Page 21 of Ink and Bone

It smelt of old spilt drinks and sweat, and a new, bitter scent of blood.

  'Now, cousin, produce,' Frederick said. He sat at a trestle table and leant his elbows on it as Jess unfastened the pack.

  Frederick talked like a back-alley tough, but he had fine hands, a musician's hands, and he cradled the book Jess gave him carefully in them. 'Damn this light,' he said. 'Got a glow on you?'

  Jess did. He tapped it and sat the round ball on the table; it warmed up to a steady firelight shimmer, and cast dark shadows around them. Frederick picked up the ball and held it close to the binding, the carefully opened the cover.

  He took in a quick breath, let it out slowly, and looked at Jess with eyes that reflected the glow eerily. 'You know what this is?'

  'I know,' Jess said. 'It's enough to cover us.'

  'Your brother would kill you if he knew you let this go to me instead of him.'

  'I know that,' Jess said, and smiled. 'But it'll make its way to him, won't it? He told me where to find you. Means he knows how to find you, too. I wouldn't hold back if I were you.'

  Frederick raised his eyebrows and carefully closed the cover of the book. He tapped the aged leather with one soft fingertip. 'I'm tempted to squirrel it away for leverage. I don't know what Brendan's game is. You watch out for your brother. He's a twisty one.'

  'He's family.'

  'I know. And if I were you, I wouldn't count on the embrace of your nearest and dearest.'

  'I'm counting on you,' Jess said, and reached for the glow ball to tap it off. 'But it's good that I'm supposed to make myself a home in the Library, then. Deal done?'

  'Fair enough,' Frederick said, and they shook on it. His cousin opened up a pack leaning on the wall and took out a familiar design of waterproof wrap - the speciality of the Brightwells, for their important volumes. He carefully packaged up the book and put it away, then shouldered the pack. 'Let's get the parade marching.'

  'I hope we won't be quite that obvious.'

  'Trust me, old son, it's my trade to be inconspicuous--'

  They were coming out the door of the tavern as Frederick said that, and his words were cut off by a raw, full-throated shout from one of his men. 'On the passage!'

  That brought a rush of realignment of Frederick's men, from guarding the tavern to a particularly narrow alleyway off to the right.

  'Wolfe,' Frederick said, in a suddenly businesslike tone, 'get your flock inside. Don't want to be seen in your company. Gives me a bad name.'

  Wolfe and Santi hustled all of them back into the tavern's dark, cramped interior, until everyone with a Library symbol was safely out of sight. Jess pulled his hood back and arranged himself at one of the windows; Wolfe and Santi had taken up similar posts.

  'Will he sell us out?' Wolfe asked.

  'No,' Jess said, but he thought, maybe. He didn't know Frederick well enough to say. He only knew that it was up to which side of the bread Frederick thought had the most butter, and that depended on things he couldn't know, like whether Frederick would keep a bargain.

  He already had the book, after all.

  'Back exit is clear,' Santi said to Wolfe. 'I had it scouted when we got here. Won't get us far, though. We'll never make it out the main gate, not with Smith setting the mob after us with the promise of food.'

  'Let's not give up on Cousin Frederick just yet.'

  Santi shrugged, as if he thought it was a foregone conclusion. Jess didn't blame him, given that he wasn't so certain about their prospects himself. If the mob came boiling out of that passage, he imagined Cousin Frederick might decline to put himself in deeper to save them.

  It wasn't the mob, though.

  It was one man. Old, greying, rail-thin from the deprivations of the siege. He edged along, propped his left shoulder on the wall as a crutch, but he stopped when he saw Frederick's men arrayed before him.

  He might have looked frail, but there was a dark intensity in his face.

  'Welcome, friend,' Frederick said from where he leant against the Turf's wall, and gave the man a grin that didn't reach his eyes. 'Sorry, pub's closed for business. Sad days, eh?'

  'I want my daughter,' the man said.

  'No girls here, mate. Sorry.'

  'She's here. I followed.' The man's voice was unsteady, and Jess realised, as he edged a little farther, that he was bloody, too, as if he'd been in a fight. 'Bloody Library has her. Give her to me. I don't want to hurt anyone.'

  The threat woke a raw chuckle through the ranks of Frederick's very capable toughs. 'Old man, just go back where you came from,' Frederick said. 'Your girl's not here, like I said. Ned, help him on his way.'

  The biggest man of Frederick's crew stepped up and put a hand on the older man's shoulder ... and froze, then backed up one step. Two. He turned to look at Frederick and shook his head.

  The older man raised his right hand over his head, and in it, he held a glass vial of liquid. The thin light caught it and turned the colour to sour emerald.

  'Don't touch me,' he said. 'Send my daughter out to me. If I toss this, a fair number of you are going to die.'

  'Easy,' Frederick said, in a calm, low voice. 'Easy there, nobody needs to end up crisped. Right? So put that down and I'll see about your girl. Come on, burning the Turf? Worse than setting the Great Library itself alight. Might be more of a loss to the world, even.'

  'Send her out,' the man said. His voice went thready and faint. He pushed free of the wall, still holding up the bottle.

  Frederick's men, who weren't scared of much, flinched and backed up to give him generous room.

  'Got nothing to lose. Send my daughter out,' the man repeated. 'Morgan Hault. Or I drop it.'

  Jess saw the resemblance, then ... the same dark-honey eyes, though this man's had faded with time. The same pointed chin.

  'Father?' Morgan's voice came from behind and to his left, and he didn't have time to do more than turn in that direction before she was past him, and out the door. 'Father! Are you all right?' She ran to him, and gave him a quick embrace, then pulled back when he winced. She hardly seemed to notice the Greek Fire he was still holding over their heads, in the first rush of reunion ... and Jess saw her body stiffen as she did. She took a step away. 'What is this? What are you doing? You have to put that down, it's dangerous!'

  'Damned right it's dangerous,' he said. 'I came to save you, Morgan.'

  She laughed a little. 'I don't need rescuing, Father. I'm rescuing you. We're leaving. Now. Come with us.'

  'Us,' he repeated. 'You think of these people as us, as if you're one of them? You can't be. Not with the Library. The Library isn't taking you away.' Her father, Jess thought, had a fanatic's burning eyes, and the look he sent towards Wolfe, towards them as they stepped out into the courtyard, was vicious with hatred. 'Take their damned sign off. You're not their slave--' His voice died as he caught sight of the bronze Library bracelet gleaming dully on her wrist. 'No. No. You're not one of them. You can't be one of them. I forbid it.'

  'Father--'

  'Morgan, take it off!'

  'I will. Just not yet. These are my friends. See? My friends. And we're all leaving here. You can come with us. Please, come with us.'

  Her father stared at her with an expression of contempt and revulsion, and said, 'They've turned your mind. Made you believe they're on your side. Who did it, that one? That Scholar? What did you do to my daughter?'

  'I've helped her,' Wolfe said. 'Which is more than you're doing right now. We have little time before the Welsh begin to destroy this city. If you don't want her to die, stop wasting it.'

  'She's coming with me,' Hault said, and tightened his grip on the girl. 'She'll never be yours. Tyler told me what happened, what would happen if she went into the Library. Not my girl. Never.'

  'Father, stop! Where are you going?'

  'Back,' he said. 'Back to burn that nest of serpents they call a Serapeum. Come on!'

  Morgan broke free of his hold. 'What happened to you? What are you talking about?'

  'We
have to burn it down,' her father said. 'It's the only way they listen.' He was insane, Jess could see it. Feverish with it.

  She backed away. 'You weren't a Burner when I left you,' she said. 'What did they do to you?'

  'They showed me the truth,' he told her. 'I can't let the Library have you. They'll use you. They'll make you just another one of them, and it's better - better if you're dead. Better that than life with them.' He took in a deep breath. 'Vita hominis plus libro valet!'

  He threw the bottle.

  'No!' Morgan screamed, and lunged forward. Somehow, she got underneath the bottle, dived, and caught it in her outstretched hands just inches above the cold cobbles. The green liquid inside sloshed, but the thin glass didn't break.

  It would have been the death of them all if it had.

  Santi stepped quickly over to Morgan, helped her up, and took the bottle. He stored it in a padded pouch at his side and nodded to Wolfe. 'Get behind me, Morgan.'

  She didn't argue. She was, Jess thought, too much in shock to even try. When she failed to move on her own, Jess took her by the shoulders and pulled her back; he held on, just in case she tried to run back to her father.

  But she didn't.

  'Go,' Santi said. He pulled his pistol and levelled it at Morgan's father. 'Go. Be grateful I'm not doing the Welsh's work for them.'

  'I'll get my daughter back,' the man said. 'I swear to God I will set her free.'

  He stared straight at Morgan with a bleak, awful expression, and then he turned and stumbled the other way.

  Frederick shrugged and made a circle motion to his men. 'Right,' he said. 'He was a treat. If he's got Burner friends and more Greek Fire, I don't want to be here when he comes back. Sorry, lass. Can't pick your family. Believe me, I know.'

  Morgan suddenly turned and buried her face in Jess's chest. She didn't cry, but the hitching, awful pain of her breathing was worse. He could feel the loss in her, a terrible bleak emptiness that pulled like a magnet.

  'He tried to kill me,' she whispered. 'He's my father and he tried to kill me.'

  Jess had nothing to say to that, because there were no words that were going to make it any easier to swallow. He remembered how it had felt in that awful moment of clarity in his childhood, knowing that his father would let him die.

  At least with hers, it was a cause to blame. Not profits.

  'You can weep about it later,' Frederick said. 'For now, get your wits back in your head.'

  'You English,' Dario said. 'So sensitive.'

  'We're a practical lot,' Frederick said, 'and you'll keep your tongue quiet if you want these practical men to get you out alive. Right?' He cast a sharp look at Wolfe, who nodded without any real expression.

  'Yes,' Wolfe said. 'For better or worse, we're in their hands now.' He suddenly gave Frederick one of those dark, cool smiles. 'Don't ever speak to my postulants again.'

  It didn't take long before the scouts came back and reported the way clear. 'Then let's move on. All of you, lose those damned Library colours. Now.'

  'You heard the man,' Wolfe said. 'Students. Coats off.' He was taking off his own Scholar's robe. That left him in plain black, like the soldiers who were ripping away patches and symbols. 'Nic. Give them guns.'

  'Real weapons? You sure?'

  'We're past kinder methods.'

  Santi gestured to one of his men, who grabbed a pack and went to each of the students, taking their stunning weapons and replacing them with heavy, sleek, lead-firing guns. 'Don't shoot unless you have to,' he said. 'It will get confusing out there. Too easy to shoot your friends.'

  Morgan's wet hair was out of its pins and falling in untidy strings across her face and neck. She looked lost.

  'Can she walk, or do I have to risk a man carrying her?' Frederick asked Jess.

  'I can walk,' Morgan said, and turned towards Frederick. 'And I can fight.'

  'Good,' he said. 'Do that. And if you want my advice, you'd best put a bullet in your dear old da's head before you let him near you again.'

  'Nobody asked you,' Jess said. 'Piss off. We're ready to go.'

  'You're really not, my dear coz,' Frederick said. 'Hold onto your knickers. This isn't the fun part.'

  Frederick's men and Santi's troops didn't mix well. After the second scuffle, Santi assigned his forces to the rearguard, while Frederick's men led the way into an old, nondescript house with a ruined door. Inside, the place was wrecked - ransacked, Jess thought, for anything that would burn - but Frederick's men weren't interested in the contents of the place. They pried up a large, square stone in the centre of the room, and beneath were steps heading down.

  'Stay together,' Frederick told them. 'It's a rat's warren. You get lost, you'll stay lost, because we're not turning back for anyone. And for God's sake, put your guns away; bullets will bounce back on you. If you have to fight, use a knife. And keep it quiet. Sound carries.'

  It was claustrophobic on the stairs, and worse once they'd gained the tunnels. For some reason, Jess had assumed the tunnels would be newly dug ... some sort of hidden smuggling system that Frederick had devised. Instead, they were very old. In some places there were markings chiselled into the stone, and Jess studied them for a few puzzled seconds before the light dawned ... but he was well behind Khalila, who whispered, 'These are Jewish signs. Escape tunnels, in the event of persecution. I've read of this.'

  'Smart girl,' Frederick said. 'Now shut it. We're not the only ones that know about these tunnels.'

  'Do the Welsh?' Wolfe asked. He sounded calm and casual, but the question definitely had weight to it. Frederick gave him a wolf's grin.

  'Not as of an hour ago,' he said. 'But things change.'

  They moved quickly and, as required, quietly ... at least for a while. It got harder to move around bits of fallen masonry, and seemed like an eternity of dark, narrow tunnels, alcoves, and the skitter of rats. Morgan stayed right behind Jess, and he glanced back frequently to see if she was all right. She seemed to be - as all right as any of them, at least.

  The forward motion stopped, and Frederick sent two of his men up a set of narrow stairs off one of the alcoves. They'd made a dozen twists and turns so far, and Frederick hadn't been consulting any kind of map; he must have learnt this warren, and learnt it well, to be so fast and sure of getting them where he wanted them to be.

  But was it safe? It didn't feel safe.

  The scouts came back down and whispered with Frederick, who nodded and turned to Wolfe. 'Right,' he said. 'Up you go.'

  'No, you first,' Santi said. 'We insist.'

  'Age before beauty, and all that,' Frederick replied. 'Up. Now.'

  Frederick's men had drawn weapons. Jess's pulse began to beat faster, and he found the hilt of the knife in his belt. Close quarters in here. Bad conditions. It would be a slaughterhouse, and the only way out was up ... and who knew what waited for them there?

  Wolfe broke the tension by saying, 'Nic. Take us up.'

  It was a calculated risk, but staying wasn't better. Santi gave the Scholar a dark, doubtful glance, but he turned and ordered his soldiers out.

  They went without question.

  Then it was the students' turn, with Wolfe, and Jess glanced back at his cousin, who was watching them mount the stairs.

  'If you've sold us out--' he began, but Frederick shook his head.

  'Family loyalty, Jess. I kept my word. There's a guide up top.' He gave a sudden, luminous grin. 'But it'll cost you later, I promise.'

  He gestured his men onward, further down the tunnels. Where they were off to, Jess didn't know.

  He followed Thomas up the steps, out into an echoing dark hallway. They extinguished their glows, because ahead was a barred gate, and cloudy, dying daylight.

  The gate's lock had been snapped, and hinges oiled to keep it silent; they stepped through and out into ...

  A graveyard.

  'Well, this is comforting,' Dario muttered. He put his knife away and pulled out his gun, which he held pointing down, the way t
hey'd been taught. Only raise it to fire when you're moving, Santi had told them. Better to shoot yourself in the foot than in the head if you trip. Too much to remember, suddenly. Jess felt clumsy and very, very unprepared for this.

  On one side, the graveyard was a sea of silvery grass and swaying trees, random movement muted by the hissing fall of ice. The bitter cold wind cut at Jess's skin. The gate through which they'd passed turned out to be a tomb, built like a miniature Greek temple, and as they left it they were surrounded on all sides by leaning granite and marble headstones, jutting like broken teeth from the jaw of the ground.

  'We have a problem,' Thomas said. He sounded grim, and scared. 'Look.'

  They were close, but he was right, the new city's wall had been built on the borders of this cemetery, and stretched high up. No way over it. You bastard, Frederick, Jess thought. He must have known what he was doing, and he'd lied about it, right to Jess's face.

  'We have a guide,' Santi said, and nodded towards the left. Someone was standing at the far edge of the cemetery, waving in their direction - a scarecrow of a woman, thin as a walking corpse. She was wrapped in faded layers of clothes but seemed half the size she should have been, even then. As the Library party approached her, she sniffled and wiped at her dripping nose with dirty hands.

  God, she was young. Not much older than Jess himself. He could see that in the fine texture of her skin, the gold of her hair, but war had worn her thin and hollow. 'Come with me,' she said. 'Hurry.'

  'Where are you taking us, girl?' Wolfe demanded, and she shook free of his grip on her arm and ducked her head, as if to avoid a blow he didn't give.

  'To the gate,' she said. 'Frederick's taking it, but you've got to be quick.'

  'We should have gone with him,' Dario said. 'I knew it.'

  'Minute the mob sees you lot, they'll howl,' the girl said, and wiped her nose again. 'Redcoats said any who grab you get extra rations. Which is why Frederick went first. Nobody wants him, so he can get the gate open for you, like. He said move it quick.'

  'Show us,' Wolfe told the girl, and she scampered off, faster than Jess would have believed possible for her thin, starved frame. The ice slimed the grass, and it crunched and slipped beneath his feet, but he kept up as Santi's men broke into a trot, then a run, in pursuit of the girl. They all kept up. He kept a hand on Morgan's arm to make sure they didn't lose her.