bedraggled creatures with bedraggled gods, haunted by ghosts of language and ceremony.
Time was a ring, the cosmos a cycle. Space itself was curved, the Craftsmen claimed.
Spinning in emptiness, he gave his blood to the world, and the world cracked open to receive him.
Caleb struck the gravel hard and skidded. Rocks tore his shirt and the skin of his back. The impact jarred, the gravel stung, but the pressure and pain were gloriously real. He laughed in relief. The shark’s-tooth pendant fell beside him. He slid it into his pocket, patted the pocket, and stood, turning back toward the Canter’s Shell.
Teo fell into him out of the blue.
She was limp, and heavy, and made no sound. He staggered beneath her weight.
He set her back on her heels. She trembled, eyes closed, and did not move. Her chest rose and fell. Quechal symbols glowed from the god-bearer draped across her shoulders. Her lips moved, and she whispered in High Quechal: praise the mother who bears the twins, praise the father risen in the corn, praise the twins who die and rise again, on and on.
“Teo,” he said. She did not respond. He touched her cheek.
Her eyes flew open, and they burned. No trace remained of her pupils and iris. To stare into her was to stare into the sun. She chanted, louder. “Praise the mother and the father. Praise the mother who bears the twins. Praise the father risen in corn.”
He tore the god-bearer from her neck, but she did not wake. The leather coiled on the ground, and twitched as if alive.
Temoc stepped out of the Canter’s Shell, and approached Caleb. Walking over gravel, he made no sound. He regarded Teo as if appraising her for purchase. “She was not ready to host a god. Without scars, without training, the experience can overwhelm.”
“Wasn’t ready? You knew this wasn’t safe for her. You knew, and let her come anyway.”
“She insisted on accompanying us, though she knew the dangers. She claimed she could open the pyramid. She may still serve that purpose.”
Caleb looked back at Teo, and closed his eyes. A twitching ruby spider spirit hunched in her heart, preening with each repeated syllable of her prayer. A small god, feeding.
Caleb opened his scars. The spider in Teo’s body twitched as if it could smell him.
He bent to her ear and whispered in High Quechal: “I cast you out.”
The spider twitched. Teo spoke, and he heard another voice, like brushing cobwebs, paired with hers: “By whose authority?”
“My own.” His words were ragged with rage. “Leave her, or I will break your legs. I will blunt your fangs and blind all your eyes and you will die.”
The spider wavered, as if about to fight, then faded into darkness.
Teo stopped her prayers. Her eyes closed.
Caleb waited.
When she opened her eyes again, they were dark, and human.
“Hi,” she said.
He hugged her, and she embraced him weakly in return. “I appreciate the sentiment,” she said, “but I don’t swing that way.”
“You’re back.”
“Did I leave?” She stepped forward, swayed, and almost fell. He grabbed her by the arm, and she recovered her balance.
She shot her cuffs and straightened the shoulders of her jacket. Her hat had rolled to the ground, and she knelt to retrieve it. “I’ve never felt anything like that. The King in Red has been inside my soul once or twice, but … I lived a thousand years. I could hear time.”
“If you lived a century ago, you would have been prepared for the experience,” Temoc said. “Gods are not so common today as once they were.”
“Fine by me,” she replied.
Mal stood on air like a bride on an empty dance floor, waiting for the groom to emerge and the band to play.
Most days, downtown airspace was a muddy mess of airbuses and optera, Warden mounts and skyspires and flying machines. Every few hours a dragon passed overhead, beating three-hundred-meter wings on its journey to the Shining Empire. Dresediel Lex had an anthill for a sky.
Today, though, the sun shone at the apex of a bare blue vault, cut with smoke. Optera retreated to their nests. Skyspires fled. No private citizen would fly today, and the Wardens were busy.
She closed her eyes and saw Dresediel Lex as a sprawling web of power and Craft, the human stain wiped away to reveal the bent lightning at the city’s root. But this too was a mask, a deception—a way she had been taught to see.
She touched glyphs at her wrist and temples, and looked down, through basements, pipes, sewers, tunnels, caves, to the beating, blinding red heart of the planet, where two serpents quaked with unpleasant dreams.
Her pocket buzzed: a warning from the Craftsmen back at Heartstone. The Serpents’ hunger outstrips our power to contain them.
She opened her hands and waited for the eclipse.
Caleb, Teo, and Temoc approached the pyramid. No one challenged them. Teo glanced about, wary of security demons, but they were not attacked.
They left the parking lot and walked down a paved path flanked by topiary. Unconscious revenants sprawled in the loam between sculpted trees, sheers and clippers fallen in the shadow of shrubbery globes and pentagrams. When Mal attacked, the undead workers would have been near the night shift’s end.
He touched Teo’s hand. “Hey.” His voice sounded small.
“Hey,” she answered. Their footsteps were the only sound in the garden, beneath the Canter’s Shell.
“Are you all right?”
“All right?” She laughed. “No. What do you think?”
“I’m sorry. I was an idiot back there, in the crowd.”
“Usually you only hurt yourself. I don’t like being part of your collateral damage.”
“Hells.”
“Relax. I was kidding.”
“I deserve it,” he said. “This is my fault. All of it. If I hadn’t got mad at Temoc, I wouldn’t have let go of his arm. We wouldn’t even be here if I’d put the pieces together about Mal. If I’d pressed her about that pendant, about Allesandre. I think she was trying to tell me, but I didn’t listen. I spend my life evaluating angles, but as soon as my feelings get involved, it all goes to hell.”
“Don’t think like that. Blaming yourself for everything.”
“Why not?”
“Because Mal’s crazy. And your father, he’s helping us, but he’s crazy, too. We all are. You can’t hold yourself responsible for people’s actions. Even if Mal made you a bit stupid, you aren’t the one who came up with her plan. You aren’t the one who set her on this road. She’s her own woman, and she did this for her own reasons. It wasn’t your fault.”
He put a hand on her shoulder. “Sam will be okay.”
She didn’t answer.
They reached the wide, flat front steps of the pyramid. Caleb’s gaze swung to Temoc, and kept swinging. “Where’s my dad?”
“I thought he was behind us.”
The grass rustled in a light breeze, but there was no breeze.
Bushes to their right crashed and parted. Temoc stumbled out, wearing a gardening zombie’s jumpsuit. The revenant had been shorter, and larger around the waist, than Caleb’s father. Cuffs of trousers and shirt rode up on his calves and his thick wrists.