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Demon in White

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by Christopher Ruocchio




  Also by Christopher Ruocchio:

  The Sun-Eater

  EMPIRE OF SILENCE

  HOWLING DARK

  DEMON IN WHITE

  Copyright © 2020 by Christopher Ruocchio.

  All Rights Reserved.

  Jacket art by Kieran Yanner.

  Jacket design by Katie Anderson.

  Edited by Katie Hoffman.

  DAW Book Collectors No. 1856.

  Published by DAW Books, Inc.

  1745 Broadway, New York, NY 10019.

  All characters and events in this book are fictitious.

  Any resemblance to persons living or dead is strictly coincidental.

  The scanning, uploading, and distribution of this book via the Internet or via any other means without the permission of the publisher is illegal, and punishable by law. Please purchase only authorized electronic editions, and do not participate in or encourage the electronic piracy of copyrighted materials. Your support of the author’s rights is appreciated.

  Ebook ISBN 9780756413088

  DAW TRADEMARK REGISTERED

  U.S. PAT. AND TM. OFF. AND FOREIGN COUNTRIES

  —MARCA REGISTRADA

  HECHO EN U.S.A.

  PRINTED IN THE U.S.A.

  pid_prh_5.5.0_c0_r0

  For my wife,

  Jenna.

  From our first year,

  to all the years to come.

  CONTENTS

  Cover

  Also by Christopher Ruocchio

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Chapter 1: Behold a Pale Horse

  Chapter 2: The Firstborn Son of Earth

  Chapter 3: The Empire of the Clouds

  Chapter 4: Children of the Sun

  Chapter 5: Tamerlane

  Chapter 6: Alone

  Chapter 7: Before the Sun Fell

  Chapter 8: Dream Evil

  Chapter 9: The Devil’s Cohort

  Chapter 10: Pinion and Claw

  Chapter 11: Decimation

  Chapter 12: Udax

  Chapter 13: Too Close to the Sun

  Chapter 14: Request and Require

  Chapter 15: The Shadows of Arae

  Chapter 16: Other Devils

  Chapter 17: Lorian

  Chapter 18: Night Journeys

  Chapter 19: The Jaws Are Closed

  Chapter 20: The Aquilarii

  Chapter 21: Demon in Black

  Chapter 22: Into the Maw

  Chapter 23: Kingdoms of Death

  Chapter 24: Beyond the Doors of the Dark

  Chapter 25: In the Belly of the Whale

  Chapter 26: The Vayadan

  Chapter 27: The Battle of the Beast

  Chapter 28: The Devil Triumphant

  Chapter 29: Far Beyond the Sun

  Chapter 30: Selene

  Chapter 31: The Cloud Gardens

  Chapter 32: Lions

  Chapter 33: There Are Endings

  Chapter 34: Majesty, Monarch, Prophet, Princess

  Chapter 35: Those Things You Thought Unreal

  Chapter 36: The First Steps

  Chapter 37: Blade Without Handle

  Chapter 38: Valka Awakes

  Chapter 39: The Council of Ghosts

  Chapter 40: The Plan

  Chapter 41: The Good Soldier

  Chapter 42: Impossible Tasks

  Chapter 43: Purgatory

  Chapter 44: Along Comes a Spider

  Chapter 45: Visitation

  Chapter 46: Shadows of the Past

  Chapter 47: Once a Myrmidon

  Chapter 48: Halfmortal

  Chapter 49: Regeneration

  Chapter 50: Evil Eyes

  Chapter 51: The Merchant of Death

  Chapter 52: Falling Off the Edge of the World

  Chapter 53: The Golden Age

  Chapter 54: Unlooked-For

  Chapter 55: Reunion

  Chapter 56: Meeting of the Minds

  Chapter 57: Gabriel’s Archive

  Chapter 58: Island in Time

  Chapter 59: Island in the Sun

  Chapter 60: The Library Again

  Chapter 61: Horizon

  Chapter 62: Computer God

  Chapter 63: Late Goodbye

  Chapter 64: The Last Command

  Chapter 65: The Lone and Level Sands

  Chapter 66: Empire of Silence

  Chapter 67: The Summons

  Chapter 68: Annica

  Chapter 69: The Highest Place

  Chapter 70: The Agony

  Chapter 71: Whispers

  Chapter 72: Between the Hammer and the Anvil

  Chapter 73: Berenike

  Chapter 74: Phylacteries

  Chapter 75: The Noise of Thunder

  Chapter 76: The Giant

  Chapter 77: Upon the Ramparts

  Chapter 78: Of Rats and Falcons

  Chapter 79: The Dismal Night

  Chapter 80: Black Sun

  Chapter 81: The Labyrinth Again

  Chapter 82: The Depths Below

  Chapter 83: No Man’s Land

  Chapter 84: The Crawler

  Chapter 85: The Winged Centurion

  Chapter 86: The Scourge of Earth

  Chapter 87: No Sword Can Cut

  Dramatis Personae

  Index of Worlds

  Lexicon

  About the Author

  CHAPTER 1

  BEHOLD A PALE HORSE

  SILENCE.

  The silence about the Solar Throne filled the great hall like water, like the deep dark of the sea. Not a soul stirred. From my place amongst the courtiers, I watched the two common soldiers where they knelt on the mosaic. They had crawled the length of the hall, proceeding down the central aisle flanked by members of the Martian Guard like scarabs in their formal blacks. How long had it been since two persons of so low a station had come to that exalted place? The white vaults had stood like Olympos atop the clouds of Forum for more than ten thousand years, and save for the artisans who had crafted them—creatures whom the nobile people about me would have spurned like insects despite the beauty they had wrought—I was prepared to wager my good right hand that fewer than a hundred serfs had knelt before our Radiant Emperor in all that time.

  That they were in that place at all was a signal—clear as the changing of bells—that the world had changed. That they would speak in that place of gold and carnelian, that hall of ivory and jet, was a sign that the change was terrifying.

  Both soldiers knelt at attention, eyes carefully fixed at the base of the dais where fifty-four steps rose toward the gleaming throne flanked by the Knights Excubitor in armor of mirrored white.

  By the stars at her shoulders I saw that one of the soldiers was a ship’s captain, but it was the other who spoke, rough tones betraying him for a common legionnaire. He had been prompted, coached on what to say by logothetes and by the eunuch homunculi who served the Imperial presence. But fear floated off the man in waves, and for a tenth and unnecessary time he bowed and pressed his forehead to the tile. “Your Radiance,” he said, voice breaking. “Holy Emperor. I abase myself before you. I am Carax of Aramis. I have been your faithful servant for nearly eight hundred years.” His tongue tripped over the words, and I could tell that he’d tried to rehearse them. “I were at Hermonassa, Radiance. Were on the Inviolate when it fell.” From the reports I’d seen of the battle, I knew the Inviolate had been the flagship of the defense fleet at Hermonassa. It had died nameless, for once violat
ed it was the Inviolate no more. The woman beside Carax had been its captain. By rights, she should have ended her life after so devastating a defeat. Perhaps she intended to do just that when this audience was ended.

  Carax spoke, describing the Cielcin attack on the flagship. “The Pale come aboard. Cut through the hull and swarm in. Ship’s leaking air. Life support’s compromised. I don’t know a thing about the battle outside, but the captain’s ordered retreat and we’re pulling back to decouple the bridge section when—”

  “Get to the point!” snapped the slippered eunuch at the soldier’s side. At a gesture from the androgyn, one of the Martians advanced to chastise the legionnaire with the haft of his energy lance.

  “Let the man tell his story in his own way,” came the voice Imperial, halting the androgyn and the Martian in their tracks. Carax and the captain at once pressed their faces to the floor as a child hides from the thunderbolt. Caesar’s words resounded from the throne, amplified by speakers hidden in the filigreed vaults above so that he spoke God-like from every corner of the hall. When he spoke again, it was not unkindly. “He has traveled far and seen much that interests us. We would not have his tale hurried.”

  Spluttering thanks, Carax straightened, still on his knees.

  “But you wanted to hear about it.” Almost I thought I could hear Carax swallow. “About the Pale King.” I guessed the man had given his official report when the survivors from Hermonassa had arrived on Forum, and from that report had been selected to come before the Emperor.

  I glanced sidelong at Pallino where he stood beside me, but my old friend and bodyguard did not so much as blink.

  I felt a shadow stir in my mind, but listened carefully as Carax continued. “My decade were left to guard the airlock. Last line of defense. On the Inviolate the bridge section’s got to by this long hall, and Thailles—he was my decurion—Thailles had sealed the door. A foot and a half of solid titanium, only they got through.” His voice shook on the last word, and he hunched where he knelt, eyes downcast. “Cut its way in with a sword like those our knights use. Highmatter. Cut through the bulkhead like it weren’t nothing, Radiance. Lords and ladies. Only it weren’t like no sword I’d seen. It were too big. And all . . . twisted. Cut through the bulkhead like it weren’t there.” He seemed to realize that he’d repeated himself, and his face darkened. “Cut through the men, too. I never seen one of the Pale so big. Had to stoop in the corridor as it came at us. All black and silver it was. And when it see us standing at the end of the hall behind the prudence shield it bares its fangs at us. Smiling, like.

  “‘Surrender!’ it says, and Honorable Caesar I swear by Holy Mother Earth it spoke our words.” He rubbed his arms. “Said our lives were forfeit. That they’d taken the shipyards. Broken the fleet. We fired on him, but they had shields. Never seen that before, neither. Pale with shields. They just laughed at us, and their king, he said he was . . .” The man struggled with the name.

  I hardly heard him.

  I knew the name.

  Syriani Dorayaica.

  The Scourge of Earth.

  The soldier’s words seized in me, and once again I beheld a vision I had twice seen. First in the darkness beneath Calagah, and again in the cold clutches of the Brethren of Vorgossos. I saw the Cielcin arrayed across the stars, rank upon rank, file upon file, ship and soldier and swords uplifted, scratching at the sky. And at their head there came one taller and more terrible than the rest. Black its raiment and black its cloak, and its horns and its silver crown were terrible as the glass fangs in its lipless mouth.

  “Did it wear a crown?”

  Silence again.

  I realized a moment later that it was I who had spoken, I who had disturbed the air and perfect order about the Solar Throne. The courtiers about me drew away, leaving Pallino and me alone on a little island beneath pillars tall as towers. Someone giggled nervously, and I felt the eyes of the Martians pick me out through their suit optics, their faceless masks dispassionate.

  Carax turned, and our eyes met. His eyes widened. Did he know me? I did not know him.

  “We will have order!” cried a sergeant-at-arms.

  Because it was expected of me, I went to one knee and bowed my head. I did not press it to the floor as the soldiers had. I was palatine, and distantly a cousin of our Emperor. Caesar’s eyes were on me, twin emeralds in that alabaster sculpt he called a face. Was it my imagination, or had one corner of his mouth turned upward in ironic amusement? Whispers burbled around me.

  “That’s Marlowe, isn’t it?”

  “Hadrian Marlowe?”

  “That’s Sir Hadrian Marlowe, the Knight Victorian.”

  “That’s the Halfmortal?”

  “Is it true he can’t be killed?”

  The sergeant-at-arms slammed his fasces against the tiled floor, brass tip ringing against the stone. “Order! We will have order!”

  The Emperor raised a hand, and order was restored. A moment later, His Imperial Radiance, William XXIII of the House Avent, spoke in a voice that brought to mind the touch of fire and the scent of old wood. “Answer our servant’s question, soldier.”

  Attention returned steadily to Carax and his captain. His eyes stayed fixed on me as he answered, ignoring Caesar where he sat amidst gold and velvet. “A crown?” The words seemed alien to the man, and he mouthed them stupidly. “A crown? Yes. It were silver.”

  Alone, this revelation proved nothing. Prince Aranata had worn a coronet of silver. The Cielcin had dozens of princes, perhaps hundreds, each the master of a nation fleet that plied the waterless seas of space. I had no reason to believe that Syriani Dorayaica, whom the Chantry called the Scourge of Earth, was the creature from my visions.

  And yet, I knew.

  But Carax was not finished. “He called himself a king,” he said, and turning broke the inviolable protocol of the throne room by looking up upon the face of the Emperor. “He said he was coming for your crown, Honorable Caesar.” On seeing His Radiance enthroned atop the mighty dais, the soldier’s voice broke, and he prostrated himself once again, lying almost flat against the tile. No longer the center of attention, I stood again, peering over the shoulders of the richly dressed personages before me. “Your Radiance, he let me live. Killed everyone else in my decade.”

  The smell of incense burning in golden thuribles above filled the air, but I smelled the smoke of fires and burning men. I saw the corridor in Carax’s tale as he spoke. The Cielcin king—if king it was—striding relentless, pale sword flashing. I imagined plasma fire and bullets breaking against its shield as its sword fell like rain. How bright the flashing of that blade! How terrible its glass-toothed smile! And when its work was done it seized Carax by his throat and plucked him one-handed from a floor slick with blood and strewn with the limbs of dead men. How clearly I saw that moment then: Carax alone against the enemy. I pressed my lips together in pity. I had a vision of boots dangling useless above the floor, and of the Cielcin lord holding this man calmly in its grip.

  “Tell your master I am coming,” it said, and Carax shuddered to repeat the words. Then it threw the man down like a child’s doll and turned, vanishing into the wreck it had made, and was gone.

  * * *

  “I don’t like this one bit, Had,” Pallino said when the audience was over.

  “I know, Pal.” I rubbed my chin, leaned my head back against the pillar behind me. The Martians had chivied the courtiers from the Sun King’s Hall after the Emperor made his departure, his massive throne carried on the shoulders of a hundred men and flanked by the Knights Excubitor. The vestibule outside the throne room was larger than many palaces, so high one could confuse the vaulted ceiling fifty stories above for the sky. Indeed, I’d heard it said there were mechanisms in the ceiling designed to suck all the moisture from the air, lest clouds form within and rain fall upon the nobility.

  My lictor crossed his arms. �
��The bastards are getting smarter. Or this one is.”

  “Dorayaica.”

  “That’s the one,” Pallino said, then said again, “I don’t like this one bit. The Pale are animals. They’ve always attacked without warning or order, burned cities and carried off people for food. In and out. But this bastard . . . Hermonassa was a military target. He didn’t even raid the planet, just torched the shipyards and crippled the fleet. I bet it was him that did for the Legion base on Gran Kor, too.”

  Still rubbing my pointed chin, I added, “And Arae.” Pallino had been at Arae with me, had seen the unholy mixture of Cielcin and machine the Extrasolarians had bred beneath the mountains on that arid and airless world.

  “Could be. You think he’s allied with the Extras, too?”

  “It,” I corrected. The Cielcin were not male and female. “And I hope not.” An alliance between the Cielcin and the barbarians who dwelt between the stars would be a hideous thing. I shivered. Even after nearly a hundred years of waking life, the memory of my imprisonment in the dungeons of Vorgossos lay on me like a film. “It’s bad enough facing the prospect of a Cielcin chieftain who understands our warfare without dragging Kharn Sagara and his ilk back into the mix.”

  Pallino grunted, and at last I lowered my gaze to look at the man who had come with me out of the fighting pits of Emesh, one of a mere handful of people who remembered me as Had, as only Hadrian, and not as Sir Hadrian, the youngest man not of the Imperial family ever to be named a member of the Royal Knights Victorian; nor as the Halfmortal.

  My friend.

  When I had first met Pallino, he’d been an old man. Hoary, white-haired, and one-eyed. He’d lost the eye fighting the Cielcin at Argissa a lifetime before. Old as he was, he’d been strong after the way of old soldiers, and when I had asked him to enlist with me, to leave the life of a coliseum myrmidon for life as a mercenary, he had not blinked the one eye remaining him.

  He had two eyes now, and the hair on his head was black again, though not so black as mine, and the skin of his face and hands—which once had been spotted and leathered with age and use—was smooth again and youthful, though shot through with a tracery of fine scars like silver wire, the mark of the surgeon’s knife and fingerprint of the gene tonics that had remade his body and elevated him to the patrician class. He’d received a new lease on life, and a second youth, all because I had asked it, all because I had named him my armsman and a member of my house when the Emperor knighted me.

 

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