The Malice. Peter Newman
Чтение книги онлайн.
Читать онлайн книгу The Malice - Peter Newman страница 15
Swords sing, metal sparking on barriers, song penetrating. Generators overload and a panel of light vanishes. With it goes the courage of the defenders. Most run, making targets of their backs. A few, more foolish, surrender. While the knights decimate what’s left, opportunistic squires swipe portable defences. Two minutes later, the group moves again.
Behind, tanks continue to threaten and foot-soldiers harry, but ahead, the way is clear. High rocks loom ever higher until, at last, they reach the natural border of the island. Huge power generators nestle into the rock, taking energy from the sea and passing it to the Harmonium Forge, housed in a great block of silver. Genner leads his people to the wall it makes, taking cover between the humming metal pillars.
‘Set up a barrier,’ he orders. ‘Let’s hope their power supply is more important to them than killing us.’
Squires comply, using the stolen Light Shields to create a curving fourth wall.
Two hundred metres away, a building falls over and four tanks lumber into view. Squads of soldiers march alongside.
Collectively, Genner’s troops hold their breath.
There is a pause, filled by heartbeats, fast, excitable.
The roar of the Crawler’s engines becomes a grumble. Cannons power down.
Collectively, the troops exhale.
Genner quickly gives orders. Shifts are divided. Some take watch, some tend to the injured. The lucky ones rest.
Satisfied, he turns his attention to Vesper. She appears somewhere between shock and despair. Duet stands close by, one of her standing next to the girl while the other lies back, allowing a field medic to attend to her injuries. The medic holds a magnet over her chest and Genner watches as metal shards leap up from her wounds, one by one, like tinkling rain.
‘Vesper, we’re at a crossroads here. It may be that support will arrive in time, it may be that it doesn’t. I want to know if Gamma has any commands for us. Has the sword spoken to you?’
Vesper blinks, comes back to the world.
‘I said, has the sword spoken to you?’
‘Once, I think. Back at home. It called me and it … it’s hard to put into words.’
‘Do you think you could speak to it again, now?’
She looks down at her hands, mesmerised by their trembling. ‘No.’
Genner turns his attention to the Harmonised. ‘Did you stim her?’
From the ground, Duet speaks: ‘We were interrupted.’
Then from Vesper’s side she adds, ‘And we thought –’
‘– Purity would –’
‘– Be better –’
‘In the presence of –’
‘– The Seven.’
Heat rises in Genner’s cheeks. ‘At this point we don’t have anything to lose. Stim her now. I’ll make sure you’re not disturbed.’ He looks pointedly into Vesper’s eyes. ‘Hurry, we don’t have long.’ The girl nods, her face white under the dirt. Genner glances back to Duet. ‘And just so we’re clear: if we survive this, your inability to follow simple orders is going to be a special feature of my report.’
Duet salutes. She waits until his back is turned to glare. Without ceremony, she produces a needle and punches it into Vesper’s arm.
‘Ow!’
The noise causes several heads to snap round in her direction.
‘Sorry.’
Powerful drugs suppress shock, bringing the makeshift camp into sudden focus. Vesper looks at the field medic applying a new layer of Skyn to Duet’s injury. She looks at the soldiers lying on the ground and the eyes that flick away when she tries to meet them. ‘I … I need some privacy.’
‘This is –’
‘– As good –’
‘– As it gets.’
‘Okay. Can you at least turn away?’
Duet complies, one of her sighing pointedly.
Vesper nods and unwraps the sword, lays it down carefully and takes a deep breath. ‘Winged Eye save us, protect us, deliver us.’ The sword is as still as it ever was. Vesper bends over it, until her lips are inches away. Fine hairs stand up on her neck and arms. ‘Hello,’ she whispers. ‘I’m sorry. I’m so sorry. I should never have taken you and I know you didn’t ask for any of this, but we really, really need you. Please. I don’t want any more people to get hurt. I don’t want any more blood.’ A memory brings a sudden shudder with it. ‘If they attack again, we’ll all die and there won’t be anybody to …’ She trails off, unsure. ‘To take you to the Breach.’
She waits, intent on the sword, and time seems to stretch. She stares so hard she forgets to blink. Vision blurs, suggesting movement where there is none. But then, finally, there is something. Not the wings, but something beneath them, as if the eye behind were moving beneath the lid, restless.
The girl dares not speak. She sees a second movement: something is disturbing the sword.
Genner’s voice, suddenly close, makes Vesper jump. ‘How’s she doing?’
‘Nothing yet –’
‘– But she is getting there –’
‘– Slowly.’
‘Well, she’d better get a move on for all our sakes. We’ve got incoming sky-ships, known hostiles. The First is on its way.’
*
Three sky-ships spiral into Sonorous. Engines rotate as they glide to a halt in the air, hovering outside the great watchtower.
Worried faces peer out from windows, nobody daring to move until the ships have finished their leisurely descent.
Thirty feet above the Tradeway, a door in the lead sky-ship’s side opens and figures tip out. A line of black dominoes, blank, spotless, falling.
Loose fabric ripples in the wind like water, flowing from outstretched arms.
A pause, not quite two seconds, then stones crack under boots, armoured and black. A cloak settles.
The First straightens, steps forward.
A second later, not quite two, another figure, identically dressed, lands behind it. Gestures are copied, they land, straighten, step forward, following their leader as the next one lands.
Fourteen times, the sequence repeats, exact, as if time was stuttering, caught in a loop. With each one, the cracks in the stones expand.
They