*
Brynd departed with no attempt at conversation, no goodbyes, just headed back out through the confusing dark corridors – smacking straight into the cold night air of Villiren, back into his normal life. A quick fuck to relieve the built-up stress – or replace it with guilt, whatever.
As he left, he couldn't help but think he was being followed. Maybe it was his paranoia. These streets could do that to you, but still…
Was there actually someone there?
In the shadows?
THIRTEEN
Another row with Beami, another bad start to the evening. All she ever did was spend her time with those stupid relics, tinkering away at them, trying to make some money. Like they needed any more of that – she wouldn't listen to him though, just wanted to do her own thing. Those kind of interests didn't seem to matter at the start – back before the ice, she'd loved the stability he allowed her, his wild edge, his passion and exuberance. And tonight came another pointless discussion on the state of their marriage before he stormed out.
Right there and then, he wanted to go out and sleep with some other woman, and aside from the obvious repercussions, here was the real bite: that was just the kind of thinking that had got him into this mess. Years ago that was all he ever did, floating from woman to woman, uncommitted and angry, and just for a moment he anchored on one. He had that intense fling with an alcoholic chain-smoker… what was her name? It didn't matter. He used to let her strike him. That was before he discovered she was in a constant state of anger because of repressing her urges for vampyrism.
Ultimately, it was a disease he caught from a cheap fuck. Those were his low days. While he was wasted on drugs, he'd asked her to bite him – he'd pleaded with her and, despite her refusals, she had eventually capitulated. Her fangs appeared and she plunged them into his neck – but because of so much alcohol in her blood and too many substances in his own, something went wrong. There was some failure in transmission.
And he wasn't infected properly.
That woman left him the next day and he never saw her again. Whatever had caused his vampyrism was only passed on at half strength, so he didn't possess a full-time urge to drink blood. His rage increased in intensity, his muscles hardened over a single week, his ageing process slowed – but it never felt complete, and now neither did he. It was as if his life, from that point, became one endless longing for something more. When his gang brethren begged to become infected with his bite, they too received this diluted strain, they too became only half vampyr.
It took him a while to become accustomed to his new body, and he had sought help from a witch, who assiduously treated his wounds in exchange for a large fee. Vampyrs were not immortal, she had warned, and they were susceptible to many other ways of dying… That, she concluded, was why they were so rare.
This was no fairy tale, then, nothing to romanticize. He was a violent monster.
*
Through the second-floor doorway, Malum glanced southwards across the roofscape. Lights glistened intermittently, showing him a glimpse of a city residence, of someone's life conducted within. Moonlight would steal a moment to expose some silhouetted figure leaping from building to building, on a mission he could only guess at.
Malum sat straddling a chair, gripping the backrest, clenching his jaw against the pain. He had insisted on the door being left open to let in blasts of icy winds – even so, sweat lined his forehead. An arum-weed roll-up burned in one hand, and he took a drag whenever the stinging became too much. At times like this he was grateful that his mask covered only the upper half of his face.
An old man wearing a white gown and with a steady hand was applying a woodblock design to Malum's naked back, adding layer upon layer of black ink to his exposed skin, then scraping with chisels or gouges. Pain pulsed through his body, before it was dulled by whatever it was within his body that rendered him not fully human.
The man painfully grafted art under Malum's skin: symbols, decorations, every line of tattoo loaded with meaning and intent. He was assiduous in his scraping. Jars of pungent, coloured ink covered the table to one side. The artist's slippers shuffled constantly on the tiled floor. Diagrams of designs papered the walls, fluttering in the wind.
Malum took another drag of the roll-up, flicked ash to the floor.
This time he had requested a tribal dragon, a fearsome representation of non-Empire deities, building on an elaboration of designs that crept from the base of his spine up to his shoulder blades.
'Hey, Malum, you got a moment? I got some news.'
Malum looked up as one of his scouts approached him from behind.
'Sure. Go on, speak. He can't hear you. He's deaf.' Malum tilted his head to indicate the old artist. 'Move round the front so I can see you.'
The scout moved into view, by the open doorway. It was one of the older, skinnier men in his service.
'Well, what have you got?' Malum inhaled some more arum weed.
'It's about the soldier,' the scout said. 'The leader.'
'The commander?'
'Yeah,' the scout said, and smirked. 'You gonna love this. I followed him like you said. And you was right.'
'And what was I right about?'
'The soldier was seen going into one of them places where men buy men. For… you know, sex.'
Malum contemplated this information for a long moment. His instinct had proven right and, well… it just wouldn't do. There was no way he was going to allow his men to fight for someone like that now, was there? It just wasn't right. Malum then considered how he could arrange to confront the albino about his despicable activities.
*
Malum didn't bother going to bed much. Instead he slumped in a chair, reading or smoking, or contemplating the bottom of his glass of vodka. Beami had been playing with her relics all night anyway, and recently it seemed easier if their lives didn't cross paths. Fine with me.
No, he needed to be up particularly early this morning, the day of the strike. His tattoo had begun to heal quickly and form a scab – such were the beneficial side effects of being what he was: unnatural. He stretched himself, to induce a more alert state, then began checking his gear – three short blades, one messer, a knuckleduster – not much but he was skilled enough with his fists and with his fangs should he need them. A different mask for today: dark blue, like all those belonging to the Bloods would be wearing. Brown leather coat, thick boots.
A quick breakfast and he was out the door. The skies had cleared and the sun was purpling the day. This would be a crisp morning. Sometimes it seemed as if this ice age wasn't natural, as if it could somehow be the amalgamation of a thousand cultists trying their best to reduce the entire land to freezing temperatures. You'd get the occasional breeze that promised spring, but that was soon beaten back by another more chilling.
Hands in his pockets, he strode towards the arranged meeting point, by the corner of the iren on the border of Althing and Saltwater. The strike would be heading down from Port Nostalgia towards the Onyx Wings, which was an impressive distance, and would take them past some of the wealthiest zones of Villiren. Past the houses of wealthy businessmen.
Fifty or so of his men were already gathered, in their dark-blue masks. A lot of the strikers would be wearing masks too: no one wanted to be recognized by the authorities while causing political trouble. As individuals they could suffer, so united they would make their stand – and such unification would now be their downfall.
Malum gave the instructions. They'd blend in with the strike movement, by now a large crowd, and pretend they were part of the protest. Lutto had given instructions for soldiers from the Regiment of Foot to guard much of the rich property nearby, so lesser ranks of the Inquisition had been delegated here. Tensions existed though because the military were trying to get the citizens on Lutto's side, so he had ordered them not to attack civilians. Therefore only the gangs could perpetrate violence. Dannan's crew turned up too, black-masked and keeping to themselves. Pretty
soon everyone had massed, and they knew exactly what they would be doing and where to go.
*
Slipping across the border of Althing and through much of the social housing, they headed north to the Shanties: where the strike action was scheduled to start.
Rumels and humans, workers of the ocean, of deep and open-cast pits, metal-smiths and construction workers and stevedores, there were much more than the predicted thousand here. At least four thousand were crammed in between the back of the cheap terraces and the industrial warehouses, and they were angry and loud and organized, young men mainly, because poverty didn't allow them the chance of ageing.
'Fuck Ferryby's,' some chanted. And 'Broun Merchants kills workers!'
Painted signs were brandished aloft, demanding improved wages and better protection and rights – for an end to the employment of slaves, lowering their wages. There were declarations of the numbers who had died during the last ten days at their workplaces. Some proclaimed that cultists were using their magic in order to be rid of regular labour.
This busy industrial zone had ground to a halt.
Red sunlight streamed across the seething masses like a premonition of the spilled blood Malum had planned. A nod directed across Malum's own ranks and the Bloods and the Screams proceeded to merge with the strikers' procession, flowing in gradually then dispersing.
Bodies crammed tightly, there wasn't much room for fighting in this mass. Someone blew a conch and several announcements were called just out of earshot. The noise level altered as the crowd began to march. There was a strangely positive mood: most participants seemed peaceful, seemed to have found their purpose here. They drifted on past the stench of the fish warehouses, stepping across the fresh marine brine that washed constantly over the cobbles. Surrounding structures became taller and narrower, displaying a little more elegance in their design. Malum shoved himself towards the edge of the ranks, eyeing the soldiers drawn up to one side, standing neatly, in sparse rows, shields locked.
Not yet… Not until the Citadel is in sight.
The crowd chanted slogans at the soldiers and the Inquisition. They called them abusive names for not being on their side, for not supporting the ordinary people who had to forge a living in this hellhole. Malum didn't give a shit what they said: he just did whatever was needed to collect a fat pile of coin.
There it was, the Citadel itself, the massive structure that stamped its authority on Villiren. Malum moved swiftly into action, and began pushing and shoving those around him.
'Hey, watch it, cunt!'
'Fuck you doin'?'
Malum ignored them. Instead he pointed out anonymous faces declaring loudly that the Inquisition had infiltrated the crowd. Paranoia exploded across the packed street. Malum drew his messer blade, and the woman next to him shrieked at the sight of it. Another man drew his own blade defensively and, at closer than arm's length, Malum struck the other weapon aside, punched him in the neck, and cut his stomach open. The stricken man collapsed to the ground as the movement of feet continued surging over his back. Another fell, then another. Just across the way Malum could see one of the Screams intensifying the violence. He was through the throng, hacking away at spines randomly.
The crowed turned on itself. People began striking out at their own brethren. Nearly everyone nearby was holding some sort of crude weapon – he saw strips of chain and cheap swords, iron bars and broken bottles. They had come ready to fight but probably had not expected it to start within, and suddenly all those masks guaranteeing anonymity and solidarity didn't seem like such a good idea. No one knew who to strike out at. Their target became anyone.
The soldiers meanwhile remained impassive ranged along the sides of the streets, as the strike procession turned into a bloodbath. Malum got down to serious work: carving out at the most violent-looking individuals or those holding up placards or those shouting slogans the loudest. He ripped his blade through throats, sliced open guts, stamped skulls into the cobbles, all the time feeling the pressure of his fangs, and his animal instincts liberating themselves.
He moved freely, slicing up the crowd – stopped to lift a young child out of the way – before continuing with his butchery. One giant of a man grabbed Malum's collar and hauled him up, so Malum turned his head and sank his fangs into the attacker's wrist. As the giant dropped Malum with a roar of insults, he stabbed his blade upwards into the man's neck, who tumbled down to the ground in a spray of blood.
Malum wiped his mouth.
A good number of people had been injured or killed by the time he spotted at least five of his gang members. That was the sign: once they could see a handful of each other, they should get out of there, quick.
To avoiding the risk of becoming identifiable, Malum slunk out of the crowd and into one of the side streets, putting his blade away. Hand up against the wall, he panted heavily. Within a few moments, another of his gang had joined him, then one of the Screams jogged by.
People were fleeing the scene in panic, running past, covered with bloody injuries. The clamour of the strike movement had all but gone, and what remained was the murmur of those participants left in shock. Soldiers shifted past the end of the alley, starting back and forth across the main street.
Malum gathered what there were of his gang and set off back into the city.
Their work here was done.
FOURTEEN
Jeryd was reminded that it was Nanzi's day off – not by her absence, but by the chaos of paperwork in his office. Amid this mess, he spent the first hour of the morning in deep contemplation. Actually that wasn't quite true. The first half-hour he spent enjoying a luxurious breakfast, hungry after his attempts at starting a diet the previous day, which he had regretted immediately as hunger pangs stabbed through his stomach.
After perusing the reports of the previous night's crimes, he stared at the large map of the city he had pinned to the wall, noting all the marks he'd made to indicate where disappearances had taken place over recent months. Then following the lines and notation, he decided to investigate those urban areas physically. He picked up his cloak and his broad-brimmed hat.
Just as he was leaving, one of his colleagues, a young and rather lazy grey-skinned rumel called Yorjey, entered and dropped a letter on his desk. Yorjey seemed to him typical of the Inquisition members here in Villiren, more concerned with his social networking rather than with getting any serious work done.
'What's this?' Jeryd indicated the letter, ever sceptical of official documents.
'An invite,' Yorjey replied. 'A number of top-level officers get entertained at the Citadel at Portreeve Lutto's request, every now and then. And what with you being a seasoned professional from Villja-mur, you're considered top-level. It'd be a good idea to go, sir, get your face seen around, you know? You need to loosen up a bit, Rumex. People say there's a war coming, you might as well enjoy yourself like the rest of the city.'
Like the rest of you sorry excuses for investigators.
That last sentence summed up the whole attitude of the Inquisition here in Villiren. Jeryd gave a paper-thin smile as the grey-skinned rumel strode out of the room. Then he wondered if he really should perhaps socialize with the others a bit more, thus forging acquaintanceships, making friends as potential future allies if there was indeed any future for this city. Would he be sucked into the easygoing lifestyle these other investigators favoured?
*
A bright day – tall skies, the red sun slouching through its southerly arc. Streets were being cleared of ice and snow by cultist-treated water. Occasionally he might see the underground piping cough up plumes of steam into the air, the firegrain doing its work to keep people warm. Jeryd marvelled at this, and wondered why such systems couldn't have been used in Villjamur. Bureaucracy, for one thing. A lack of decent leadership under a mad Emperor, then his poor daughter who was set up to replace him, then that bastard Urtica who deposed and imprisoned her. No doubt Urtica was thoroughly enjoying the perks of his new-found
position. How long would it be, Jeryd thought, until the name of the Empire officially changed – even out this far. The only alteration so far was that an order had gone out for new government stationery with new lettering. 'The Urtican Empire,' he muttered, the words bitter on his lips. It was probably used as a mantra in Villjamur.
He had to adjust dramatically to his new life here: this was a hedonistic city, a more liberal society, one without the tight laws of Villjamur. Now and then he'd come upon a shop that sold items he didn't agree with, some kind of new drug he didn't approve of, or someone used a phrase involving far too much vulgarity. People here tended not to queue for things in an orderly fashion. People pushed past him rudely. Women were too forward for his tastes. Hookers loitered in doorways, calling over to him with half a smile, half something else entirely, almost suggesting an exhaustion at the lifestyle they led.
Having memorized the wall map, he walked up and down the various areas where people had gone missing in the largest numbers. What was unique about this neighbourhood? Why were people being targeted here? To the south lay the Ancient Quarter, the Onyx Wings almost silhouetted against the lowering sun. To the north stood the barracks and Citadel, their ramparts bold against the horizon. He tipped his hat to two old rumel ladies who seemed to be admiring him, smiling gently in his direction.
It was generally the middle- and upper-class zones that had lost most residents, although what had surprised Jeryd was how a significant number of the others who were missing had held high-profile roles in the local labour movements or were known for their political activism. Among miners and stevedores and tradesmen, it was those most active in defending labour laws who had vanished. That wasn't much to go on, and he was cynical about government methods at the best of times, but he had to look for trends wherever he could.
Irens cropped up all over the place, using any corner they could find. From cooking equipment to clothing, it seemed you could find anything on the stalls scattered about here. Jeryd made his way through one of the larger markets.
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