the platform and lunged for the men. The men swung hard, bringing their ghastly assailants down.
Taelin stared in horror.
After twenty seconds of brutality, what creatures were still standing retreated. She watched them lope back into the trees, slip down retaining walls and scurry off into shadow-clogged alleyways. Some dragged themselves through busted windows, heedless of the shards.
The men had won but Taelin could see them panting, hands on knees. They glanced in every direction like scared children and backed quickly toward the cargo elevator, which now sounded to be coming back down. They kept their truncheons out.
Nearby, the
“It’s the same thing,” said Baufent. Taelin had forgotten the physician was there.
“What is?”
“The disease.” Dr. Baufent’s short gray hair rumpled in a faintly latrine-scented wind that drew through the urban desolation to the west. “It drives them mad at first. We’ll take samples. We’ll run tests, but I think it’s the same.”
Taelin’s heart was pounding. “But the vaccine works?”
“Yes, dear. You’ll be fine … by the end of day two. We just need to keep you quarantined until then.”
“Quarantined? Why bother bringing me up if I’m … how am I supposed to help if…”
“Shh—” Baufent’s gunmetal eyes were analyzing the talking men. “We have plenty of doctors up here. This was about you posing for litho-slides, remember? It’s political.”
Taelin felt insulted, but Baufent’s brutal candor acted like a strange ointment. It smoothed things over in an abrupt and unexpected way. “What about them?” asked Taelin. She pointed to the men.
“They got theirs a year ago.” Baufent spoke softly. “All physicians and government employees were required to be vaccinated after the court was cleaned. The rest of Isca got theirs soon after.”
“The court?”
“I’m sure you read the papers, dear. Ghoul Court is what we call the borough in Isca where it started.”
Taelin had read the papers but now she was talking to one of the physicians that had actually been there. “What does the disease do? That was information they never published.”
“It turns them into fish,” said Baufent. “Not really, of course. But it’s a genetic modifier. Some people thought there was cross-breeding going on. Complete nonsense. What’s strange is that the mutation shuts down at different stages for different people. We don’t know why. Some people’s transformation is nearly unnoticeable. Only their brain is affected. Others die. And still others … Well. I guess you’ve seen them.”
“Is it airborne?”
“No. It’s carried in the blood and mucus membranes. And it’s sensitive to race. Pplarians for instance react differently.”
Word came back from the ground crew that the High King had decided not to abort. “We’re going to set up shop,” one of the men in blue goggles said curtly as he strode past Baufent. He had just come up the lift and seemed to have been tasked with disseminating information.
Taelin and the doctor left the deck and went down to the cargo hold where people were gathering. One of the men in black was barking out instructions.
He told them that erecting pavilions for a field hospital at the current spot would be futile. The wind in the Ghalla Peaks was irregular and violent. So, the decision had been made to locate the hospital’s hub on the palace grounds, some eight hundred yards to the east, which would also be safer in case of another attack.
The master sergeant also made it clear that they wouldn’t be taking up residence in the palace proper for political reasons, a decision that irked most of the physicians.
Taelin got a personal escort to the palace grounds where she was assigned to oversee the medical supplies being ferried from the airship. Despite her knee she was able to organize and verify inventory counts and help the other iatromathematiques unpack. She unrolled yards of white cloth and opened boxes of antiseptic, surgery tools and ampoules ready for the needle. There were less conventional supplies as well, living creatures encased in holomorphic glass harvested from the Memnaw: a dozen scarlet horrors with special equipment to turn their voracious hunger on the plague.
Toward nightfall the hospital, fully erected and open for business, sat waiting for patients.
No one came.
* * *
BORED, Taelin sat down on a little crop of rock just outside the tent hospital. It was dark here and relatively quiet, the perfect place to think. She unfolded Speck’s drawing and smiled.
Sena was up to something. She was sure of it. And poor Caliph Howl might be along for the ride. But what could she do? How did Nenuln intend for her to overcome the High King’s witch?
Taelin flinched from a noise in the darkness. A soft twittering.
It was a bird that had come up and was dancing on the crop of rock. Strange that it was still flying after dark. Then she noticed the subtle glow in its eyes.
It seemed to gasp as it hopped back and forth, twisting its head, looking at her finger like a grub.
There was clockwork in its brain. Taelin reached out and grabbed it. The lodestone that had drawn it to her was in a ring on the third finger of her right hand.
Well he had found her.
Again.
Strapped to the bird’s leg was a note and a little bottle of liquid. She read the note with a sense of horror. All it said was,
“I am not an assassin!” she hissed. Thankfully, no one was close enough to hear. She looked toward the bright hospital tents where people still bustled. No one was close enough to have even noticed the bird’s arrival.
She crumpled the note and tossed it into the weeds. She considered throwing the tiny bottle in the same direction but put it into her pocket instead.
Depressed, stressed and angry, she left the crop and hobbled up the battlements to the palace’s outer wall where Naobi had risen. She watched the large moon for a long time. Clouds slipped like white flames across its face.
Dr. Anselm arrived to check on her.
“It’s beautiful,” he said.
“I suppose it is.”
“I wanted to thank you.” She found his loud, friendly voice soothing. “You did a great job today.” He cocked his head. “And I’m not just saying that to pamper Avidan Mwyr’s daughter.”
She raised a finger at him. “No babysitting.”
“No babysitting.” He grinned. Then, “You certainly didn’t need any. Have the reconnaissance teams left?”
“What? I don’t know. I hadn’t heard about them.”
“Maybe they’re already gone. The king sent two detachments down Avenue of Lights.” He pointed vaguely toward domes and statues that cluttered the dark skyline. “From the sound of it, we weren’t the first ones here. A Pandragonian vessel landed to the south somewhere.”
“What is it?” she asked. “You make it sound like something bad happened.”
Light from the tents groped his features as he glanced down at his feet; nostrils, lips and cheekbones became a black puzzle. “Word has it, they were attacked … worse than we were.”
Taelin ached to know if her family had been spared. Her cousin and several close friends lived in the Perch. But how could she get to them?
And how could they have been spared? When she gazed over the copper domes and ancient masonry, the city seemed empty. All she saw were blackened streets and windows. Bright flowers in planters threw ruffling shadows over abandoned brickwork and tar, lit harshly by pools of white-blue lamplight.
Somewhere in the darkness, Taelin could hear a fountain splashing. But the lovely avenues rolled with papers