Lynn stared at him, her jaw clenched. She wanted to lash out at the man but she knew this was not the place to do it.
“Not only does this rob the Territory of one of its greatest Diggers, but unfortunately it also leaves you without a guardian.”
“What does that mean?” Lynn asked.
“I have been in discussions with the Sisters, Lynn,” the Administrator said. “You are to move to the cathedral for training as a member of the Sisters of Glorious God the Redeemer.”
“No!” Lynn said. “You can’t do that!”
“He is the Administrator,” came the silky voice of Knox Soilwork, slithering like a snake from his mouth, “he can do it, and it has just been done.”
Lynn glared at him. “You can shut up,” she snapped.
Knox smiled. “It seems a life among the Sisters will do you good. You need to learn some respect for authority.”
Lynn couldn’t help it; the tears came. Ms Apple put her arm around her shoulder.
“I’m not going to join the Sisters,” Lynn said. “I won’t. They’re horrible.”
“You’re lucky there’s no representative of the Church here, girl,” Knox Soilwork said. “They could charge you for words like that.”
“Enough,” the Administrator said quietly. “She is just a girl.”
“I am not just a girl!” Lynn snarled. “I should be going to join the Diggers!”
“Lynn,” the Administrator said, apparently trying to soften his gruff voice, “only a man can be a Digger. The cathedral is the only place left for you now.”
“You stupid bastard!” Lynn said. “I know what you did! You killed my father. You had him killed because he never agreed with you. He always said you were moronic in your knowledge of military tactics, that you would get good men killed. Well, now you’ve murdered him because he got in your way, and you’re just getting rid of me too. You won’t get away with this. I’ll prove it. I hope the Ancestors take you to your grave!”
Lynn heard Ms Apple gasp. The Administrator seemed unmoved, but the smile Knox Soilwork had been wearing vanished, his anger now apparent. “How dare you speak to the Administrator that way? You cannot make unfounded accusations like that!” he yelled. “Guards, take her into custody.”
As the two Diggers standing inside the door to the Council Room moved forward, the Administrator rose.
“Stop,” he said, “that won’t be necessary. Lynnette, I assure you I had nothing to do with your father’s assassination and I apologize that your fate is not what you would wish. Perhaps I could have been more tactful in my delivery of this dreadful news. I’m sorry, Lynnette, but you will be leaving for the cathedral momentarily.”
“Your Honor,” started Knox Soilwork, “I insist that—”
The Administrator’s raised hand stopped him. “She is the daughter of a friend, Knox, a friend who has been murdered. I insist that we forget the matter. Could you inform the Sisters that Lynnette is ready to go?”
“My father was never your friend!” Lynn screamed. “You don’t murder your friends!”
“Lynnette,” the Administrator said, “I suggest you take the olive branch I have extended. My patience for this nonsense will last only so long.”
Lynn was going to say more. She was going to keep going but Ms Apple put a calming hand around her shoulders and she could do nothing but fall against her elderly teacher in tears.
Minutes later there was a knock on the heavy doors of the Council Room. Lynn turned, knowing who it would be. Even the Administrator went quiet as the black boots of two Holy Guard clergymen clicked on the floor, one of whom Lynn recognized as Clergy-Lieutenant Helios, the soldier who had confronted her just days before.
“The daughter of the colonel,” Clergy-Lieutenant Helios said. “We meet again. I told you we’d be watching.”
Lynnette said nothing as she left the room on shaking legs, her mind reeling as Ms Apple held her hand. Behind her, flanking her as if she were a prisoner, the two clergymen escorted her away. The Sisters ... this couldn’t be happening. Lynn thought of the copper-haired girl from the street. She didn’t want to be part of all that. She felt as though she was being discarded, pulled out of her normal life as if it had never existed.
It was him. She knew it. It was the Administrator who had sent an assassin to kill her father. The body of the man who had fallen from the window had been removed before she could see it and no one could tell her where it had been taken, or even who had taken it. As the clergymen led her away Lynn couldn’t help but cry. She couldn’t let the Administrator get away with this, but it felt awfully like he already had.
CHAPTER 15
It was hot outside, as always, but the inside of the Holy Cathedral was colder than the Sisters. The building had a complex system of heat sinks, mechanical fans and cold-water piping designed to keep it cool, and yet still the coolness Lynn felt was unnatural. The walls were made of thick stone and there were few windows, most of them stained-glass motifs of God, the Prophet Steven and other religious icons that let in little natural light. Entering the building was like traveling to another place altogether, a place of perpetual cold rather than a place within the heat of the Central Territory. Even the gas lamps that lit the walls with their coverings of religious art seemed to exude an aura of chill rather than warmth.
Lynn was with a group of several other young girls, all of whom had reached their coming of age and had volunteered to join the Sisters. The girls stood in a small chapel room lined up in two rows in front of hard wooden pews. An older Sister, tall, lean and all sharp angles and straight lines, stood before them at an altar. This was Priestess Helena. Behind her was a looming cross, the wooden beams of which had been sculpted to look like the bodies of hundreds of intertwining ghouls. It was the ugliest thing Lynn had ever seen, but it was hard to know where to look because Priestess Helena was no beauty queen either.
“Stand up straight, Lynnette,” Priestess Helena said, “a Sister of God must always hold herself tall.”
Lynn said nothing, but stood up and tried to push the slump out of her shoulders.
“Are you not happy to be here, Lynnette? Are you not looking forward to your service to God?”
Lynn looked at Priestess Helena but did not reply.
“You will answer when spoken to, Lynnette.”
Again Lynn said nothing.
“Let this be your first lesson, girls,” Priestess Helena said. “Not all who come to us come willingly, and it is often our duty to set them on the right path. Lynnette, you will be put before the eyes of the Ancestors.”
Priestess Helena rang a small brass bell that rested on the altar. Another Sister, a much younger one, entered the chapel.
“Yes, Priestess?”
“Sister Matilda,” Priestess Helena said, “you will take Lynnette here to the Ancestors’ Eyes. She is to spend her first day with us there.”
“Yes, Priestess,” Sister Matilda said.
Sister Matilda led Lynn through the corridors of the cathedral to a wooden doorway with an intricate golden plaque screwed into the door. The plaque read: “Room of the Ancestors’ Eyes.”
Sister Matilda looked at Lynn. “I’m sorry you must face this on your first day, Lynnette,” she said, and Lynn sensed real empathy in her eyes. “I too was sent against my will to be with the Sisters, but believe me, this is for the best. It is God’s will and the will of the Ancestors that you have been brought to us. You will see that in time, as I did. You will see that your work is a service of great joy. Service to the will of God the Redeemer will set you free. Praise be to the Pure.”
Lynn looked at the girl but did not repeat the words as she knew she should have done. Sister Matilda smiled, though it was a smile filled with pity.
“I too was stubborn, Lynnette, but you will learn the joy of the service.”
Sister Matilda opened the door to the Room of the Ancestors’ Eyes and nodded for Lynn to enter. Lynn walked forward hesitantly. The room was dark and she
could make out little of what surrounded her in the light that shone through the doorway. It looked like a room bordered on every wall by many levels of shelves. Sister Matilda closed the door behind her and the room was plunged into thick darkness.
Moments later the room erupted with light again as sealed gas lamps flared to life, and for the first time Lynn saw what the floor-to-ceiling shelves held. Skulls. They surrounded her, skulls of bone and dust, skulls of death and decay, skulls large and small, hundreds and hundreds of human skulls and all of them were looking at her. In their sockets were eyeballs. They must have been made of glass, Lynn thought; they were too perfect to be anything else. Surely they were not real …
Lynn spun on her heels, eyes of all colors looking down on her, all of them seeming to pierce right into her. She moved to the door and began banging on it.
“Let me out!” she cried, but no answer came. “Let me out!”
A soft sound began to whistle through the air around her. It was faint, a whisper of air through a gap somewhere, or was it the whispering voices of the dead? It was loud enough that she couldn’t ignore it but at the same time it was too quiet to properly define. It was something the Sisters were doing, she told herself, it wasn’t real. It wasn’t real. She looked back at the eyes. She couldn’t help it. The whispering was everywhere. She was terrified, the most terrified she had ever been. All around her the eyes looked at her, the Eyes of the Ancestors. Lynn sunk to the floor and closed her eyes and that is where she spent the rest of the day, in the company of the whispering dead.
*
That night Lynn could not sleep. She had been sent straight to what would be her tiny bedroom after the ordeal of the room with the eyes. A bowl of some sort of vegetable soup had been placed on the small three-legged table that barely fit between the side of her bed and the wall. Her hands still shook as she attempted to spoon the cold soup into her mouth. She had known the Sisters were strict, tyrannical even, but to torture their own, to bring them to the edge of sanity by surrounding them with the unblinking eyes of the dead, that was something else. She couldn’t be part of this. She wouldn’t.
A thousand thoughts rolled through her head, collecting into a great seething ball of confusion that bounced around the inside of her mind. Her father was dead, murdered by an assassin sent by the Administrator. And here she was, shipped off into the arms of the Sisters. So much had happened in such a short space of time that she felt as much a prisoner in her own life as those who had been in that cage. Lynn squeezed her eyes closed as she tried to force her thoughts into a coherent order. What could she do? But it was no good, she could see no way out. It was hopeless.
When she opened her eyes she saw the rug on the floor of the bedroom. It was the same rug that was in her father’s room. She could see the blood filling the gaps in the diamond shapes, soaking into the fibers, and in the middle of the rug was her father. He was pale, his fingers wrapped around the spoon that jutted from his neck. He looked at her. Lynn swallowed hard and rubbed the tears from her eyes, hoping to wipe away the image as well, but it remained. Colonel Hermannsburg pushed himself into a sitting position. He looked at his daughter and smiled. Reaching behind him he grabbed a tub of chocolate fruit-o-licious ice-cream. With a swift motion he pulled the spoon from his neck, turned it in his fingers and, like he had done with his daughter countless times before, began to eat ice-cream.
“Don’t let anyone stop you,” he said in the same raspy tone he’d had when he had been dying.
“Don’t let them stop me doing what?”
He took another mouthful of ice-cream, and some of it began leaking from the hole in the side of his neck.
Lynn told herself this was just a product of her imagination, but still she wondered if that room had sent her mad. “What do you mean, Father?”
“Don’t let anyone stop you,” her father said again. “Don’t let anyone stop you.”
“What am I supposed to do?” Lynn cried. “I don’t know what you mean.”
Her father didn’t answer her, because he was not there. There was no rug on the floor of her room, no dying man; she was just talking to the air. Lynnette Hermannsburg felt an immense crushing sadness. The weight of the world was pushing her down, trying to fold her in half beneath it. She sniffed and wiped the snot from her nose.
She sat for some time, staring into the mirror at the end of the room. There was a vanity in her room; she supposed it was so she could preen herself into a state suitable for a Sister before she left of a morning. Lynn stood and flicked the switch on the wall, holding it until the single gas lamp flared to life and filled the room with its constantly moving light. Lynn stood and stared into the mirror. She had to think. There had to be something she could do. She couldn’t become a Sister and she had to find a way to prove what the Administrator had done to her father.
Lynn stared at her reflection. She picked up the hairbrush from the vanity in front of her and began to brush her long blonde curls. She watched them jump with each stroke, and then slowly she stopped. There was a pair of scissors on the vanity. She put the brush down and stared, for a long time, at her face in the mirror. She could do it. She had to do it.
Lynn picked up the scissors. She took a small handful of her blonde hair and lifted it gently. She slipped the blades of the scissors around the hair. This was her mother’s hair, her grandmother’s hair, and cutting it felt like cutting her ties to them, but she had to, at least for now. Tears began to run from her eyes. Her lips quivered. She snipped the scissors closed.
CHAPTER 16
The sky was darkening but Squid had been watching the Rock grow larger since that afternoon when one of the other boys had spotted it out the window. The Rock—some still called it Uluru, a very old Nomad name—rose sudden and immense from ground that was flat and desolate in every direction. At first the Rock was a burned red color, but as the hot sun began to drop below the horizon it shifted to a deep purple and then to blue. Everyone had heard stories about the immensity of the Rock but as the wagon train drew nearer it loomed over them in a way that no words could describe. Even the three huge dirigibles that floated in the air above it were dwarfed. In the fading evening light the Rock twinkled brighter than the stars appearing above it. It was only as they pulled up right beside it that Squid realized the twinkles were windows, lights burning in holes cut in the sandstone of the great monolithic fortress.
It had been almost a week since Squid had left Dust on the wagon train bringing recruits to the Academy. During the journey he’d remained on the fringes as much as he could, sitting and watching, avoiding contact, listening to the other boys and their excited conversations about what awaited them. He had learned much from his eavesdropping, though it was clear that none of them really knew what to expect.
The wagon train was stopped briefly at an outer fence and then continued through a gate past a number of smaller buildings before reaching the Rock. The boys in the wagon were pushing against each other as they strained to see out the windows, but it was only as they drove beneath an enormous archway and into the Rock itself that the scale of the fortress could be understood.
The Rock was essentially hollow, carved into enormous open caverns with whole buildings lining their sides and corridors running away in every direction. Squid thought it was very much like a bull-ant nest he had spent an afternoon examining on the farm, except in here, at least in the entrance yard, the scale was so great it didn’t even feel like being inside.
The boys clambered off the wagon and an officious man holding a clipboard barked at them to separate themselves into their set groups: Digger, First Apprentice or Apprentice. Squid had been told in no uncertain terms that he was to be an Apprentice, the lowest rung on the army ladder. When he and the forty or so other boys here to become Apprentices had managed to form a line, they were herded into a small room where Squid’s name was written down and a neatly folded uniform placed in his arms. At the insistence of a pushy man dressed in a blue uniform he wa
s made to change on the spot. His own uniform was a simple gray jumpsuit, and though it was an improvement on the shirt and trousers he’d spent the last week in, it was uncomfortable and itchy.
“Trainee Apprentices,” a voice called, “form up over here.”
Squid made his way through the moving mass of people toward the sound of the voice. When he reached it, he was relieved to see it belonged to Lieutenant Walter. At least this was someone who would be nice to him.
“Okay,” Lieutenant Walter said, “let’s get one thing perfectly clear before we begin. You are Scants; you are the bottom of the food chain here at the Academy, and most of the Diggers will think you are worthless piles of discarded trash. However, I understand the value of having Apprentices who are loyal, strong and skilled, and I am here to see that you become those things. Do not get me wrong, I still think you’re trash, just not worthless trash.”
Squid was confused, though certainly not for the first time. Lieutenant Walter had never spoken like this before; he sounded like Uncle, or the Sisters who taught in the schoolhouse in Dust. Squid had thought he had Lieutenant Walter’s measure, but as usual, he was proved wrong.
“And another thing,” Lieutenant Walter continued, “forming up does not mean milling around like you’re at a tea party. Get yourself lined up, tallest to shortest.”
Squid knew without needing to compare himself to any of the other boys which end of the line he belonged to. He followed behind the others as Lieutenant Walter led them down a broad corridor lit by flickering gas torches and out into the main yard.
The main yard of the Academy was unlike anything Squid had ever seen. It was another enormous cavern cut inside the Rock, but it was easily the size of Uncle’s entire farm. Above them was a shaft traveling all the way to the top of the Rock and below it, cut intricately into the roof, which was so high it might as well have been the sky, was a cascading chandelier of mirrors. During the day the mirrors reflected and amplified the light coming down the shaft until it lit up the yard. Squid stared at it. It was magnificent.
A Town Called Dust: The Territory 1 Page 9