The Blood Debt - BestLightNovel.com
You’re reading novel The Blood Debt Part 33 online at BestLightNovel.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit BestLightNovel.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
*What about the tower?' he asked, pointing at the ruins. *Could we attach the heavy lifter to that and climb down from there?'
*It's a possibility,' Chu said. *I'll aim for it and we'll see what the air is like.'
*Well, that's something we can help you with. Every warden is taught to see the wind.'
*Really?' Chu looked deeply envious for a moment. *Then I guess you'll come in useful after all. Tell me when you're ready and you can start giving me directions. That'll make my life a lot easier.'
s.h.i.+lly edged away as Marmion closed his eyes and concentrated. The small amount of the Change Marmion called on didn't add much to that already buzzing in and around the structure of the heavy lifter. But she felt the s.h.i.+ft in the world as his mind interacted with it in much the same way as a musician might s.h.i.+ft key in the middle of a song.
Chu watched the warden with all the attention she could spare. Her desire seemed as keen as s.h.i.+lly's. Both of them lacked the innate potential for the Change that made Sky Wardens, Stone Mages, yadachi bloodworkers and the occasional wild talent like Sal the envy of everyone - although s.h.i.+lly had long ago gotten over her resentment of that fact.
When one of the bubbles in Marmion's torc began to glow like a miniature star caught in perfectly clear amber, Chu gasped. His eyes opened. They had turned a clear, translucent blue, the same colour as the sky.
*We're cutting across a dense current,' he said, leaning forward to peer out of the gondola. *I can see it running like a river from the southeast.'
Chu nodded. *That's what's making us rock. There should be another one ahead, tending south. It's usually there this time of day.'
Marmion's charmed gaze sought details where s.h.i.+lly could see none. *Yes,' he said. *You're taking us a little high. Bring us down and you'll catch it. There'll be some turbulence, but it won't last. It's just the boundary where the two flows brush by each other.'
Chu nodded and obeyed his instructions without hesitating. The lifter's nose dipped and a shudder ran along its length. s.h.i.+lly held on tight as the turbulence worsened.
A hand tapped her shoulder. She turned around to see Tom looking at her, slightly green around the ears.
*Is everything okay?' she asked.
He sat down next to her. *You haven't called Sal since we left.'
*I know. I figured you'd be tired from what I'd already Taken.'
*I am, but you're worried. You can try again if you want to.'
She was more grateful than she could say for the offer, even if she wouldn't let herself accept it. *He'll call me if he can. I'd rather you conserved your strength for when I really need it.'
Tom nodded quite seriously.
s.h.i.+lly had been half-joking, but his lack of amus.e.m.e.nt gave her reason to be seriously concerned.
*Unless you're trying to tell me that I should call him now? That you've dreamed me doing it?'
*No.'
*Okay. We'll just have to wait and see what happens, then.' Like always, she thought, telling herself to emulate his insouciance.
The heavy lifter shuddered and dipped again. When she checked their progress, she saw the Aad much closer than it had been before.
Chu and Marmion were still discussing possible landing sites.
*That rules the tower out,' said the flyer, pointing.
s.h.i.+lly craned her neck to see. Smoky brown haze hid the details, but a small group of people appeared to be waving at them from the summit of the ruined city's watchtower.
*Are they -?'
*I hope not,' said Chu. *Look at the base of the tower.'
She squinted to make out the details. The figures she saw were the same colour as the background stone, making their nature immediately obvious: they were man'kin. But what they were doing was less clear. They appeared to be circling the tower's ground level, stopping occasionally to strike the stone walls as though it was a giant drum.
Not strike, s.h.i.+lly corrected herself after a longer look. They were taking stones from the wall and flinging them away. Dismantle.
*Can we get down there to help them?' she asked Chu, filled with horror at the thought of what it must be like on top of the tower while monsters did their best to collapse it.
*I don't know.' Power surged through the propellers with a deep thrum. The dirigible's angle of descent steepened. Instead of travelling in a straight line, Chu guided them around a sweeping curve, with Marmion calling directions along the way. The gondola tipped and swayed like a ride in a fair. Tom's face turned greener than ever.
Behind her, the wardens tied ropes to eyelets along the gondola's edges. Banner walked from knot to knot, testing them for strength.
*I don't think it's them,' said Marmion as the tower came closer.
*That doesn't matter,' said s.h.i.+lly. *We can't just watch them die!'
*Too late,' said Chu as part of the tower's wall collapsed. The structure tipped like a drunken sailor. The people on the top ran hopelessly back and forth. One fell off.
s.h.i.+lly couldn't watch any longer. Marmion was right. None of them looked like Sal, Skender or Kail, but that was irrelevant. They were still people, and no one deserved to die in terror and agony.
When she steeled herself to turn back, the tower was gone. Only a rising cloud of stone and mortar dust remained.
*Now we know why Sal sent for us,' said Marmion. *The man'kin have gone on the rampage.'
*Is there anything we can do to stop them?' s.h.i.+lly asked, hoping it wasn't too late already. The thought of Sal on top of a tower like that, screaming, made her feel sick.
*They are creatures of the Change,' Marmion said. *To kill them, you have to kill the Change itself, and that is obviously impossible.'
*Not for the Homunculus.' A tiny candle of hope still burned in her chest for Sal; her sense of him remained undimmed. *Where it is, they'll be safe.'
*And unable to call us,' said Tom, his face a mask of concern.
*Yes, there's that.' s.h.i.+lly craned as far as she dared over the edge of the gondola. The heavy lifter hovered directly over the city. She could see several man'kin wreaking desolation through the already ruined streets. Rubble lay everywhere she looked. It was hard in places to tell what damage was new and what the result of time and the weather.
Twice more she saw people, none of them the ones she sought. Three ran out of a structure attached to the Divide wall and made a beeline for the edge of the city. A giant, lion-shaped man'kin chased them for a block, snapping at their heels. Its heavy tread brought down the remains of a nearby building. It stopped to perform an odd dance among the shattered stonemasonry while its victims took the opportunity to flee. s.h.i.+lly shuddered to think what the man'kin might have done had it caught them.
*Do you see anything?' asked Marmion.
She shook her head. A half-dozen flyers had kept pace with them from Laure. They circled warily around the heavy lifter, distracting Chu. The one with an att.i.tude problem had drifted away, possibly as struck as she was by the devastation below.
*If we've come all this way for nothing -' Marmion started to say.
*Wait.' s.h.i.+lly took his arm. *Look!'
One of the flyers on the edge of the ruin had suddenly dipped. It began to tumble, then just as suddenly recovered - as though it had left a bubble in which its charms had stopped working.
s.h.i.+lly knew only one thing that could have that effect.
*The Homunculus! It's over there!'
Chu looked to see where s.h.i.+lly was pointing, then wrenched the controls of the heavy lifter. Ponderously it began to turn.
*Be careful,' Marmion warned her. *Don't get too close. The wake extends further through air than it does across the ground.'
*I know,' she said. *I haven't forgotten what happened the last time I flew over it.'
The edge of the ruins came nearer. s.h.i.+lly made out a long wall carved from the side of the Divide. It had cracked in several places, like a gap-toothed lower jaw. At first she couldn't see anyone, but then a huddle of people came into view, tucked inside the remains of a series of small buildings.
She instantly recognised Sal by the colour and cut of his hair.
*There they are!'
*What do I do now?' asked Chu. *I can't get too close or we'll lose the rudder charms and the props.'
s.h.i.+lly scanned the area around the group. One solitary person crouched off to one side, perfectly still, but she couldn't tell who it was. A large man'kin was heading towards them, cras.h.i.+ng through ruined walls like she would through stalks of wheat.
*Let me think,' she said. *There has to be a way.'
*You've ruined everything!' Pirelius snarled. The knife bit deeper into Kemp's neck, and the albino squirmed. *I should kill you all right now for what you've done!'
*Calm down.' Sal held out his hands in a gesture of conciliation. *We didn't come here to ruin you. We just wanted our friends back.'
*Liar!' Pirelius spat in the dirt between them. One eye was bruised and swelling. *She sent you. No one else knew I was here. No one else knew about the sink. No one else had a f.u.c.king motive. So don't feed me that c.r.a.p, or I'll kill the freak!'
*Got it.' Sal clenched his fists in frustration. The desperate fury in the bandit's eyes convinced him that the threat wasn't empty. Kemp's tunic was already dark with blood. A millimetre deeper and his life would be spilling onto the dirt. *What do you want?'
*I want to make her pay.' Pirelius's crooked teeth flashed malignantly through the rankness of his beard. *You're going to help me.'
*I don't even know who she -' He bit off the rest as the knife s.h.i.+fted again. *How are we going to help you?'
*The man'kin are everywhere. They're bringing the whole place down.' The whiteness of Pirelius's eyes betrayed a hint of fear. *I don't know how she called them, but there's no way to fight them. I'm not going to die here. That thing is going to get me out of here.'
Sal turned to the Homunculus, which was still effortlessly holding Shorn Behenna in its arms. Its features s.h.i.+vered under the bright sun.
*I may have lost the sink,' Pirelius went on, *but I'll have the next best thing. Your ugly friend here stops the man'kin cold in their tracks. With it I can get clean away, and she can't do a thing about it.'
*We don't want to help you,' said the Homunculus.
*You will if you don't want to see your friend here dead.'
*He's not our friend. We don't know him.'
*That's your answer, then?' Pirelius's nostrils flared. *If I kill him, it's on your conscience.'
The Homunculus put Behenna down on the ground. *We have our own destination. You can travel with us, if you wish.'
*Not good enough. I want revenge, and I know how to get it.' Pirelius dug the point of the blade into the muscle under Kemp's jaw. *I'm losing patience!'
Heavy stone footprints thudded towards them from the other side of the wall. Sal backed away as a mighty stone man appeared, trailing a cloud of dust. For a moment he was sure that it would step right through them, but it hit the boundary of the Homunculus's influence and instantly stopped.
Beyond its n.o.ble brow, he saw something even stranger: a blimp descending over the Aad with light flas.h.i.+ng from its prow. Someone was holding a mirror up to the morning sun and using it to catch their eye.
Pirelius hadn't spotted it. His attention was firmly fixed on the Homunculus.
*All right,' it said, *we'll go with you. Set him free and we'll leave this place together.'
*Oh, no,' said Pirelius. *It's not that simple. I saw what you did to Izzi in the cell. It's not going to happen to me. You.' He nodded at Skender. *Tie all its hands together and its feet in pairs. When that's done, and not before, I'll let the big freak go.'
*I can't,' said Skender. *They helped us!'
*You'll do it or I'll take you instead,' Pirelius snarled.
Sal leaned in close to Skender and hissed in his ear, covering his words by rummaging in Kail's pack. He produced several lengths of slender, soft twine. Skender nodded, tight-lipped, and didn't argue.
The Homunculus, whether it had heard or not, cooperated as they lashed its limbs together. Its flesh was cool and waxy to the touch, with no visible markings like tattoos or scars. Sal's hands moved quickly, conscious of the dirigible growing nearer over Pirelius's shoulder.
He and Skender stepped back when the job was done. The Homunculus was as human as it had ever looked, although it still seemed to have too many eyes and mouths.
*Right,' said Pirelius. *Come here.'
The Homunculus obeyed. When it was within arm's reach, Pirelius put his foot in the small of Kemp's back and pushed him face-forward into the dirt at Sal's feet. The knife jabbed into the Homunculus's side as Pirelius tested the knots. Sal didn't know how much damage an ordinary blade could do to the artificial body, but it was clear the Homunculus wasn't prepared to take a chance. It was frozen - with fear or hopelessness, Sal couldn't tell. Perhaps both.
He wanted to say that he was sorry, but there wasn't time.
*Get ready to run,' he whispered to Skender as he helped Kemp to his feet. *We have to get out of the wake so the dirigible can come in closer, and I don't think our friend there is as dead as he looks.' The frozen man'kin swayed on the very edge of the Homunculus's sphere of influence, its eyes watching them unblinkingly.
*How are we going to carry everyone?' Skender whispered back. Rope ladders dangled over the side of the gondola as it grew nearer.
*We'll have to leave Mawson behind for the time being.'
*It's been a pleasure doing business,' sneered Pirelius, shoving the Homunculus ahead of him. *Don't try to follow or I'll stick you like pigs.'
Sal ignored Pirelius as he hurried away towards the Divide. The drone of propellers rose up out of the sound of stone smas.h.i.+ng. He couldn't see the edge of the Homunculus's wake as Skender had in the Divide, but he could take a rough guess as to where it was. Kemp wordlessly wiped the blood from his throat and picked up Behenna. Skender put an arm around his mother and helped her stand straighten *I'll go first.' Sal waved both arms over his head, away from the man'kin, hoping the pilot of the dirigible would understand. Seconds later, it did s.h.i.+ft course, coming in lower over the ruins in the direction he had indicated. He tensed to run.
Then, with a subtle grinding noise, the man'kin turned and took a step. Sal backed away automatically, even though he knew he was safe in the wake. He expected it to come between him and the dirigible, but instead it walked around the wake and followed Pirelius down the slope towards the Divide. Its step became thunderous. The bandit looked over his shoulder in alarm, and picked up the pace.
*Maybe we're not tasty enough,' said Skender.
*I don't care what it's doing. I'm just glad I'm not about to be squashed.'
Sal helped Skender and his mother to the first of the ladders. Abi Van Haasteren was too weak to climb on her own, but allowed herself to be hauled up by the blue-robed wardens into the dirigible. Sal could see s.h.i.+lly now, leaning out of the front of the gondola. He waved as Kemp and Behenna went up in the care of the Wardens, then he went back with the albino for Mawson.
Later, he had told Skender. We'll come back for the Homunculus later.
He was the last to leave the ground.