A Darkling Plain
"Now, Len," said the lady Engineer in a warning voice.
"The Green Storm must know that you're here," said Wolf. "All these windmills and fields and so forth. They must have seen you."
"I suppose so," said Clytie Potts.
"Yet they choose to leave you in peace. Perhaps they think you are Anti-Tractionists, like them?"
"Well, they'd be wrong then," said Angie's father, sensing the challenge in Kobold's question and bristling. "They don't know our plans, no more than you do...."
"Len," said Dr. Childermass, and Chudleigh Pomeroy cut in hurriedly to say, "Anyway, now that young Natsworthy
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and his chums are here, we'd best make them comfortable; decide where they're to stay and so forth."
"Oh ; we don't want to trouble you," Kobold told him. "We'll just stop a few days, have a nose about, and then head back to the Jenny Haniver."
"But you can't leave so soon!" protested Pomeroy. "You've only just got here!"
"What he means is, you can't leave at all," said Mr. Garamond, who had been listening impatiently to all this from his perch near the door. "These are important times for London. We can't risk having you tell somebody we're here."
"Come, Garamond," said Pomeroy, "Mr. Natsworthy is a Londoner like us!"
"That's as may be, but his daughter isn't, and as for this other gentleman ... As head of the Security Subcommittee I have a duty to point out that we don't know them, and we can't trust them."
"Hear, hear," said Angie's father, nodding vigorously. "It'd be a right shame if we hung on here for all these years only for some nosey parker to go and squeal about us to a scavenger just when we're about ready to--"
"Len!" snapped Dr. Childermass.
"But I'm afraid Garamond's right," said Pomeroy apologetically. "I think it would be best if our young people keep a twenty-four-hour guard on the Holloway Road and the airship park. Tom, Wren, Herr Kobold, I hope you will consider yourselves our guests, but I'm afraid that there is absolutely no question of you leaving. Another biscuit, anyone?"
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21 Paging Dr. Popjoy
***
Sixty miles beyond dead london, where the young mountains of Shan Guo rose steeply from the plains, stood the fortress city of Batmunkh Gompa. It guarded a pass through which, for centuries, Traction Cities had kept trying to break into the fertile Anti-Tractionist kingdoms of the east. But now that the Green Storm had pushed their frontier westward, it had become a sleepy, faded shadow of itself, like a harbor from which the sea had retreated. A small garrison still manned the Shield-Wall, but the city served mainly as a base where armies and supply convoys paused on their way west to the new battlefields of the line.
In the valley behind it, along the pleasant shores of the lake called Batmunkh Nor, lay stilted fishing lodges and the pretty, steep-roofed villas and weekend homes of senior Green Storm officials. One, prettier than the rest, stood
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among pine trees on a finger of land pointing out into the lake. The lights in its teardrop windows made long reflections in the water, and the roofs curled at each corner like the toes of a sultan's slippers in a fairy tale. Anyone bold enough to peek between the bars of its high spiked gates would notice some curious statuary in the gardens and a nameplate beside the paved drive that read:
DUN RESURRECTIN'
It was the home of another survivor of MEDUSA: Dr. Popjoy, late of the Guild of Engineers, and more recently head of the Resurrection Corps. The villa was his reward from the Storm for all the armies he had built them.
"That is the house," said Fishcake's Stalker, when he described what he could see as they came down the mountain road that night. "When Sathya was stationed at Batmunkh Gompa, we went for boat trips on the lake and looked at that house from the water. It belonged to an artist then; a master calligrapher. Sathya used to say that when she was old and rich, she would live there herself."
Fishcake stopped at the last steep turn of the road above the lakeshore. He was cold and tired, footsore after the long trek from the hermitage, and very afraid that they would be challenged as they neared the outskirts of the city. He had insisted on walking most of the way, although his Stalker had offered to carry him, because he did not want her to think that he was weak. An ache had begun in the back of his knees after a few miles, and had now spread to every part of him,
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making it hard to walk at all. He knew that he should be happy that the journey was over, but he just felt afraid.
When his Stalker turned to find out why his footsteps had stopped, he said, "Don't go down there."
"But Popjoy can mend me," she whispered. "Then I will be Anna all the time."
"You don't need him!" Fishcake said. It seemed to him that she was mended already. She had been Anna ever since the day they'd climbed up onto Zhan Shan. He was dimly starting to understand that the Anna part of her was made stronger by memories; the fluttering flags written with prayers to her old gods had woken her again, and the familiar mountains and the talks with Sathya had made her stronger than ever; perhaps the Stalker Fang part had been crushed for good. Why risk trusting this Popjoy person?
But he was too tired and shivery to explain all that to his Stalker. She came and picked him up and said, "Don't be afraid, Fishcake. Dr. Popjoy will mend me, and then we shall go back to Sathya. Now be my eyes again, and tell me, is there anyone about?"
There was no one, and no one challenged them as she carried him to Popjoy's gate. It was late. Batmunkh Gompa was a glittering curtain of lights drawn across the sky beyond the lake. Snow was falling, flakes patting Fishcake's face like chilly little fingers; like the cold fingers of the ghosts of children.
The Stalker set Fishcake down and smashed the gate's strong locks and Fishcake pushed them open, looking nervously at the lighted windows of the house that showed through the trees at the far end of a long drive. His Stalker
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took his hand as they stepped together through the gateway, the gate swinging shut behind them. "We shall ask Dr. Popjoy to give you some food before he works on me," she promised.
"What if he won't?" asked Fishcake. "Work on you, I mean?"
"I will make him," whispered the Stalker. "Don't worry, Fishcake."
Fishcake looked again toward the house, and put a hand into his pocket to clasp the little horse she'd made him. He still didn't want his Stalker to put herself at the mercy of this sinister-sounding Engineer. He almost pulled her back through the gate, but already it was too late. In the garden ahead, where shadows lapped beneath the trees, things were moving. Spiky shapes that had looked like statues suddenly turned their heads; green eyes lit like flames.
"Stalkers!" whispered Fishcake's Stalker, hearing the clank and hiss as they came to life. She sounded scared.
"But you're a Stalker," Fishcake said.
"Oh, so I am. Thank you, Fishcake. I forget sometimes...." She pushed him gently behind her, out of harm's way, and unsheathed her claws.
The house had three guardians; big, polished battle-Stalkers customized by Dr. Popjoy, finned and spiked like heraldic dinosaurs. Light silvered their spade-shaped, featureless faces as they loped across the snowy lawns. Fishcake's Stalker limped toward them. They were stronger, but she was cleverer. She dodged their clumsy, flailing blows. Her blades flashed as she drove them through the couplings of each Stalker's neck in turn. Sparks spewed and fluids squirted. The beheaded bodies lurched aimlessly about,
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colliding with one another and falling over, thrashing and clattering on the flagged path as Fishcake's Stalker turned toward him. She reached out to him with one hand and then snatched it away, touching her own face. Her sightless eyes flared; her head jerked. "No!" she whispered.
"Anna!" wailed Fishcake. He squidged himself back against the cold bars of the gate as she struggled with herself. She shook herself and came toward him. She grabbed his chin, twisting his face upward. She was not Anna anymore. What had made h
er change? Had the fight with the other Stalkers tripped some circuit in her head? Or had Fishcake done it himself, by reminding her of what she was? He shook with sobs, wishing there were some way he could bring Anna back.
"What is this place?" she hissed, listening to the wind in the trees, the lap of waves along the lakeshore. "How long was the Error in control?"
"D-Doctor Popjoy," was all that Fishcake could say, through his tears. "He lives here...."
"Popjoy?"
"Anna thought, she thought ..."
"She thought that he could make her even stronger," the Stalker whispered, and gave a hissing laugh.
"What about Sathya?" he said. "What about my horse? Remember--"
"Be silent." She let Fishcake go and went over to the ruined Stalkers, who were falling still at last. Bending down, she felt across the ground until she found a wrenched-off head. She unplugged one of the cables from her own skull
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and inserted it into a socket on the head. The dead Stalker's eyes began to glow again. She lifted the head and held it up in front of her like a lantern. As she swung it toward Fishcake, he understood that she was looking out at him through its eyes. He wondered if she was disappointed, after all their time together, to see how small and frail he was.
"Come," was all she said. "We will see Popjoy, as the Error intended. I will make him expunge her permanently."
Fishcake wanted to run, but he went with her instead, as he always did. He didn't know what "expunge" meant, but he could guess. He wanted to hold his Stalker's hand, in the hope that his touch might somehow bring Anna back, but she was not in a hand-holding mood; she flapped him away and went limping fiercely along in front of him, still holding up the baleful head.
As they neared the house, a dozen big Stalker-birds launched themselves from the trees outside and began to circle the intruders, closer and closer, slivers of light falling from their beaks and claws. Fishcake tried to hide himself in the folds of his Stalker's filthy robe, but she just raised her arms and whispered to the birds in some battle code, and they settled meek and watchful on the lawns, waiting for her next instruction.
The front door was ironwood, bound and studded with actual iron, but it splintered easily under a few kicks from the Stalker Fang's good leg. Behind it lay a pillared atrium where a Resurrected butler lumbered out of an alcove to bar the way. "What is your business?" it droned.
"I have come to meet my maker," replied the Stalker Fang in her usual cool whisper. She smashed the butler to pieces
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and left its wreckage scattered on the tiles. Fishcake scurried after her across the atrium, through another shredded door, and down three stairs into a sunken den walled with soft draperies and lit by a toffee-colored glow. A small, bald-headed old man was rising from his couch to ask what the commotion was about. He went very still when he recognized his visitor. A glass fell from his hand, splashing wine across the carpet.
"Keep away! My birds will fetch help! They'll fly to Batmunkh Gompa and--"
"Your birds are under my control now, Dr. Popjoy," whispered the Stalker. "Stupid creatures, but they have their uses." She moved toward him, swinging the head in her outstretched hand so that the light from its eyes swept the room. Fishcake glimpsed things running away--Stalkerized insects and animals, a dog with the head of a dead girl. On a plate balanced on the arm of Popjoy's couch sat a neat wedge of fruitcake, which Fishcake snatched and crammed into his mouth. Eating messily, he pushed open a door in the far wall and looked through into some sort of workshop: cadavers on slabs and shelves heaped high with curious machinery.
"It wasn't me!" Popjoy was whimpering, assuming that the Stalker Fang had come for revenge. "I didn't know Grike would attack you! It was all that girl's doing; that Zero girl! She's dead now; did you hear? The townies got her, down in Africa. Naga's quite cut up about it, they say; sticks to his quarters and won't issue orders. Everyone will be relieved to hear that you're back! You'll be on your way to Tienjing, I suppose? To reclaim power? I can help you...."
"Tienjing no longer matters," whispered the Stalker,
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holding the head out to stare at him. "The Green Storm no longer matters. The world will not be made green again by air fleets and guns and the squabbling of the Once-Born."
"Of course not, of course not." Popjoy edged away until he was pressed against a wall and could edge no farther. His face shone sweatily in the green light. "So what can I do for you, Excellency? What small service can this feeble Once-Born offer ... ?"
The Stalker did not answer at once. She moved the severed head, following the flight of a Resurrected bee around a lamp on a side table. Then, in a voice softer even than her usual graveyard whisper, she said, "I remember things."
"Ah...."
"I remember being Anna Fang."
"Oh? Interesting." Fishcake, who was watching from behind the couch, could see that Popjoy really was interested, despite his fear.
"The memories overwhelm me sometimes," the Stalker confessed. "It has been worse since I reached Shan Guo. Sometimes it is as if I become her."
"Then the stuff I installed has started to work at last!" cried Popjoy triumphantly. "The damage you suffered must have dislodged something, or perhaps in repairing itself your brain has made some connection that I could not achieve with my crude instruments."
"How is it possible?" demanded the Stalker. "Are they real memories?"
"Hard to say," mused Popjoy. "How do you define a real memory? But it's nothing to be frightened of. I think I can correct it.... May I take a look? Inside?" He tapped his own
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bald head, and grinned, his fear replaced by a nervous excitement. "If you could wait till morning, when my laboratory assistants arrive to help me with my little retirement projects...."
"No." The Stalker Fang was already moving toward Popjoy's workshop. "No one must know that I am here. You will do it now. The boy can help you."
The workshop stank of death and chemicals. Racks on the walls held shiny displays of scalpels and bone saws. Fishcake, who still didn't trust the old Engineer, helped himself to a long, thin-bladed knife and hid it inside his coat.
The Stalker Fang shoved a cluttered bench aside and knelt down on the floor, in the spill of light from a hanging argon globe. Kneeling, she was still so tall that her bowed head reached halfway up Popjoy's chest. The Engineer circled her, licking his lips and fidgeting. "You, boy," he snapped, holding out his hand to Fishcake without ever looking at him. "Pass me that tray...."
The tray was metal, covered with delicate, finely made instruments. It rattled and clattered in Fishcake's shaking hands as he passed it over. The instruments made a mockery of the crude tools he had used to repair his Stalker. He saw the Engineer wince at the sight of the cheap iron bolts with which he had fixed her death mask in place.
"Who made these repairs? A real botch job...."
"The child has done well," said the Stalker, and Fishcake felt proud.
Popjoy had surgeon's fingers, slender and clever. Within half a minute he had the mask off, baring the dead woman's face beneath. Another half minute and the top of her skullpiece
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came free and was laid on a table. "Lamp, boy," he said, and strapped the small flashlight that Fishcake passed him around his head. He peered down into the tangle of machinery and preserved brain tissue inside the Stalker's skull.
"Sometimes she is just Anna, for days and days," said Fishcake, hoping that Popjoy would take the hint, destroy the Stalker part of her, and save his Anna. "It was the Anna bit that wanted to come here, so you could help her. I think Anna Fang is trapped inside her somewhere, and sometimes when she remembers who she is, the Stalkerish side shuts down...."
"The ghost in the machine...." Popjoy looked at him and winked. "I'm afraid not, lad. Nobody returns from the Sunless Country, you know." He selected a long, thin probe from the tray and inserted it into a crevice of the Stalker's brain. The Stalker's head
lifted with a jerk; her dry lips moved; she whispered, "Stilton ... I'm so sorry. I didn't want to hurt you, but it was the only way--"
"Anna?" said Fishcake eagerly.
Her eyeless, desiccated face turned toward him. "Fishcake?"
"It's her!" Fishcake told Popjoy, "Keep her! Hold on to her! Don't let the other one come back!"
Popjoy was busy with his probes and instruments. He didn't even bother to look at Fishcake. "You have it all wrong, boy," he said. "These memories aren't a person. They're just residue that the Stalker brain has scoured out of the dead brain cells of the host. Eighteen years too late, mind, but better than never...."
Something sparked, down inside the Stalker's head; the flash lit up the inside of her mouth, which had fallen open.
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She jerked again and said, "No tricks, Popjoy."
"What, you think I'd sabotage my finest work?" cried Popjoy hurt. "I am just making a few minor adjustments."
"You have found the Error? The memories? Remove them!"
"Great Quirke, certainly not!"
"Remove them!"
"But Excellency, they are what distinguish you from the mindless Stalkers, the battle models.... They are what make you the finest Stalker of the age; the pinnacle of Resurrection technology...."