Rachel felt the air turn deathly cold.

  “Remember?” the god said to Carnival. “Remember your mother, the mortal whore? A bone-crawler like the others, but so pretty, even in death when she began to rot. I gave her back her soul so that I might enjoy her suffering more.” He sneered. “But you took it with you when we ripped you from her womb. You stole it from me. You will remember now, child—your first kill?”

  Carnival gasped, tried to pull away, but the wraith chains held her tight.

  “Now.” Ulcis’s voice was thunder. “Remember my rope.”

  Carnival lunged for him.

  Rachel heard bones snap as the angel hit the iron grate.

  The god recoiled. In spitting fury, Carnival clawed the air in front of him.

  “Now you remember, daughter,” Ulcis said. “The rope? My gift to you, savage little Rebecca. My little carnival freak.”

  Devon felt like he rode the shoulders of a god. Perched on the chair before the control bank, he snapped a lever back and the bridge responded with a powerful shudder. A deep rumbling shook the walls and floor. The Tooth lurched forward, engines thumping, into the Deadsands. Sand sprayed from either side of the forward scoop like crashing waves. The massive tracks ground and crushed everything in their path.

  “An outcrop of rock,” Bataba warned, pointing. “Look there! You must steer west.”

  “Nonsense,” Devon shouted over the booming engines. “This thing could flatten a mountain.”

  “Show me. The cutting arms.”

  Grinning, Devon twisted a valve open. Fluids pulsed within the trembling control bank. Air hissed from moist vents. He gripped a bony protrusion and slid it back. A ferocious grinding noise came from below, and a great jet of pulverized rock flew skywards. The bridge shook again, and the Tooth’s cutters lifted into view, in a blaze of spinning cogs.

  But the shaman had turned away. He was looking at a sack Devon had deposited in one corner of the bridge. Dark stains seeped into the burlap from its contents.

  “Where are your men?” Devon asked. “I thought they would be here to see this.”

  “Up on the roof.”

  “I see.” Devon eased the handle back a notch. The Tooth growled. Cutters bit deeper into the dunes, till geysers of sand sprayed up and over the bridge windows. The setting sun soaked through it like blood. “Ah,” Devon said. “My apologies, shaman. I believe I meant to move this handle the other way.”

  “Careful, Poisoner.” Bataba’s gaze remained pinned to the sack.

  Devon slotted the handle back into place, then nodded at the object of the shaman’s attention. “I made Sypes a promise,” he explained, “to ease the temple guard’s suffering.”

  Angus had been in a terrible state. The poison in his veins had pushed him to the very limits of endurance, even to the brink of insanity. But still he clung to life with a tenacity that Devon found both astonishing and repulsive. The Heshette healers had retreated, leaving the poor man restrained so as to prevent him from tearing at his own flesh. Devon became curious: he wanted to see how much Angus could endure. But he’d promised Sypes to help, so he had compromised.

  “You were forbidden access to your poisons,” Bataba said.

  “My chemicals were not necessary,” Devon said. “Merely a saw.”

  The shaman looked back at the sack, at its lumpy, seeping contents. “What did you do?”

  “I stopped him from scratching himself.”

  The Tooth climbed a low rise in a series of jolts that jarred Devon’s teeth, and then settled back into the dull thumping of engines as it picked up speed and rumbled down the slope on the other side.

  Twilight deepened. The Tooth ploughed on into the Deadsands, swaying gently. It crested dunes, devoured rock beneath its tracks. Stars winked on. Scar Night’s dark moon would soon be rising unseen: its very absence from sight an ominous portent of the blood to be shed before dawn. After a time Bataba left to join the other councillors on the roof.

  Devon felt invigorated. He leaned over the array of controls, feeling the pulse and throb of the great machine in every muscle, and surveyed the landscape ahead.

  To the south, aether-lights flickered in the night sky.

  Decoys.

  Devon pulled a lever and a web of metal mesh slammed down in front of the windows. The first attack would come long before the main armada reached them. Deepgate had one black warship, theWhisperer . His own idea. Silver-coloured ships were too easy for archers to spot at night. TheWhisperer was a fast-strike vessel, slender and swift, its gondola stripped of crew quarters, grapples and docking pulleys, and every other non-essential fixture, to make room for its bulkier engines and extra payload. Out of aether contact with the main fleet, it would be somewhere close overhead, riding high currents on an interception parabola. And if the aeronauts’ acting commander, Hael’s second-in-command, was as predictable as his predecessor, an attack ought to occur at any moment.

  On cue, a distant boom sounded overhead. A fizz, as firelight lit the ground all around the Tooth for an instant and threw stark wells of shadow across the dunes.

  Incendiaries.

  Another boom, followed by more fizzing, and the desert flickered orange and red. The Tooth thundered on regardless.

  Two drums thudded into the sand ahead, spewing lime-gas. Devon lowered the cutters. The first drum shot into the night with apang; the other exploded into shrapnel. Fragments of metal smacked against the lowered grille. Smoke brushed the windows. Two more drums of gas landed some yards to the left, upwind of the Tooth. Devon banked the machine windward and shredded them like dry leaves.

  A hail of missiles glanced off the hull, followed by the concussions of more incendiaries.

  All around, the desert burned.

  Devon was whistling, rapping a knuckle against the control panel in tune, when the bridge door burst open and Bataba stormed in.

  “A black skyship,” he snarled.

  Devon regarded him disdainfully. “You cannot expect me to anticipate everything.”

  “We lost four men.”

  “I didn’t tell them to sit up there.”

  “Four men, Poisoner—a score more with burns.”

  Devon shrugged.

  “You didn’t know about this black ship?”

  “I did not.”

  “You are lying.”

  “Have I not saved you once from a gas attack? Did I not bring down the Adraki, and then coax this machine into battle? And am I not about to crush the ground forces of Deepgate? All for you, shaman, so why would I lie?”

  Bataba glowered at him. “Anything else we ought to know? Your usefulness has all but run out.”

  “If I think of anything, I’ll let you know.”

  Tension gave way to uneasy silence as the Tooth crawled up another steep dune. The rest of the fleet had finally arrived. Silver envelopes converged overhead, shining dully amidst furiously flashing aether-signals. At the summit Devon eased back the throttle. A vast sweep of lights glittered in the desert ahead.

  “Deepgate troops,” Devon murmured.

  “How many?”

  “All of them.”

  By the light of their broken lantern, Rachel saw that Carnival had been crying. She shuffled over, taking care not to shine the light directly in the angel’s face.

  Carnival hid her scarred cheeks in her hands. “Leave me alone.”

  “You didn’t remember him?” Rachel asked.

  “Leave me!”

  Rachel flinched. “I’m sorry.”

  “I don’t want your sympathy! Save your breath, bitch. It won’t save you. Nothing will save you.”

  Rachel had to hope otherwise. By forcing Carnival to remember, the god of chains had sought only to hurt his daughter. One look at him had been enough to shatter three millennia of defences, to reopen her deepest scars. It had left her vulnerable, but, Rachel suspected, it had also exposed her heart.

  Carnival hugged her knees. A tracery of cuts engraved her arms. One wing hu
ng crooked from her broken shoulder; the feathers limp and matted with grime.

  Rachel squatted on the floor beside her. She picked up a handful of the chain links and let them drop. “It’s Scar Night right now, isn’t it?”

  “Yes.”

  “You’re going to kill me.”

  A pause, then: “Yes.”

  “I’m sorry, I’m sorry. I’m sorry he’s your father. I’m sorry for everything.” And she was sorry. Sorry her own life had ended up like this. Sorry Dill was dead. Sorry her father was dead.

  When she thought about the old man, it was always the same image: him returning home from some campaign, a solid, earthy man in a starched white shell of a uniform, silver buttons liquid in the light of the hearth. She remembered his comical frowns as Mother fussed around him, babbling on about the books she’d read, the gossip from the officers’ wives club, Mark’s scuffles with the authorities at the academy. And she remembered her father’s face when she told him she’d joined the Spine: the grim line of his mouth, the wounded look in his eyes.

  You could have stopped me. Why didn’t you stop me?

  Rachel looked down at Carnival, at the lank black hair strewn all around her ruined face, the broken feathers in her wings, the rotting leather vest, patched a thousand times and flecked with ancient mould. Carnival was curled up tight, making herself small, childlike. Her thin scarred arms wrapped tightly around her knees, like bandages.

  “Talk to me,” Rachel said softly.

  Carnival was weeping again. “Leave me alone! You’re trying to save your own worthless flesh.” Carnival raised her head, teeth clenched, thin dark eyes swamped with tears. “You think I give a damn about you? You’re nothing to me. You’re meat. Meat!”

  “You can fight this.”

  “Fight this?” A pained laugh. “Fight this!” The angel spat out the words. “You ignorant bitch!”

  “Your life didn’t begin with that rope, and it didn’t end with it.”

  “It should have been a chain!”

  “Stop feeling so sorry for yourself.”

  At once, the tightness left Carnival’s face. Tears now flowed freely over her scars. She dropped her chin to her knees again, and took a deep, shaky breath. “I hate this.” Anguish tapered her voice. “I hate them—you. I’ll kill them. You. All of you. Everyone!” She wailed. “Get away from me! Get the hell away from me!”

  Rachel touched her shoulder. “Rebecca.”

  Carnival slapped her away, hard. “My name is Carnival!” she screamed.

  “I’m sorry, I—”

  A key rattled in the lock of the cell door. Rachel whirled round.

  A giant stood behind the bars, dressed in filthy robes, his bulk filling the doorway. At first she thought Ulcis had returned, but then she saw that this man was built more solidly than the god, a mass of dense muscle. Bruises and stubble shadowed his face. Human bones strapped to his left leg formed a rude splint, while more, longer bones had been lashed together into a crutch on which he leaned. He fumbled with keys in his massive hands. The door creaked open.

  “Abigail?” he said.

  29

  THE SCROUNGER

  MR. NETTLE’S HEART soared as his daughter picked herself up from the cell floor. She approached him warily, her face shadowed by the overhanging lid of the lantern at her hip. He felt like rushing over, scooping her up in his arms, and holding her tight.

  He said, “I’m taking you home.”

  “Balls you are.”

  Abruptly his elation collapsed. This girl was too short, too slim, too fair. She moved lithely, with a grace Abigail had never possessed. And she wore the leather armour of a Spine assassin.

  The assassin lifted her lantern and regarded him with shocking green eyes. Her face was skeletal. Bruises marched in a line from her neck to one side of her forehead. “Who the hell are you?” she asked.

  “You’re Spine,” Mr. Nettle said.

  She studied him, her expression pinched. “I’m Rachel Hael.”

  Mr. Nettle scratched the scabs amid his stubble. “You dead too?”

  An odd look. Maybe this Spine didn’t know she was dead. He’d heard of ghosts like that, the ones who never settled easily in Deep, the ones who resisted. Often they didn’t realize they were dead.In denial, League folks said—but, then, what did those bastards know?

  “You seen her?” he grunted.

  “Who?”

  “My daughter.” He leaned his big face closer. “She won’t be with them.”

  Abigail would have fled once she’d seen those ghouls there on the bone mountain. He figured she’d be hiding down here in the tunnels below Deep, among the dead angels and their broth kitchens. The daft girl liked angels.

  Rachel Hael dropped her gaze to his splint, the bones he’d found and tied to his wounded leg. Pain racked the flesh there as though she’d touched him. He shifted his weight and the crutch creaked.

  She asked again, “Who are you?”

  “Nettle. Is she here?”

  The girl looked puzzled. “Are you one of Ulcis’s servants?”

  He flinched at the name. The fat god was down here somewhere, sliding down the tunnels like a wall of mud, watching everything. Hungry. And Mr. Nettle had lost his cleaver. He spat, “No.”

  “Then what are you doing here?”

  Was she stupid? “Abigail,” he explained. “I’m looking for her.”

  “I don’t know who she is. Are you from above? From Deepgate?”

  “Aye.”

  The city was only a dream now. It seemed he had fallen for days, or even years. He must have slept as he fell, or maybe that was when he’d died—he couldn’t be sure. He’d woken when the angel bit him. Scrawny, evil-looking thing in dented armour, it must have caught him near the bottom. It had dropped him quick enough when he’d yelled and smashed a fist into its face.

  Then he’d been lying in a crater of bones, dead as dead, with a bloody great bite-mark in his leg. Abigail hadn’t spoken to him since then, hadn’t told him where she was hiding. She was probably afraidthey ’d hear her. Or she was sulking.

  His ribs felt tender from the fall, and his leg hurt like a tooth-puller had been at it with his tongs. Maybe it was infected: he didn’t know, didn’t much care. So he’d fixed it with a makeshift splint and gone off in search of his daughter. She was down here somewhere, and so was the syringe that held her soul. He’d find them both—dead or not, he was still a damn fine scrounger.

  “How did you get here?” she asked.

  “I fell.”

  She stared like she didn’t believe him.

  “Where did you get the keys?”

  “Scrounged them.” Stole them . This was his own voice in his head now, and for that he was thankful. Abigail would be furious with him if she knew—just like her mother. He wouldn’t tell her about stealing keys, or any of the other things he’d done since he’d died.

  The murders.

  “Quiet,” he murmured to himself. “Can’t kill the dead.”

  Someone sniffed, and then another voice came from the shadows: “Is it human?” This one had wings.

  Scars.

  Mr. Nettle recoiled. He looked for a weapon, saw none, so he hefted his crutch instead. His unsupported leg screamed in protest. He ignored it, ploughed forward.

  “Wait.” The Spine pushed him back, strong for such a little thing. “She won’t hurt you.”

  “Don’t count on it,” Carnival muttered.

  He growled.

  “I recognize him now.” The scarred angel rose from the ground. “My drunken assassin. Lost your cleaver, beggar?”

  Mr. Nettle went for her.

  A tearing pain in his leg stopped him dead. The assassin had a foot pressed hard against his injured thigh. He swung a punch at her—

  —and found himself on his back, gasping.

  “Enough!” This time Rachel Hael had him pinned to the ground, her heel digging into the cords in his neck. He tried to grab her, but she dug her heel
in deeper. “I said, enough! Darkness take me, there’s plenty down here for you both to piss on without pissing on each other.”

  Mr. Nettle noticed that her ankle was manacled to a chain. He twisted his neck, so his eyes followed the links. His grunt was almost a laugh: one bitch chained to another.

  The Spine let him up again, handed back his crutch. “What happened to your daughter?”

  “Killed,” he said, keeping one eye on Carnival. “Poisoner bled her. Need to find her before she gets herself in any more trouble.”

  Assassin and angel exchanged a glance.

  “The dead angels here,” Mr. Nettle said, and his eyes narrowed on Carnival. “They’re even worse than you.”

  Carnival folded her arms.

  Rachel Hael looked uncomfortable. “Your keys, will they open the other cell?”

  The opposite cell, when he opened it, was dark and cold, and stank of violence. Blood had been spilled here, lots of it. Mr. Nettle shifted forward, on his crutch, to see better. “Abigail?”

  Behind him, the assassin raised her lantern.

  White feathers matted with blood were scattered all across the floor. Mr. Nettle bent down and started stuffing them into his pockets. You could sell feathers. Folks made pillows and warm jackets from them. And there were piles of them here, even though filthy. He’d have to clean all the muck and blood off first, but that didn’t matter. They were still worth scrounging.

  Then he noticed the corpse in the corner.

  The angel lay broken on a bed of straw, like it had been thrown there, its skin black and swollen, mouth and eyes gaping in frozen terror. Its wings had been ripped to shreds, as though a pack of dogs had been at them.

  But there was a sword.

  Mr. Nettle moved over to take it. That was worth more than all the feathers.

  The Spine stopped him. “Don’t,” she said, her voice sounding strangely thick. She hunched down beside the angel and rested a hand on its forehead.

  “Dill?”

  Mr. Nettle grunted, and went back to gathering feathers. Over his shoulder he saw the assassin prise the weapon free from the angel’s grip. “They didn’t take his sword,” she said; then, angrily, “They didn’t even take his sword!” Then she laid the weapon on the angel’s chest. She didn’t once turn round.