“It’ll be better if we’re separated for a while, so your family can see that I’m not manipulating you. Others as well.” Rias tilted his head toward Yosis, who hadn’t moved or spoken since she came out. No doubt he hoped they’d forget he was there and let some devious Turgonian secrets slip out.
“Given what my people believe about imperial brainwashing methods, they’ll probably think you can sway me all you like from miles away.”
Rias chuckled softly, though she picked out a sadness underlying it. “Your family, at least, should know you’re too smart for something like that,” he said.
“You’d hope so, but…” Tikaya thought of Parkonis and how quickly he’d accused her of having captive complex. Of course, he’d been hurt that she was choosing Rias over him and had been looking for a justification. That was the problem. In the aftermath of the war, everyone on the island would seek similar justifications. They’d want to believe that all Turgonians were evil. Though a decade or two would dull the wounds, it might be too early to ask anyone to accept Rias as anything other than a savage. “Mother did seem to think you were acceptable,” Tikaya finally said, feeling the silence had grown too long. “At least she made pleased grunts every time she circled the table and saw that you’d cleared your plate and were ready for another serving.”
From his, “Hm,” Tikaya couldn’t tell if he was dismissing Mother as an ally worth having or considering the ways she might help his cause. Since they were observed, she dared not ask about any strategies he might plan to employ. If he was strategizing at all. Maybe he just hoped to bide his time until he could escape.
“Can you understand what they’re talking about?” Ell asked.
It took Tikaya a moment to realize he was addressing Yosis. The professor ignored him. It didn’t seem to bother Ell.
“Because all they’ve done so far is hold hands. Chastely. I’m beginning to fear The Black Scourge of the Seas is wholesome. How disappointing for someone with such a fierce name.”
Since Yosis was facing Ell for the moment, Tikaya took the opportunity to slip her response to Rias’s earlier note into his hand. “Not everyone wants an audience for… intimate activities, Ell. Perhaps you could take the professor out front and give us a moment to say goodbye.”
Ell eyed Yosis, who returned his consideration in a baleful touching-me-would-be-bad-for-your-health way. “I never had much luck getting professors to listen to me,” Ell said and dug his tobacco tin out of his pocket.
“Where are you going to stay?” Tikaya asked Rias as her cousin rolled and lit a cigarette. “I need to visit the Polytechnic tomorrow and get some advice from colleagues on the artifacts, chiefly whether we should make them disappear for all eternity or put together a team to study them.” She remembered the request Rias had made in his note, that she figure out why someone might be alarmed at the notion of his submarine, and added, “It’s a good place to do research,” while squeezing his hand.
Rias nodded. “Though I can understand your fascination with the language—and the puzzles intrigued me as well—my vote would be for burying those secrets somewhere. The world isn’t ready for them.”
Yosis moved a couple of steps closer to a torch and tilted his notepad in that direction so he could write. Tikaya curled a lip at him.
“As to my lodgings, your cousin here says the Pragmatic Mate is affordable.”
“And you can get all manner of poki there,” Ell added in Kyattese, making Tikaya wonder how much of their conversation he understood. As far as she knew, he’d failed most of his linguistics classes—all of his classes, in truth—but more from a lack of interest than aptitude, she’d always thought.
“Poki?” Rias asked dubiously.
“Hallucinogenic compounds,” Tikaya said. “But, really, Rias, the Pragmatic Mate? The locals call it the Pernicious Miasma, with good reason, I’m given to understand. The place makes your igloo seem palatial. You must not want me to visit.”
“I’m certain I’ve stayed in worse accommodations. Though it would be a shame if you didn’t visit.”
“You’re lucky I’ve discovered a new adventurous streak. Also, we don’t have to stay there if I visit. Kyatt offers many scenic and private destinations.” Which she’d dearly love to share with him, if they could get rid of—
“Put out that dreadful thing,” Yosis growled, speaking for the first time all evening.
“Dreadful?” Ell lifted his cigarette. “My proprietary blend of vanilla-spiced tobacco is most certainly not dreadful. It’s—” He crinkled his nose. An acrid, smoky scent had drifted into the courtyard. “That’s not me.”
“Fire?” Rias released Tikaya’s hand and snapped into an alert posture.
“It smells worse than a wood fire,” Tikaya said.
A surprised yell came from inside the house, or perhaps the lanai on the far side. Rias must have thought it originated outside, for he ran to the back of the courtyard and raced around the corner of the house.
Yosis cursed and fumbled to snap his journal shut.
Tikaya gripped his arm before he could think of stopping Rias with that ghastly device. “I’m sure he’s going to help.”
But the rest of her family might not appreciate his “help.” Tikaya released Yosis and ran after Rias.
Since she’d changed back into sandals, her footwear slapped against the flagstones as she raced around the house. As much as she’d loathed that Turgonian uniform, the boots had been more practical for active pursuits. She didn’t need to run far before a startling sight brought her to a halt so quickly she almost tripped.
The front lawn was on fire.
It wasn’t some random bonfire, but three lines of… Tikaya squinted. Letters? Words? From her angle, she couldn’t read them.
Her kin were pouring out of the house to stand on the lanai and gape. Tikaya searched about for Rias. When she didn’t see him on the lanai or lawn, a hunch drew her gaze upward. He stood on the roof, looking down at the flames, his face grim. She thought about shouting up to him, asking for a translation, but decided to climb up instead.
Using the corner lanai post for support, she clambered up the railing and pulled herself onto the roof without any particular grace. Unlike her brother, she’d never been one to sneak out from the second-story bedrooms to run off with friends or lovers, so she lacked practice. She made it up, though, and joined Rias. From the elevated perch, the flaming words were easy to make out. Unfortunately.
Go home, joratt. Death awaits you here.
“I suppose you can read that,” Tikaya said, groping for a way to make light of the situation, though worry weighed upon her heart. And anger as well. What bastard would have come onto her family’s property to do such a thing? Though a hint of the mental sciences lingered in the air and was doubtlessly responsible for the perfect outlines of those letters in flames, any fire had the potential to get out of hand. What if sparks landed on the thatch roof of the house?
“My vocabulary has many holes in it, but those are words I knew long before I met you, yes.”
“I’m sorry, Rias. I’m sure it’s just one angry person who’s misguided and not thinking. Or…” She stopped. She didn’t want to justify the actions of whatever idiot had done this.
“As I was saying, it’ll be best if I leave tonight.” Rias touched her back gently and maneuvered past her to hop off the roof.
Feeling numb, Tikaya watched the flames until her father’s bellow echoed up from the lanai below. “Everyone stop standing around. Get down here to put out this fire!”
By the time Tikaya climbed down, Rias and Yosis were gone.
CHAPTER 6
“It’s fascinating,” Professor Liusus said, her face so close to the black sphere, she kept bumping it with her nose. Her chin clunked the bamboo table on which the artifact sat more than once. She didn’t notice. She held her spectacles in one hand and, with the other, kept shoving back gray strands of hair that fell into her eyes as she examined the artifact from ever
y angle. It’d been at least ten minutes since she’d said anything to Tikaya or acknowledged her presence in the room.
Tikaya didn’t mind. She knew Liusus had a passion as strong as her own, though her specialty was maritime archaeology rather than philology. They’d had occasion to work together often, and Tikaya considered Liusus a friend and mentor.
Tikaya leaned forward and touched a series of symbols on the outside of the object. A spherical projection formed in the air above the device, depicting one of the race’s languages, the last thing she had been studying. Liusus stumbled back, hand to her chest, eyes wide. She bumped her chair, upturning it with a loud thunk that echoed through the library alcove, but she didn’t seem to notice.
“That’s not an artifact,” she said, giving the word the special accent to refer to a practitioner-crafted device rather than an archeological find. “There’s no sense of—”
“I know,” Tikaya said. “It’s all technology-based.”
“Technology…” Liusus started to lean back over the table again, but her foot caught on the leg of the fallen chair. She stared at it for a moment, as if perplexed as to why a piece of furniture might be lying down there, then straightened it with an exasperated grunt. “Have you showed this to anyone else yet?”
Liusus eyed the surrounding shelves full of scrolls and textbooks, as if she feared some spy might be watching from behind the stacks.
“Yes, the police searched my bags when I returned, and the artifacts were flagged and sent over to Dean Teailat. He, his staff, and I had quite the discussion about them this morning.” Tikaya had relayed the same story that she’d shared with her family, though there’d been far more questions related to the tunnels, language, artifacts, and ancient people. She’d given accurate accounts of everything. Someone had to know the truth about what the relic raiders and the Turgonians had been up to, and how dangerous the technology was, as she wasn’t comfortable holding all that information to herself, though she did hope she could trust her colleagues to remain tightlipped about everything.
“And they let you have them back?” Liusus asked.
“Sort of. I’m to keep them at the Polytechnic and only study them here until the department heads have met and discussed the situation. I’m still trying to arrange communication with the president. He definitely needs to know about all this, and I need his help with another matter as well.”
“Yes.” Liusus reclaimed her seat. “I understand your other matter is the talk of the island.”
Tikaya grimaced. Her colleague had never married, nor, in the years Tikaya had known her, shown interest in physical relations; she’d hoped Liusus would be too fascinated with the artifacts to care about rumors concerning Rias. In the less than twenty-four hours that she’d been home, Tikaya had already received enough advice on that matter and had no wish to discuss it again.
“The fire in your yard must have been alarming,” Liusus said, her tone sympathetic.
“Yes… Who have you been hearing all the details from?” Tikaya wondered which of her family members was blabbing to the world. Everyone might know about Rias, but what happened on their plantation ought not be fodder for the island gossip mills.
“It was in the morning newspaper.”
“I didn’t think you read the news. It’s too recent, you’ve said on many occasions.”
“That’s correct,” Liusus said, “but everyone was discussing it in the staff lounge this morning.”
Tikaya sighed. “Wonderful.”
“If it cheers you up, only one in three of your colleagues thinks the Turgonian has brainwashed you into bringing him here so he can spy while perpetrating the ruse of being your lover.”
“Wonderful,” Tikaya repeated. “What do the other two thirds think?” Why, she wondered, am I asking when the answer will only irritate me?
“Mixed reactions. A few outliers think you may be knowingly colluding with him, rather than being brainwashed—”
Tikaya rolled her eyes. Was that supposed to be an improvement?
“—but those were people who aren’t aware of what your work in the war entailed. A couple of optimistic sorts who are aware of your cryptography contributions—and admire them very much—think you’re working for the president and, under his orders, seduced the admiral in order to extract information for our people’s benefit.”
Tikaya snorted. That was new. And even more ridiculous than the rest. As if she could seduce someone. “Does anyone think we were thrust into an adventure together, against our wishes, and happened to fall in love along the way?”
Liusus scratched her jaw thoughtfully. “I don’t recall that version. Not enough intrigue to capture people’s fancies, I imagine.”
No, of course not. “So, how are you doing? Is anything new happening in the world of marine archaeology? I haven’t talked to you much this last year.” Tikaya would have wanted to catch up with her colleague anyway, but she’d specifically sought Liusus out because of Rias’s message.
“Yes, I’ve been busy looking over wreckage from a Danmesk Empire shipyard that was unearthed on the Bratar Coast, a good four hundred miles south of what was previously believed to be the southern most border of the empire. We believe volcanic activity buried a significant coastal colony there nearly two thousand years ago.” Liusus took a breath, signifying that she was warming up to a lengthy lecture on the topic.
“Nothing closer to home?” Tikaya felt rude for cutting her friend off, and, in different circumstances, would have enjoyed hearing about the new dig, but she was quite certain that a civilization that had been dead for over fifteen hundred years wouldn’t have a problem with Rias building a submarine.
“What do you mean?” Liusus asked.
“Around the islands. Our islands.”
“Our history is well documented, given that our people were writing and keeping records when we first colonized the islands seven hundred years ago. The maritime museum even has one of the original settlers’ ships on display, along with examples of dress, tools, and housing from the time period.” Liusus tilted her head. “But you’ve been to the museum, surely, and know all of that.”
“Yes, I was just wondering…” Tikaya removed her spectacles and took a moment to clean the lenses while considering if she should tell her colleague about Rias’s suspicions. She believed she could trust Liusus, but she didn’t even know what to ask. All she had to go on was Rias’s hunch. “Rias sketched out plans for a submarine while we were on our way over here, and, out of all the items he had that might have given the authorities cause for alarm, it was those sketches that drew Jikaymar’s attention.”
“Jikaymar? The high minister in charge of foreign relations?”
“Yes.”
Liusus spread her arms. “I imagine he sees a submarine as a craft that could be used to spy upon our people. You can’t blame him for being alarmed. Was there anything unusual about the design?”
“Only that Rias believed he could make it work for long voyages. He said his people haven’t been able to do more than putter around on the bottoms of ponds, because there’s no way to create a viable underwater propulsion system with wood or coal as the fuel. He thought to acquire a Made power source from a local craftsman.”
“Well, there you go. Can you imagine the potential power of a craft that married our Science with imperial metallurgy and engineering technology? The Turgonians may be warlike and brutal by our standards, but nobody would call them dumb. They have the best ships in the world. When it comes to the mental sciences, they’re as superstitious as children in a graveyard on All Spirits Day, but that’s a good thing as far as the rest of the world is concerned. I’m sure the high minister is horrified by the idea of Turgonian submarines that use Kyattese power sources. What if your admiral is designing a prototype, and he intends it to be the first of dozens or even hundreds that their military builds? Can you imagine what sort of advantage that would provide in naval warfare? They could be ready to take on the Nurians
again by the end of the decade. And where would that leave our little islands? In the line of fire again.”
Though Tikaya had been shaking her head all through the latter half of the speech, it took a lot to stop Liusus once her taro pot started bubbling over. “He’s only interested in building it for us,” Tikaya said. “Him and me. So we can work on intriguing puzzles and digs from the world of eld and then disappear beneath the sea if his past enemies catch up with us.” As much as Tikaya had always considered herself a homebody, the idea of such explorations had grown on her, and she smiled as she explained it, not realizing until she finished that Liusus was watching her with a frank gaze.
“You were never this hopelessly quixotic when you were engaged to Parkonis.”
At least she hadn’t called Tikaya naive. Yet. “No, we were a very… practical couple. But Parkonis never gave me a reason to adore him… Rias is very…”
“Yes, I’ve seen the tintype.”
Tikaya blushed. Was she the only one on the island who wouldn’t have recognized him at first glance? “I was going to say supportive. He makes you feel bigger than you are instead of smaller.”
“He’s certainly bigger than average.” Liusus’s eyes glinted behind her spectacles. “I suppose all his body parts are proportional.”
Tikaya’s blush grew so fierce it threatened to singe her cheeks from the inside out. “I never knew you had such a wicked mind, Liusus.” Figuring she’d best change the subject before she burst into flames, Tikaya switched back to the original topic. “If I wanted to research Kyattese maritime archaeology, where would be a good place to start? The Oceanography Wing of the library?”
Liusus studied Tikaya for a long moment before answering. “Yes.”
“Thank you.” Tikaya picked up the sphere and took a step toward the door, but Liusus’s words halted her.
“There are detailed bathymetrical maps of the waters around the Kyatt Islands in there. I trust… they won’t be used against our people.”
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