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Authors: Rabia Gale

Tags: #Young Adult, #Fantasy, #Science Fantasy

Quartz (4 page)

BOOK: Quartz
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Rafe smiled. He was lightheaded and it felt wonderful, being freed from all responsibility to Oakhaven. “Two days to be precise. Though I may have dozed off in the dumpster,” he said as she hauled him into a sitting position. “Did you know that Blackstonians drink a lot of ginger tea? I didn’t either, before my sojourn in the dumpster.” The next instant, she thrust his head down into his drawn-up knees. “Ow.”

A few moments later, before the dizziness had quite cleared, someone thrust a water bottle into his hand. Rafe drank deeply. The water was cool and sharp and slightly earthy. Before he had had nearly enough, Izzy took the canteen away and put a soup bowl in his hand. “Eat. You need your strength.”

Rafe needed no urging. His stomach groaned as the first spoonful slid warm and thick and savory into his belly. He spooned the soup faster into his mouth. Izzy stayed his hand. “Slowly. Or you’ll be sick.”

Izzy and Burgess sat beside him. The others had drifted away; most had left the tent. Occasionally, a guard gave Rafe a fierce look. To pace himself, Rafe said between mouthfuls, “Water and food. I must be in Selene’s palace. Next, you’ll be offering me a nest of plump cushions to sleep in.”

Izzy shook her head. “No. You’ll have to make do with a pallet and a blanket.” Rafe ate soup rather than saying
It was just a joke.
She wasn’t the laughing type.

“Don’t eat yourself into a stupor. Rest is a long way off.”

Rafe lifted a brow.

“The New Year’s Eve celebrations are two stages away.” Interesting. She’d used the Oakhaven measurement of time. “If you want to leave Blackstone alive, then this is the best time.”

“Try to slip out of the gates in the hopes all the guards will be away? Have to explain why I’m not guzzling my beer ration or gawking at jugglers? Why would anyone want to leave Blackstone in the middle of New Year festivities?” Rafe ought to have been more grateful to his rescuer but impending continued lack of sleep made him cranky.

“No.” Her serenity was infuriating. She had to realize he was goading her. “We’re going to make it so that they will be practically pushing you out the gate before moonrise.”

Burgess grinned. Rafe looked around the tent, at the men in paint and sparkles; at the batons, whips, and hoops piled in the corners; and the coils of wicking material and cans of kerosene. “Oh, no.”

“Surely you can dance a little?” Izzy’s look held a faint challenge. Rafe was an excellent dancer—he was known in Oakhaven society for it—but he had the uncomfortable feeling that his rescuer already knew that. Flames,
where
did he know her from?

“But firedancing?”

Burgess clapped his shoulder. Soup sloshed out of Rafe’s bowl and soaked his deplorably-dyed trousers. “A lesson or two and you’ll be all right. Just remember not to set your hair alight and leave the fancy moves to us.”

“I’ll try.” Rafe sighed. “When do we begin?”

 

Rafe was relieved to learn that he was expected to wield only one of a firedancer’s many accessories—a flaming baton which would be lit just before he went on stage. After that, it was a simple matter of moving in time to a beat pounded out on large drums. Rafe had learned square and circle dances alongside the more elegant lines and sets of high society and the moves were similar. However, there was one thing he had to do to put himself beyond any suspicion, Burgess told him apologetically.

“It’s simple, really. Head back, mouth open wide, make sure the inside of your mouth is well-coated with spit. And don’t ever breathe in during the process. Like so.” Burgess demonstrated with an unlit torch, then made Rafe do the same several times, correcting his posture and technique.

“We’ll even let you hold water in your mouth before you eat the fire. How’s that?” It obviously pained Burgess to make that concession.

“If I’m going to be quenching flames in my mouth in front of all of Blackstone, can I at least practice it with real fire first?” asked Rafe. They were in a tented practice ring, barefoot in gritty gray sand. Burgess had found him a costume almost as gaudy as his own, stiff with starch and reeking of a nauseous combination of alcohol and lavender. The vest barely laced across his bare chest.

Burgess shook his head. “Fire-eating practice is forbidden inside the city limits and I won’t be caught violating that. They’ll have all of us staked and burned, no questions asked.”

“Don’t look so surprised,” Izzy called from where she leaned against a tent-pole, arms crossed. “It’s the same everywhere, even in Oakhaven. Just remember, if you do burn yourself: don’t scream, and wait until you’re offstage before writhing on the floor in hideous pain.”

“Can I have her job?” Rafe jabbed his thumb in Izzy’s direction. She was the drummer, though Rafe doubted that was her primary occupation.

“I’m not the one being hunted by stazi,” she pointed out.

“That’s not anything I need to know about,” said Burgess. “I’m just doing a favor for a friend, taking in a fire eater with no work. If he fails to live up to his reputation, I’ll be as shocked and indignant as the rest. So you’d better practice those steps again.” He stalked out, a short purple cape swinging behind him.

Rafe’s smile twisted. “It would be a shame to waste all your hard work now.” He picked up the baton. “Hit it, Izzy.”

She pushed herself away from the pole and stood behind the drums, hands poised above them. “Stop calling me that.”

“You haven’t given me any other name to call you by.”

“Try Merciful Rescuer or Mysterious Benefactor.”

“Too long.”

“How about Nia?” she offered. Nia was a diminutive for any number of common names.

“No. It was hard at first, but I’m getting used to Izzy. I might end up calling you Iz-Nia by mistake.”

She sighed. “Would Isabella roll off Your Lordship’s tongue better?”

“It might.”

“That’ll do, then. Now why don’t we work on the insignificant matter of perfecting your disguise so you can actually get out of here alive?”

“Whatever you say… Isabella.”

Isabella slapped the drum a mite too hard, kept the pace a tad too fast. Rafe stepped, spun, threw, kicked in an odd combination of wild abandon and tight control. Muscles were loose and limber and gestures flamboyant, but each move was precise, each step only so long. Rafe focused inwards, reaching into that part of him that was always alert, vital, drowning out worry and nagging aches with the free-flowing stretch of muscles and tendons. He’d always been athletic and was glad of the many hours he’d put in at the gymnasium before the Blackstone mission.

Of course, he’d done all that on the assumption he might find himself scaling walls and getting into hand-to-hand combat with the stazi, not masquerading as a firedancer.

“You misstepped,” called Isabella. “Do it again.”

Rafe gritted his teeth and complied.

“I’m surprised you’re helping me.” His aching right heel struck the ground hard. Pain jolted up his ankle. “Aren’t I competition?”

“Depends. Are you a Blackstone double agent?”

Rafe gave a short laugh. “Not likely. Are you one of Oakhaven’s spies? Did the Minister of Information send you?”

“No.”

He hadn’t expected her to reply in the affirmative. Uncle Leo would’ve told him if he’d sent another agent into Blackstone. “Clearwater, then. Or one of the Trans-Point states?”

She didn’t respond, but none of his guesses felt right. She knew his name and his mission, so she had to have good Oakhaven connections. Clearwater maintained trade relations with the Blackstone regime that it wouldn’t want to compromise—the Fisher Council tended to like stability. The Trans-Point states didn’t usually meddle in politics this side of the disc. And Shimmer, populated by the only mages born after the dragon’s rampage seven centuries ago, was isolationist. Its relationships with other states were based on the trade of mage-made items, mostly lamps and machine parts, for the quartz that powered their magic.

Rafe was too out of breath to ask more questions. But he ran faces through his head—people he’d met at parties and diplomatic dinners, in state meetings and in shady taverns, hoping she’d turn up in his memories.

The booming of the drum reverberated in blood and bone, sand flurried around his ankles, baton spun and slashed in his hands. Rafe tossed it high into the air. It shimmered as it twisted and fell, and he caught it with a flourishing stretch that brought him to kneel in the sand. Energy coursed through his veins.

“You’re kicking up too much dust.”

Rafe took in great gulps of acrid air. “Shall I do it again, then?”

“No.” Isabella came out from behind the drums. “You might fall down dead.”

“Then give me leave to sleep.”

“There isn’t much time before the performance. Girdlesday is almost over.” Isabella cocked her head. As if on cue, bells began a discordant jangle, a theatrical mourning for the old year as the moon slipped below the horizon for a brief disappearance before New Year’s Day. “You’re on in less than three gongs.” Back to Blackstone time.

“It’ll be enough.” He turned to leave, but Isabella stayed him with a raised hand.

“You’re going to be in public. Blackstone considers all itinerant performers to be licentious, frequently drunk, and prone to gambling, petty theft, and low cunning. Make sure you show them exactly what they expect.”

“I’ll douse myself with grass wine,” Rafe promised. “I still need an armful of femininity, though. Are you volunteering?”

Isabella snorted.

Rafe took that as a no.

 

Once ensconced in his new quarters, in a nest of blankets smelling of ash, sweat, and remarkably, compost, Rafe pulled out the ovoid object he had pilfered from the Blackstone train.

The item fit warm and well into his hand. It was flat-bottomed, as if meant to be mounted into some sort of setting. Was it an artifact of the pre-Blackstone era, created or acquired by the Goldmoon aristocracy? Gilt lines made abstract designs upon a blue surface that had once been lustrous, but was now battered and chipped. Rafe pushed his fingernail into the seams and pushed down on the thumbprint-sized depressions, but nothing clicked open. How had it made that infernal noise? Was it an alarm of some sort, sensitive to… what? Temperature, air pressure, a heartbeat?

The mages of centuries ago had made devices like these, some to entertain, some to work, and others whose purposes could only be guessed at. The mage Renat, one of the thirteen kayan who’d died after binding the dragon, had been fond of this kind of shape for his magical engineering. The physical remains of some of his works—defensive wards, light exhibits, and architectural wonders—often had sockets for what scholars had come to refer to as Renat Keys. Rafe’s Uncle Leo had three of them in his private collection. They were no more than curiosities now. No one had been able to make them work.

This one looked to be an imitation. Perhaps it had been made by Shimmer mages. If Rafe ever got some leisure time, he might take it apart to see how it worked.

Rafe put away the object and pulled out the pamphlet Berlioz had given him. It was printed on cheap rough paper, ridged where the type had punched down too hard.
On the Liberty of Man
proclaimed the title, followed by a passionate literary outpouring full of dashes, rhetorical questions, and exclamations. Dried leaves fell from between the pages.

Rafe glanced at them. Ironweed. Blackstonians grew it for its leaves, which were smoked, and roots, which formed a mildly hallucinogenic brew called poor man’s friend. He turned the pages, looking for some hidden code, or a scribble in the margins.

Nothing.

The leaves slid in his lap and Rafe made to brush them off. Then he paused, frowning, and picked up the stem, staring closely.

Long leaves, set in pairs, exactly like ironweed, but the leaves were toothed, not smooth, and even dried there was a bluish-purple tinge to them. Rafe had never seen a real specimen—none had been found for at least two hundred years—but every surveyor and botanist learned of the plant from illustrations.

Dragonlace.

Stunned, Rafe leaned his head back against the pillows. Dragonlace was entirely out-of-place in the modern world with its factories and trains, coal furnaces and gas lamps. It was something from a legend, a vision dreamt by old men enveloped in the blue haze of their pipes. Someone had found real dragonlace, and with it, discovered a massive vein of the greatest resource in the world.

Quartz.

And somewhere in Blackstone, a man named Pyotr knew more.

Chapter Three
Blackstone

R
AFE HAD BEEN ASLEEP
for mere moments when someone tapped his hand. Rafe shot up, grabbing for the unknown assailant. The next instant, he opened his eyes.

Isabella rocked back on her heels. “Nice move. Save it for the stazi.” She jerked her thumb over her shoulder. "They're working their way through the tents now." Raised voices, tramping boot steps, and the general sounds of things being flung around straggled in from the outside.

Rafe struggled with the blankets pinning his legs. Isabella pushed him down. "No, whatever heroic course of action you have in mind is not going to work. Here. This was a good idea of yours." She tossed an open bottle at him.

Cheap grass wine spattered his face, soaked the front of his vest, splashed onto his tights. Rafe caught the bottle before it hit his chest. "Watch out. I'm told these are priceless costumes, lovingly cared for and tenderly passed down from generation to generation."

"I'm sure Burgess will be happy to accept monetary compensation for them," said Isabella, unperturbed. "Get ready."

She slid over to the side of the tent.

“Where are you going?” asked Rafe. She trusted him to deal with the stazi on his own? Remarkable.

Isabella looked back briefly. “It won’t help you at all if they find me here.” She lifted the side, and disappeared underneath.

So, Isabella was known to the Blackstone authorities and the relationship was not cordial. Rafe filed that away for a later date, as a weary voice from outside said, “Yet another one of these filthy little tents, like pimples on a backside."

BOOK: Quartz
9.19Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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