Salvage

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Salvage Page 16

by Duncan, Alexandra


  “Miyole.” My voice sounds unsteady, and I feel cold, as if I’m watching everything from somewhere deep inside.

  She lifts her head and stares at me from the copilot’s chair. We’ve washed her bleeding hands with saltwater and wrapped them in strips of silk from one of Perpétue’s parcels. I cut open all the packages with Perpétue’s knife while we waited out the storm. Mostly, they were full of oddments and luxuries, gold-painted eggs, cold-sealed vials full of something what might be quicksilver, cloth so thin you could make it flutter with a breath. Nothing useful.

  “We’ve got to find someplace to land,” I say.

  Miyole nods.

  “We can look for your manman and Kai from there,” I say, even though I know they’re empty words. We can look, but they’re sunk to the endless bottom with the monsters and mermaids and all else the Gyre folk liked to talk on around their fires.

  Miyole looks out the window into the soft dusk falling over the ocean. She’s aged a million turns since we left her safe on the Gyre before the storm.

  “My manman’s dead,” she says. “Her and Kai.”

  “Do you have any other family?” I ask, even though I think I already know the answer.

  Miyole shakes her head. She turns from the window. “We should go to that place you always talk about. Mumbai,” she says. “We can find your tante.”

  Dr. Soraya Hertz, Mumbai University at Kalina. It isn’t much, but it’s more than nothing. One of the sloop’s aft engines has taken on a gutter and whine. I haven’t been able to check the ship’s armored tile plates, but I suspect some of them are damaged or else ripped off altogether in the storm. We need to set down, and soon.

  “Right so,” I say. “Mumbai.”

  I scroll through the navigation log and select the location of the nearest city east of us—the one with the slippery rice dealer. Once we’re nearer to land, we can pick up the network and find Mumbai’s coordinates. And then we’re gone, skimming unsteadily over the water with the engines at quarter lift. The sun goes down before us. We are alone in the air. I can’t afford to look away from the sloop’s jittering instrument panels, but I reach out my hand and take Miyole’s as the night swallows us whole.

  UNCORRECTED E-PROOF—NOT FOR SALE

  HarperCollins Publishers

  ..................................................................

  PART II

  UNCORRECTED E-PROOF—NOT FOR SALE

  HarperCollins Publishers

  ..................................................................

  CHAPTER .19

  When we first see Mumbai, I think I’ve fallen asleep at the controls. Only I could never dream something like this. A towering seawall surrounds the city. Clusters of squat, round buildings cling to the top of it, like the barnacles that grew on the sides of the Gyre’s ships. Inside, massive crystalline structures rise from the earth and disappear into the low-lying clouds. Skyscrapers, that’s the word Perpétue would have used. To the north, the land rises in a patchwork of roofs and trees, divided by gray trainways and the gossamer threads of rivers.

  “Miyole,” I say.

  She stirs awake. We both stare at it, the city growing before us. The sloop’s controls lie forgotten underneath my hands, until the coms channel crackles and a clipped voice directs us to somewhere called Navi Flightport on the outskirts of the city. I guide us lower and eastward, where the houses become concrete, and then crooked roofs and blue tarp, swaths of shanties blossoming along the edges of a swamp. At last the flightport comes into view. The sloop rocks as we descend through the air currents and finally touch down with a clumsy bang on the landing pad.

  The ship’s as bad as I feared. There are gaps in its skin where the wind tore shield tiles free. The whining aft engine is a snarl of bent, blackened metal. We can limp along without it, but there’ll be no more runs up to Bhutto station or even across the sea until we find a way to fix it. I still have the square of pay plastic Perpétue gave me for the information port, but it takes near half what’s on it to dock the sloop at Navi Flightport for a day, and the rest to buy our own entry into the city without “papers,” as the uniformed woman corralling us through the entry gates calls them, though she really means a palm-sized smartcard what tracks our comings and goings.

  The hallway outside the gates funnels us past advertisements playing on the station’s walls, past shops selling food and hats and tiny motorized fans. The crowd from an arriving passenger flight swallows us up and pulls us along, down into a narrow room lined with seats. It isn’t until a soft chime sounds and the doors seal themselves shut that I realize we’ve boarded a train car. I wish I could feel the thrill of it—my first time aboard a train—but I cannot. It whisks us through a dark tunnel, and then out into the dazzling sunshine, along the side of a landing yard crowded with thousands of craft glinting in the sun.

  The car slows. The chime rings again, followed by a woman’s voice speaking a bubbling, melodic language I don’t understand, and then, “Navi Flightport Authority welcomes you to Mumbai, located on one of the world’s oldest surviving peninsulas. Please enjoy your stay in our beautiful historic city. Svaagatam!”

  I want to ask Miyole if she knows what a peninsula is, but she looks the way I feel—wrung out and hollow, as if any words might echo through her.

  “All we have to do is find my modrie.” I squeeze her hand. “We’re close. Don’t worry.”

  We stand on the lip of a crowded platform outside the spaceport. Everything is too bright and loud. Hulking passenger trains roar by, stirring up gusts of hot wind. The smell of burned ozone, simmering spices from the pushcart at the far end of the platform, and the oily stink of hot pavement stews in the air. On the palm-lined street below, crowds of people press by, some on foot, some high on creatures I think are called horses.

  I should be awed, but I only feel numb. The world should be silent and gray now Perpétue is no longer in it, not teeming with voices and light.

  “There’s got to be a map someplace,” I say. And then I spot it through a break in the crowd, a freestanding smartboard in the middle of the platform.

  We make our way over. “How do we . . . ,” I start to ask, but stop when I glance down at Miyole’s face. It’s utterly blank, as if whatever makes Miyole Miyole has evaporated from her body.

  She steps up to the smartboard. “Map,” she tells it, and an aerial view of the city springs up in front of us. To me, it looks like a knot of letters and lines and shapes, but Miyole focuses it easily with one bandaged hand.

  “We’re here.” Miyole points to a flat, ticklike shape to the far right of the tallest buildings. “Mumbai University, please,” she says.

  A column of rectangular boxes springs up, each connected to a spot on the map by a thin white line. There must be a dozen of them.

  Miyole frowns at me. “Which one is it?”

  For one brief, panicked moment, I can’t remember. I haven’t slept in over a day. My head feels thick and grainy. “Ka. . . Kalina.” The name comes to me in a rush of relief. “Mumbai University at Kalina.”

  Miyole taps the map. It zooms in and focuses on an image of a weathered gray building flanked by palm trees. A light breeze stirs their fronds, and blurs of people pass by on the pavement.

  I step closer. “How do we get there?”

  Miyole touches a series of yellow dots, which link together and form a line from our place on the map to the university. A train schedule slides into view at the corner of the board. I can piece out the words now, the number and times. Train fifty-nine, estimated arrival 10:48 a.m. Train twenty-four, estimated arrival 10:52 a.m. Iri might be alive now, we might both be safe with my modrie Soraya already, if only one of us could have read what the hologram was trying to tell us. I would never have met Perpétue and Miyole and brought all this trouble on them. Perpétue might not have been gone that day if she hadn’t been teaching me to fly. She might be alive, and Kai and his family, too. . . .

  Stop.
I hear Perpétue’s voice, as if her ghost is speaking in my ear.

  “It says we can take train twenty-four to cross the river and then switch to number one-oh-five.” Miyole looks up at me.

  “Right so.” Together we walk to the edge of the platform, away from the other travelers.

  “When we find your tante,” Miyole says, looking down at the track. “Will she let me stay?”

  “Course she will,” I say, even though I not sure if she’ll let me stay.

  “Why should she?” Miyole kicks at the line of glow paint by the edge of the platform. “I’m not her blood.”

  “I wasn’t your blood when your mother took me in. But now . . . you’re my blood, now.” I squeeze her hand so she’ll know I mean it. “I won’t stay without you. We’ll go back up in the ship and find work at Bhutto station if we need to. Your mother—”

  I choke to a stop. A soft hum rises from the magnets below us, and far down the track, a sleek white vessel turns toward us. TWENTY-FOUR glows on the smartboard across its face.

  “The train,” says Miyole.

  We step back as it blows past us into the station, glass doors and windows tripping by. It brakes to a smooth, sudden halt. The doors open, and we climb in, wary of the dark gap between the car and the platform. It reminds me of the shark-filled gaps between the Gyre’s pontoons. Miyole sits with her back to the window, the sun setting the tiny curls that have escaped from her braids alight and casting her face in shadow.

  Bodies pack in around us. Men in dark suits and collarless white shirts buttoned at the neck, chins shaved and hair oiled and tucked behind their ears; women dressed the same, with diamonds or gold rings studding their ears and noses; others in pretty printed dresses and scarves, or wide-cut, flowing pants. The ones standing alongside me in middle of the car grab hold of a rail above our heads, so I do the same. The sharp odor of so many sweating bodies packed together nearly suffocates me.

  The city whips by, the closer buildings a blur of metal and glass, and gray stone, with only the faraway towers and treetops moving slow enough for our eyes. Suddenly, the train’s windows darken. Thick, white letters glide over the glass, BAY MOUTH STATION, and at the same time, a calm voice rings out from the ceiling, repeating the name aloud in English and that same bubbling language I don’t know. We come to a stop. Our train empties half its passengers out one side of the car, then opens the other side to let more pour in. A young man calling, “Chai! Chai!” edges through the car with steaming drinks balanced on a tray hung around his neck.

  We pull out again. The train is building into its steady, silent glide, slipping under the midday sun, when a rushing sound swells up beneath our feet and the floor jerks under us. The car fills with screams as we crush together, too close packed to fall to the floor. The gravity’s malfunctioned, I think for a half a breath, but then I remember we’re groundways. Something’s wrong—bad wrong. The train screeches and shudders to a halt.

  A stunned silence holds us all for a moment. Then a baby breaks into a frightened cry, and the car fills with shouts.

  “De! Watch it!”

  “. . . every time I’m running late.”

  “Hawa aane de!”

  “Damn. What, again?”

  “Miyole?” I shout.

  “I’m here.” She clutches the bar beside her seat. Her eyes are wide, but she looks unhurt.

  I breathe a sigh of relief and right myself. “Sorry, so. Sorry,” I mutter to the man in front of me, whose back I slammed into.

  “Ava?” Miyole slips her hand into mine. “What’s happening?”

  “I don’t know.” I go up on tiptoe to look. My back prickles with sweat.

  “It’s a washout,” the man I fell into says. He points up to the ceiling. “Any minute now, they’ll call it. Listen.”

  The speakers sound a soft bong, and a woman’s soothing voice fills the car. “Attention, we are currently experiencing flooding in the line—”

  A collective groan goes up among the passengers.

  “Remain calm and stay in your seats until a transit authority officer comes to escort you to the nearest station.”

  Near the front of the car, someone has forced open a door and people are jumping, one by one, across the small gap between the track and a walkway. The crowd nudges forward, pushing us along with it.

  “Aren’t we supposed to wait?” I ask the man in front of us.

  He shrugs. “You wait if you want. I have to make it downtown by three.”

  I glance back at Miyole, worry building in the pit of my stomach. If we leave this train, how will we find our way to the other one that’s supposed to take us to my modrie?

  But we don’t truly have a choice. I try to press myself against the row of seats, stay out of the way, but everyone is pushing. There’s nowhere to go but out the door, into the steaming afternoon heat. The man in front of us jumps, lands with a heavy clang on the metal walkway, and then turns and holds out a hand to help us across. Miyole takes it and springs over the gap. He reaches back for me. I know I should take his hand, know he’s only doing me a kindness, but his hands are so large, with soft skin and perfectly rounded fingernails. I can’t let him touch me. I leap across on my own and land with an awkward wobble.

  All up and down the tracks, people pile out of the train cars, into the burning sun. Most of them choose the walkway, but a few climb up onto the lev train’s back and skirt the shuffling crowd altogether. Below us, a muddy trickle starts to fill the bottom of the magnetized pit.

  “Do you think . . . ,” I look down at Miyole and stop. Even though her hand is in mine, she isn’t with me. Her eyes stare unfixed at something I can’t see, and her mouth turns down in a way I’ve come to know means she’s sunk deep in her own thoughts.

  By the time we make it back to the nearest station, the sun is past its peak and my shirt is plastered to my skin. The backs of my eyes burn. Everything comes to me muffled, the way the world sounded with my ears beneath the water in the desalination pool. This silvery city seamed with green, the constant roar of ships passing overhead, the bright colors and burning sun . . . none of it seems real. My head swims.

  I drag us to the nearest smartboard and wait behind the other passengers lined up to use it. When my turn comes, I squint at the lines twisted around one another like wires. One of them flashes blue. OUT OF SERVICE. What was the one we were aiming for again? One-oh-five? I scan the board, but there are so many different numbers and words and lines. I finally find one-oh-five, but now twenty-four won’t take us to it, and I could maybe figure out if another might, but I don’t know the name of the tiny station we’ve wound up at or which of the trains will be coming through.

  “Miyole?” I say hesitantly.

  “Jaldi karo!” The woman behind me huffs. “Hurry up, please.”

  “Sorry, so.” I can see the way everyone is looking at me. It’s the same look I’m sure I had when the kitchen girls forgot to add protein powder to the bread meal or something dull headed like that.

  I pull Miyole back through the crowd and sink down on a bench beneath a tree in the middle of the platform. I’ll check again when they’ve all cleared away, when I have more time to trace the lines. I try to swallow, but my throat is dry.

  “Are you thirsty?” I ask Miyole. If I am, she must be too. Maybe more so, since she probably swallowed saltwater in the storm.

  She nods.

  I push myself to my feet again and scan the platform. Most of the other passengers have their own bottles of water clipped to their belts or the bags they wear over their shoulders.

  “Please, so.” I stop a woman wearing darkened glasses and carrying a slick black bag. “Do you know where we could get water?”

  “There’s a store inside.” She waves over her shoulder at the small building behind us selling tickets and cold juice. “You can buy some there.”

  “Buy?” I frown. In the Gyre, everyone shared their water. If we were on our way back from the market and got thirsty, all we ha
d to do was ask, and one of Perpétue’s neighbors would give us a drink. It was always warm and flat from boiling, but it was never something we worried over.

  “We don’t need it cold or special or anything,” I tell the woman. “Just regular water.”

  She raises her eyebrows and pulls off her glasses to give me a withering stare. “No such thing as free water, kid,” she says, and stalks away.

  Her words hit me like a cold slap, and anger flares in my chest, sudden and ice hot. I grip the haft of Perpétue’s knife. I’m going to swing at her. I’m going to run her down and shove her face in the trickle of dirty water skimming the bottom of the trainway. I’m going to cut the strap of that shiny bag of hers and run off with the full bottle hanging from it.

  Then the memory of the red-haired woman and the tea washes back over me. Perpétue comforting me in the ship’s hold. Perpétue on the ship’s ladder. Perpétue lost in the storm. All the fight goes out of me.

  I let go of the knife. The sun is high overhead and there are no shadows. Sweat rolls down my back. The crowd still mills around the smartboard maps, but a few people have taken a raised footbridge over to a different platform, where a train waits with wide-open doors.

  I grab Miyole’s hand. “Come on.”

  I expect her to ask where we’re going, but she follows me mutely across the bridge. I don’t even glance up at the name of the next station gliding above our heads as we wedge in next to the window. It doesn’t matter where it’s going, as long as it’s away from here, away from that horrible woman and all that water held out of our reach. Besides, it’s cooler in the train cars than out on the platforms. We won’t notice our thirst as much.

  The city closes in around us as we pick up speed. The buildings creep nearer to the trainway and then rise and rise so we can’t see their tops from inside the car. Hand-painted signs on the sides of buildings give way to smartboards and windows playing enormous images of smooth-skinned women with teeth as tall as Miyole. Every now and again, a break in the buildings lets in a blinding flash of sunlight.

 

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