Read Phoenix Burning Online

Authors: Bryony Pearce

Phoenix Burning (2 page)

BOOK: Phoenix Burning
12.24Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

“He was killed?” Toby swallowed.

“Yes. Hopewell used him to try and make us turn back. He gave us two minutes; when we didn’t reverse into dock, he shot him right in front of us. I had a team of ten working on the
Phoenix
. Of those, eight sailed with me. Oats and Dee are the only ones left.”

Toby gripped Nix. “Why don’t I remember anything
from back then? I should have
some
memories.”

Barnaby’s fingers drummed on the bollard. “Not necessarily.”

“I think I remember a classroom – the pictures painted on the walls.” Toby hung his head. “I can’t remember
her
at all.”

“Your mother.”

“Not her face, her smell – not even the sound of her. I don’t know, maybe that’s a good thing.” Toby looked up, his face drawn tight. “After hearing what she did, I’m not sure I want to remember.”

Barnaby closed his eyes, then opened them again. “You did spend a lot of time in that classroom – I’m not surprised you remember it. Judy adored you, but she loved her work, too. And you know me. Once I got into an invention, I could be gone for days.”

“Did I know Ayla when I was a kid, were
we
friends?”

“Nell and I worked in the same lab, but her husband stayed at home with the children, he was a better dad than—”

“Than you?” Toby grabbed his father’s hand. “Never.”

Barnaby’s smile sagged around the edges. “No matter what else Judy or I have done, you’re the best of us both. Wherever she is, if she’s still alive, she loves you, maybe even as much as I do.”

Toby squeezed his father’s rough hand. Their fingers were both zigzagged with old scars and ingrained with soot.

Barnaby patted Toby’s shoulder and stood, captain of the
Phoenix
once more. “Come and help me get these electrics sorted out.” He pulled Toby to his feet and stamped back towards the panels. “Hiko, grab a cloth and help D’von polish. Dee, what’re you doing just standing there?”

Dee huffed. “Don’t worry, I’ll have a course plotted by the time you’re ready to move the panels into position.”

Toby took a final moment in the fresh air and looked around. Faroe Rocks were behind them, a low cluster of caves and ridges that sheltered the
Phoenix
from prying eyes. Ahead, it was open sea almost all the way to Eire.

Toby strained to see as far as the horizon, his heart thumping. He had been born before the sun’s return: his eyes saw better at dawn and dusk and he always kept a piece of light material to cover his face when the light dazzled.

As always, he was looking for any sign of the
Banshee
. Nell would never give up her vow to seek revenge on the
Phoenix
. And now Ayla knew about her murdered sisters, she wouldn’t try to curb her mother.

The
Banshee
was coming and one day there would be a reckoning.

Toby turned from the railing and headed towards the
bridge. He waved at Hiko as he passed. His serious little protégé crouched next to D’von, whose face was as open and sunny as the sky. The two were as different as the
Banshee
and
Phoenix
, yet had more in common than almost anyone else on the ship – both had lost their families and been sold as slaves.

Yes, Toby’s mother was gone, but at least he had his father.

Inside the bridge Toby chose a pair of wire strippers and looked at the captain. “You’ve made all the changes to the engines, like we planned?”

The captain nodded. “They should work fine with the solar power, but we’ll know for sure soon enough.” He rolled his shoulders.

“She’ll be able to reach ten, maybe fifteen knots with her engines running,” Toby said with a grin.

“We’ll burn up the salt, all right! Get the rest of these small wires stripped and ready to connect and I’ll check the inverter. It’ll be in the final crate – there’s only one we haven’t unpacked.” He raised his voice: “Rahul, I’m ready for the last box.” He forged out of the bridge and on to the main deck as the wind caught in the furled sails with the sound of a flock of birds.

Toby twisted a wire between his fingers then carefully
he stripped the plastic and laid the wire down. The sun shone through the holes drilled in the bridge roof, ready for the leads from the solar array to snake through. All Toby had to do was attach each to the panel via the inverter and the
Phoenix
would be powered by electricity.

Electricity. All he’d ever seen of it was a bulb swinging in a Tarifan dungeon, but he knew its power. Thrilled, he rubbed his hands together. The
Phoenix
and her crew were already wanted by several governments; now, with engines running at full capacity, she would be the most sought-after ship on the salt.

Toby shuffled Polly on to the table. “Sit here and tell me if I’m missing anything.” He worked his way through all the wires his father had left him, following each back to its source and ordering them.

As he worked he realized that the deck had gone quiet.

He raised his head just as the captain’s voice boomed across the ship. “Bloody well
find it
.”

Toby raced into a scene of panic. In the centre stood the captain, hands on his hips, an empty crate at his feet.

“What is it?” Toby slid to a stop.

Marcus looked up from beneath the gunwale. “Toby, help us look. The inverter’s missing.”

Toby stared at his father. “But we can’t use the panels without the inverter! Isn’t it in the box?”

“Yeah, have you checked the box, Cap’n?” Crocker sneered from the other side of the second mast. “Wish we’d a thought a that, hey, Peel?”

Peel was crawling around the solar array, eyes glued to the deck. “Good job Toby’s here, ain’t it?”

“Did anyone see it before we started work?” Toby was growing cold.

The captain shook his head and glowered at Rahul.

Rahul pointed at the plastic crate. “All that was inside were wires and more silicon sheets.”

Toby exhaled. “OK. So let’s search the wreck room in case it fell out in there.”

The captain nodded. “Marcus, take Hiko. Theo, Simeon, if it isn’t found, take
Birdie
back to Cobh and find Dorah – make sure you didn’t sell her our inverter.” He turned to Rahul. “You and Nisha inventoried. I want a list of everything that came out of that storage container.”

Toby straightened. “What can I do?”

“Keep working. We’re going to find that inverter and when we do, we’ll need to be ready for the installation.”

“And if we don’t find it?”

The captain clenched his fists. “Then all we have here are some very expensive ornaments.”

As the sun began to lower in the sky, Toby checked the leads again.

Polly nudged him with her cold head. “You’ve done all you can.” He ignored her. “Toby?”

His knuckles turned white on the handle of his pliers. “If we hadn’t had the coordinates of the panels, the
Banshee
would never have attacked. We wouldn’t have needed to dock in Tarifa.” He continued to coil and uncoil wires. “Our friends died for those panels and now they’re worthless?”

“Toby, please stop.”

Carefully, he placed the last wire. “We’re ready to go.” He cleared his throat. “I suppose we’d better go and tell the captain.”

As Toby stepped on deck, the
Phoenix
rolled against her anchorage. He automatically adjusted his balance and wiped the stinging spray that splashed his face. Once, he
had been told, the salt had been clean, but seven billion people had filled it with rubbish. Then the super-volcano had poisoned the sea with gases and the tsunamis had broken up the great garbage patches. Fifty years ago, people had swum in the sea; now it was the salt and he had to wipe it from his face in case it burned his skin.

Under a swaying canopy, Uma was repairing a net. She looked up as he dried his hand on his trousers. “How are you doing, Toby?”

Toby shook his head, unable to answer. “When will Theo and Simeon be back with news?”

Uma looked up. “A week? Sailing day and night, it’ll be at least two days each way.”

Toby groaned. “Any word from Rahul?”

“He and Nisha are still going through the inventory with the captain. If there’s a box or piece missing, we’ll know about it. Here, hold this.” Toby caught hold of the needle she offered, while she examined the netting she had just sewn.

Toby took a moment to check the sky; they were anchored a day out of Reykjavik and he worried about hail. He and the captain had weighed the danger that bad weather posed to the solar panels against the fact that the oil war between Reykjavik, Scotland and St George, which had started over the North Sea oil reserves, would keep
St George ships away from Faroe Rocks. They had decided the anchorage was worth the risk.

At the moment the clouds seemed to be racing away from them. Toby squinted up at the crow’s nest where Arnav was keeping watch, then over the swinging plastic shades to the bow where Peel had set up a barbecue and was cooking gull stew for dinner.

As he watched Peel stir the broth, Toby thought of how the awful cook had tried to save him from the
Banshee
. That led his mind down familiar pathways back to Ayla. The last time Toby had seen the
Banshee
, she had been facing a St George naval vessel and fighting for her life. Even with one arm broken, she had whirled like a tornado.

“You’re thinking of her again.” Uma touched his arm.

Toby flushed. “How do you know?”

Uma smiled. “I remember how you looked when you brought her to me, injured.”

Toby shook his head. “It doesn’t matter. Even if the
Banshee
escaped St George, we’ll never be together again.”

Uma tied off a knot. “Because the
Phoenix
left the
Banshee
to the Greymen?”

“Because my mother betrayed Nell and had her family killed.” Toby sat at her side and adjusted Nix so that the sword wouldn’t dig into his thigh. “Nell blames the captain.”

“If the captain hadn’t fled, Judy would never have been in Nell’s home – it would never have happened.”

“I know.” Toby leaped to his feet as the deck hatch that led ultimately to the wreck room was flung open and the captain appeared. He climbed up the ladder and stood with his shoulders bowed.

Toby froze. “Bad news?”

“We’ve been through that inventory three times.” Rahul climbed on to the deck behind the captain. “We never pulled any inverter out of the salt.”

The captain growled. “It must have been in a separate shipment.”

“All of this for nothing?” It was Oats. He was standing with Marcus by the winch and his hook glinted as he raised it over the panels. Toby couldn’t tell if he meant the work they’d done getting the solar array fixed up, or the loss of his hand.

The other pirates started to mutter and Polly hopped quickly across the deck, her metal wings clattering as she spread them for balance. Toby lifted her on to his shoulder.

“You’d a known we needed that inverter from the start,” Crocker snapped. “You shoulda made sure it was there before we worked our butts off gettin’ those panels all fixed up.”

“Watch it, Crocker.” Dee stalked forwards. “That’s your
captain you’re speaking to.”

“Crocker’s right,” Rita called. “Why wasn’t this checked before we started?”

“The box was there—” Rahul began.

Toby raised his voice. “There’s no use arguing about it. What’s done is done. Your work’s not been for nothing. All we need is an inverter. Fix the panels in place, then I’ll fire up the boiler and we’ll find one.”

“There’s a problem with that.” Marcus tugged at the scarf that covered the scar on his throat. “The solar panels on land were all destroyed in the riots – that’s why our salvage was so precious. And if the panels were all destroyed, their inverters likely were, too.”

“Marcus is right,” the captain said roughly. “There might not be any inverters left to find.”

Toby swallowed. “But you can make anything out of anything, right? Make an inverter.”

The captain spread his palms. “I can try, but I’ll need components compatible with the Solaris array. I just don’t know…”

“So, we’re screwed,” Oats spat. “That’s just great.”

“Well,
there’s
a surprise. Looks like the
Phoenix
needs me again.”

Toby’s brain stuttered. It was the voice he had been hearing in his mind for weeks. Polly jerked upright,
digging her claws through his shirt.

As the rest of the
Phoenix
erupted in furious cries, Toby slowly turned. He could barely believe it, but his ears hadn’t lied. Ayla was climbing over the side of the
Phoenix
, the beads in her hair clattering on the railing.

“Ayla!” D’von’s face was bright as midday. “You came back.” He grabbed her arm and helped her over the gunwale.

“Let go of me.” Ayla swung her legs over the side of the
Phoenix
and brushed rust from her hands.

“Arnav, what the hell?” the captain yelled up at the crow’s nest as he pulled his blunderbuss from his belt. Dee grabbed a hook.

Arnav waved frantically. “I were distracted – listenin’. Sorry.”

“Are there more of them?” Marcus shouted.

Arnav pressed the binoculars to his eyes. “Only the girl.” He called eventually. “She’s come alone … again.”

“Well, now,” Crocker hissed. “Weren’t that stupid!”

BOOK: Phoenix Burning
12.24Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Lion Who Stole My Arm by Nicola Davies
PreHeat (Fire & Ice) by Jourdin, Genevieve
Midnight Squad: The Grim by J. L. M. Visada
Educating Ruby by Guy Claxton
Piano in the Dark by Pete, Eric
Beyond the Pale: A Novel by Elana Dykewomon
Emergency Ex by Mardi Ballou