Beckett drew long on the cigar, felt the hot smoke lacerate his lungs. He could feel his heart jumping in his chest, and was unaccountably frightened that someone might notice his quickened pulse. He passed the cigar back to Fletcher and took his shift on the oars, as they beached the longboat. The men shipped their oars and leapt into the soft sand. They took twenty minutes to unload muskets, swords, cannons, and packs, and formed up at the foot of the hills. They had been told that the daylight hours were the best time to strike at the Dragon Princes, who must be asleep in their crypts when the sun rose. The island seemed deserted enough-there was widespread speculation, nervous chatter that flitted among the soldiers, that perhaps the main body of their forces was elsewhere. Perhaps the danger of the princes had been exaggerated through the years. Perhaps this wouldn’t be so hard after all.
It was a lie, and they all knew it. You couldn’t see the shores of Kaarcag, barren of life, of weapons, of fortification, and not know that Czarneck, the chimericist, was waiting for them.
They marched up the hill double-time, and when no defenders had appeared, the men grew confident. They told jokes. Beckett, to his dismay, was near the end of the line-what veterans called the column’s ass. He could see a black river of marines on the march, eager to strike down Trowth’s long-hated enemy.
“…I told him that’s not my cutlery, son, that’s my
There was an ominous whistling then, and more men screamed. Dull thuds. And then bodies rose up from the dust.
Thousands of them, everywhere, clawing up from the ground, men with concave skulls (
(“What is that?” Fletcher asked again, before a bullet hit him in the side of the face. He stared blankly, still uncomprehending, as blood trickled from his nose.)
The tide turned and the men ran, Beckett trying to keep his feet in the vanished discipline and fleeing soldiers. They ran for the boats, as more dummies sprang up, sinking crooked yellow teeth into necks and arms.
(A dummy clutched at Beckett’s arm, and he saw the thing’s face, the livid purple dent about its left eye, the wall-eyed gaze, sweaty drooling thing, Beckett smashed at its face with the butt of its gun until it let go.)
More fog came then, green and swirling like a living thing.
Cook stared at him, fallen to the ground. Beckett tugged at his arm. “On your feet,” he shouted, voice muffled by his scarf, “come on, soldier, up!” The green fog crawled from Cook’s nostrils, drawing blood out with it, suspending it in tiny drops in the air. More cannons sounded, and more detonations. The green fog rose in pillars, and reached out with crooked tendrils for tender lungs.
Blood landed on the soil, and the elephant roses bloomed in waves, slow explosions of tiny red flowers; the fat dry stumps sucking up the last of the living men. A carpet of red roses spread out from the trail, washed over the island’s surface, followed the fleeing marines, as the dummies harassed them.
Beckett made it back to the boats, tried to drag Sergeant Garret back in with him. He held on to the Sergeant’s arms, braced his body against the gunwhale, tried to pull him on board. Garret opened his mouth, but no sound came out, only a coughing sound (
Beckett screamed but held on, held on as they crept up his forearms like fire and Garrett began thrashing madly, held on as the crept up past his elbows and he convulsed…tried to hold on but couldn’t, he let Garrett go and the sergeant’s weight wrenched the thorns free from Beckett’s arms. Garrett fell back into the water, arms still reaching out, face still imploring for succor, vines and waves swallowing him up.
The sun beat down on them, all unmoved by the sight. As the longboat skimmed into the water, Beckett saw Kaarcag, once dead brown and gray, now red and beautiful with blood and roses in the morning light.
Thirty-Two
Back when there were still newspapers, agitators of various stripes and dispositions would often argue that one or more laws, or failures of law, or events or institutions or what have you were absolutely essential to the stability of the city. Essays on the subject-suggesting that a failure to support the new tariff legislation on linen would lead to the collapse of the Empire within the year, or that permitting the Working Woman to return to gainful employment would bring about the city’s imminent doom, or that if the Public Theater’s production of
Perhaps this is because no contributor to the broadsheet ecosphere had ever considered the fact that the Empire’s integrity might rest on the back of one crusty old detective in the Coroners Division of the Royal Guard. Had broadsheets and streetcorner pamphlets still been legal, they would be filled with dire warnings about impending catastrophe, now that Elijah Beckett had disappeared. In truth, they’d probably be closer to the truth with these predictions than ever, as chaos swept rapidly through the city in the old detective’s absence. Without Beckett’s brutal, guiding will, the army that he’d assembled quickly dissolved into a mass of vigilantes. They attempted to continue with Beckett’s raids, though guided now by fervor instead of intelligence. They raided docks and offices, started riots with gangs and stevedores.
Not a day went by without at least one bloody, vicious fight breaking out in the streets-some unacceptably close to New Bank or the Royal district. Of course, because there was no longer any news, no one had any idea where the fights were occurring, or when, or why. Numbers and violence were magnified by gossip, which served to be the only entertainment that anyone had left. It was fairly uncommon for people to leave their homes very often in the avalanche of rainfall that constituted late spring, but even these rare trips had been curtailed. People stayed in their homes, feeling besieged, making plans for escape or emigration, or otherwise simply hunkering down and crossing their fingers.
James Ennering, formerly communications officer for the 16thQuartermasters, formerly reconnaissance partner for Elijah Beckett, now found himself the
With Becket gone, most of the gendarmes had stopped bothering to write reports at all; most of what came in now were notices from the more well-to-do districts, which had long been governed like police-states, anyway. Though even these notices were largely useless.
“Item: two men, miscreants. Arrested, administered corporal punishment, discharged,” Thut Akh Dun said.