were dripping from the heat as much as any among their prisoners of war. Their body language positively cried out with discomfort and displeasure at this duty. He noted the way their heads moved, jerking around. They were close enough to the race of man for him to be able to read them, and they betrayed their dislike for this realm with every gesture. How must the island appear to them? The claustrophobia of only being able to move in limited dimensions. No up, no down. The restrictiveness of this environment combined with the almost infinite expanse of the sky, sight-lines stretching to the horizon, rather than the restricted visibility underwater. They don’t like this, he realized. Bob my soul, but they don’t like this at all. This is a hardship posting for them. Short duration and frequent rotations of duty to stop them developing, what shall we call it, land sickness, perhaps? He murmured thoughtfully to himself. ‘There once was a gill-neck from the sea, which on the land he had to be. When he took in the air he was sick, and he could only last out of water a bit, so home he swam in time for tea.’
Daunt patted his pockets and sighed in appreciation as he discovered his aniseed balls were still in his pocket. ‘They didn’t take them?’
‘I told them it was your medicine,’ said Boxiron. ‘It didn’t seem like a lie.’ The steamman gloomily tapped his power limiter. ‘My might they had already tasted, however, and the fastblood devils were quick enough to steal that.’
‘And my sleeve gun,’ complained Sadly. ‘The blighters had that away fast enough.’
‘Ah well,’ said Daunt. ‘At least they left you your cane to march with.’
‘Wouldn’t get too far without it, Mister Daunt, my bad foot and me. Not sure how much longer I can keep up with this, truth to tell. March, march, march, all day. No water in this heat. You’d think the gill-necks would appreciate the wisdom of staying hydrated, says I.’
‘Maybe they’ll let you open up a food stall when we get to where we’re going,’ sneered Tull.
‘Quieten your incessant ramblings, you diseased surface dweller vermin,’ hissed one of the guards. He removed his mask for a couple of seconds, rubbing the chafing scales of his green skin, and spat out a stream of water at the informant’s feet. ‘There is your water. Now keep moving, you shall stop for more of it later.’
The later in question became evident with the guard’s sibilant laughter when the trail through the rainforest gave way to a stinking stretch of everglades. The water around their feet started out barely lapping around their shoe leather, but rapidly rose deeper, soaking their knees before stopping at their hips. Still the prisoners marched on, a gloomy silence fallen upon the exhausted sailors, throats dry and croaking. But however thirsty Daunt grew, he was never once tempted by the thick, badly reeking water of the everglades. Insects skimming across the surface in enough variety to have kept a Jackelian entomologist engaged for years, the majority of the bugs only too happy to add a faltering column of soft-skinned Jackelians to their diet. Would that I had an entomologist’s netted hat, gloves, and sealed linen suit. Only Boxiron was immune from these biting, annoying swarms; clouds of them bothersome enough that Daunt began to swat at his skin with every tear of rolling sweat, mistaking perspiration for bloodsucking needles.
After an hour of slogging through the glades, the trees fell away and an island of raised land appeared surrounded by tall reeds, a rough path sawn through the ground and paved by something like bamboo. The exhausted prisoners were herded up a ramp and onto the path, reeds eventually falling away to reveal a camp built across cleared land. Simple barracks of white bamboo-like material, a fence just shy of the height of a man’s head. Not much to stop a prisoner from escaping. But then, the barricade wasn’t the barrier. That would be surviving for long enough to escape off the island and then navigate across hundreds of nautical miles of an ocean that was the sole dominion of the gill-necks. Not totally unguarded though. Guard towers rose out of the fence every hundred yards or so, simple wooden platforms with roofs of thatched palm trees, the silhouettes of lounging guards and their long rifles. A camp where the guards’ rifles point out, not in. What, I wonder, is out there to engage their attention in such a manner? On the far side of the camp stood a series of larger, more permanent-looking metal structures; a small forest of cranes rising beyond that. There was a distant hammering of steam engines carried by the weak febrile wind, the drumbeat of a slave galley for the emaciated figures of captives moving around the camp, pushing carts along rails or staggering under the weight of heavy hemp sacks. Not a prisoner of war camp then, but a work camp. And these aren’t mere make-work labours to busy minds and bodies so hard they can no longer think of escape, either. I detect the whiff of serious industry on the air. Interesting. A camp where the guards are as uncomfortable as the inmates, literally fish out of water. This has a purpose to it. I wonder what I would find inside those sacks the prisoners are lugging?
Turning left at the main gate of the camp, the columns of captives were marched towards a long shed-like structure, two bamboo doors swinging open. Inside was a wheezing machine that Daunt recognized from the Kingdom. A blood-code machine, the slowly rotating transaction-engine drums of its central control panel poorly oiled and squeaking in the humid atmosphere. The sailors in front of Daunt and his friends were led before the machine in turn, their arms pushed into a rubberised hollow, the grimace on their faces indicating the moment a needle was extended to sample their blood. For Boxiron, they didn’t even need the machine, a flurry of activity among the gill-neck engineers administering the tests. One of them fluttered a white card with the unmistakable black silhouette of the steamman’s unique form.
‘This is bloody wrong,’ said Dick Tull.
Daunt reached into his pocket and palmed an aniseed ball before popping it into his mouth, half-melted and sticky. ‘I agree, good sergeant. The Advocacy shouldn’t have access to such a machine, let alone our citizen records swirling about its memory.’
Our identity details should be kept jealously guarded by the civil service’s bureaucrats back in the capital’s engine rooms, not freely floating around an enemy power.
‘This is much more than that crooked sod Walsingham and his cronies selling us out,’ said Tull.
Daunt nodded. ‘I rather fear it is.’
Extra guards arrived, along with a high-ranking officer, judging by the ornate gilding of his helmet. They cut Boxiron from the line, their raised rifles somewhat superfluous given the power-limiter they had fitted on the steamman’s body. With Barnabas Sadly, Dick Tull and Daunt passed through the blood-code machine and their identities confirmed, the four of them were marched under guard out of the building and taken towards the more permanent set-up at the rear of the camp. Shoved rudely inside one of the mill-like structures, they were led through iron passages that could have passed as the interior of the Purity Queen, until they reached a chamber lined with empty windowless cells, unpadded bunks its only furniture. Rusting metal bars slid into the ceiling at the bidding of a gill-neck soldier standing at the end of the corridor. Daunt was shoved inside alongside the others. Then the bar sank deep into pits set into the floor as the guards departed.
‘Lords-a’larkey, they know who we are, don’t they?’ groaned Sadly.
‘It would seem we are now wanted in two states,’ said Boxiron.
‘Your corrupt friends on the State Protection Board are to be congratulated,’ said Jethro to Dick. ‘Fast work indeed, to uncover who we are and circulate our descriptions so widely and rapidly.’ He placed a hand on Boxiron’s shoulder. ‘I rather fear it was your involvement, old steamer, which allowed the board to identify us. Your unique physiology featured rather prominently in the police files once upon a time.’
‘Whereas Sergeant Tull and his little rodent stool pigeon’s were rather easier to come by,’ announced a voice.
Daunt looked around. A middle-aged woman and a non-descript looking man. Ah, the man from outside Tock House. Walsingham, alias Mister Twist.
‘No salute for me, Sergeant?’
‘Piss off, traitor,’ growled Tull. ‘How much are the gill-necks paying you to sell us out?’
‘Let us say a comfortable accommodation has been reached,’ smiled Walsingham. ‘A little something for everyone involved, including my friend here, who-’
‘-is Gemma Dark,’ said Daunt. ‘Otherwise known as the younger sister of Jared Black.’
She inclined her head in acknowledgement of the fact. ‘Yes, I was told you used to be a Circlist priest. A clever fellow, full of tricks.’
‘You share more than a passing resemblance. Chin, voice, physical mannerisms.’
She stroked the bars playfully. ‘A clever man like you, you must already know why I’m here.’
‘You were hunting us, obviously,’ said Daunt, matter-of-factly. ‘These two-’ he indicated the State Protection Board agent and his informant, ‘-to ensure their silence. Myself and Boxiron to discover our involvement and the extent of our knowledge of your little royalist conspiracy. The commodore, because you hate him more than anyone else in the world, and Damson Shades, well, the young lady most of all. Because she has King Jude’s sceptre.’