A Darkling Plain
Later she would pray that he had been dead by the time those sliding slabs of machinery caught him. She would tell herself that it had not been his screams she heard as he was snatched and mangled and plowed down into the earth, only the shrieking of stressed metal somewhere, some shard of long-dead London crying out as Harrowbarrow ground over it.
But by then they were on the outer edge of the debris field. A wide plain stretched ahead of them, empty as an ocean--except for the lights of New London, which was a quarter mile ahead and racing northward, crossing open country now, the wreck of its mother city left behind it like a sloughed-off skin.
"Girl!" someone was shouting, and in her shocked state Wren could not work out who it was; not Wolf, for sure; not his gunners, who had vanished with their swiveling turret; not Theo, who was struggling to his feet, his face streaked with blood from where he'd struck his head. She looked up. The Storm's white ship hung low above her, keeping pace with her by some miracle of stunt flying that only an aviator could properly appreciate. Reaching down to her from a hatch in the gondola was something that she took at first to
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be a Stalker, until he shouted again, "Girl!" and beckoned irritably for her to take his hand, and she recognized General Naga.
The Fury's gondola smelled of gun smoke and air fuel. Naga strode around issuing orders to his aviators, glancing at Wren just long enough to say, "You are Londoners? Captured by the harvester?"
Wren just nodded, clinging tight to Theo and finding it hard to believe that they were both still alive. It did not seem like the moment to try and explain that she and General Naga had met before. She could not stop shaking, or thinking about Wolf Kobold. As the Fury veered away from Harrowbarrow and flew toward New London, she let Theo go and went to crouch in a corner, where she was sick till her stomach was empty.
They touched down on New London's stern, where a crowd of Londoners and Green Storm soldiers were waiting. "Wren!" cried Angie happily, waving, forgetting that Wren had ever been a suspected spy.
"Miss Natsworthy! Mr. Ngoni! Thank Quirke you're safe!" shouted Mr. Garamond, helping them from the gondola. No thanks to you, Wren felt like saying, but then she realized that he already knew that, and that his clumsy hug was his way of saying sorry, and she hugged him back.
The new city had a curious feel; there were none of the tremors and half-muffled shocks and lurches that you felt aboard a Traction City, just a sense of dreamlike movement, and of speed. But perhaps not quite enough speed, for Harrowbarrow
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filled the view astern, its mouthparts opening to reveal a hot gleam of furnaces and factories inside.
"You'd have thought they'd stop when Kobold died," said Theo.
"They don't know," Wren replied. "Or maybe they do, and they don't care. Mr. Hausdorfer and the others can handle a simple chase without their master. Harrowbarrow never cared about Wolf the way Wolf cared about Harrowbarrow."
She didn't want to talk about Wolf. The way he had looked at her when he'd realized she'd killed him would stay with her always. She tried to tell herself that it was good she felt so guilty and so soiled by what she'd done. Better that than to be like her mother, and not care. But it did not feel good.
She took Theo's hand, and together they went to stand among the other Londoners at the stern rail. Behind them, Naga was giving orders to his surviving officers, telling Subgeneral Thien, "You will return to Batmunkh Gompa with the Protecting Veil. My wife believes that the Stalker Fang controls the new terror weapon. Help her find it and destroy it."
"Yes, Excellency...."
"And New London is to be granted safe passage through our territories."
"Yes, Excellency...."
"Now I want everybody off the Fury before I take her up."
"But Excellency, you cannot fly alone!"
"Why not? I flew alone at Xanne-Sandansky and Khamchatka. I flew alone against Panzerstadt Breslau. I
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should be able to handle a filthy little barbarian harvester like this."
Thien understood; he bowed and saluted and started shouting orders. Wren, looking round to see what all the excitement was about, saw the Fury's crew jumping down onto the deck plates, saw Naga heaving himself aboard. She looked away. What was happening astern was far more interesting than anything the Storm could do. She barely noticed when the Fury took off again.
Harrowbarrow was driving toward them through sprays of wet earth. Its armor was holed, there were fires on its upper decks, and one of its tracks was grinding, but Hausdorfer didn't care. He'd been skeptical about this place his master had brought them so far to eat, but now he'd seen it move, seen it fly, he understood what young Kobold had been on about. "More power!" he screamed into his speaking tubes. "Open the jaws! They are defenseless! They are ours!"
Naga turned the Fury toward the oncoming suburb and took her down almost to ground level. She was a good ship; he enjoyed the way she answered to his touch on the wheels and levers, and the purr of her powerful engines when he switched them to ramming speed. As Harrowbarrow's jaws opened, he aimed straight at the red glow of the furnaces in her dismantling yards.
When the Harrowbarrovians started to understand what he was planning, guns began firing from inside the jaws, shattering glass in the gondola windows, starting fires.
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A shell from a hand cannon punched through Naga's breastplate, but his armor kept him upright, and his mechanized gauntlets gripped the helm, keeping the blazing ship on course. The suburb was closing its jaws, but not quickly enough. Naga fired all the Fury's remaining rockets, and watched them streak ahead of him into its maw. "Oenone," he said, and her name, and the thought of her, went with him into the light.
The blast was brief; a sunflower blossoming in the dusk, stuffed with shrapnel seeds. There was a blunt, muffled boom and then other sounds; thuds and squelches as large fragments of wreckage rained down into the Out-Country. Aboard New London no one cheered. Even the soldiers of the Storm, who had grown up singing jolly songs about the destruction of whole cities, looked appalled. One or two small pieces of debris landed on the deck, plinking like dropped coins. Wren stooped to pick up one that fell near her. It was a rivet head from Harrowbarrow's hull, still warm with the heat of the explosion. She put it in her pocket, thinking that it would make a good exhibit for the New London Museum.
What was left of Harrowbarrow--the broken stern section, half filled with fires--settled into the Out-Country mud. It would be part of the landscape soon, like old London. The survivors, stumbling clear, stared about in bewilderment. Some looked toward the debris fields that filled the southern horizon, wondering what sort of life they would be able to make there. Others ran after New London, shouting out for
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help, begging their fellow Tractionists not to leave them here defenseless in the lands of the Storm. But New London was beyond earshot, pulling away from them quickly across the vast, dark plain, smaller and smaller, until it was only a fleck, a gleam of amber windows dwindling in that enormous twilight.
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52 Last Words
***
THE STALKER FANG LIMPED around her chamber. Her bronze face was lit by the winking lights on the heap of machinery by the green numbers that flicked and squiggled on her Goggle Screens. Through the open doorway Tom and Hester watched, and each time her eyes were turned away from him, Tom made another little movement, easing himself closer to Hester, until he was able to reach out and touch the knife in her belt.
"Not long now," the Stalker whispered, glad of this audience to whom she could explain her work.
Tom was thinking of Wren, hoping that New London would go nowhere near the Tannhäusers or any of the other mountains ODIN was to target. "Why volcanoes?" he asked. "I still don't see how that can make the world green...."
The Stalker's fingers spidered over ivory keyboards. "You
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have to take the long view, Tom. It isn't only Traction
Cities that poison the air and tear up the Earth. All cities do that, static or mobile. It's human beings that are the problem. Everything that they do pollutes and destroys. The Green Storm would never have understood that, which is why I didn't tell them about my plans for ODIN. If we are really to protect the good Earth, we must first cleanse it of human beings."
"That's insane!" cried Tom.
"Inhuman, perhaps," the Stalker admitted. "The ash of volcanoes will choke the sky and shroud the Earth in darkness. Winter will reign for hundreds of years. Mankind will perish. But life will survive. Life always does. When the skies clear at last, the world will grow green again. Lichens, ferns, grasses, forests, insects; higher animals eventually. But no more people. They only spoil things."
"Anna would not want that," said Tom.
"I am not Anna. I just use her memories to understand the world. And I understand that humanity is a plague; a swarm of clever monkeys that the good Earth cannot support. All human civilizations fall, Tom, and all for the same reason: Humans are too greedy. It is time to put an end to them forever."
Tom struggled to rise, wondering if he could reach the machine, smash it, and pull out all those complicated cords and ducts. The Stalker Fang seemed to read his thoughts; the long blades slid out of her fingertips.
"Do be sensible, Tom," she whispered. "You're very ill, and I'm a Stalker. You'd never make it, and Hester wants you to stay alive for as long as you can. She loves you very much, you know."
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She moved behind her pile of machinery, making some adjustment to the cables that trailed up through the ceiling to the antenna on the roof. Tom tugged the knife out of Hester's belt, and she fumbled it from him and clasped it between her hands, sawing awkwardly at the old ropes the Stalker had used to tie her wrists.
As he crept across the causeway, Pennyroyal tried to keep calm by imagining how he would describe all these adventures to his enthralled readership. Caution urged that I should stay away from that dreadful house, hut the fate of whole cities hung in the balance, and my poor companions were prisoners within. I knew that to run would leave an irredeemable blot on the honor of the Pennyroyals! (And I do need that key, Poskitt-damn-it!) My faithful native companion, Fishcake (can that be his real name?), led me to the end of the fatal causeway and would go no farther. I would not have allowed it anyway, for I could never let one so young risk his life in mortal combat with the Stalker. (Stalkeress? Stalkerine? Gods, I hope it doesn't come to actual combat! I wish that lad had had the nerve to come instead of me; the beastly little coward....) It was a little unsettling, I confess, but as I went on alone through the gathering darkness, I began to feel curiously nerveless. I have found myself in a lot of dicey situations over the years, and what I've learned is that it's always best to remain cool, collected, and-- GREAT POSKITT'S HAIRY ARSE WHAT'S THAT?
Only an owl!
Only an owl....
Shuddering, Pennyroyal took a nip of brandy from his secret hip flask and started hunting along the water's edge for
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Tom's anti-Stalker gun. The boy had said that Hester had dropped it here somewhere. Pennyroyal didn't mean to go any closer to that damned house without it. Ah! There it was. Still humming. Looked undamaged. A dashed odd-looking weapon, but they don't call me Dead-eye Pennyroyal for nothing! Setting the stock of the strange gun firmly against my shoulder (is that where it's supposed to go?), I resumed my catlike progress....
The Stalker Fang was busy with her machinery. From time to time the words and numbers crawling across the Goggle Screen were replaced with a furry, grayish picture. Tom realized that he was seeing what no human being had seen for millennia: the world from space, viewed through the eye of ODIN. Oddly, it was not very impressive.
Could ODIN really destroy humanity? Surely it would break, or run out of power, or something in that crazy stack of old machinery that the Stalker was using to talk to it would go wrong, and that would be the end of her plans. It made him angry that he and Hester had come so far and sacrificed so much to avert such a tatty effort. At least MEDUSA had looked worth dying for; its entrails had filled a cathedral, and its cobra hood had towered over London. This new weapon was just space junk, controlled by a mad old Stalker from a place that looked and smelled like a teenager's bedroom....
Beside him, Hester gave a little grunt of triumph as the knife severed the rope on her wrists. She stooped to start work on the one that bound her ankles.
The Stalker Fang was talking to ODIN again, tapping at
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her ivory keys, whispering the codes to herself as she conducted her bargain-basement apocalypse. Sometimes she whispered something to Tom and Hester too: "Just think, my dears--all that pretty lava ..." Anna Fang had liked having someone to talk to, and the Stalker she had become had inherited the taste. When Hester whispered, "Now!" and Tom rolled off the bed and stood up, she said, "Where are you going?"
"Come on!" hissed Hester, her arm around him, supporting him, dragging him toward the nearest window. She hadn't Tom's education, and she hadn't really followed the Stalker's rambling talk. All she cared about was saving Tom. She refused to believe that there was no hope at all.
But Tom knew there was little point in trying to outrun the Stalker Fang, who turned and came toward them as they neared the window. He twisted around to face her. Hester was still trying to drag him to the window, but Tom shook free of her. He had come to Shan Guo to talk, not to fight; if Naga wouldn't listen to him, perhaps this Stalker might. I am not Anna, she had said, just a bundle of Anna's memories.... But what was anyone but a bundle of memories?
Tom reached out to her. "We can't stay," he said. "We have a daughter. She'll need us."
The Stalker's eyes flickered. "A daughter ..."
"Her name's Wren."
"A daughter ..." She clapped her hands together with a clang. "Tom, Hester ... How wonderful! When I, when Anna first saw you together, she, I knew you were meant for each other! And now you have a baby girl."
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"She's not a baby girl anymore," said Hester. "She's a great big stroppy young woman."
"We brought her up," said Tom, "we kept her safe; we taught her things; she learned to fly the Jenny Haniver.... And now you want to kill her along with everybody else."
The Stalker shrugged--an odd movement for a Stalker; it made her armor grate. "You can't break eggs without making an omelette, Tom. Or is it the other way around? Where is she, this daughter of yours?"
"In London," said Tom. "In the wreck of London. The people there are building a new city, a floating city...." He wished now that he had paid more attention to Dr. Childermass's technical explanations. "It doesn't claw up the ground, it doesn't eat other cities, it doesn't even use up much fuel. Why can't it have a place in your green world? Why can't Wren?"
The Stalker hissed and turned away, going back to her machines.
Tom stumbled after her, and Hester, who had resigned herself to listening to the two of them chat, went with him.
The Stalker's fingers were rattling at her keyboards again. The gray image on the central screen changed, from a view of Zhan Shan's blazing wound to a more distant panorama of the clouded limb of the Earth. Then it began to close in again, the machinery behind the screen wheezing and clicking, the images flicking past like shuffled cards. A charcoal-gray patch expanded to become the wreck of London, then filled the screen. Tom recognized Putney Vale and the Womb as ODIN's gaze slid eastward, then north.
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"Nothing moving ...," whispered the Stalker. "What are those bright patches?" asked Tom. "Those are burning airships."
"What?" Tom stared as more specks of white fire slid past; then, just off the northern edge of the wreck, a burning sprawl like a hole torn in the screen. What had happened in the debris fields since he'd been gone? What had happened to Wren? His heart clenched into a fist and began to batter at his ribs.
"Ah!" hissed the Stalker. "That must be your floating city...."
She was quicker at reading the grainy pictures than Tom. It took him a moment to understand that he was looking down at New London. It was well outside the debris fields, moving north. And still the machinery whirred and nattered and the image on the screen kept flicking, changing, pulling closer and closer to the new city until he could make out people milling about on its stern. Dozens of people, lining the handrails, staring back toward the debris fields as New London bore them safe away. And he could make out faces now, the faces of his friends: Clytie and her husband, Mr. Garamond laughing for once, looking happy--and there was Wren, disheveled, smeared with what looked like soot, but Wren for sure; he cried out as her face slipped across the screen, and the Stalker swung ODIN's gaze to focus on her, still zooming in and in.
"It's Wren! She's all right!"
Tom felt Hester's hands tighten on his arm as she watched their daughter's face swim up toward them out of the gray fuzz of the picture. "Wren," she said. Her voice sounded
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shaky. "What's she done to her hair? It's all lopsided.... And there, behind her, look! It's Theo!"
ODIN zoomed again, and there was nothing on the screen except their daughter's face. Tom went closer, pushing past the Stalker Fang, reaching out to touch the glass. At such close range the image started to grow vague; Wren's face broke down into lines and specks and flares of light; this smudge of shadow an eye, that white smear her nose. He traced with his hands the curve of her cheek, wishing he could push through the screen somehow and touch her, speak to her. Surely she must be able to feel him watching her? But she only smiled and turned her head to say something to the boy behind her. Tom felt as if he were already a ghost.