clap of lightning and then a fan of light opens just under the mouth of the Engine. Things move in it—ribbons of roads, people in odd clothes. A peal of bells from some distant church echoes underneath the dome. I smell the breeze from an ancient world I’ve only heard of but never visited—Old London.
Charles laughs. “And now the Heart to speed me on my journey!” He reaches for me.
I hear the sound above the wildly ringing bells before he does. A thundering . . . the sound of hooves and wings and . . . song.
I want to laugh as the dome breaks above us. Tiles rain down and a huge, blocky face peers in at us. I glance at the grains of the Waste stirring, stirring, stirring in their beaker.
Charles’s gaze moves upward to meet that of the Giant glaring down at him.
And that’s when I do it. I reach forward and grab the horrid jar out of his slackening hands. Before I can think, with all the power coursing through my veins, I throw it to the ground.
Charles’s gaze returns to me, his eyes nearly white with terror. He screams.
It’s an echo of that day long ago when I unwittingly freed the sylphs with my growing magic. I don’t hear anything else because the release of souls nearly deafens me. They rise in a ghostly whirlwind, singing, screaming, crying, mumbling . . . so much noise I clap my hands over my ears. Their sound breaks the glass in the Engine. Together, the souls and the Waste whip up in a devilish dance. They sweep up people like matchsticks—I watch in horror as Lucy, Charles, my father, the Empress . . . all are thrown through the air like dolls. Olivia crouches under the orrery, holding to it for dear life. Aunt Minta I can’t see at all.
The portal to Old London sucks Charles and hordes of whistling souls toward it. I watch, horrified and helpless, as Charles grabs Lucy’s arm and drags her in before the portal claps shut like a fan.
The Giant sneezes above me like someone inhaling pepper. He frowns and retreats from the smashed dome.
And then Syrus and Bayne are beside me. Bayne’s grabbing my elbow and forcing me to run as the Waste begins to devour the observatory.
The last thing I see is Father lying and staring up at the falling cloud, his mouth open in terror before Bayne pushes me down the corridor and toward the stair.
“You must wake the Beast now,” he says. “He’s our only hope of stopping the Waste from spreading.”
“Father . . .” I say.
“He’ll have to find his own way. The best thing you can do now is return the Heart to its rightful owner.”
I nod, too breathless to form words. The Wyvern and Dragon hatchlings, freed at last from their long confinement in the Exhibit Hall, bow as we pass. But the sad plinth of the Sphinx remains empty. I still cannot believe the Grue destroyed her. Evidently, there are all kinds of greed.
We are down the stair and at the gate faster than I thought possible. The Heart beats out the time through my entire body. The Waste follows us in a black wave.
Bayne gets us through the gate with a burst of magic. “Into the tunnel!” he shouts.
I run until I can’t anymore. The jagged rock simply hurts too much and my feet refuse to move. Bayne scoops me up as if I weigh no more than a sylph. I’m embarrassed, deeply embarrassed, but I put my head against his neck for just one moment. I smell his wonderful smell and my heart, my true heart, aches at my own foolishness for casting that spell.
I feel the line of his shoulders and neck tense under my cheek. “I’m sorry,” I whisper. My throat is so dry I can barely speak.
“I am too,” he says.
“Will you ever forgive me?”
“If you will forgive me.”
I lift my head and look at him, but we’ve come to the stairs above the great pit. The breathing is so loud now, I can’t speak over it.
The stairs just end in a great open space that would terrify me if the Waste behind us didn’t terrify me more. Pipes run this way and that, but I can see the glimmer of golden scales petrified by time far beneath them. There’s a well, a space where the breathing hitches. And it’s below us, far, far below. Far deeper than any of us can reach.
“Down there,” I say.
Perhaps if I could be a bird again . . .
Bayne looks at me and shakes his head. I haven’t noticed how terribly pale he is until now. “I’m using all my energy keeping us safe from the Waste, blocking the tunnel against it,” he says. “You must get there yourself.”
Syrus says in a small voice, “I can do it. I can climb down and put it there. If you’ll give me the rope.”
I smile, remembering a day long ago when he started this whole mess by stealing that seemingly harmless toad.
I pass him the Heart. My chest, my whole body, feels hollow without it. I understand why everyone wants to keep it; its tremendous power is alluring. But it’s not mine. It has never belonged to any of us who stole or borrowed it. It belongs here, in this world, with this Beast.
Syrus shows me the characters incised on the heart. “Endurance,” he says.
I am stunned. He can read it. And if he can read that, I wonder what other mysterious texts he can read. I long for the Ceylon Codex with its strange Unnaturals, but it’s probably still in my room in Virulen, if it’s not been swallowed by dust.
I say what the Manticore said to me, “Heal this world.”
We take the rope that Bayne hands us and secure it to the railing. It falls down into the abyss. Syrus climbs down it like one of St. Darwin’s most agile apes. Bayne sinks to his knees, gritting his teeth. I can feel the pressure of the Waste bearing down on us, everything above dissolving—the push and pull between Unnatural forces and the dread disease of the black sands. I put a hand between Bayne’s shoulders, offering what power I can to hold the Waste at bay. I watch as Syrus vanishes into the well.
I close my eyes. The ticking sound of the Heart is lost under the weight of the building collapsing above us.
And then I hear it. Louder and ever louder. A chorus of clocks, as if the thousand clocks in the Tower were all ticking in unison in this one great chest. And then comes a great, belling chime.
It reverberates through the rock around us, driving it all back.
“Hold on!” Bayne shouts. And I only know what he means because I see him wrap an arm around the buckling railing.
The power courses under our feet and then we’re falling. Beneath us, emptiness turns to golden-scaled skin. My breath whooshes out of me as I make contact with flesh solid as stone, and claws clutch me, carrying me faster and faster up through the air, twisting like a bucking horse. I glimpse the sun rising over New London below us, but it’s no New London I’ve ever known. Streets are rising and being shaken off golden scales. The Tower teeters and falls from a great, horned head that turns and snaps at the Waste boiling over the walls and along the riverbank as if it’s little more than an annoying cloud.
Color spreads from where the Beast rises, from where all the Unnaturals return to their native places. And where they go, they push the Waste before them, until it recedes utterly beyond the horizon in the West. Even though it’s technically winter, it looks like spring.
But the bigger problem now is how to get off this ride before we die.
Farther up the bucking body, Syrus desperately clings to the metal chest, a stupid grin on his face at the sheer wonder of it all. I don’t know how much longer we’ll all be able to hold on. I see him put his cheek against the golden scales and whisper something. A shudder moves along the great frame, and then the scales slide against the ground and the Dragon gently turns to allow us to disembark.
He bows his horned head to me over his shoulder. This is exactly the creature I saw in the Ceylon Codex— horns, beard, cloudy fetlocks, and golden scales.
“Tianlong,” Syrus says softly. “Heavenly Dragon.”
The Beast smiles at that and I see his long iron teeth. Then he rockets straight up into the air, his body rippling like a gold banner in the sun until he’s out of sight.
“That would be one hell of a way to get back to Scientia,” Bayne observes.
I elbow him in the ribs.
And then I stop, because I don’t know if I have the right to do such a thing. Here at the beginning of a new