She had one more thing to show him after the fireworks were over.
“Come on,” she said. “Let me tell you a story.”
“OK,” he said. What else could he do? He’d followed her all day, listened to what she had to say all day. Not very well, maybe, but he had. It was almost worth it, to be close to her.
Istvan would have told him he was in denial and been right, too, but Istvan wasn’t there. Edmund would take what he could get.
She led him back to a cable car as the crowds dispersed. “Remember how I told you it took two months to build this place?”
“I do.”
“Those were the two months after Providence. After the fallout settled.”
He leaned against one of the window slats as the car started downwards. “The dust.”
“That’s right.” She took up position on the opposite side, watching strings of lights as they passed. “That explosion that leveled the city, killed Anoushak and her–”
“Shokat Anoushak. Names are important. Get them right.”
“Yeah, whatever. Listen: that was us, Eddie. That was Diego.”
Edmund scrubbed a hand across his eyes. It was too late for this. “Grace, that makes no sense.”
“Shut up and let me explain. Barrio Libertad was a combo deal: a bomb and a prison cell, all in one package. The fortress, the pylons, the whole shebang. Aerosol dispersion. The Susurration didn’t even realize what was going on until it couldn’t go anywhere – and it was here, Eddie, all along. As far as we can tell, it was here before Anoushak, maybe even since the Wizard War began.”
“Grace,” Edmund repeated, more slowly, “that makes no sense.”
“No?”
“Not unless Magister Hahn has been taking credit for your...”
Grace raised her eyebrows.
Edmund leaned more heavily. Mercedes had never mentioned anything like this. She had never detailed what she did to end the Wizard War at all.
But... then again, she was the Magister, however she had attained the title. It was almost a requirement for the position, to be distrustful and dangerous and, as the years wore on, just a little crazy. Magister Jackson had won the vault in a card game with God-knew-what, after all, with consequences no one cared to ponder if he had lost. Mercedes was far from the worst.
Besides, if the Susurration had always been here, and if Diego had really...
He watched the great metal sails overhead recede. “Grace, are you saying that killing the most powerful wizard of all time was incidental?”
“No, I’m saying that we did our part and that now we need some help to do our part again. Just wait for it, Eddie – I’m not done.”
“You’re not?”
The cable car stopped and she led him out. Out and down, down, down to a large circular structure standing apart from the living blocks, far away on the lowest terrace ring. A sign in both English and Spanish declared it to be “The Center for Existence Improvement,” which sounded grand enough, but rows of decorations strung across the door suggested that no one came or went on a regular basis.
Edmund ran a finger across the doorknob, expecting dust, but the metal was spotless. “Grace, what is this?”
She tugged the streamers down. “You’ll see.”
The interior resembled the halls of a battleship. Gunmetal-grey. Exposed piping. Strange depressions in the walls, man-sized, filled with jointed steel arms and sheets of filmy material. Most of the machinery clustered around the head region. Several of the wires and needles looked as though they were meant to be inserted inside the skull. Edmund stayed close by Grace, focusing on breathing. The walls were plenty far apart and there was no water. No motion. No need to worry. At the back of the building Grace waved him into another elevator.
He hesitated. “Grace?”
“You’ll see,” she repeated. “I just need you to not panic, OK?”
That was never a promising request. Edmund followed her in and took his fedora off, trying to pretend he wasn’t as tense as he was. “Grace, you know what I do for a living.”
“I also know what you do when you remember that for yourself.”
He flinched. “That wasn’t what I meant.”
She didn’t reply. She struck a switch on the wall and they plummeted.
Edmund clutched at his fedora, wishing he’d brought his top hat instead. Wishing he had his cape and mask. He was a librarian with one good arm – he was fine for watching fireworks, but this? Don’t panic? Make sure your shoes were tied before enacting the ritual? Grace could say what she liked; this place was sounding more and more like magic all the time, and as the Hour Thief he’d spent the greater part of his career combating magical threats. The very worst kind. After Magister Jackson, the Twelfth Hour had realized that having an immortal on roster meant having someone who could be sent on suicide missions more than once. He was an expendable asset guaranteed to came back.
He’d seen things. Don’t panic, hah.
He still wished he had his other hat.
The doors slid open. A soft blue-white glow spilled from beyond, pooling in the air as though each particle were illuminated from within.
Edmund knew that light. He knew it very well.
He stepped forward – and Grace slapped an arm across his chest. “Don’t,” she said. “Stay in the elevator.”
He backed up again, straining to see past the glow. It wasn’t coming from spheres, he thought... more like filaments, or tubes, lines that ran straight but seemed curved. Maybe the other way around. The elevator trembled with the same indefinable hum that emanated from the pylons outside. He gritted his teeth against it. “This is the part where you tell me what you really do with the Bernault devices, Grace?”
“No,” she said. “This is the part where I tell you that Barrio Libertad was designed from the ground up to collapse the Susurration’s home dimension into this one and then blow it and its entire domain straight to Hell.”
He hadn’t heard that right. He couldn’t have heard that right.
He turned to stare at her. The blue light made it look as though all the blood had drained from her body.
“Do you understand now?” she asked.
Edmund opened his mouth. Closed it. She reached for him. He backed away, dizzy, his pocket watch slippery in his fingers. The deck trembled beneath him, the smell of grease and diesel filling his nostrils. She looked dead. The light made her look dead. She was dead.
“Look,” she said, and he didn’t, he couldn’t, he reeled around to face the light so he wouldn’t have to, “we need those devices, Eddie. We need to keep the Susurration under control or a lot of people are going to die. The option to fire the weapon comes up every year and we’ve voted it down every year and it’s gotten worse and worse, and Eddie, Diego isn’t going to wait anymore. You saw how many smilers are out there. Do you understand now? Eddie? Eddie, are you listening to me? I know you don’t want to hear it, Eddie, but I’m serious. If you don’t believe me, I can show you. Here.”
A switch clicked. The elevator pitched forward.
Water ripped through the shredded hull. Ship foundering. No light. No air. Decks lurching crazily beneath him, walls becoming floors and then ceilings that dragged him down beneath them. His lungs screaming. Himself, screaming. Bubbles he could feel but not see. He floundered through the darkness, seeking a hatch or a ladder or anything, anything that would lead out, lead up – and touched hair.
The corpse hugged him.
He yelled. Jerked away. A star-spotted yank at his bad arm brought him up short, dangling. Before him – below him – stretched metal supports that tapered and vanished, bands of elaborate latticed wafers suspended by nothing, bolts of blue-white particulates sheeting across vast mechanical vertebrae, an overpowering electric tremble that stood every hair on end and tasted of oil. Oil in water.
Istvan. Istvan. He had to find Istvan. Istvan could fix this.
He scrambled for his watch. No thought spared; the calculations for home slotted themselves into place by instinct.
A snap –
– and he vanished.
He fought. Oh, how he fought, across one world and then another, scrambling between what was and what had been, fleeing from what might be. He was dead, but not gone. He wasn’t wholly a man, nor wholly an event. Istvan Czernin was a patchwork crux of warring ideas who (as multiple past and extant foes could attest) was extraordinarily difficult to catch, much less be rid of forever.
Most opponents, however, existed in but a single realm. They weren’t able to attach themselves like a glittering leech to his psyche. They couldn’t strip away layer after layer of self-definition and rifle, relentless as the War itself, through his memory for ammunition.
The Susurration could.
Istvan fought and he fled, tripping over the rasping parchment of his chains.
<Oh, Pista, don’t be like this. All you must do is listen.>
“Stop calling me that!” He refused to speak German. It hurt too much in German. “You have no right to call me that!”
Pietro appeared before him again, seated on one of the benches in a park that gaped with sickening holes. His jacket shimmered, like stars in blackness, and his eyes were soft, his smile kind. Brown eyes, with flecks of yellow, ringed with a dark rim like a section of oak. He was slim, not thin. Delicate fingers. Hair to match his eyes, half-hidden beneath that bowler hat he’d taken such a fancy to in the last year. <Don’t I?> he said, and his Viennese was flawless. <I know you just as well.>
Better than Istvan’s own family. Better than Franceska.
Better than Edmund.
“No!” Istvan skidded about, wings trailing broken feathers. One of his chains caught on his ribs and snapped him backwards, through the grass, into the dirt and past it, face-to-face with Pietro again. Dead bones. Like him.
<Istvan!> shouted another voice, short of breath and dashing after him as he left his practice. <Istvan, I’m sorry, but you must know! Pietro… Pietro is dead, he hurled himself from a window, he–>
Istvan tripped over himself. <What?>
Janos – it was Janos, disheveled and miserable – reached out to steady him. <I just heard. I’m sorry. I’m so sorry.>
Istvan drifted sideways. Sit down. He had to sit down. He felt like he’d just lost a boxing match and was newly awoken from a concussion. He couldn’t see straight. <What?> he repeated. There was a flight of stairs nearby; he half-fell onto them –
– and then fell again, tumbling backwards into snow.
<Pista, Pista....> sighed the Susurration. The monster, the memory-stealing horror, not Pietro. Not dear Peti. <You are different, aren’t you? What can I do with you?>
Istvan lay there, coughing. He wore a greatcoat now, torn and bullet-riddled, but it didn’t seem to matter. It shouldn’t have mattered. Oh, it was cold. “You can’t do to me what you do to everyone else, can you?” he rasped. “Catch them? Control them? Work them until they die?”
Pietro, now clad in a greatcoat himself, crouched in the snow beside him. <My people are as my children, Pista. Do you not think I would better provide for them, if I were able? Do you not think if I were free of this wasteland, I would do everything in my power to ensure their safety? Their security?> He shook his head, his expression a familiar quiet anguish. <All I can give them is happiness, and you condemn me for it?>
Something whistled. The snow shifted beneath him. Istvan scrambled away, sprinting behind an outcropping as shellfire exploded where he’d just been. Where Pietro still was. Where he wasn’t, any longer.
Chips of rock ripped through Istvan’s fleshless bones; when he held up a hand, he was bleeding.
<I am the end of suffering,> came the pronouncement. The cheerful notes of a Strauss waltz rang behind the words.
The sky snatched at Istvan’s chains. Yanked him upwards. Hurled him against frozen stone. It was too late. The guns had already fired, the shells had burst among the Austrian column, the pass cracked and boomed and the snow roared down and down and down–
<You brought me here. You cried out, and I came.>
Istvan couldn’t save them all. He couldn’t even find all of what was left of them. The worst part was that he felt almost nothing, that there was so much pain and yet it didn’t overwhelm him with euphoria, that – two years in – he possessed a tolerance for suffering so high that he could weep at the losses of one or a dozen or a hundred men. How much greater agonies were yet to come? Was this his sentence for demanding answers, for cursing the Almighty, for dying as he’d done? Torn to pieces... and returned, to watch others suffer the same?
<But you, Pista, you scorn my gifts. You struggle!>
Starry emptiness reached for him, the space between grown solid. Echoes.
Istvan stabbed it.
Laughter. Pietro’s laughter, deep within his chest. <Do you think I’m afraid of you? Devil’s Doctor? War to End All Wars? You are a house of bones bound by barbed wire, dancing to the pull of bloody strings.> The emptiness oozed around his knife, towards his hand. Climbing. <You, who can offer no happiness to anyone, who has become all that he despised, who has no future but the lonely thunder of guns? Why would I ever be afraid of you?>
Istvan tried to rip his knife free. Couldn’t.
<That honor, Pista, falls to the one you love most.>
Istvan froze. Past experiences used against him, fine. That was little different than what he could do to himself, that was guilt, it was all over and gone in the end. Over and gone. But this...
“No,” he said. “Stop it. And stop calling me that name!”
<The one who has replaced your dear Peti,> the creature continued, <all unknowing, and who will only loathe you all the more should he ever learn of it.> A sigh, low and wistful. <How much suffering are you willing to endure? Chained for good cause, sowing nothing but horror, witnessing naught but destruction and glorying in it, only to hate all that you are when the bloodlust ebbs. Haven’t you ever wanted to end it, Pista?>
So soft. So gentle. It was wholly sincere, in Pietro’s voice, and only wanted to help.
It had to know that he’d tried. Once. In life. After he’d lost his closest friend, his constant companion, the man who he had betrayed in the name of respectability. The man who had forgiven him. The man he’d loved more than anything.
In a matter of days Istvan had found himself aboard a passenger ship, signed up as a volunteer fighter in a war on another continent he knew nothing about, having given up everything he’d owned, and signed away the rest. No warning. No goodbyes.
He wouldn’t be coming back.
But then, when he had... when the British had sent him home years later… scarred and destitute, addicted to morphine, fevered and angry and desperate and with no one to blame but God himself...
He still didn’t know if the Susurration had Edmund.
Istvan threw himself off the mountain.
He was home. He flipped on the lights. Nothing happened.
That was enough.
Hours later, Edmund lay on the couch, candles burning on the table beside him, a bottle he hadn’t touched through some heroic effort toppled on the floor below him, Beldam purring thunderously as she sprawled on his chest. He’d thrown up until he couldn’t taste oil anymore and now he’d finally stopped shaking. No Istvan. The specter had obviously given up on him, just like Grace. After all, who would bother being around a guy whose entire existence came at the expense of others? Who survived only because he stole time from its rightful owners, and squandered it on fits of nightmare, on terror, on self-loathing so powerful he wished he’d drowned... and then he remembered there was nothing there for him, either, there was no way out even at the extremes of torment. He was damned. No way out. He would be the only one left, over and over, forever, and it was his fault. His stupid fault.
Shokat Anoushak herself had confirmed that, hadn’t she?
Run. Forever.
That was it. That was all. So much for being a hero.
He looked dully down at the bottle again. He hadn’t touched it. Somehow, he hadn’t touched it. He’d promised he wouldn’t, not over Grace, and yes he’d slipped up with the tiger but this time...
Well. That was something.
Beldam twitched. He scratched her ears. “You’re squashing me,” he told her.
She purred louder.
Istvan was... he was probably at the Twelfth Hour. He usually was, at this hour. That made sense. Besides, there was that whole matter of Barrio Libertad being one enormous bomb built by the camera-headed aberration who had singlehandedly killed Shokat Anoushak and didn’t have any qualms about repeating the process.
That was kind of important. Someone had to hear about that. Someone who had ordered him not to look into the matter. Someone who was sometimes up and about this late, in an office she may have won through a barefaced lie.
Edmund reached down and picked up the bottle.
Just a little. Just enough to wash out his mouth, and maybe a few memories. Istvan wasn’t around. He wouldn’t notice.
Really, if any situation merited a drink, this was it.
He nudged Beldam. “Let me up.”
The cat didn’t move.
He put the bottle back down. “I appreciate it, I really do, but I can’t stay here.” He prodded her again. “I have things to do.”
She grumbled something obscene and slouched off, tail switching side to side.
Edmund got up and away before he could reconsider. He shucked his rumpled civilian clothes in the washroom, brushed his teeth, and put on the black. Gloves, cape, aviator goggles. His top hat hung on its peg by the door, and after he set it on his head he checked himself over in the mirror. None of the stitching was visible. That was good. Bum arm still, but that couldn’t be helped.
He tried a smile. He was the Hour Thief.
The Hour Thief could do this.
“I’ll be back in two shakes,” he told Beldam. She sniffed at him. He pictured the Twelfth Hour, ran the right almost-calculations, and vanished.
Istvan wasn’t in the infirmary. In fact, he wasn’t anywhere in the building, and his staff had no idea where he’d gone. Out sulking, maybe – he wasn’t taking events well, either. The note probably hadn’t helped. Taking advantage of a loophole in direct orders probably hadn’t helped. Grace, more than anything, wasn’t helping.
Yes, the ghost had to be off burning steam. There was still a lot of earthquake damage out there and the combination of fear, pain, and flying was just the ticket. Flying always helped, he’d said. The one undeniable positive of his condition.
That left Mercedes. The matter of Barrio Libertad. The revelation of a weapon that could kill hundreds of thousands of innocents along with their eerie jailer, its trigger in the hands of an entity just as inhuman and frightening as the presence outside the walls. One who had broken the back of the greatest sorcerous army the world had ever seen. No wonder the Susurration was so desperate to escape.
Now all Edmund had to do was fess up to his visit.
He strode down the picture hall, eyed the Magister’s door, and tapped it with a shoe. “Mercedes? This is…”
It swung open.
“…Edmund.”
No one sat at the Magister’s desk. Candles ringed the moons-and-clock emblem set into the floor, three clustered at each cardinal point. A labyrinth of chalk lines crisscrossed the floor, offering bowls spaced wherever they intersected, most of them filled with the usual odd knick-knacks and one or two with blood. Some of the flames flickered into signs and sigils as he watched. Mercedes’ phone lay in the center, resting atop a seven-pointed star made of cables and wire. Someone was chanting, long slow syllables in a tongue he recognized as ancient Aramaic.
He frowned. Since when were phones standard summoning foci? “Mercedes?”
The chanting stopped. Mercedes stuck her head out from the window seat. “Don’t stand there,” she said, “you’re letting in a draft.”
He stepped in and shut the door behind him, making sure not to scuff any of the lines. “Mercedes, were you aware that Barrio Libertad is actually a transdimensional superweapon designed to wipe out the Susurration and all half a million people trapped in that crater with it?”
“Is it.”
Not a question. She didn’t sound surprised.
He waited for her to ask what he’d been doing there. Why he’d gone there. What authority he thought he possessed, to pursue a forbidden investigation against direct orders. He was the Hour Thief. Fine china. An heirloom passed from one figure of power to the next, one who should never have taken up the Magister’s mantle, even once.
The skull of Magister Jackson stared at him. You damn fool Templeton. Learn your place.
Mercedes said nothing. She stayed in the window seat, barely visible.
Edmund edged around the circle’s perimeter. He didn’t like having that phone in it. That meant part of the ritual was new, and innovation in magic was akin to innovation in falling. You could only try so many times from so many heights. Sometimes it was the first one that killed you.
Not for the first time, he wondered about her missing finger.
“Mercedes,” he began again, “I understand that I shouldn’t have been at the fortress at all. That was a mistake on my part. I’ll accept whatever sentence you dictate.”
She wrapped a scarlet-stained bandage around her left hand. Her jacket was rumpled, its sleeves rolled up and a coffee stain spilling down the front. The pens remained in her hair, but strands had come loose, frizzing about the sharp angles of her face. She looked like she’d slept about as much as he had. “But?”
No buts, he wanted to say. None at all.
But... why wasn’t she surprised? Why wasn’t she laying down judgment? What was she doing so late at night with a ritual circle like this?
Magister Jackson stared. Edmund looked down at a chalk line running before his shoes.
Barrio Libertad put an end to Shokat Anoushak and her armies, Mercedes. Not you. Not unless someone else is lying here. If you didn’t, why claim it?
You became Magister after all this, Mercedes. You declared Providence off-limits. You barred further investigation.
A telephone as a focus, Mercedes?
“Spit it out, Mr Templeton.”
He steadied himself. “Barrio Libertad was built from dust by what I dearly hope isn’t some kind of nascent machine god. It – he – goes by Diego Escarra Espinoza, and if what I’ve learned is true, he’s responsible for both the Susurration’s confinement and the blast that wiped out Providence. He finished off Shokat Anoushak. Now, you claim to have done that. You were elected Magister after that. You’ve done a fine job and I’m not looking to reclaim the position, by any means, but...”
The chalk line lay before him. Don’t ask. The wizards who survive are the ones who don’t ask.
He stepped over it. “Mercedes, I’d like to know what’s going on here.”