed back up top. Al-Wazir shouldered his empty spear and followed Boaz as they headed out across the slick bridge.

 

Twenty minutes later, clinging to a rope, al-Wazir said, “For a lad who don’t know where he’s been, you surely do seem to know where you’re going.”

“The smith gave me a path.”

Eventually they were in a true byway. This was a dank stairwell, rotten with moss and mold, water flowing in a little rill down the center of the steps through a soft-walled channel it had cut for itself. Al-Wazir trudged behind Boaz, thinking on their errand. There were dozens of ways to kill a man, but this king was no man.

He hoped.

He wondered, too, what this path was that the smith had given Boaz. Secret markers were well and fine, but al-Wazir worried that they had somehow built a new layer into the Brass man’s thoughts. Could Boaz be trusted now? Could Boaz trust himself?

Doctors, at least, only cut into a man and sewed him up again. They didn’t stir his brains like a drunken clockmaker at an admiral’s watch.

When they reached a narrow door on a small landing, Boaz turned to him. “You are not compelled to follow me within.”

“That’s what you think, laddie,” al-Wazir muttered. “Someone’s got to pull your clanking Brass arse out of this foolishness.”

“For that, I am grateful. Still, if you wish to remain here, I—”

“Shut up and keep moving!”

“After this, I am not so certain,” warned Boaz.

“Is anyone ever certain before battle? I dinna think so, but for the foolish and the dead. I am no fool and you are no longer dead.”

Boaz tried to tug the latch, but the door would not budge. He shook it several times to no avail. “We go,” he said, and yanked the door off its hinges.

 

They dashed into the high chamber where al-Wazir had heard the splashing the day before. It was lit now by shafts of daylight from high above. A giant slab-sided glass tank stood on eight great iron legs in the center of the room. Something huge and silver flashed within as a wall of scales slid by.

“The Inhlanzi King,” said Boaz.

That gave al-Wazir a moment’s pause. He’d certainly been on the Wall enough to realize what
could
be here. It was a different world from Lanarkshire or the Royal Navy.

Two of the brass-armored soldiers ran toward them, bringing al-Wazir’s brief reverie to an end. The attackers’ spears were braced as they moved in eerie silence. No one here spoke. No one at all.

He raised the Ophir spear and stepped to meet them, trusting Boaz to know what must be done next.

The soldiers closed head on, running side by side. They had raised no alarm that he could see, unless they’d banged on the doors connecting to the outer chamber before charging him.

It was as if they wanted to fail. . . .

He swung the Ophir spear butt-first and stepped around the charge to slam one of the soldiers in the side of the head. The man dropped like a poled ox, his own spear clattering across the damp flagstones of the floor. The other defender turned, but instead of engaging at close quarters, he simply charged again with his spear fixed in his hands.

Al-Wazir tripped him.

The solder went down on his hands and knees with a great whoof of air, falling like a child.

They were definitely fighting to lose.

Just to keep himself out of trouble, al-Wazir gave the second defender a good kick in the ribs. He then raced to catch up to Boaz.

The Brass man stood beneath the wall of the tank and stared upward into the murky waters.

“What are ye going to do, laddie?” al-Wazir gasped.

“I wish to breach the vessel above us. Once spilled upon the floor, the Inhlanzi King should be easier to dispatch.”

“Yon fish is the size of a whale. Not so easy to chop off his head.”

Above them this morning were no rolling eyes or great breathy voices—just that silver body obscured by water and the depth of time that clung to anything grown so huge. They looked around while the fish circled overhead. The room was possessed of the same frenetic eye-bending architecture as the outer chamber, but there was virtually no furniture.

There was, however, a set of pipes leading out one wall to connect to the Inhlanzi King’s vat. They were about eight feet off the ground, supported by narrow columns of iron with wide, flat bases bolted to the floor.

“If we take one of these down,” al-Wazir said, “ ’t’will cause the pipe to buckle. That may give us something stout enough to whack at the glass of the tank.”

Boaz grabbed at the top of the iron column and gave it a hard shake. The support groaned and the pipes above gurgled, but it did not show sign of breaking free.

BOOK: Escapement
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