by D. P. Prior
‘Master Rayn has his demons to lay to rest,’ he said with a pronounced note of cynicism. ‘Don’t worry, Governor, he’ll be back.’ And if he wasn’t, Cadman didn’t really give a damn. Justin Salace might have been an opportunist little runt, but he was ideal for the task in hand. ‘Can I get you something? Whiskey? Water?’ Which looks about all he’s got in here, puritanical nincompoop. Not at all like Councillor Arkin. Now there’s a man who likes his drink.
Zara Gen’s brow furrowed, as if he didn’t quite approve of Cadman helping himself. He sighed and leaned back in the chair.
‘Whiskey—a small one mind. Need to keep a clear head in these matters.’ He tugged on his ponytail and grimaced. ‘You’re sure these pieces are to blame?’
Cadman unscrewed the cap on the whiskey and filled a glass before handing it to Zara Gen. ‘Sorry,’ he said. ‘Bit over-zealous with the pouring.’
Zara Gen accepted it with sigh. ‘Don’t suppose it’ll hurt this once.’ He took a sip that turned into a glug and then waved the glass under Cadman’s nose. ‘The pieces, Doctor.’
Cadman topped him up and replaced the bottle.
‘Ah, yes, the pieces. Well, you know the legends as well as I do.’ Actually Cadman doubted anyone did after the amount of reading up he’d been doing, but that was the way to talk to politicians: make them feel superior, or at the very least equal. ‘The Statue of Eingana is shrouded in superstition—Dreamer mumbo-jumbo in the main, but it’s generally supposed to be a force for good.’
Zara Gen took another swig and leaned forward, eyebrows raised.
‘However,’ Cadman said, pausing for effect, ‘like all such powers, it’s something of a mixed blessing. In the right hands, Eingana is the bringer of life…’
‘And in the wrong?’ Zara Gen was getting his point.
‘Absolutely, Governor. It’s the combination of raw, atavistic power with the dubious morality of Aeterna that has led to our problem.’
Zara Gen was making irritating noisy circles with his glass atop the desk, but Cadman did his best not to mention it, biting down on his bottom lip and counting to three.
‘I’m not sure, Cadman. The priests have always been…’ Zara Gen struggled for the right words.
‘Wolves in sheep’s clothing, Governor, just as the Emperor’s always said. Think how grateful Hagalle’s going to be when he learns what you’ve done here: banishing the last Nousians from Sarum and confiscating the cause of the contagion. I see great things for you, Governor: a duchy perhaps.’
‘I don’t know about this.’ Zara Gen ripped off the black ribbon and shook his hair free. ‘I’ve known Mater Ioana for a long time; and Jarmin—well he was only in this very office a short while ago. We spoke at length and I saw nothing to…’
‘Governor,’ Cadman interrupted again. Zara Gen’s eyes narrowed, but he let it go. Cadman raised a hand in apology, but continued anyway. ‘Doesn’t it strike you as odd that the most prominent Nousian in the North just happens to pop in for a visit?’
‘I invited him,’ Zara Gen said.
Cadman gave his most sympathetic sigh. ‘Yes, Governor, but think about what led to you making such a politically…sensitive move.’
Zara Gen’s face reddened and he drummed his fingers on the desktop.
‘Most out of character.’ Cadman whipped off his pince-nez and squeezed the bridge of his nose. ‘And I dare say it didn’t go unnoticed in Jorakum. You know how the staff gossip. My point is, however, that soon after Jarmin departed, our itinerant holy knight, Deacon Shader, turned up in Pardes where the Grey Abbot just happened to have a piece of the Statue of Eingana.’
Zara Gen pushed his chair back and stood, his eyes suddenly keen and radiating clarity. ‘Which you knew all about, Doctor. What was it Shader said you sent after it? Living corpses? No, Doctor, this doesn’t feel right. If the Grey Abbot is as morally reprehensible as you claim the priests are, then why was there no ill-effect from his possession of a piece of the statue?’
‘He’s lived a very long time.’ Cadman was clutching at straws. He crammed the pince-nez back on his nose. ‘Who knows what—?’
‘Oh, come on, Doctor! I may not have all your degrees, but I’m no idiot. I agree that the statue has a part in all this, but the Nousians? You’re starting to sound like Hagalle. You’re supposed to be a man of science. Where’s the evidence to support your hypothesis? And, more to the point, just how long have you had those pieces?’
So the Governor’s not as stupid as he looks. Oh well, onwards with plan B.
Cadman took the eye and the fang from his pocket and rolled them about in his fingers. ‘You already know about my acquisition of the Grey Abbot’s eye.’ Cadman flicked it into the air and deftly caught it. ‘The other piece, I have you to thank for. If you hadn’t invited that odious hermit to your office I might never have learnt of its whereabouts. Actually, I doubt I’d have ever given this whole silly business of Eingana a second thought.’ Scarcely a moment had passed since when Cadman hadn’t wondered if he’d been better off out of it; sticking to his life of anonymity and preying on the nauseating citizens of Sarum.
The blood had drained from Zara Gen’s face. Cadman touched a hand to his cheek, thinking the illusion might have wavered again, but then he realized Zara Gen was probably shocked at the idea of being spied on.
‘Thicker walls, Governor.’ Cadman gave the panelling a sharp rap. ‘Soundproofing. It was all the rage in my day, what with the paparazzi, the sellers of secrets, and jealous rivals. We even had little devices you could secrete in plant pots. If you’d been more cautious I’d have been prevented from eavesdropping. As it is, your carelessness has led me to a place I’d rather not have come, and it’s looking increasingly like there’s no turning back.’
Cadman sauntered to the door and locked it.
‘Guards!’ Zara Gen called out, rushing round the table and pushing past Cadman to take hold of the door knob. ‘Someone call Captain Harding!’ He turned the key and pulled the door open. A shadow blocked his way, causing him to back into the office until he was pressed up against the desk. The shadow drifted towards him taking on more clarity, a full-faced great helm, translucent armour and a diaphanous surcoat, yellow with age but still bearing the red Monas of the Templum.
‘What…What is…?’ Zara Gen’s teeth were chattering and he clutched his arms across his chest.
‘Governor, Callixus. Callixus, Governor Gen. Now do be a good chap and sit down before you fall down.’ Cadman waved Zara Gen back to his chair. ‘Splendid.’ He whipped out his cigarette case, tapped it three times and replaced it. Not the best time to smoke, he decided. Some jobsworth was bound to investigate the smell. Walking straight through the ethereal form of Callixus, he went back to the drinks cabinet.
Callixus’s eyes smouldered.
‘Are the Lost in position?’ Cadman asked, pouring himself a large whiskey. Wouldn’t have the slightest effect, but ancient habits die hard.
‘They have entered the city. The Imperial troops were no match for them.’
‘Good, good. Tell them to come straight here. A bit more terror and panic can’t do us any harm, eh, Governor? I expect the good people of Sarum are quite getting used to it, what with the plague and all. Sterling stuff. Sterling.’
In spite of his bravado, Cadman was worried. More worried than he’d been in centuries. It wasn’t in his nature to take such bold action; and yet wasn’t that the way life worked, throwing up opportunities for advancement, each acceptance bearing its own risks?
‘What are the Lost?’ Zara Gen had taken on the complexion of wax, and his knuckles looked almost arthritic from gripping the arms of his chair so tightly.
‘Who would be more apposite, don’t you think, Callixus? Governor, Governor, things have got ahead of themselves, as I knew they would. Action begets more action, I always say, and all action leads inexorably to climax, dispersal, and disintegration. I’m afraid it doesn’t bode well for dear old Sarum, but what’s a man to do when the entire co
smos is just waiting to take a swipe at him? Back in my day we had something known as the Lost and Found—I expect you have something similar here at Arnbrook House, what with this being a thoroughly bureaucratic institution. What Aeterna has lost, I have found and intend to put to good use. Let’s see if this particular climax can’t be twisted to a positive end.’ More positive for some than others, if fate doesn’t defecate in my celebratory champagne.
‘Don’t worry, Governor, once I have the rest of the statue I won’t be sticking around here. You might even get out of this alive—if you stay put and do as you’re told. Now do be a dear and zip it, as they used to say.’
Cadman touched the amber pieces together, watched them spark and glow. He closed his eyes and reached out into the streets of Sarum, hunting, probing.
‘Now look here, Cadman, we’re both reasonable men,’ Zara Gen said, breaking Cadman’s concentration.
‘Perhaps I didn’t make myself clear, Governor. Shut up!’
Zara Gen shrank back into his chair as Cadman once more closed his eyes and sought out the dead of Sarum. He didn’t have far to look, the wisps of his questing soul drawn to the fresh corpses of a death-cart a couple of blocks away. Siphoning off the power of Eingana to enhance his own necromantic art, he breathed black life into the cadavers and felt the first stirrings of undeath.
Casting his net wider, Cadman scoured the morgues and hospitals, animating all the dead flesh he could find before passing over the cemeteries and revisiting the tumuli outside the city. He felt their groaning protests, these reluctant slaves drawn back from the grave. There were hundreds of them, all connected to his will by the merest sliver of awareness; not enough to think for themselves, but enough for mechanical movements and a burning hunger that would never be sated, no matter how many victims they feasted on.
‘Good,’ Cadman said, pocketing the pieces of amber. ‘That went well. Now then…’
A distant caw sounded from deep in his mind. Cadman slapped the side of his head and pounded his ear like a swimmer trying to void water.
The caw was answered by another, louder and more urgent, and then another. Icy dread crept up his spine, adding to the cold that never left him.
Bugger. Now what have I done?
‘Callixus,’ Cadman’s voice was shaking. He coughed to clear his throat and turned to the wraith who was hovering just a little too close for comfort. ‘Meet the Lost outside and take them to the templum. Justin will be expecting you.’ Not that I don’t trust the boy knights to get the job done, but you can never be too careful. ‘Get rid of the priests and then search every nook and cranny. If there is a piece of the statue there, I want it, do you understand?’
A ripple passed through Callixus’s ghostly body. ‘What of Shader? He was able to harm me before.’
‘So the odds are even. The legends say you were the greatest of the Elect; surely, even in death you can best a neurotic upstart who doesn’t seem to know whether he’s coming or going. Oh, and Callixus, send one of your men to me. Someone’s going to need to keep an eye on our friend here.’
Callixus’s eyes narrowed to red slits and then he dispersed in a puff of black smoke.
‘There’s still time to put an end to all this.’ Zara Gen was half out of his chair.
The sound of breaking glass came from somewhere downstairs.
‘No there’s not. The game’s afoot, Governor. If I were you I’d sit very, very still. Do nothing, say nothing, and who knows, you might turn out to be the luckiest man alive.’
Cadman headed for the door but it opened just before he reached it. A massive knight stood in the doorway, skeletal jaw hanging slack, one shrivelled eyeball dangling from a thread across a bony cheek. The links on its rusty chainmail were broken here and there, leaving unsightly tears like a moth-eaten rag. It wore the surcoat of the Elect, blackened with mildew, and carried a dented kite shield and jagged longsword.
That was quick.
‘I am Abelard,’ the dead knight rasped, its jaw falling to one side and looking like it was about to drop off. ‘Marshall of the Elect and second only to Callixus.’
‘A pleasure,’ Cadman said, holding out his hand and then withdrawing it, thinking Abelard’s might come off if he shook it. ‘You sound eminently qualified for the job. This,’ he turned to Zara Gen, ‘is our beloved Governor. Under no circumstances is he to leave this room. If he tries anything, kill him.’
From the looks of things, Zara Gen wasn’t likely to try anything very much at all—although he was starting to look like he needed to relieve himself.
‘On second thoughts,’ Cadman turned back to Abelard, ‘he may need the W.C. You’d better wait outside or he’ll never stop, and I’d hate for him to run out of toilet paper. Right, I must leave you two to get acquainted.’ I have business to discuss with a rather shady customer who’s got more tentacles than an octopus.
It was another step down the slippery slope, but what else could he do? The die was cast, the players assembled. Now it was up to him to ensure that the odds were stacked definitively in his favour.
PAST GLORIES, PRESENT WOES
Hagalle, Emperor of Sahul, stood upon the balcony of the Imperial Palace in Jorakum and waved to the marching veterans and the dutifully cheering crowd. It seemed a particularly long parade. Never-ending. Interminable. It was all very well honouring past heroes, but with enemies at every door it would have been more comforting to be surrounded by the heroes of the present. If you could find any, that is. He clenched a fist behind his back and hoped that his fixed smile hadn’t turned into a grimace. With his armies scouring the interior for any sign of an Eastern incursion, protecting the coasts from mawgs or the inevitable Templum invasion, and now containing the plague in Sarum, he was feeling more than a little stretched. More than a little vulnerable. The last thing he needed was a Veteran’s Day procession. If the tedium didn’t kill him, the chances are some skulking assassin in the crowd would. It was a sign of the times. Every second man would more likely stab you than shake your hand. Troubling times. Worrying. Violent times.
‘What is it, Emperor?’ Aristodeus brushed against him and peered at the crowd, looking more at home with the occasion than a member of the royal family—if there’d been one.
With his father murdered by the Sicarii, who were supposed to serve him, his mother in a lunatic asylum in Daemonia, and his idiot younger brother Paryll killed falling from his horse, Hagalle was the last of the line, as Aristodeus always reminded him each time he put in one of these impromptu appearances. All very well for him to say, Hagalle gave the philosopher a sideways glance and leaned on the balustrade to create some distance between them, but no sooner was he alone with a beautiful woman than his manhood wilted like a tulip in the desert. His blasted worries couldn’t leave him alone for one minute so that he could get the job done without fretting about being stuck with a hairpin, or receiving the kiss of death from poisoned lips.
‘Thought I saw something down there: a glint of metal.’ Bastards never gave up. You could see them everywhere, if you looked hard enough. Always lurking, always waiting in the shadows.
Aristodeus scanned the crowd like a hawk, pursed his lips and shrugged. ‘Probably just a coin, or sunlight glinting from jewellery.’
Hagalle drew back, his jaw aching from smiling so much. He’d expected Aristodeus to say that. What he couldn’t decide, though, was whether the philosopher was keeping something from him or mocking him. Hagalle was fully aware that most of his inner-circle thought him paranoid. No one had the guts to tell him to his face, but he saw the looks, heard the whispers. Maybe one day, when the Ipsissimus showed up with an invasion fleet, they’d eat humble pie, and if they didn’t, it wouldn’t hurt to have a mass execution to restore respect.
Troop after troop of Sahul’s retired servicemen marched past the palace to the steady boom, boom, boom of the bass drums, the rat-tat-tat of the snares, the wail of the bagpipes; each regiment preceded by a standard bearing its motto and years of
service.
‘Look,’ Aristodeus said with the enthusiasm of a small boy at a shark cull. ‘The Cassowaries. Wasn’t that Emperor Gorkan’s regiment?’
Hagalle squinted at the blue-coats goose-stepping past, chins held high and flanked by the drooping ends of regimental moustaches. Each old soldier had an enormous broadsword strapped to his waist, and at the front a big bull of a man hoisted the standard aloft: a flightless blue bird on a white background.
‘He pretty much grew up with them.’ Hagalle acknowledged the troop with a nod. ‘Tough old birds.’ He gave a little laugh at the irony. It’s how the regiment had jokingly described itself when Hagalle followed in his father’s footsteps during his youth. Good times, he sighed. Happy times. All before he’d been left to run this tinpot empire from the steaming, stinking dungheap of a city that was Jorakum.
‘Many of the men down there fought for my father in the civil war.’ Hagalle turned an eye on the philosopher to make sure he was listening.
Aristodeus dabbed at his slick forehead with a handkerchief, eyes widening with what looked like feigned interest. Hagalle knew even Aristodeus wouldn’t dare to change the subject, and would have to endure the coming monologue with tortured patience. That was the first cheery thought he’d had all day.
‘It’s to men such as these,’ he took in the endless blue line with a majestic sweep of his arm, ‘that we owe the survival of the Zaneish Dynasty. I’m sure you’re aware, old friend, that we go back more than three hundred years.’
Hagalle was starting to enjoy himself. Of course Aristodeus was aware—he’d been the one to teach him history, along with philosophy, the rudiments of the science of the Ancients, and the art of war. His father might have misjudged the Sicarii, but he’d made a fine choice of tutor. Pity the bald bastard had grown to be such an irritation later in life.
‘Quite, quite,’ Aristodeus’s voice had a reedy quality to it, as if he were bored out of his mind and trying to sound interested. ‘Ishgar, wasn’t it? Built up the Sahulian League. Forced the Eastern Lords to sign the Charter just outside of Sarum. Did I ever teach you about the strategy he employed?’