Foundryside

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Foundryside Page 49

by Robert Jackson Bennett


  “I don’t know,” said Berenice. “I think so though?”

  They waited, and waited.

  “Should something be happening now?” said Orso.

  Then they both jumped in fright as a wall of shadow leapt at them out of an alley.

  “Goddamn it!” said Sancia’s voice, floating out of the darkness. “It’s me! Calm down!” She was panting hard. “Damn…That was a lot of walls, and a lot of gates.” She climbed inside—or Orso thought she did, it was so dark it was hard to tell—and collapsed in the back of the carriage.

  “Is it done?” said Orso.

  “Yeah,” gasped Sancia.

  “And when does your clever plan start?”

  “Simple,” said Sancia. “When you hear the explosions.”

  * * *

  Claudia and Giovanni crouched in the shadows of the street, watching the Candiano gates. Then they heard a sound—a clattering, a clanking.

  “What’s that?” said Gio.

  Claudia pointed, dumbstruck. “It’s the gates, Gio.”

  They watched as the huge gate doors…trembled. They quivered, like they were the skin of a drum that had just received a powerful blow. Then they began rattling, at first quietly, then much, much louder, until it strained their ears, even from where they were.

  “Sancia,” said Claudia. “What the hell did you do?”

  And then the gates broke.

  The two halves erupted open, swinging outward with a force like a raging river, snapping all the locks along their middle. They pivoted a full 180 degrees, slamming into the campo walls and the watchtowers on either side of them, and they struck the walls hard enough to make them crack and start to crumble—a stunning feat, considering the campo walls had been scrived to be preternaturally durable. For a moment the two halves of the gates just stood there, smashed into the walls, before the reverberating momentum caused them to slowly, slowly topple forward, which pulled down a lot of the walls with them. They slammed into the ground hard enough to send a fine spray of mud and dust surging throughout the entire city block.

  Claudia and Giovanni coughed and covered their faces. The Commons lit up with cries and shouts—but this wasn’t loud enough to cover up a new sound: a rattling and clattering from the next set of gates, just south of the fallen walls.

  “Oh shit,” said Gio. “She did it to all of them, didn’t she?”

  * * *

  Orso and Berenice sat up, startled, as the immense crack echoed through the night skies.

  “I told the gates opening outward didn’t count as opening,” said Sancia in the backseat. “The hard part was getting them to wait.” She sniffed. “Should be…oh, one every minute or so for a while.”

  * * *

  In the Mountain, Estelle Candiano heard the crash and looked up. “What in hell?” she said aloud.

  She looked down at herself. She’d finished covering her arm and chest in the appropriate sigils, and she did not want to smudge them any.

  Still…That was worth investigating.

  She walked over to the windows and looked out at the dark ramble of Tevanne. She immediately saw what had happened: one of the northeastern gates appeared to have totally collapsed. Which…should have been impossible. Those gates had been designed by her father. They should have withstood a damned monsoon.

  “What in all th—”

  Then, as she watched, there was a tremendous crack, and the gate south down the wall from that one suddenly burst outward. The walls around it cracked and began to crumble apart.

  Her mouth twisted with rage. “Orso,” she spat. “This is you, isn’t it? What in hell are you trying to pull?”

  * * *

  The intense cracks shot through the Commons with a curiously steady rhythm, like a lightning storm touching down every minute. Orso flinched each time. Soon the sky above the eastern campo was a haze of dust, and the Commons were screaming in panic.

  “Sancia,” said Orso quietly. “Did you take down the entire eastern walls?”

  “I should have, when this is all over with,” said Sancia. “Should give all those campo soldiers a lot to defend. And it’ll be somewhere far from here. A decent distraction.”

  “A…a distraction?” he cried. “Girl…girl, you’ve scrumming killed the Candiano campo! You’ve killed my old house in one night!”

  “Eh,” said Sancia. “I just aired it out a bit.”

  * * *

  Estelle Candiano threw on a white shirt just as Captain Riggo threw open the door and charged in.

  “What in hell is going on out there, Captain?” she demanded.

  “I do not know, ma’am,” he said, “but I came to ask if I could mobilize our reserves in order to investigate and respond.”

  There was another sharp crack and the rumble of falling walls. Captain Riggo cringed ever so slightly.

  “But…but what do you think is happening, Captain?”

  “In my professional estimation?” He thought about it. “It would appear to be a siege, ma’am. Many gates destroyed so that we have to split our forces.”

  “Damn it all,” she said. She looked at the clock. She had just over thirty minutes until midnight. I’m so close, she thought. I’m so damned close!

  “Ma’am?” said Captain Riggo. “The reserves?”

  “Yes, yes!” she snapped. “Throw everything we have at them! Whatever the hell is happening, I want it stopped! Now!”

  He bowed. “Yes, ma’am.” Then he turned and smartly strode away, shutting the door behind him.

  Estelle walked over to the windows and stared out at the damage. The northeastern half of the campo was almost completely obscured with smoke now. She imagined she could hear screaming from somewhere out in the dark.

  Whatever is happening, she thought, I just need it to last more than thirty minutes. After that—nothing else will matter.

  * * *

  The two Scrappers watched as the Candiano campo walls dissolved, bit by bit.

  “Well,” said Claudia. “I think we’re done here, yeah?”

  “I think so.” Giovanni wrinkled his nose. “Now to file all of Orso’s paperwork—yes?”

  She sighed. “Yes. And to buy his property. Off from one mad plan, and on to the next one.”

  “You know, we could just take the money he gave us and run,” said Giovanni lightly.

  “True,” said Claudia. “But then everyone else would die.”

  “Well. Yes. I guess we wouldn’t want that.”

  Together, they fled into the darkness.

  38

  Sancia leaned forward as the gates ahead began to rattle. “Good,” she said. “I told them to go last. The second those things pop open and the way’s clear, you speed in as fast as you can, all right?”

  “Oh shit,” said Orso. A bead of sweat ran down his temple as he gripped the pilot’s wheel.

  “Don’t go too fast,” said Sancia. “Because there’s going to be shrapnel. Get me?”

  “You…you are really not helping here,” snapped Orso.

  “Just go when I say go.”

  They watched the gates rattle, tremble, and shake—and then, like all the others, they burst open, ripping apart the walls on either side.

  A massive tsunami of dust flooded toward them. Sancia shielded her eyes with one hand. She was now mostly blind—but she could still see with her scriving sight.

  She waited a moment. Then she said, “Go. Go now.”

  “But I can’t see!” said Orso, sputtering.

  “Orso, just scrumming go, go!”

  Orso shoved the acceleration lever forward and the carriage took off, hurtling into the dust. Sancia squinted and peered ahead, reading the scrivings written into the buildings on either side of the street, glimpsing the massive, rippling landscape of designs and sigils encoded into e
verything.

  “The road curves slightly to the left up ahead,” said Sancia. “No, not that much—there. Yes. Good.”

  Finally they broke free of the dust cloud. Orso exhaled with relief. “Oh, thank God…”

  “No soldiers in sight,” said Berenice. “Streets are clear.”

  “All on the eastern wall,” said Sancia. “Just as I’d hoped.”

  “And we’re almost there.” Orso peered out the window at the street names. “Just a little farther…Here! Here’s the spot!” He slammed on the brakes. “Exactly a mile and a half from the Mountain!”

  They stared ahead at the vast dome rising among the towers. Then they all scrambled out. Sancia started affixing the gravity rig to her body, and Orso checked his twinned heating chamber. “Everything looks good here,” he said.

  “Turn it on,” said Sancia.

  “I’ll turn it on once you’re ready,” he said. “Just to be safe.”

  She paused, glancing at him, but continued buckling on the gravity rig. “Goddamn, I hope I have this dumbass thing on right,” she muttered.

  “Let me see,” said Berenice. She reviewed the various straps, fussing and tutting and adjusting them. “I think you’re set,” she said. “Except perhaps this one here.”

  She tightened one buckle on Sancia’s shoulder. Thoughtlessly, Sancia reached up and grabbed her hand, her own bare palm gripping Berenice’s fingers.

  Berenice paused. The two looked at each other.

  Sancia swallowed. She wondered what to say, and how to say it; how to articulate how impossible touch had been for so long—real, genuine, human touch; and how, after tonight, she wanted to touch no one but Berenice; how hungry she felt for Berenice’s enthusiastic glow, this raw desire to snatch a piece away for herself, like a demigod stealing fire from a mountaintop.

  But before she could start to fumble with the words, Berenice just said, “Make it back.”

  Sancia nodded. “I’ll try,” she said hoarsely.

  “Don’t try.” Berenice leaned in, and suddenly kissed her. Quite hard. “Do it. All right?”

  Sancia stood there for a moment, dazed. “All right.”

  Orso cleared his throat. “Listen, uh—I don’t want to interject here, but we are dealing with, you know, the apocalypse, or thereabout.”

  “Yeah, yeah,” said Sancia. She released Berenice and took stock of her gear—some stun bombs, darts, and a long, thin length of rope—and breathed deep. “I’m ready.”

  Orso turned the bronze dial on the side of the heating chamber.

  The gravity rig grew bright on Sancia’s chest.

  “Shit,” she said. “Oh boy.”

  “It’s still working, yes?” said Orso anxiously.

  chirped the rig.

  “Yeah,” said Sancia. “It’s working, all right.”

  “Then do it! Now, now, now!”

  Sancia took another deep breath and told the rig,

  said the rig.

 

 

  She situated her feet and dipped her legs down into a crouching position.

  As she did, the gravity around her…changed.

  Things began to float around her: pebbles, grains of sand, shreds of leaves…

  “Berenice?” said Orso nervously.

  “Ah…I believe this is upthrust,” Berenice said. “Like—step into a bathtub, and the water level rises. I didn’t have time to control for that.”

  “Shit,” said Sancia. “Here I go.”

  Then she sank lower, and jumped.

  And she flew.

  * * *

  Orso watched as Sancia seemed to be obscured by a fine mist. Then he realized that the mist was actually more motes of dust and sand, all hanging suspended in the air around her, cheerily denying gravity.

  Then her legs flexed, and things seemed to…explode.

  It was like something huge and invisible had fallen down nearby, causing a huge gust of wind and a massive swirl of sand. But of course, there was nothing there—at least as far as Orso was aware, but it was hard to verify since the next thing he knew he and Berenice were flying ass-over-head down the street.

  He crashed into the cobblestones, coughing, and sat up. “Shit!” he said. Then he peered up. He thought he could make out a tiny dot arcing across the night skies toward the Mountain. “It worked? Did it really work?”

  “I would say so,” said Berenice wearily, sitting up on the other side of the street. Groaning, she stood and hobbled over to Orso’s empty heating chamber. “It’s giving off a lot of heat…I know scriving defies reality, but it seems like you’ve defied a lot more reality than normal tonight. Now what do we do?”

  “Now?” said Orso. “Now we run like hell.”

  “We run? Why?”

  “I thought I mentioned this to you…” said Orso. “Or maybe I mentioned it to the Scrappers. I forget. Anyway, scriving a chunk of reality is really very hard to manage. Tribuno and I found that out a long time ago. So although this thing is stable now…” He knocked on the side of the carriage. “It won’t be for long.”

  She stared at him, horrified. “What do you mean?”

  “I mean in about ten minutes, this thing is either going to explode or implode, I honestly don’t know which. But I know I don’t want to be around to see it.”

  “What!” she screamed. “Then…then what’ll happen to Sancia?”

  “Well, if she’s still flying…then she will stop flying,” he said. He saw her outraged stare. “Well, the girl’s obviously going to make it there in way less than ten minutes! I mean, look at her, she’s hauling ass! It was just a gamble I had to make!”

  “You could have scrumming told us this!” shouted Berenice.

  “And what would that have done?” said Orso. “Probably made everyone yell a bunch, just as you’re doing now. Now, come on, Berenice, let’s go!” He turned and sprinted down the street, back to the gates.

  39

  “Captain Riggo!” shouted Estelle.

  Again—the footsteps, the door, the salute. “Yes, ma’am?”

  “Have we encountered anything in the campo?” she asked.

  “I’ve not heard back yet, ma’am,” he said. “But from my vantage point…I’ve yet to see much in the way of conflict.”

  She shook her head. “It’s a diversion. A goddamn diversion. They’re coming here, here! I know it in my bones. How many soldiers do we have in the Mountain, Riggo?”

  “At least four dozen, ma’am.”

  “I want three dozen up here,” said Estelle. “Two dozen in the hallways, and a dozen in here with me. I’m the target—me, or the antiquities.” She pointed at the desk, upon which sat the box, the imperiat, and the key, along with dozens and dozens of books and other artifacts. “And we can’t move all those now. So we have to be ready.”

  “I see, ma’am,” said Riggo. “I’ll deploy your orders immediately.”

  * * *

  Above the campo, Sancia screamed.

  Screaming was all she could do, really. So many of her higher levels of thought had just been abruptly obliterated by the sudden acceleration, the raging press of the wind and the reek of smoke, that she could only react to her situation in the dumbest and most instinctual of ways—which meant screaming.

  She was rising so fast, so damned fast. She blinked tears out of her eyes, and saw she was already far, far, far above the city. Too far, really—and she also wasn’t going anywhere close to the Mountain.

  If I don’t stop this thing, she thought, I’m going to sail past the damn clouds!

  Sancia placed both hands on the plate and tried to tell it to slow dow
n.

  squealed the rig.

  Sancia screamed at it.

 

  She mentally directed the rig at the Mountain.

  chirped the plates.

  said Sancia.

 

 

 

  Their ascent slowed, but not much.

  she said.

 

  Their ascent slowed more.

  she said.

 

  Then her ascent stopped…and she slowly started being redirected toward the Mountain, lightly drifting down to the huge black dome.

  She’d have to make more adjustments to make it there, she knew. But she was getting the hang of this. The gravity rig was incomprehensibly powerful—probably more powerful than Estelle’s version, since Berenice had left out all the calibrated controls. If Sancia screwed up the directions or the power too much, the thing would basically be a devastating weapon.

  But then, she had been counting on that.

  Quietly, gently, she sailed toward the Mountain.

  * * *

  “Ma’am!” called a soldier. “Something’s coming!”

  Surrounded by a dozen soldiers, Estelle Candiano peered through the gaps in their shoulders at the office windows. “Something?” she said.

  “Yes, ma’am! I…I think I saw something flying through the sky?”

 

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