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Authors: John Claude Bemis

The Wooden Prince (19 page)

BOOK: The Wooden Prince
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The doge removed a handkerchief and began cleaning his leaden hand. He pursed his fleshy lips at Captain Toro. “What is your name, airman?”

“Captain Toro, airman of the Ninth Carabinieri, my doge.”

The doge addressed a massive soldier, older than the others, with cropped silver hair and scars crisscrossing his haggard face. “General Maximian, didn't you tell me that Captain Toro was the first to report that the traitor Geppetto was here in Tuscany?”

The general stepped forward. “Yes, my doge. Apparently Geppetto had been hiding in the village of San Baldovino for months under the name Polendina, pretending to be a shopkeeper.”

“And why wasn't he captured when your soldiers arrived?”

The general gave an uncomfortable grunt. “He slipped past us somehow. Although I believe Captain Toro questioned him in his shop before he managed to escape.”

“I…but…there was no automa in his shop!” Captain Toro spluttered. “There was no way to know at the time he was Geppetto. My orders were to search for a man in possession of the automa who escaped from Don—”

“Captain Toro joined our search,” the general went on. “Breaking off from his patrol—without orders, mind you—he cornered Geppetto on an aqueduct. However, he lost Geppetto when he was attacked by the automa. Captain Toro then claimed the automa brought him back to life after he drowned.”

“The automa did—” Captain Toro began, but the doge silenced him with a glance.

“After what we've all seen today, it would appear Captain Toro could have been telling the truth about this automa. Don't you think, General Maximian?”

The general gave a stiff nod. A smile of vindication crept onto Captain Toro's face.

“An automa who can bring back the dying…” The doge waddled around to face Pinocchio. “How is it able to do this?”

Al Mi'raj crouched submissively. “I swear to you, I have no idea, my doge. This is beyond anything Bulbin and I are able to do to an automa.”

“I'm certain of that,” the doge sneered. “General Maximian, this is the answer to our problem. This automa is just what we need to keep our prisoner alive.”

“Yes, my doge,” the general replied.

“Is it true then, my doge,” the lord mayor whispered, “that you have captured Prester John?”

The doge cut his eyes warily over to Al Mi'raj. Al Mi'raj looked like he would spontaneously combust before he repeated anything he'd heard.

“Yes, we captured the immortal king of Abaton,” the doge said, his hands behind his robes as he paced. “But I made the mistake of assuming he would bring the Ancientmost Pearl with him. Sadly, he left it in Abaton for safekeeping. And now, without his precious Pearl, he is dying, at long last, aging into a decrepit old man in my prison at this very moment. But this automa…”

The doge rounded on Pinocchio. “This one, whatever Geppetto has done to it, this one might keep Prester John alive long enough.”

“Long enough for what?” the lord mayor asked. “What good is keeping him, if he's dying?”

“Oh, I have my reasons, Lord Mayor,” the doge said. “Prester John has many uses to me, but only if he is alive. And I will need my former high alchemist. I need Geppetto. General, what is the latest news on the search for him?”

General Maximian began, “Our last report was that Geppetto was spotted fleeing from the river after Captain Toro supposedly drown—”

“I did drown!” Captain Toro squawked.

The doge waved a hand, and General Maximian continued.

“Our men say Geppetto escaped with the assistance of a blue fairy. He hasn't been seen since, but we have redoubled our efforts and are scouring the countryside, my doge. I can assure you, we will find him.”

Captain Toro's face went pale, and when the doge saw it, he said, “What's the matter, Captain?”

Captain Toro mumbled, almost incomprehensibly, “I…I saw two travelers just yesterday. One was a fairy. The other…”

“You let Geppetto slip past you yet a third time!” General Maximian barked.

The doge fixed his gaze on the trembling captain. “Is this true, Captain Toro? Are you such an imbecile that you spotted a fairy with a man and you didn't suspect it was Geppetto?”

“I…she said he was her uncle. She said he was a fairy too.”

The doge's voice dripped poisonously. “Can you not tell the difference between a man and a fairy?”

“My doge,” Captain Toro pleaded, “he was cloaked. I saw them just as I was learning about the automa in Al Mi'raj's show. It was a crucial discovery! One that led me immediately to Siena. I was going to report it to General Maximian when—”

“Don't give me excuses, Captain!” the doge said, his jowls flapping in rage. “I want Geppetto. I want to know how Geppetto has done this to the automa!”

The room grew quiet.

A moment later, Toro began to mumble, “My doge, I just had a thought.…If Geppetto was there yesterday when I heard about this automa, he must have heard it too. He would come here to Siena. He might be here now!”

As the doge considered this, his anger began to wane.

“I can have the city guards begin a sweep at once,” the lord mayor said. “We can close the gates and—”

“No,” Captain Toro interrupted.

The lord mayor grimaced, but the doge said, “What is it, Captain?”

“We shouldn't scare him into hiding,” Captain Toro said. “If Geppetto feels he has a chance to rescue this automa, he might come here. Tonight, even.”

“Yes,” the doge agreed. “Yes. We must show him that we have not departed with his masterwork of an automa. Show him that he has an opening if he wants to rescue it.”

The doge pointed at Al Mi'raj. “Lock the automa in with the half-beasts.”

“Yes, my doge,” Al Mi'raj said, looking as if he had narrowly escaped a death sentence.

“General,” the doge said, “we will set a small guard to show that the automa is here. The rest of my guards and airmen I want back at the mayor's Palazzo Pubblico at once.”

“I can stand post here—” Captain Toro began.

“I don't want you botching this again, Captain,” the doge snarled.

Captain Toro's face twisted unpleasantly. He stayed silent, bowing his head in submission before following the doge, the mayor, and the soldiers from the room.

Once they were gone, Al Mi'raj snapped his fangs, the black spots on his yellow face growing larger with rage. He knelt. “Are you all right, Bulbin?”

The gnome nodded, still looking shaky.

Pinocchio felt he should be afraid of the doge. He had a vague memory that the doge had done something bad to his former master Geppetto. But the fogginess in his head was too thick. He couldn't muster a worry.

“What you want me to do?” Bulbin asked. “Do we help the doge?”

“We have to,” Al Mi'raj said. “We have our own necks to worry about.”

“But you seen what this automa can do! If the doge has the power to raise the dead—”

“He also has Prester John dying in a Venetian prison. It might be the only way to save His Immortal Lordship.”

“Believe me,” Bulbin said. “The doge en't doing this to help Prester John. There's some dark scheme at play here. Something awful.”

“There's nothing else we can do, Bulbin. It is not our problem anymore. We'll lock him up with the chimera as ordered. Go with Bulbin,” Al Mi'raj said to Pinocchio, “and stay in your cell until the doge's soldiers collect you.”

Bulbin sighed. “Get up, manikin.”

Pinocchio stood, realizing he might be leaving Al Mi'raj's theater soon. Al Mi'raj was his master, so if Al Mi'raj wanted him to go with the doge, he would obey.

Pinocchio was taken to the dungeon deep beneath the theater and locked in a separate cell from Mezmer and her chimera. After Bulbin left, Mezmer came to the bars separating her from Pinocchio. “Why are you here, automa?”

“The doge is taking me away in the morning,” Pinocchio replied.

Sop sneered at him through the bars. “Most likely going to take you apart and figure out how you performed your trick.”

“Quiet, Sop,” Mezmer said. She nodded to Pinocchio. “Wish I could repay you for what you did, lad. But it's not looking too likely I'll have the chance.”

“Repay me?” Pinocchio asked. “An automa has no need for money.”

Mezmer laughed. “I mean I'm in your debt. You saved my life. A knight always honors her debts. I don't know how you did it, but I live another day because of you. All of my darling mongrels, too.” She cocked a furred thumb back at the chimera.

A few nodded in agreement, like the boar. Sop and some of the others glanced uneasily at Pinocchio.

“What good is another night waiting to die?” Sop mumbled, licking the back of his hand to smooth the fur around his eye patch.

Mezmer leaned closer to Pinocchio to whisper, “How did you do it, by the way?”

Pinocchio said, “I do not know.”

Mezmer watched him with bright orange eyes. Finally she walked away.

One by one, the chimera fell asleep. Pinocchio stood alone against the stone wall at the back of his cell. There was nothing to figure out, nothing to worry about. There was only waiting until his master told him what to do next.

The door to the dungeon opened, and Wiq came in. He whispered, “We have to be quiet.”

“All right,” Pinocchio said.

“The doge is going to take you away in the morning.”

“Yes, I know.”

Wiq looked surprised. “But if you do, you'll be in trouble, Pinocchio. You know how dangerous the doge is.”

“I do?” Pinocchio asked flatly.

Wiq stared at Pinocchio. “What's wrong with you? Are you just going to let Al Mi'raj give you to the doge?”

“I do what Master Al Mi'raj orders.”

Wiq shook his head. “No, you can't. Why are you acting this way? Don't you remember our promise? I thought we were friends.”

Wiq pushed up his sleeve, showing Pinocchio the loop of jasmine around his wrist.

Pinocchio blinked at the sight of the bracelet. He looked at Wiq as if seeing him for the first time. He slid up his own sleeve and discovered an identical jasmine bracelet. A memory wanted to break through the fog that was clouding his thoughts. “Friends? We are…friends?”

“Did Bulbin do something to you?” Wiq said, his voice shaking. “What's happened?”

“I think…” Pinocchio fought against the fog. “I think when I saved the half-beast…”

“The fox chimera?”

“Yes, Mezmer,” Pinocchio continued. “I lost something. I cannot think right.”

“You're acting like…an automa,” Wiq said.

“I am an automa,” Pinocchio replied.

“Not an ordinary one. You can think for yourself! You're different, Pinocchio. Don't you remember? Please remember!”

He was trying to. He wanted to. What had happened to him?

Wiq said urgently, “You're becoming…alive, Pinocchio! You're searching for your father. He wants to find you.”

Yes, his father. Geppetto! He didn't belong to Al Mi'raj. He belonged with Geppetto. Geppetto wanted him to be his son!

The thought was like a breeze blowing the fog clear from his mind. Pinocchio gave a gasp as his memories began to flood back. With them came a welling of panic. “Wiq! I'm in trouble.”

“I know!” Wiq said. “That's what I've been saying.”

“And the doge…he's planning a trap. He wants to capture my father! I have to get out of here.”

Wiq looked beside himself with relief. “You will.”

“I will? How?”

Wiq held up a ring of keys.

W
iq unlocked the cell. Pinocchio hesitated as he opened the door. The fealty lock in the back of his neck tingled and his nose itched.

“Wiq, I can't. Al Mi'raj ordered me to stay here. If I disobey him, my nose…”

Wiq flipped through the jumbled mass of smaller keys. “I stole these from Bulbin's workshop. We just have to figure out which one fits.”

As Wiq began trying one fealty key after the other, the chimera woke. Sop came to the bars, his tail slashing back and forth. “Mezmer, get up!”

The fox was awake in an instant. “What are you doing, lad?”

Wiq kept working. Pinocchio felt keys jostled around hurriedly in the back of his neck. “Don't say anything to her,” Wiq murmured.

His words weren't quiet enough, and Mezmer narrowed her eyes at Wiq. “Maybe I should shout for the guard.”

“No, don't!” Pinocchio said. Then he whispered back at Wiq. “We have to set them free too. They'll be killed otherwise.”

“It's too dangerous, Pinocchio. I've got to get you away. I can't release all of them as well.”

A key slid neatly into the slot in Pinocchio's neck, clicking the tumblers into place.

“I've got it,” Wiq said.

Pinocchio reached back to stop Wiq's hand. “When you turn it, who will be my master?”

BOOK: The Wooden Prince
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