War Master's Gate (Shadows of the Apt)
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And about the raids, of course: villages not far from Sarn that had been found empty, with not a witness, not a body, only disturbed earth – so that people were talking about some terrible new Imperial weapon, save that some scouts had found Wasp camps similarly deserted.
And, at last, she would tell him that he had been lost to the world for almost three tendays, while the Instar fought against the injury within him, although she would never tell him how she had despaired, back in Collegium, and had abandoned him. And she would tell him of Averic, and Gerethwy, and all their other friends who had not left Collegium. And she would tell him that Stenwold Maker himself was believed dead, though nobody would admit to having seen a corpse. There would come a time for all these revelations.
But, for now . . .
‘Hello, the Antspider.’ His voice sounded faint in his own ears.
‘Hello, Chief Officer Eujen.’ Her smile seemed the most fragile thing he had ever seen, himself included. ‘Where the pits have you been, eh?’
The Others
Across the Lowlands and the Empire and beyond, cracks had begun to show.
Tiny fissures, hairline fractures in stone, like the unexpected gap that those students had crossed to escape the doomed College. But they were deep. Look down into that sliver of abyss, and there might be distant lights, movement.
Sometimes the cracks were more than that, chasms rupturing wide into caves, the earth abruptly hollow . . . and then things came out.
They took the living and the dead. They left no bodies. They cared nothing for Empire or Lowlands, Apt or Inapt.
They had been away a long time, but they had not forgotten.
Glossary
Characters
Aagen – renegade Wasp, now of Princep Salma
Akkestrae – leader of the Felyen Mantids within Collegium
Amalthae – forest mantis
Amnon – former First Soldier of Khanaphes
Argastos – ancient Moth mystic
Arvi – Fly-kinden secretary to Jodry Drillen
Averic – Wasp student at Collegium
Balkus – renegade Sarnesh Ant, now of Princep Salma
Bergild – Wasp Air Corps captain with the Second Army
Berjek Gripshod – Beetle-kinden lecturer in history at the College
Brant – Wasp engineer lieutenant, Second Army
Castre Gorenn – Dragonfly archer with the Coldstone Company
Ceremon – Nethyen Mantis, consort of Amalthae
Cheerwell Maker – Inapt Beetle magician
Cherten – Wasp colonel, Intelligence Rekef, Second Army
Cornella Fassen – student at the College
Dariandrephos (Drephos) – master artificer and leader of the Iron Glove
Despard – Fly artificer, Tidenfree crew
Elder Padstock – Beetle chief officer, Maker’s Own Company
Ellery Heartwhill – student at the College
Elysiath Neptellian – Master of Khanaphes
Ernain – Bee engineer captain, Second Army
Esmail – Assassin Bug spy masquerading as the Wasp Ostrec
Eujen Leadswell – Beetle student and leader of the Student Company
Gerethwy – Woodlouse student at the College
Gjegevey – Woodlouse adviser to Empress Seda
Gorrec – Wasp Pioneer sergeant, Eighth Army
Grief – formerly Grief in Chains. Butterfly Monarch of Princep Salma
Hanto – Fly Pioneer, Ninth Army
Helma Bartrer – Beetle historian and diplomat
Helmess Broiler – Beetle Assembler, Wasp sympathizer
Howell Graveller – Bettle student at the College
Icnumon – halfbreed Pioneer, Eighth Army
Jadis of the Melisandyr – Spider bodyguard to Mycella
Jen Reader – Beetle College librarian and wife of Willem Reader
Jodry Drillen – Beetle-kinden Speaker for the Collegiate Assembly
Jons Allanbridge – Beetle aviator
Jons Escarrabin – Beetle Pioneer, Eighth Army
Kymene – Mynan commander in exile
Laina Mowwell – Beetle soldier of the Student Company
Laszlo – Fly agent and occasional pirate
Lissart – Firefly agent and arsonist
Madagnus – Ant-kinden chief officer, Coldstone Company
Maure – halfbreed magician from the Commonweal
Milus – Sarnesh Ant tactician
Morkaris – Spider-kinden mercenary adjutant for Mycella
Mycella of the Aldanrael – Spider noblewoman
Nethonwy – ancient Woodlouse adviser
Nistic – Hornet-kinden captain
Oski – Fly engineer major, Second Army
Ostrec – Wasp Rekef major, Esmail’s disguise
Paladrya – Kerebroi adviser of the Sea-kinden
Parrymill – Beetle-kinden Collegiate Assembler
Peddic Gorseway – Beetle-kinden soldier of the Student Company
Remas Boltwright – Beetle chief officer, Fealty Street Company
Roder – Wasp general, Eighth Army
Sartaea te Mosca – Fly lecturer in Inapt studies at the College
Scorvia – Sarnesh Ant sapper-handler
Seda I – Empress of the Wasps
Sentius – Sarnesh Ant commander
Serena – Fly officer, Fealty Street Company
Sperra – Fly of Princep Salma
Stenwold Maker – Beetle-kinden, War Master of Collegium
Storvus – Beetle-kinden Collegiate artisan
Straessa – the Antspider, officer of Coldstone Company
Syale – Roach-kinden diplomat of Princep Salme
Taki – Fly aviator of Solarno and Collegium
Tegrec – Wasp magician, ambassador to the Empire from Tharn
Terastos – Moth agent from Dorax
Termes – Vekken Ant commander
Thalric – renegade Wasp
Tisamon – dead Mantis Weaponsmaster raised by Seda
Tomasso – Fly-kinden pirate and merchant, captain of the Tidenfree
Tynan – Wasp general, Second Army
Tynisa – halfbreed Weaponsmaster, Tisamon’s daughter
Vendall – Beetle Collegiate magnate
Vollery – Beetle Collegiate artisan
Vrakir – Wasp Red Watch captain
Willem Reader – Beetle Collegiate artificer
Wisden – Beetle Collegiate Assembler
Yraea – Tharen Moth diplomat and magician
Zerro – Fly scout working for the Sarnesh
Places
Capitas – capital of the Empire
Collegium – Beetle city-state
Commonweal – Dragonfly domain north of the Lowlands
Darakyon – Mantis forest, formerly haunted
Dorax – Moth retreat
Etheryon – Mantis hold
Felyal – Mantis hold and forest
Helleron – Beetle city-state
Hermatyre – Sea-kinden city
Kes – Ant island city-state
Khanaphes – ancient Beetle city-state
Malkan’s Folly/Malkan’s Stand – battlefield, former site of Sarnesh fortress
Myna – Beetle city-state, formerly part of the Empire
Nethyon – Mantis hold
Princep Salma – city founded by refugees of the last war
Parosyal – Mantis-kinden sacred island
Sarn – Ant city-state, ally of Collegium
Seldis – Spider city
Solarno – Beetle city on the Exalsee
Spiderlands – large domain south of the Lowlands
Tark – Ant city-state
Tharn – Moth retreat
Vek – Ant city-state, recently at peace with Collegium
Organizations and Things
Amphiophos – Collegiate centre of government
Arcanum – Moth secret service
Aristoi – the Spider-kinden ruling cla
ss
Army Intelligence – Imperial army corps
Assembly – Collegiate ruling body
Aviation Corps – Imperial army corps, part of the Engineers
Battle of the Rails – battle in which Malkan’s Seventh defeated the Sarnesh
Coldstone Company – Collegiate Merchant Company, motto: ‘In Our Enemies’ Robes’
Consortium of the Honest – mercantile arm of the Empire
Engineering Corps (‘the Engineers’) – Imperial army corps
Esca Magni – Taki’s orthopter
Farsphex – new Imperial model of orthopter
Great College – Collegiate centre of learning
greatshotter – new Iron Glove-developed artillery
Imperial Eighth Army – commanded by General Roder
Imperial Fourth Army – ‘the Barbs’, destroyed by Felyen Mantids in the last war
Imperial Second Army – ‘the Gears’, commanded by General Tynan
Imperial Seventh Army – ‘the Winged Furies’, Malkan’s command, destroyed by Sarnesh in the last war
Iron Glove – artificing cartel led by Drephos out of Chasme
lorn detachment – soldiers sent on a suicide mission
Maker’s Own – Collegiate Merchant Company, motto: ‘Through the Gate’
Malkan’s Stand/Malkan’s Folly – Sarnesh defeat of the Empire, now Sarnesh fortress
Outwright’s Pike and Shot – Collegiate Merchant Company, motto: ‘Outright Victory or Death’
Prowess Forum – Collegiate duelling school
Quartermaster Corps – Imperial army corps
Red Watch – new Imperial corps, the mouth of the Empress
Rekef – Imperial secret service, divided into Inlander and Outlander
Slave Corps – Imperial army corps
Spearflight – Imperial model of orthopter
Stormreader – Collegiate model of orthopter
Student Company – newly formed Collegiate unit, motto: ‘Learn to Live’
Twelve-year War – Imperial war against the Commonweal
Continue reading for an
exclusive short story set in
the world of the Apt from
Adrian Tchaikovsky.
Heart of the Green
It was the storm that tipped the balance. Everything else could be accounted for as just bad luck. By Sergeant Corver’s estimation, bad luck was his lot in life, as if by a decree of the Emperor himself. The storm, though: that was through the other side of his luck and into a whole different country.
Bad enough to be on this little airship in the first place, let alone without clear orders to tell any of them where they were going. Worse still to be under the command of a slimy, self-interested creature like Captain Ordan of the Rekef Outlander, roped into some secret mission. Worse even than that to be in this piss-pot defenceless little craft headed westwards of that north–south line that the Empire’s armies had drawn across the Lowlands, on one side, ‘ours’, and on the far side – the side the airship was flying over – ‘theirs’. Sandric, the pilot, had been keeping up a steady, wretched muttering for hours now, waiting for the dots of Sarnesh orthopters to appear. Then the sky had gone from blue to grey, from grey to a thunderous, angrier grey, the wind had picked up, and Corver’s luck had simply taken the day off. You don’t need me any more, it had told him. You’re now so thoroughly pissed on that I can’t possibly make things worse.
There had been an abortive conversation between Sandric and Captain Ordan with the pilot insisting that they needed to set down, and Ordan pulling rank: ‘This is enemy territory! What do you think we’ll see if we set down here?’
Well, quite, had been Corver’s unspoken thought. And so where the pits are we going?
A day before he had been sitting in the quartermaster’s tent, dicing with an off-duty engineer and the duty sergeant, when Ordan had commandeered him to load an airship. The loading had been of a single metal-bound chest, and Corver had commandeered Vrant, one of his regular squad – and even then the two of them had struggled. It was noticeable that the two other soldiers following Ordan like his shadow had not lifted a finger to help, neither had the shifty little Fly-kinden in a Consortium greatcoat, who was either the captain’s secretary or his overage catamite. By the time the chest was ensconced in the back alcove of the cabin that made up most of the airship’s below-decks, Ordan had given Sandric orders to lift off, and Corver and Vrant had simply never been allowed off the ship, unwillingly seconded to the Rekef Outlander.
Sandric had become increasing panicked as the wind picked up – meaning as the wind picked up the airship and started throwing it about the sky. There was no way he could hold a course, the pilot had insisted. They could end up anywhere. Ordan had shouted at him to do his job. That was really just the final brick in the tower of suspicions Corver had about Ordan – a piece of mental construction finished behind time, far too late to do any good. By then it was plain that not only did Ordan have no idea about flying airships, but also that his plan appeared to be mostly to do with moving away rather than specifically towards. Away, in this case, from the camp of General Malkan’s Seventh Army.
There had been a shake-up in the Rekef – everyone had heard the rumours. They said there were purges going on. Corver, like any sane man, had as little to do with the Empire’s secret police as possible, but his luck, once again his luck, had found a way to get him stuck right in there with them.
Ordan had retreated to the rear of the cabin as the wooden walls around them began creaking and shuddering, the gondola jumping like a puppet as the battered balloon pulled its strings. The engine kept chugging, but its propellers might as well not have been there. They had all become the wind’s playthings, despite Sandric’s best efforts.
Behind Ordan: the chest in its alcove, shifting against the ropes that held it there, ready to become the sort of missile suitable for siege warfare the moment its restraints broke. To either side of the chest, Lucen and Tarvoc, Ordan’s two silent accomplices, ensuring that nobody as untrustworthy as a sergeant of the Seventh Army should so much as get a look in. The wretched little Fly, Sterro by name, was clinging on for dear life somewhere, looking pasty and about to throw up, whilst Sandric held futilely to the controls and pretended he had some influence on where they were going. Corver and Vrant were left to their own devices.
Corver’s own devices took him to Sandric’s shoulder, peering through the glass of the ports at the sky ahead and the land beneath. ‘Stab me,’ was his immediate reaction. ‘Should there be all that green down there?’
‘No, no there should not,’ Sandric spat back, any other words lost in the instinctive whimper as the airship took another battering, every part of it creaking and straining and trying to break free from the rest. Corver tried to picture what the land west of the Seventh’s camp looked like – a sergeant didn’t get to see the campaign maps, but he knew that there was the city of Sarn there somewhere, and north of that . . .
He felt cold all over: the Mantis forest, the name of which he could not recall, but he had enough jagged memories of their kinden from the Twelve-year War. For a moment he was clinging to the back of Sandric’s seat, seeing the dark between the trees, hearing the whoops of the Mantids and the screams of their victims, of Corver’s own men . . .
Then something struck the airship hard, making it lurch far more than the mere wind could account for, and Sandric let out a high, panicked cry. Fleetingly the gondola and balloon were in serious dispute as to which of them should be above the other.
‘What? What is it?’ Captain Ordan was demanding, shouting over the gale.
The face that Sandric turned back on him was white with dread. ‘There’s something on the canopy, sir!’ The entire airship lurched again, drunkenly. ‘We’ve got to get it off, whatever it is!’
Ordan blinked at him for a moment, then jabbed a finger at Vrant. ‘You! Get out there and see what’s going on.’
For a moment Co
rver thought that Vrant wouldn’t do it – not through fear of the weather or the unknown but just because Vrant was like that, but then the big soldier stomped over to the side hatch, braced himself and unlatched it. He had to lean into it with some force to push it open, but then the wind caught it and slammed it out against the hull, its invisible claws rushing into the cabin and whipping every loose thing about the enclosed space, dragging at everyone, the great void of the sky hungry for them to join it. Vrant bared his teeth, and then bundled himself through the hatchway.
He was a bad soldier, Vrant. In a fight, under pressure, none better, but without something to focus his attention on he was first in line for any disciplinary charge you cared to name. Half his military career had been spent undoing all the good the other half had won through hard fighting and bravery. Men like Ordan, Rekef men with big mouths and no backbone, got right up his nose.
We will have a reckoning when I’m done with this, he promised himself, and hauled his body onto the top of the gondola, his Art wings a constant blur as they fought to counter the tug and push of the wind. The balloon was a great bloated moon immediately above him, impossible to see what was supposed to be wrong with it from here. For a moment he couldn’t even work out how to go about this – taking flight would be a sure recipe for ending up miles from the airship. Then he spotted that some of the lines holding the canopy to the gondola were made into rope ladders, presumably for some arcane engineer business not normally carried out in the teeth of a pox-rotten storm.
I am going to kill Captain Ordan with my bare hands.
He set to climbing, with the same bloody-minded stubbornness with which he approached most things. Immediately the wind tried to snatch him, but he was a strong man, and his angry thoughts made him stronger. One hand, one foot at a time, and he ascended, bouncing and dancing with the strumming ropes like a webbed fly with the spider coming. He did not look up, or anywhere except at the rope ladder itself, closed his ears to the storm, brought to the task the single-minded vigour he normally reserved for thwarting his superiors. At first he was climbing half-upside down, up the underside of the balloon, but then he was righting himself, creeping over the curve, feeling the wind only stronger as it sought to brush him off the great rounded expanse of the canopy.