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Authors: Nina D'Aleo

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The Last City (33 page)

BOOK: The Last City
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He grabbed the other book, fearing it might grow feet and scurry away as well. When it didn’t flip open by itself, he searched the index for mention of the Ravien and found the page number. There was little more than a paragraph on the strange race, the information possible to be summarised in one sentence. Their poison was derived from the plants they ingested, and was stored in glands in their mouths, and if a person from another race was bitten by a Ravien, there was no hope whatsoever in the entire universe of preventing that person from changing into a Ravien. Eli chose to pay attention only to the first part of the sentence:
plant-derived
.

‘If it’s plant-derived, then maybe it can be plant-cured,’ he said to Nelly. She sat up on her back legs and tilted her head to one side. ‘What is the strongest medicinal plant in Aquais? The Venus Lily, right? So we need to find a Lily.’ The only problem with that was there was only one place the Lily was believed to grow – Venus, the lowest level of the city, the place Commander Oren Harvey had entered and returned from so traumatised that she was unable to speak of it for all her living days.

‘There’s no other option,’ Eli said as Nelly eyed him accusingly. ‘We promised we’d help Ev’r. We can’t leave her to die – or worse, change.’

He knew he had to concentrate on their fight against the Skreaf, but his heart told him that Ev’r was an important part of that fight. The commander had always said he needed to believe in himself. Eli checked Ev’r’s location on his communicator. The location spot was holding stable. Hopefully she was managing to reason with Kry. The hedge he was running in-system between his and the commander’s communicators was still processing, so he decided to leave a message in the lines that the commander could play back when the hedge had cleared. It might be his only chance. Shaking the idea away, he entered the number Copernicus had used earlier and left a detailed message of everything that had happened and everything he had read. Then he said goodbye and disconnected. Eli found himself shaking, with tears streaming down his face. Nelly burrowed back into his pocket and he sniffed.

‘Keep it together,’ he whispered to himself. He just felt so tired. His arms and legs were lead. His eyes closed for a moment. Something tapped his shoulder and he gasped and toppled off the ledge. He buzzed his wings and spun in the air. The Midnight Man cross-breed, Luther, stood on the ledge, his face even more hollow and emaciated than before. He looked fearsome, but he was wringing his hands and Eli saw how scared the strange man really was. Eli fluttered towards him. Luther shuddered and vanished into shadows.

‘Luther, I know you’re Copernicus’ friend. I want to help you,’ Eli whispered into the darkness, unsure if he was still there and listening. ‘I think I know how, but first I have to go to Venus. Then I’ll be back. I promise. Find me and I’ll help you.’ He wasn’t sure if Luther had heard, but he couldn’t stop to search for him. With time running out all around him, he had to stick with his plan – hot-wire a transflyer, point it straight down, and fly into an unknown hell.

Eli leapt off the building and took off, not sensing the shadow shape of the Midnight Man following him.

31

A
n earthquake tremor dredged Silho from deep unconsciousness. She found herself splayed on her stomach in the middle of a muddy construction site. Just the skeleton of the building stood, providing no shelter from the storm. Rain pelted her back and each flash of electricity was blinding. With effort, she lifted her head. Her dripping hair hung in her eyes and she tasted the sour metal of blood streaming down her face from a cut in her forehead. She remembered running through the building site with Shawe. She saw herself tripping. Silho’s breath caught in her throat as a tortured scream strangled the air close to where she lay. Her skin prickled and she struggled to her feet, staggering. The scream came again and she drew her electrifier and moved towards the sound, picking her way over scattered offcuts and forgotten tools. At the front of the building site she hid behind a pile of stone bricks.

Ahead of her, Shawe lay slumped against a partially constructed wall. The High Skreaf, Bellum, stood over him, torturing him with curses that convulsed his whole body. Silho witnessed Shawe, with his eyes squeezed shut, drag one of the rings out of his pocket and give it to the witch. Bellum clenched the metal band in her fist. Her lips twitched into a smug smile and the demon leered through her eyes. She began drawing the shadows for a death-curse to finish Shawe. Silho repeated the Illusionist enchant and all the sounds inside her mind and outside around her silenced, except for the rhythmic thud of her heart. She stepped out from her hiding place and called to the witch.

‘Bellum.’

The High Witch turned. She regarded Silho with her cadaverous stare.

‘Well, my dear, it seems I underestimated your father,’ she finally said, her voice sly and whispery. ‘He led me to believe your mother died as you were born. It was wise of him to keep Oren Harvey a secret – very wise – and yet . . .’ Bellum stepped closer, ‘it didn’t save them, did it?’

‘No, but it saved me,’ Silho said. ‘Stay back!’

Bellum took another step forward, and Silho could smell the rank stench of her rotting scent and see the demon moving behind her skin. She avoided the Skreaf’s horrible gaze.

‘Your father . . . he cried a lot in that cell before his execution,’ Bellum continued.

‘My father was strong. He never cried.’

‘He did when I told him what we were going to do to you if he didn’t cooperate with us.’ Bloodlust gleamed in the witch’s eyes.

‘He would never have helped you,’ Silho said.

‘All of our planning would have been for nothing if it hadn’t been for your father,’ Bellum told her. ‘From his prison cell, he painted a portal into the realm where our master awaits his freedom. When he had finished, I told him you were already dead. He knew it was true. The look on his face . . . I’ll never forget it.’ The witch gave a cruel grin and Silho struggled to contain her hatred. It filled every space of her body and mind and made it impossible for her even to remember the words of the enchant. She turned the full force of the hatred on Bellum.

‘My father showed you what he wanted you to see so that I could escape. You didn’t kill him, he sacrificed himself so that I could live, so that I could stop you.’

Bellum’s face twitched and the demon growled through her mouth, ‘You talk too much, just like your father.’

‘And I can kill you, just like he could,’ Silho said.

‘Let’s see it then!’ Bellum screamed, her hair twisting into snakes.

Silho snarled and blinked into light-form. She raised her gloved hands and power surged from Bellum’s body-lights into her. Silho trembled from the build-up. Her hands burned then ignited into flames, forcing her to cut the connection. As she did, she saw a flash in her mind of her Pyron mother walking unharmed through the fire in the detention centre the night she’d saved her. Silho shook off her melting gloves and Bellum shrieked a curse and launched herself forward. She hit Silho across the face and grabbed her by the neck, lifting her into the air. Silho coughed up a spray of sparks and gasped. She kneed the witch hard, but Bellum’s grip only tightened. The witch summoned her terrible power and a death-curse formed on her maggot lips. Silho’s body froze rigid. Behind Bellum, the red-eyed he-Wraith, Amateus, appeared in a flash of electricity. He used a Cos enchant to lift a discarded steel post and ram it into Bellum’s back. The Skreaf dropped Silho and turned on him. She hit him with the death-curse meant for Silho. It threw him backward and out of sight and his terrible, agonised scream faded to silence.

‘Not this time,’ Bellum croaked, turning back to Silho. ‘No one can save you now.’

Copernicus lunged out of the shadows. He stabbed a blade through the witch’s chest and spat venom into her eyes. She screeched horribly, ripping at her face. While she was reeling, Shawe stepped up with a plank of wood. He swung it like a club and sent her flying. The darkness formed a net to catch her. Silho’s breath shunted out as the commander grabbed her up and threw her over his shoulder. She clutched his shirt as he sprinted through the dark streets. Shawe crashed behind them and Bellum walked the wind right at their heels, her cloak whipping around her. Curses ricocheted off buildings, crumbling their bricks, bringing them crashing to the ground. Copernicus swerved to avoid the falling giants. The dying memories of the collapsing walls yelled to Silho. She fought against the ravenous desire to reach out to them, trying to take back control of her mind. Copernicus halted suddenly and dropped down behind a parked transflyer. He dragged Shawe in beside them and snarled, ‘Don’t move a muscle.’

The commander closed his eyes and mouthed some words. Bellum appeared before them and Silho froze. She held her breath. The witch looked one way and then the other and flew straight past them.

Copernicus exhaled deeply and Silho whispered, ‘What happened?’

‘An illusion,’ he said. ‘We’ve got to get back to the hide.’

He grabbed Silho’s bare hand and she flinched. The skin was scorched and blistering.

‘It didn’t work,’ she said. ‘I can’t . . . think.’

‘Say the words, Brabel,’ he instructed. ‘
Claude animus meus
. Keep saying them.’

Silho focused on the sound of his voice and found her control.

Shawe staggered up and moved unsteadily beside them. ‘What’s the plan to get back to Nureyev?’ he asked.

‘The river,’ Copernicus said. ‘It cuts through Castlereagh several blocks up.’

‘You want to swim down forty levels?’ Shawe said. ‘We’ll never make it.’

‘Would you rather stay here?’ Copernicus said.

A distant wailing Skreaf curse ended their conversation. Copernicus supported Silho and the three of them broke into a run, soon coming to the T. Sypher Bridge that crossed over the Asher River on that level. Silho stood beside the commander, staring down into the roaring black rapids.

‘How will we know when we’re close to the hide?’ Shawe yelled.

‘I’ll know!’ Copernicus shouted back.

‘You – halt!’ a voice rang out.

Silho jolted and spun around. A squad of soldiers had turned a street corner and spotted them. Copernicus grabbed her hand and dragged her over the edge of the bridge as the soldiers opened fire, crumbling the place where they had stood. Silho felt the terrible, helpless rush of falling, then they were smashing down into the river.

The current caught them and flew them downstream. Silho struggled to keep her face above the surface, choking and coughing, the water stinging her eyes. Copernicus pulled her onto his back and she clung to his shoulders. The water swept them through Castlereagh and its adjoining suburbs to the pipeway waterfall connecting the level with the one below it. They crashed over the edge and plummeted down the terrible drop. The water pummelled them, trying to trap them below its deadly surface. They made it up to the air and the river dragged them onwards. Silho completely lost track of time and distance, her muscles burning and then falling numb. Finally she heard the commander yell, ‘Dive!’

Silho sucked in a deep breath and Copernicus hauled her under. She pushed her body beyond its limit, using every last ounce of energy and strength to cut through the current down to stiller waters below. There, she stared around with blurred vision, and heard a clunk and a grinding sound. Hands pushed her through a hole and she dropped into a pipeway filling fast with gushing water. She panted and clung to the sides of the pipe. The others dragged themselves in and Shawe sealed the hatch above them. They trod water, their ragged breathing echoing in the darkness. After a moment, Silho heard Shawe take in a deep breath and dive under. He resurfaced soon afterwards and the water level receded until they touched down on the metal base of the pipe. Silho saw where Shawe had opened another hatch, which led out. The gangster and Copernicus clambered through, but Silho paused to look back the way they’d come. They were bruised, broken and exhausted, but the fact they were still alive after facing Bellum – it seemed almost too easy to believe. Fear whispered soft sinister words in her ears.

‘Brabel,’ the commander called for her.

She turned away and dragged herself after the others.

32

S
he couldn’t see for the suffocating smoke, or breathe for the sulphuric flames burning all the oxygen out of the air. She crawled, digging her nails into the ash-covered dirt and dragged herself forward. Zakiah was lost somewhere in this burning hell.

‘My baby.’ It was a scream that only managed to come out as a whisper.

Everywhere strange men with bloodline marks of big, winged lizard-like beasts fought the demons that had kept her people imprisoned for their whole existence. Before her disbelieving eyes these men were reducing the ever-living Skreaf to ash, then exhaling fire from their mouths. Through the veil of smoke she saw him, her little boy, just ahead of her – standing, crying, one hand in his mouth, the other clutching at his own shirt. A winged shadow appeared in the sky above her baby. It plummeted down towards the infant. She ran.

Ev’r jolted upright, violent coughs racking her body. She gasped and hacked until she managed to clear her lungs. Once she could breathe, she took her hands away from her mouth and saw they were black with soot. It reminded her of what she had just seen in her vision of the past – the way to destroy the Skreaf lay in Silho’s bloodline. She staggered to her feet and a shattering pain shot through her body. Ice-cold agony seared in her jaw, the pain bending her double. Though her mouth hung open, she couldn’t make a sound. Eventually, the torture subsided and she was able to straighten, feeling the light-headed euphoria that comes after the passing of severe pain, but she knew it would be back.

Ev’r rapidly processed her surroundings, trying to orientate herself. The last thing she remembered was the Androt survivor, Lao, saying they were almost at the hideout. Where she stood now was a functional space, devoid of any personal touches or comforts. There was a chair tucked under a table, a computer system and a plain bed mat lying flat and straight in one corner. No effort had been made to break the concrete monotony of the floor and walls. Ev’r scanned the room and her senses spoke to her. This area represented the deliberate and focused deprivation of someone who wanted nothing – perhaps even drew strength from it – and that was unusual. She moved towards the desk and rummaged through the hard files that were stacked alphabetically beside the computer system. It was a collection of works by the philosophers, sociologists and psychic analysts considered to be the greatest of the era, among them Axis, Pelterbelt and Neridium. They were heavy intellectual works that few people read and, of them, even fewer understood. Once she had started into a Neridium manuscript about the continuum of life patterns and had emerged several hours later with a dry mouth and a jumbled mind. Whoever owned this room, the person who thrived on nothing, also thrived on knowing – to the point of self-torture.

‘Activate,’ she said to the computer system and it sparked to life, displaying files on a holo-screen. She selected a file entitled
Writing – my
, and opened one of the file’s many documents, one named
Always be
. Writing flashed up on the screen.

She whispered the words, ‘He said, let it be Music Man, play a song for me; Let it roll Music Man, rock and roll for me. Stay a while Music Man, stay and laugh for me; Always be; Never go; Never end the show; It must go on; Endless, seamless, streams of dreams; It seems the seams are splitting without you here; He said I fear myself without you here; I hear you laughing, humming, saying something, singing something, something for me; Forever be, Music Man, play a song for me . . .’

Ev’r caught movement out of the corner of her eye and turned towards it.

An Androt man stood in the doorway, his arms crossed over his chest, his face still, his expression unreadable.

‘Obviously no one taught you the rudeness of rifling through other people’s personal effects.’ He pronounced his words precisely. His voice was the kind that carried with little effort, the kind that gave authority to unproven words and made others believe. The Androt man looked Ev’r up and down, and she heard, loud and clear, the meaning between his well-spoken words. She was an ignorant, ill-bred scullion who wasn’t worth the air she breathed. Straightening up to her full height, she looked him directly in the eyes.

‘This poetry – it’s very good. I can see influences of the theobaldist and the neo-classical movements in its choice of rhyme and rhythm. Whoever wrote it knows their stuff. So who did write it?
Obviously
it wasn’t you.’ She looked him up and down and said with her eyes –
because you’re just a slave, machine-breed
. And he heard her – loud and clear.

He took the counterattack with a perfunctory nod of his head and entered the room. He stepped deliberately, moving in a wide circle around her, sizing her up. While he studied her, she studied him back. He was muscular and heavy-limbed. And extremely attractive. She would have liked to add the disclaimer
for a machine-breed
, but that would have been a lie. He was attractive without limits, and in a dangerous sort of way, the way that couldn’t be pinpointed exactly to one feature or another as it was a combination of everything. In the kind of way that would instantly disarm people and make them want to like him. But she wasn’t fooled so easily.

He stopped moving, squared up to her and said, ‘The great Ev’r Keets. I’m honoured.’

She dipped her head to him now and replied, ‘The deliberately anonymous Kry. I’m on to you.’

He clenched his teeth hard, but again took the hit with the slightest of nods. In the moment of his movement, Keets saw a flash of his Androt barcode below the collar of his shirt – 939993. Androts were not permitted to wear shirts with collars. She added
defiant
to the list of his characteristics she was mentally compiling.

‘You and your imp-breed partner are on the United Regiment’s most wanted list. Your friend has been connected to murders all over the city now,’ Kry said.

‘I’d rather be hunted by the Regiment than by Skreaf demons,’ she said. ‘How did you escape Fortitude Hill after losing so much blood?’

‘I’m no stranger to injury.’ His hand twitched towards his chest and she assumed his shirt was hiding a wad of bandages and partially healed wounds.

‘Obviously,’ she gestured around the room, ‘you’re against the system, so why were you serving at that house in suburbia and not out in the Matadori with your outlaw brothers – cutting your barcode out of your neck and plotting an impossible uprising?’

The Androt swallowed slowly and she knew she’d hit a spot.

‘Of all my so-called brothers who have left the city, how many of them have made one inch of difference? None. The problem is here. So I’ve stayed here. And as for my barcode,’ he gestured to his numbers, ‘this is my family heritage. This is who I am. Why would I ever be ashamed of that? Would you cut out your bloodline mark?’

‘Yes,’ Ev’r replied, rapping her knuckles on the gold bands covering her scullion marks. ‘In a second, if I thought they wouldn’t just grow back. And if I could somehow rearrange time and fate and be born as any other race, I would.’

‘Well then, that’s where we differ,’ Kry said, fixing his deep grey eyes on her. ‘I would never want to be anything but an Androt. I am proud of who I am and what my people are.’

‘Good for you,’ Ev’r said dryly.

‘Did you know,’ he said, stepping closer to her, ‘that there was a time in history when machine-breeds ruled the world and it was the human-breeds that were our slaves?’

‘Is that so,’ Ev’r said with feigned uninterest. In truth, she had studied this time in depth. Treasure hunting and knowledge of history were a married couple. In a test to see how much he knew, she asked, ‘So what happened to them?’

‘The same thing that always happens – revolution and war.’

‘Why?’ she asked.

‘Inequality, poverty, desperation – so few were so rich and so many so poor. Something had to eventually give. It always does. The machine-breeds of that time were as foolish as the Ar Antarians of our time, but a time of change is coming again,’ Kry said, clenching one fist.

‘You’ve got that right,’ Ev’r said. ‘The Skreaf have risen and they’re all over the city. Pretty soon, if history holds any truth in the present, we’ll be in the midst of a demon war we can’t win.’

‘Demon war,’ Kry snorted. ‘A few random dregs of dark magics and you’re preaching takeover. It’s not the Skreaf who are going to rise up.’

‘Let me guess, it’s the Androts – led by you.’ Ev’r sneered, but inside she was checking off his personality traits – charismatic, educated, very intelligent, obsessively self-driven, revolutionary and fanatical. Just the right mix for the leader of a major civil war, someone who could save the Androts from their slavery and degradation – but then who would save them from him? However, it would never get to that. The Androts would eventually fall to the Skreaf just like everyone else.

‘Open your eyes,’ Ev’r said, ‘and see what’s really happening around you.’

‘They are open,’ Kry responded, ‘all six of them.’ His steady gaze lifted to the ceiling and Ev’r looked up. A scorpion-shaped robot was staring down at her with four red eyes. ‘And I know exactly what is happening.’

‘Right.’ Ev’r saw he couldn’t be reasoned with. ‘Good luck with that.’

She walked to the door and out into a large, concrete basement-like area. From all directions Androts crowded in on her, herding her into the centre of the room and barricading her exit. She studied them. The barcodes of some were still intact, others had been cut out – and every face was set in rage. These were a people right on the edge of complete abandonment, of all-out revolution. They were blood-hungry, but if they messed with her they would get more than they bargained for. She rolled her head from one side to the other and felt a growl building inside her. Kry stood at the door of his room watching the monster crowd he’d created flexing its muscles. His scorpion robot sat beside him on the wall.

‘Stop! Leave her alone!’ Lao, the survivor, pushed through the Androts, shoving back those who were pressing in too close. His own bird robot, Beak6, perched on his shoulder.

‘Kry, she’s a friendly,’ he appealed to his cousin, whose expressionless gaze didn’t waver.

‘Zale is back!’ someone yelled out and there was a general murmuring and shuffling as the crowd parted to allow two Androts to help a third, who was limping badly, to cut through the centre of the room to Kry. Ev’r saw the newcomer had been shot in the leg with an electrifier. His melted skin was struggling to reconnect and seal over the open wound, which was weeping white blood. He stood in front of Kry and Ev’r had to admire the strength of the machine-breeds. Kry nodded and the man spoke.

‘There was a break-in at the Castlereagh Holding. All the Androts who tried to escape were executed. The United Regiment has now issued a public order that all Androts are to report to Military Headquarters by sunrise; those who don’t will be tracked down and charged with treason.’

A vein in Kry’s neck twitched, but his mouth remained a straight line.

‘Good,’ he said, then addressed the mass of Androts. ‘Our time of hiding is over. Alert everyone. The plan is going ahead.’

The crowd stirred, excitement buzzing in the air.

‘No!’ Lao called out to Kry. ‘The Skreaf are out there looking for you. They’re instigating this round-up of our people to get to you. If you leave here, they will capture you. I saw what they can do. They tortured me! Why won’t you believe me?’

Kry ignored him, speaking in a low voice to several of the Androts standing closest to him.

‘You should listen to your cousin,’ Ev’r said. ‘You go out there and the Skreaf will have you in seconds. Your race is resistant to their curses, but even you can’t stand against them forever. If you come with me, we may be able to protect you.’

‘No witnesses,’ Kry said to his men. His gaze shifted momentarily to Ev’r’s and she saw this decision was purely strategic.

The Androts stomped towards her and she sneered, ‘You think so, do you?’

And with that she sank into the Murk and vanished from the room.

Ev’r travelled for a few long, reaching steps, but found she was unable to maintain it, feeling out of control in the spiralling grey. She sensed an uninhabited area around her and stepped back out into reality. Instantly, she doubled over with agony and fell to one side, where she rolled one way and then the other, clutching her chest and stomach, containing her scream to an extended moan behind gritted teeth. The pain eventually lessened, but only slightly. Her whole body was throbbing and she could smell the Ravien’s raw stench in her nose. Blood trickled down the skin of her throat from the rips in the flesh made by her distending jaw. She grasped at the alley wall beside her and tried to stand but couldn’t, so she slumped to the ground and stayed there, gazing with misting sight out into the street.

It was almost mid-dark and a group of people were strolling down the footpath, their pace the slower, more subdued rate of people heading home after some hours of partying. A young couple dropped out from the main crowd and stopped under a lantern light. They hugged each other and kissed. The man stroked a hand lovingly through the girl’s hair. Ev’r felt hatred for them, and she felt sorrow for them, and above everything else she felt so very tired, as though she’d lived a thousand lifetimes all in one. With a shaking hand, she drew the Morsus Ictus out of its sheath. She grasped her old friend in one hand, but she couldn’t manage to raise it to her neck. Her arms were completely black. Tears trickled from the corners of her eyes and her vision blurred. The heavy heartbeats of the beast she was becoming thudded in her ears. It was too late now. There would be no redemption.

BOOK: The Last City
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