Authors: Skye Melki-Wegner
âDot can help with that,' Susannah said. âAre either of you injured?'
âBoy got shot in the arm, Captain, but nothing Travis can't fix.'
Susannah nodded. In the depths of the globe, her face was too small to read her expression. âI need you back here quickly, Sam. But be careful â we've had a hell of a night, that Songshaper from Bremen's on our trail. If she catches us, we'll have to â'
A snap of sound, and the globe went blank.
Sam swore under his breath. He clutched the globe more tightly and shook it. Nothing happened â it stayed just a clear glass ball in his hand.
âWhat happened?' Chester said.
âLost the damn connection.' Sam gave the globe one more shake, his lips tight, before he dropped it with a curse into his pocket.
âWhat's wrong?'
Sam yanked a lever, blasting them forwards with a new-found burst of speed. The older boy looked suddenly pale. âOnly two things can break a connection like that,' he said. âEither falling out of range â which don't make sense since we're heading in the right direction â or â¦'
There was a pause.
âOr what?'
Sam let out a slow breath. âOr the person you're talking to is under attack.'
The
Cavatina
crouched in a gully, black rain swirling like a symphony around its hull. Its marker blinked on the map, guiding them forwards.
Chester stared at it, stunned. The echoship was thirty times as large as Sam's boat, or maybe forty. It was the size of a mansion, not a wagon. A faint shine emanated from its outer skin: a hint of Music, trapped in wood and metal.
If Sam was pleased to see his home again, he didn't show it. His face was drained of colour and his eyes were wide open.
âWhat's wrong?' Chester whispered.
Sam pointed.
A shadow lay beneath the left side of the echoship. Not a normal shadow, like the constant darkness that swirled around the Hush, but something deeper and blacker. Like an ink-stained jaw opening up to consume the base of the ship, licking its tongue around the wood, pressing its lips up towards the windows â¦
Sam swore. âHow could they be so stupid?'
Chester glanced from the ship to Sam, then back again. âUm â¦'
âWhy the hell'd they try to cross the river?'
Chester looked at the crawling darkness. It didn't look much like a river to him. Whatever it was, it certainly wasn't water. âThat's a river?'
âIn the real world, it's a river,' Sam said. âFirst rule of the Hush: never ever fly your echoboat over water.'
Sam wrenched a lever and turned the steering wheel, and they began to cautiously edge towards the
Cavatina
.
âCan't trust water in the Hush,' Sam said. âNot when it's in a big mass, anyway. It's reflective, you see? Got Music all of its own â¦' He shook his head. âThe ripples, the gurgles, the way it sloshes on the shore â all of that's making a tune. A melody. In the real world, it's just water, right? But in the Hush, if a chunk of water's big enough to catch your full reflection, then â¦'
Chester's throat was dry. âWhat?'
âIt grabs you,' Sam said. âDrags you down, tries to suck you into its own damn melody. Water's got too much natural Music. It ain't quite right in the Hush.' He swore again. âAnd the captain just went flying over a river big enough to reflect the whole damn
Cavatina
.'
âMaybe someone attacked her and she swerved the wrong way,' Chester said. âOr maybe she was distracted, talking to you on the communicator, and â'
âIf she was talking to me, she should've had one of the others steering.' Sam's expression darkened. âI bet it was Travis. That weaselly little rat.'
âI don't see any Songshapers,' Chester said, trying to find something positive.
Sam shook his head. âThe Shapers ain't fools. They would've seen the crash; they'll know this is their chance to take us down, once and for all. Bet they've nicked back into the real world to fetch some reinforcements. Give 'em twenty minutes and they'll be back here shooting every soul on the blasted ship.'
Sam angled their boat towards the
Cavatina
. The ship took up almost the entire breadth of the river; barely a foot of water lay between the edge of the vessel and the shoreline. Not enough water, thankfully, to reflect their own tiny vessel.
âHold on tight.'
Chester steadied himself against the wall. Sam wrenched a crimson lever that Chester hadn't noticed before. With a mechanical groan, the echoboat shuddered â and then it began to rise.
âCan't do this too often,' Sam said, in response to Chester's startled look. âWaste of engine power. But we got no choice if we want to dock the damn thing.'
With a rattling clank, their echoboat ascended to the
Cavatina
's upper deck. A large platform, circular and smooth, lay beside the ship's masts. The proximity bell jangled, louder than before, but Sam ignored it. His entire mind was focused on landing.
They touched down on the platform. A jolt â then a gentle little bump â before Sam jerked a lever and their echoboat fell still.
âCome on,' Sam said. âWe gotta hurry.'
Chester followed him out into the swirling chill of the Hush. They stood atop the deck of the echoship, with their own small boat at rest beside them. The
Cavatina
's masts rose high above, sails flapping in the dark.
As soon as they had clambered down from the platform, Sam wrenched a lever on a nearby railing. There was a clanking sound, followed by a hiss of steam, and a trio of metal claws shot up from the edges of the platform. They angled inwards, slotting neatly into the grooves of the echoboat, and clicked down to secure it in place.
Sam and Chester hurried across the deck of the
Cavatina.
Sam unlocked a metal trapdoor, and gestured for Chester to follow him down the ladder below. âHome sweet home,' Sam muttered as he slipped down.
And so Chester took a shaky breath, and followed him into the ship.
The
Cavatina
was not what Chester had expected. A dark green carpet snaked along the corridor, and the walls were patterned with floral wallpaper. Sorcery lamps dangled from the ceiling â mostly orange, punctuated by the occasional blue or red â and the air smelt of honey and cinnamon. If he concentrated, Chester could almost make out the Music of the lamps: a myriad of overlapping melodies, tingling in the depths of his ears.
Sam shoved open a door at the end of the corridor, revealing a spiral staircase. The staircase cavity was a little cold, but Chester admired the rich wood panelling of its walls as they descended.
They hurried along a hallway, passing a couple of doorways. Chester wanted to ask what lay behind them,
but this wasn't the time. He could see now how the river had begun to take hold: the entire echoship was being consumed by shadow. Already the corridor was angled strangely, with a sharp tilt downwards on the side where the ship was sinking fastest.
The driver's cabin was huge, at least six times the size of its equivalent on Sam's echoboat. Chester stepped inside, skin tingling. Three of the walls were composed entirely of windows, so that for one terrifying moment he felt as though he was falling forwards into the dark swirls of the river. The ship was tilting ever more horribly as black tendrils crawled up towards them. He heard clatters and crashes from other rooms as loose furniture slid across the floor and crockery tumbled from shelves.
Then he saw the blood.
One window of the
Cavatina
was splintered into shards. On the floor a young woman sprawled in a mess of curling red hair and blood. She wore a rumpled white blouse and a pair of men's trousers with a thick black belt. A wound pierced her torso, staining the blouse with a blaze of liquid crimson. She couldn't be older than seventeen.
âCaptain!' Sam hurried towards her. âWhat happened?'
Susannah was breathing but her face was pale. âSongshaper shot me through the window. She'll be back soon, with reinforcements.' She grabbed Sam's sleeve. âGet us out of here, Sam.'
âWhy'd you steer into the damn river?'
âWasn't deliberate,' Susannah managed. âLost control of the wheel, when ⦠when she shot me.'
âWhere are the others?'
âTrying to fix the engine,' Susannah said, in a rasping voice. âIt got knocked out of tune when we crashed. Dot's doing what she can, but â¦' She trailed off, eyelids flittering.
Sam swore, pressing a hand to staunch the flow of blood. âDot ain't got enough power to reset that engine!'
âI know,' Susannah said. âBut we can't just sit here and sink â¦'
âCan I help?' Chester said.
They both stared at him. Susannah's eyes were unfocused, but he noticed for the first time that they were a pale, ghostly blue. Just like Sam's. Under the tendrils of red hair, her face looked almost ethereal. Chester knotted his hands behind his back and attempted to look more confident than he felt.
âWhat are you gonna do?' Sam said. âYou ain't been trained.'
âI know,' Chester said. âBut if Dot tells me what tune to play, maybe â¦'
âYou ain't going into the engine room,' Sam snapped. âNot when the Music ain't stable. I just risked my life to save your neck, Hays â I ain't gonna waste all that effort to let you kill yourself.'
âI'm going to die either way, then, because this ship's sinking!' Chester said.
His fear was rising to the surface now, coloured by frustration. He might not know about the Hush, or echoships, or Musical engines. But he had survived for months on the road and he had never given up. Not when his money
had been stolen in Leucosia, or when he'd been forced to beg on the streets in Jubaldon. Not when a bitter old man in Taminor had told him he was on a fool's errand and that he should give up his father for dead. Not even in the prison cell, down in the dark under Hamelin. If Chester was to die today, he would do it on his own terms.
âWhere's the engine room?' he said.
Sam looked away.
Chester tightened his expression. Hopefully his scowl was one of righteous indignation, rather than an expression of the reality of rapidly congealing panic.
Convince the world you're strong and you're halfway to being there
â¦
âI've gone along with you for a day and a night without arguing or pushing questions you didn't want to answer. But if I'm going to die here, I've got a right to fight for my life.'
Susannah gave a hazy smile. âYou did well with this one, Sam. We could do with a little fighter.'
âI'm not little!' Chester said. For some reason, her patronising tone stung more than Sam's outright refusal. âI'm not a child! Tell me where the engine room is, and I'll get your engine running again. I swear it!'
âDon't make oaths you can't keep,' Susannah said, suddenly looking serious. She coughed, and a little spurt of blood trickled over her lips.
Chester felt his frustration fade and guilt welled up in his stomach. What was he doing, snapping at this girl? She was dying. âLook,' he said, âplease, just tell me. It's got to be worth a try.'
Susannah made a small sign to Sam and, finally, Sam pointed. âDown the corridor, to your left. Just keep heading downwards.'
The doorway of the engine room was so low that even Chester had to duck his head. Opening the door, he was struck by a set of discordant tunes: a mixture of music, a jangle of wild noise â like a gunfight between melodies. Tunes ricocheted around the room, off the machinery, and back into each other, colliding with an explosion of sound.
Chester took a deep breath and scrambled inside. The air hissed with steam. He collided with various prongs of machinery, banging into clockwork contraptions and metal canisters, tripping through the dark and smoke as he navigated the increasingly tilted floor of the sinking ship. Black smoke blasted from pipes and metal spokes clanked like teeth across the ceiling. He barely ducked in time to avoid a mechanical arm that moved like a blade, slicing the air with a hiss of steam.
No wonder Sam considered this place dangerous. If you didn't know how the machinery worked â¦
A jet of steam blasted towards him. With a cry, Chester dove to the side. He smashed his injured arm against a metal tank â but he considered it a better option than having his face burned off.
Taking the opportunity to look around, he saw a pair of figures down in the darkest depths of the room. One, a young man, was tall and slender, with brown skin and a
pair of spectacles. He hunched over a segment of machinery, folding his spindly height beneath the low ceiling. He puffed awkwardly into a harmonica, looking about as comfortable as a librarian in a slaughterhouse.
The second figure was a girl with a crop of short blonde hair. She was banging away at the keys of a piano accordion, but the sound was lost in the din.
Between them sat a massive glass dome, buckled down with metal straps. Light fizzled through its innards like a thunderstorm with indigestion. Chester knew instantly that this was the source of the clashing music. He felt it in his fingers, in the static that tickled his neck, in the prickles of each tiny hair on his arms. Not just music, but
Music
. This was what gave the echoship its power. This was the engine.
And it was all going wrong.
âHey!' Chester staggered forwards. âCan I help?'
The strangers looked up at him, alarmed. The young man staggered backwards, as though Chester might be an attacker, and the girl almost dropped her piano accordion.
âSam brought me here!' Chester said quickly. âI'm a musician. I thought maybe I could help reset the Music â¦'
A look of horror crossed the boy's face, which Chester privately thought was a bit harsh. Then he realised that the expression wasn't directed at him. The boy raised a frantic hand to point behind him and, instinctively, Chester threw himself to the floor. With a fresh rip of pain, wet blood spilled out of the bullet hole in his arm.
Stupid, stupid.
He had reopened the wound, just when â