Название | The Seven |
---|---|
Автор произведения | Peter Newman |
Жанр | Вестерны |
Серия | |
Издательство | Вестерны |
Год выпуска | 0 |
isbn | 9780008239077 |
‘So you say. I remain unconvinced but, I am intrigued.’
Vesper shifts the sword to her left hand and holds out her right. ‘A truce then? You’ll come with me and take part?’
‘I will travel with you, I will observe. Perhaps I will engage. I promise no more than that.’
‘That’s all I’m asking.’
The First takes her hand, mimicking the human gesture perfectly. ‘I accept.’
A few days pass as the Wavemaker and The Commander’s Rest speed along the sea together. From under the water, a new vessel moves to join them, then another. Both part of the First’s fleet.
Vesper and the sword exchange a concerned look.
It does not stop there. A fourth ship comes, a fifth, and so on, until a war fleet of nine follows them, just under the surface. When a half dozen sky-ships drop from the clouds to fall into position above, Vesper demands another audience with the First.
It comes in multiple bodies. Some arriving from the sky-ships, others swimming up from the depths. Vesper watches them through the sword’s eye, and begins to appreciate how big the First truly is. A single being, divided into bitesized human chunks. Though the First has a diverse collection of shells, they dress the same, move the same, making the differences in height and weight hard to remember. Vesper guesses that perhaps a quarter of its strength is here, the rest of the infernal spread out across the world.
They line up along the rail, like a line of ravens watching, waiting for an animal to die.
Vesper gestures to the ships all around them. ‘What is this?’
One of figures breaks from the others, jumps down. It removes its helmet, revealing Duet’s face. ‘You wished for me to come south with you.’
She frowns. ‘For talks. We don’t need an invasion fleet.’
‘I am not here to invade. We have made a truce.’
‘I just don’t understand why we need all of these ships.’
‘You seem displeased. I do not understand. Surely your gathering is important enough to warrant my full attention.’
‘Wait. You’re calling all of, um … you, here?’
‘Yes.’
The sword looks at Vesper, its hum felt more than heard, whisper-like. She nods. ‘There’s something you’re not telling me.’
‘You once promised to stand between me and the Malice, do you remember?’
‘Yes.’
‘And while we are at peace, do you promise to stand between me and rest of The Seven?’
‘Yes.’
The First leans closer, bracing itself against the invisible force of the Malice’s anger. ‘You truly don’t know, do you?’
‘What are you taking about?’
‘The Seven. They have awoken and the fires of their rage burn in the north.’
‘But there’s no hostile force in the north.’
‘They see it differently.’ Vesper’s face falls and the First continues to speak. ‘The Seven are gathering Their strength. They call out to Their agents, who in turn call out to others. Factions within the colonies that came over to me have already begun to rebel.
‘They are coming south. I believe They are coming for me.’
Vesper’s hand goes to her mouth. She thinks of her family, despairs. Have they become another sacrifice? And what will The Seven do to her? What kind of example will they make? Such thoughts are dispelled with a shake of the head. ‘You knew this all along. That’s why you came to speak with me. You’re afraid!’
‘Yes. I am afraid. We are united in fear.’
She looks up, defiance colouring cheeks. ‘No, we are united in more than fear.’
But when the advance scouts of The Seven’s armada appear on the horizon, she goes straight to Samael, and he pushes The Commander’s Rest harder until it seems to fly across the wavetops.
The First returns to its fleet and they too accelerate, doing their best to keep pace with the sleeker vessel.
The scout ships fade from view but they are not forgotten.
Delta forces herself to look. In one hand she has a skull, in the other, part of a skeleton. The skull is ordinary, that of a human male, the skeleton belonging to a different man, one that has experienced the touch of the taint, turning the bones asymmetrical.
Even without attending to the essence echoes around them, she can tell their end was abrupt, anguished, and at the hands of her brother, Alpha.
A compulsion makes her walk around the ruins of Greyspot Three. Where normal eyes see only the present, pyres, ashes and charred buildings, Delta’s see shimmering where the power of her kin was used. Her ears attend to the fading hum of energy, her body sensitive to the softvibrations in the air. Together, these sensations allow her to follow in her brother’s footsteps. She stops at each place he sang, identifying the corpses he has made, choking on her brother’s righteous anger that still lingers, remorseless.
There are so many dead. So many of her people, dead, that it overwhelms her. Finally, on the edge of Greyspot Three, she stops, and thinks.
Her role is to love her siblings, to make a better world with them, and yet she cannot feel love for what has happened. Cannot help but judge.
She has asked how it came to this, and they have pointed to her brother. But this is unsatisfactory. She knows that Alpha did this, knew it the moment they arrived. What she does not understand is why he did it, nor why it was done in such a manner.
The need for answers bubbles in her, converting despair to action.
Jem pulls on the Vagrant’s sleeve, lowers his voice. ‘How long do you think She’s going to be gone for?’
The Vagrant looks in the direction Delta went, shrugs.
‘Then let’s go before She comes back.’
The Vagrant nods and strides off towards the docks.
Reela strides after him, little legs working double time to keep up. With a last glance at Delta, Jem follows her.
The air here is smoke-heavy, smelling of burnt rubber and cooked meat. The Vagrant covers his mouth and, for different reasons, the two behind do the same.
The ragtag array of ships usually found in port are gone, their wrecks thickening the water. Most are sunk, some still sinking, the odd stray mast protruding from the surface in final salute.
The Vagrant looks out to sea. Alpha’s sky palace has already lumbered from view, leaving an empty, peaceful vista.
After a moment’s contemplation, he frowns and walks along the corrugated jetty, amber eyes searching.
‘What are you doing?’ asks Jem. ‘We need to get out of here. If we follow the coastline far enough we’ll hit another port. Maybe we could get passage on a ship there. Or we could go inland, find somewhere remote, where nobody else goes. Somewhere with lots of goats!’
The Vagrant pauses to direct a hard stare over his shoulder.
‘What? You love goats!’
The Vagrant turns back to his task, dismissive.
‘Look, it doesn’t matter what we farm or even if we farm. We have to get out of here, now. The Empire will be coming for Delta and we don’t want to be here when they arrive.’
Jem checks again to see if he can see Delta, only to find she is a hundred metres away,