Read Geared for Pleasure Online
Authors: Rachel Grace
The gear and its surrounding clockwork began to turn and the panel shut with a decisive click. The messenger’s wings flexed and stretched, humming into flight once more, this time heading toward the blanket that Freeman had put in place.
Hovering beside the fabric, the automaton beat its wings faster than it had before. She heard a crackling sound much louder than the fire and felt a static charge building in the air around them.
Traces of the energy began to coalesce around the body of the bird and arc between its wingtips. Its crystalline eyes started to flash with bright white light, the energy seeming to pool in its head. Its beak opened and the flashing light shot from its eyes onto the blanket, creating flickering images that Dare prayed everyone else could see.
“Queen Idony,” she gasped. A grainy image of her queen like the one taken by an artisan’s amphitype. Only this was not a single smiling queen frozen in time. Each flash of the bird’s eyes changed her expression in the tiniest of increments, until she appeared to be speaking. Her mouth moving.
“The beak is an opening for sound, I believe.” Bodhan’s low whisper sounded close, but she couldn’t look away. “It is a message, Dare. A recording made by the queen herself.”
A recording? Like the automaton at Trader’s Square? A voice,
sounding metallic and far away but still recognizable, echoed around the small camp. “If you have retrieved this message then my Chalice is in your company. Her unique markers alone could initiate this recording.” Dare watched the queen’s smile wobble in the shuttering pictures. “What we knew would be has come to pass. I have been taken from the palace against my will. The Theorrean Raj, selfish and greedy though they may be, could not have done this on their own. But they are deceived if they think he will share power if he is allowed to reign again.”
If
who
were allowed to reign again? Dare took a step closer to the bird, straining to hear every word.
“There is too much to tell, and too little time to explain. Captain Amaranthe, you will need more than your Freeman and Seraphina, no matter their talent, to man the Deviant now. Bodhan of the Siren may be your greatest ally in this. Trust him.”
Dare could feel the captain and Bodhan’s tension at the mention of their names, but she could not look away from her queen’s flashing face. There was such sadness in her eyes, and it broke Dare’s heart to see it.
“Go north and send my regards to those within Tower Orr. They can help.”
“Dare…” The voice paused and the queen seemed to look directly at Dare. “The life of my Chalice is precious to me. No harm must come to her.” The recording skipped for several anxiety-ridden moments. “I gave my Arendal Sword a dagger before he went missing. Find it if you can. Find
me
if you can. I can endure, but my time may soon be winding down.”
The beak closed and the bird’s eyes ceased to flash. Her queen was gone. Again.
“Damn it, what happened? Why did it stop?” Phina had walked toward the blanket, her hand touching the fabric where Idony’s face had been. As if she could maintain the connection by will alone.
The captain ran a rough hand through her dark hair. “That is all we have to go on? A dagger and a tower I have no knowledge of? She knew more than that, I could hear it. Why wouldn’t she just tell us?”
Bodhan’s low voice was thoughtful. “Perhaps she knew someone was listening and was unable to say more.”
Dare rubbed her temples, trying desperately to think. What was it she was trying to say about Cyrus? She’d given him a dagger? If it was so important, why had she sent him away with it in his possession?
She had just seen proof that Idony knew of Captain Amaranthe and the Siren. She had called Bodhan an ally. Her faith in him had been justified, not that she hadn’t already learned to trust him. To trust what she felt about him.
So why did she feel as though her heart was splintering? As if she never knew the queen at all?
And who was the man she spoke of? The one who had fooled the members of the Raj?
Agonized screams broke through the group’s silence, and all of them flinched in surprise when a blood-covered Wen pulled down the blanket and appeared before them.
Wen dropped to his knees. “Gebby. I told him we shouldn’t have come here. It took him. Biggest marsh cat I’ve ever seen bit his arm clean off and dragged him into the marsh. Please, he was cryin’—beggin’ me to help him. Captain,
please
.”
Dare turned to reach for the blade in her boot but stopped when she saw that the hummingbird, its mission complete, had disappeared the same way the dragonfly had.
The captain strode into the darkness, shouting orders. “Freeman, with me. Phina, in the trees now, I need your eyes. Wen, stay with Bodhan and Dare. We will return as quickly as we can.”
“I could help.” Bodhan lifted his hands, grimacing at the clinking of metal that kept them connected. When the captain disappeared
as if he hadn’t spoken, he muttered, “Perhaps not. She is just doing this for spite now.”
Dare wanted to talk to him about what they’d just witnessed. Wanted to run after Captain Amaranthe and help Gebby. The kind crewman did not deserve such a gruesome fate. She knew of more than one marsh creature that had the ability and the aggression to kill a man.
“I think I should help them,” she said. “Just let me—”
The distinctive cock of a pistol closed her throat. She looked up in time to watch Wen, now on his feet with a calm expression transforming his features, raise another cocked weapon and aim it at Bodhan’s heart.
In the chaotic moments before, she hadn’t sensed what she did now. Intense delight.
He’d laughed while slitting Gebby’s throat and covering himself with the stupid man’s blood.
She swayed at the strength behind his sadism. “You killed him.”
Wen’s smile dimmed. “Lucky guess.” He steadied his aim. “Three guesses what I’m thinking now,
Chalice
. Come on,” he wheedled. “I
dare
you.”
Dare mentally brushed away the negative feelings swarming round her head like insects and focused on her options.
Bodhan was vulnerable, still shackled despite the queen’s words. The captain and the others were searching for Gebby, believing him alive. Dare was livid, but she was Wode. Though she hadn’t had much use to practice those talents in the confines of the palace, they were a part of her.
She was no longer trapped beneath the sea or hovering over Theorrey in a flying machine. She was on solid ground.
Here, rage could enhance her abilities. Wode were of the earth, they said. Strong and numerous as the mountains and as molten at the core. She had taken down Nettles, and this man was a lanky half-wit compared to him. Only his aimed guns gave her cause for hesitation.
She could hear Wen’s heart racing with the thrill of his success. Could sense Bodhan’s nearly imperceptible movement as he edged his way toward something he could use to protect them.
“Either you are brighter than I originally gave you credit for, capable of overcoming all of us with nothing but two rusty pistols
and your wits,” Bodhan said derisively, “or you are a pawn in a bigger plan. I’m laying my wager on pawn. And pawns never play alone, so how about you tell us where your friends are?”
He was using the opportunity to distract their attacker. Clever. She would think he had done this before.
Dare’s gaze narrowed on Wen’s unsteady grip on his weapons. “You’re right, Bodhan. I can feel others. Not the captain or Phina. Strangers. And the marsh has gone quiet, a sure sign we are no longer alone.”
Wen paled. “It’s true then? You are what my lord has been searching for? The blood in the chalice who can read minds?”
Bodhan laughed. “Ah, blessed ignorance. Do not tell me it was your idea to volunteer to crew for the bloody Captain Amaranthe as someone else’s spy? You don’t have to read minds to guess what she does to spies. Let’s just say it takes time. Quite a bit of it, so I’ve heard.”
Wen shuddered, his eyes blinking rapidly as if he feared he’d faint. He attempted a weak sneer. “Cursed bitch won’t get the chance. I sent out the beacon. He knew she would come, don’t you see? Knew
I
could get close. So I’ll take little Miss Dare here, get my reward, and the rest of you can meet my other shipmates.”
His lord. His ship. Was Wen implying he was a crewmember of the
other
airship? The fictional airship?
Bodhan seemed to think so. And his worry for her was tangible. It was also unnecessary. The gun aimed toward him, along with the glimpse she’d been given of the queen, had been the catalyst that reminded her who she was, and why she was here.
Bodhan would not be harmed.
She caught his eye, wishing for an instant he could feel what she felt for him. That he shared her ability. That he knew.
“You know what I love most about our campsite?” she asked.
He lifted one eyebrow, perhaps thinking she’d lost her mind as she took several steps back. The land dipped until she stood beside one of the trees that sprouted up through the wet grass.
Dare grinned. “You don’t need Phina’s senses to know that the heavier you men are, the louder your boots splash in the muck.”
In an instant, she’d kicked out behind her and ducked to avoid Wen’s reflexive shot. She heard a loud curse as she and Wen both hit the attacker lurking in the tall grass and darkness. The sound of a large body splashing as it sank into the marsh music to her ears.
Her leg was still high in the air and she deftly reached back with one hand to pull the slim blade out of her boot.
“Are you sure you’re pure Wode? I have never seen a move like that from someone without Felidae blood.” Bodhan’s impressed tone pleased Dare immensely, though she knew the reaction was inappropriate to the moment.
“Just Wode,” she assured him. “What I lack in size I make up for with other abilities.”
He had moved as she spoke, using her as a distraction. He reached Wen’s side and brought the metal on his wrists down hard on the skinny man’s head. Wen crumpled in a boneless heap and Bodhan crouched down low to grab a pistol, tossing it toward Dare before reaching for the other. “Indeed. Remind me never to make you angry, princess.”
The sound of the shot had sent the others out of hiding. Dare counted perhaps ten pairs of boots running toward them in the darkness. These men were not trained to move silently, which she found odd. Surely stealth would be a requirement for those who crewed the mythical shadow airship.
She hoped the captain had heard the commotion as well. Quiet or not, the numbers were against them. Dare moved strategically toward the center of camp, closer to Bodhan and higher ground.
They appeared through the mist and the darkness, men who varied in weight and size, but wore the same dark clothing, the same stripes of red painted across their faces like bloody claw marks.
The same distinctive weapons.
Dare narrowed her gaze and made a quick mental inventory of their raised hands. Every man she could see wore the same fingerless black leather gloves. Each glove was fitted with sharp retractable blades attached at each knuckle. Simulated Felidae claws? She had been expecting guns similar to Wen’s, but these men were nothing like the skeletal deckhand.
They charged Dare and Bodhan with loud roars, fists high. She fired one-handed into the mob, holding her blade up and ready with the other.
She moved to stand directly in front of Bodhan, noticing as she did that their attackers seemed to be scattered, closing in from every side.
Dare opened her mouth to order him to turn around and fight back-to-back with her as Cyrus had taught her, but he was already moving into position, shooting his nearest attacker as she did the same. “I prefer being front-to-front with you,” he quipped, “but I suppose this will have to do for now.”
His teasing was short-lived as a clawed hand came close enough to scratch the fabric of her jacket and a small patch of skin at his side. She heard the useless clicking of his pistol and he swore. “I also prefer not to be shirtless and chained without
my
pistol when costumed marsh devils attack.” He grunted as his fist connected with someone’s flesh. “I am a simple man.”
Dare sympathized. Wen’s guns were far from reliable.
She blocked one clawed, beefy fist with her forearm and used the butt of the pistol to break the closest man’s nose. It might not shoot but it was still good for something.
It seemed as if there were more of them coming. There was no way she could fight them all off. She felt the pressure on her back increase and whipped her head around to see Bodhan with the short chain connecting his cuffs wrapped around someone’s neck, choking him until he lost consciousness.
He noticed her and snarled a smile. “And you thought I was just a pretty face.”
His enthusiasm was contagious, but she had no time to respond to his banter. Arms nearly as thick as her torso wrapped around her chest, lifting her in the air and scratching her arms in the process. The sharp blades stung her flesh, and the scent of her own blood in the air around her only increasing her adrenaline.
Dare dropped her chin against her collarbone and then banged it back with all her might. The action caused her head to ring with pain, but it was effective. The oaf dropped her in surprise, falling back into the men behind him while cupping his bloody face.
Captain Aramanthe’s voice reached out of the darkness. “Need any help, or should I sit this one out?”
A bubble of relieved laughter built in Dare’s chest as Bodhan replied, “And deprive you of your fun?” He stepped on one prone attacker’s wrist and twisted until they all heard the audible crack, then lifted his arms to deliver a two-fisted blow to a yowling adversary. “Any chance you brought my pistol, Captain?”
Captain Amaranthe’s wicked smile was her only response as she drew her weapon, heading Dare’s way.
Her sword was truly a thing of beauty. The steel glinted sharply even in the dim light. Almost too quickly for the eye to see, the captain’s free hand pressed what had appeared to be a decorative gem on the hilt, then the silver sword began emit an eerie tone, a vibration Dare could feel in the air around them. In her skin. What in the name of the queen…?