enough and when my land itself had had enough of their presence, it tried to restore the balance of the ecos by sending ages of ice and heat. But the masters controlled even the land's attempts to fight back, pumping chemicals and machines into the air to stop the ecos from cleaning their corruption from her skin. Fixing our land in a state of living death. Then the masters settled in for the long haul, feeding on the static corpse of my nation until there were no more resources left to convert, no mines left full, no soil fit for growing food, until even the animalcules flowing under the earth and the magnetic energies that pump through the land's veins had been exhausted.'

'I was hoping I might find sanctuary in your home,' sighed Purity. 'Now I'm glad we're not going back there.'

'I never said I wasn't going to return home,' said Kyorin. 'But the time is not yet right. I need the help of a friend I have made here to return to my land. And I still hope to find allies among your people. Those with the wit and the will to survive the journey with me to meet the great sage and join our last effort against the masters. If I cannot bring the mountain to the Kingdom of Jackals, it seems I must bring the Jackelians to the mountain.'

Purity felt disorientated. There was an empty barrel by one of the market stalls and she used it as a seat. Was it Kyorin's tale, or was it the light and the space of the capital's streets? Even in a crowded market, the sense of freedom from the familiar corridors of the Royal Breeding House was dizzying, overwhelming at times. She knew Kyorin's story was the truth, the part of her that throbbed with the land, the whispering voice of her madness, told her so.

'You could stay here with me.'

Kyorin squeezed her hand in reassurance. 'It is not my wish to return home. You don't know how beautiful your land is, with fresh water running through the centre of your capital, sparkling and alive with the creatures of the river. Clouds that swell with falling rain you can walk in without it burning off your skin. Parks of trees and lawns you can actually stroll across, blades of grass you can feel between your fingers – all this we know only in memory. But if your kingdom is to be spared the fate of my home, I fear the journey must be made.'

There was something about his tone of voice. A warning note rose from the ancient voice whispering through her soul. 'You've never met this great sage of yours, have you? You're not even sure he's not just a rumour, an old slave legend invented to keep a spark of hope alive.'

'You are learning to listen to your powers,' said Kyorin. 'That's good. One day soon your intuition may be all you have to keep you alive. You are correct. I am city-born; my cell in the freedom movement was attached to the maintenance of the masters' great devices of geomancy. Only a few nomads in the salt wastes can truly count themselves free of the yoke my people wear, and it is they who carry the word of the great sage.' He kicked the ground with a boot. 'I fear I make a poor sage. The few powers I have are amplified massively here, thanks to the vitality of your land. Back home I could not cast even a basic shield of protection. If I could have performed such feats, my family would have been culled and I would never have been apprenticed as an engineer.'

Purity was about to ask Kyorin more about his life, but he sniffed the air and cursed in his singsong tongue. 'The slats hunting us are drawing closer. We must pay a boatman to row us down the river again and reach a different district of your city.'

'What about that perfume stick of yours?'

'It is running low and the masters will have sent their most proficient pack of hunting slats after me. I fear my pursuers may now be tracking me by the scent of the masking stick itself. But even they have not yet mastered the art of following a scent across water.'

Their lives weren't so different, Purity mused as they sprinted off towards the embankment of the River Gambleflowers. Both born as prisoners to the rulers of their land. Both slipped their chains. And both of them due to be swiftly executed if they fell back into either of their masters' clasp. Two kingdoms to save, but they could barely even preserve their own lives.

Molly wiped the dust off the bottle of red wine – a Quatershiftian vintage brought over from before the revolution and the execution of the Sun King – a rare treat and just the thing to cheer up Commodore Black. While the rest of Middlesteel was celebrating Smoking Prester Charles Night by building bonfires and letting off fireworks, the commodore was moping around Tock House, resolutely refusing to celebrate the foiling of the notorious rebel's ancient attempt to blow up parliament with his underground cache of compressed-oil explosives.

'Ah, Molly,' the commodore had wheezed. 'You cannot expect me to celebrate my own ancestor's betrayal into the hands of those grasping bureaucrats and shopkeepers that rule us. Leave me alone this evening and you raise a glass to those rascals in the House of Guardians with your writer friends down on Dock Street. Don't expect me to go out carousing with you tonight.'

'Perhaps you could look upon it as a celebration of royalist bravery?' Molly had slyly suggested.

'The bravery of a mortal failed fool. Have you seen what our neighbours are building on the green outside our own gates to rub my face in it?'

She had. The ritual of Smoking Prester Charles. A bonfire platform topped by a straw figure covered in a silk gauze screen – a cheap effigy of the glass dome into which parliament's soldiers had pushed the captured rebel five hundred years ago before burning chemically treated wood to fill the man-sized bottle with poison gases. As humane a method of public execution as any, she supposed. Centuries on, Smoking Prester Charles Night had become an excuse for a little fun in the capital, rather than the pretext parliament had needed to disinherit the losing side of the civil war of their remaining lands. Had the political police known about Prester Charles' plot, and perhaps even encouraged it? Probably, but that wasn't going to get in Molly's way of a night's much needed diversion from the worries the Hexmachina's final fraught warning had filled her with.

She examined the faded label on her bottle. Perhaps the wine would lift the commodore's spirits a little; he disliked the massive cellar levels and relied on Molly to ferret out the surplus bottles racked outside of their pantry. She walked up the stairs in search of the old u-boat man. There were eight storeys in Tock House, not counting the basement levels. Molly had once investigated getting a lifting room added onto the outside of the tower-like structure, but the architect she had wheedled into inspecting the building had sadly shaken his head, tapping the walls. Seven feet thick, built after the Jackelian civil war in an age of paranoia. A layer of innocent red brick concealed hard-cast concrete layered with rubber-cell shock absorption sheets. The mansion was a disguised Martello tower, a veritable fortress masquerading as a folly. Masons weren't going to be knocking through to build additions to this place. Not without the assistance of a volley from the Jackelian Artillery Company.

Finding the commodore's rooms empty, Molly continued up the stairs to the highest level of Tock House and sure enough, the old u-boat skipper's complaints could be heard coming from the chamber that housed the tower's clock mechanism and Coppertracks' laboratory. But that was odd… None of the oil lamps in the corridor was lit…

She found Commodore Black in a room at the back, tugging on the handle of a winch with the help of three of Coppertracks' diminutive mu-bodies. As the commodore and the drones heaved, the two halves of the dome above were creaking apart, revealing a cloudless, starry night. Molly buttoned up her tweed jacket tightly. No wonder it was so cold and dark up here, their steamman housemate was planning another series of observations on his telescope. Along with the oil lamps, the pipes that carried Tock House's warming waters from the boiler downstairs were turned off across the top floor.

'Ah, this is no night for your peerings and proddings about the firmament, Aliquot,' said the commodore.

Alongside the submariner, Coppertracks' drones raised cyclopean eyes to the heavens, extending them telescope-like to their maximum length, as if they might help the intelligence that inhabited their bodies in his endeavours of astronomy. 'I believe our position at the top of Tavistead Hill will isolate us well enough from the firework displays this night,' said Coppertracks.

'The commodore might have a point, you know,' said Molly. 'Fireworks or no, they're getting ready for a bonfire on the green opposite. When the smoke from that starts to fill the sky, you're not going to be able to see much tonight.'

'Then let us make haste,' said Coppertracks. 'If I were to abandon my work every time you softbodies held a celebration in the capital, I would spend more of the year playing chess against Jared here than I would in achieving anything of scientific merit.'

Commodore Black finished winching open the dome and eyed the bottle of red wine clutched in Molly's hand. 'Now there's a friend on a cold night like this. Not many of those left downstairs, nor any more likely to come our way. The ingenuity of those that owned the vineyards crushed like their own grapes in the monstrous killing

Вы читаете The rise of the Iron Moon
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