She wasn’t certain what awoke her, but when Holly stirred
herself enough to listen to the
silence of the house, she couldn’t shake the notion that an earthquake had
traveled through the bricks and boards, leaving her trembling. Peering at the
fireplace, she chided herself: Of course
you’re shivering. The coals are burnt out. --Betsy! Worry for her charge
propelled up and across the threshold of the turret bedroom, slippers left
behind in her haste. The hearth held only held cooling bits of ash, the room
chilled and damp. Holly berated herself for not remembering to set a clock to
awaken her at midnight, and checked Betsy’s forehead.
The girl’s breath seemed shallow, and halting; her skin
was cool and moist. Alarmed, Holly turned up the wick on the bedside lamp. A
chill sweat covered Betsy’s brow, her hair slick against her skin. Holly
pressed a dry washcloth over her face, but Betsy only mumbled in her sleep. But she seemed better today! She fought
a rising sense of despair, and made herself focus on laying out new logs in the
fireplace the way Vonken had done. She remembered to sweep aside the ash,
tucked dry twigs underneath, and in a few minutes had a small tongue of flame
licking the logs. Perhaps something in
his bag? A quick rummage through the doctor’s satchel produced several
bottles labeled in an elegant, bold script. Camphor,
no, not helpful... Tincture of valerian? Colocynthus aqua? She shook her
head, understanding the Latin but not the purpose of the remedy. Frustrated,
she read the label of each bottle and vial, finally finding one noted as Citrus zingiber, tinc. Xtra. She knew
that one; their family doctor in years past had often prescribed it for
seasonal colds. Well, Vonken gave her
something citrus earlier; perhaps this was it. It couldn’t hurt, and I don’t
know what else to do.
She lifted the tiny, limp body until Betsy was more or
less sitting upright, and brushed her hair from her forehead. “Duckling? Betsy?
Wake up, sweetheart...you need a little medicine,” she said, trying to keep
anxiety from her voice. The girl’s eyelids fluttered, but her gaze was
unfocused.
“All...rise,” Betsy whispered, sounding as scratchy
inside as the burlap sacks she’d had for shoes. Poor little one...was she in court for something? Perhaps to see an
older brother sentenced for some petty crime? Holly winced at the thought,
but could conceive of no other reason why a girl not yet seven years old would
have heard a bailiff proclaim the entry of a judge. “We all...rise...”
“Sweetling, please drink a bit of this.” Holly coaxed a
spoonful of the tincture between Betsy’s lips, and tilted her chin a bit until
the child swallowed, coughed, and swallowed again. Dabbing her mouth, Holly saw
blood on the cloth. Oh god. No, no, you
were doing better! You were healing! It’s this room, it’s too cold – this whole
cursed city is too damp and chill! Holly left the bedside to urge the
crackling flames higher, fanning them with the hem of her shift. Warmer, I must get her warmer! She
pulled the heavy goosedown comforter off her own bed and lugged it to the
child’s room, arranging it atop the bed until she was sure no cold air could
possibly seep in any crevice. Betsy nestled under once more, her breathing
calming. Holly listened, but couldn’t determine whether her respiration sounded
more or less clogged.
I should’ve woken
earlier...should’ve checked on her again before now...she was fine when I
pulled the bath for the Pilot! Realizing she hadn’t seen nor heard anything
from that quarter yet, she
reluctantly left Betsy’s room to look into the bath. The soupy slime in the tub
and floating bits of what seemed to be pale, soaked, torn cloth made her
recoil. What in all the Depths is that? Dried,
lumpy scum, like hardened seafoam, marked a trail into the hallway. Holly
stepped around it, lighting one of the twin krakenoil lamps by the sink. He left his clothes? Is he rollicking around
my home nude as a dolphin? She looked into the murky water filling what had
been a sparkling, spacious bathtub, repulsed by what appeared to be snakeskin
draped over the lip. Is he...shedding?
Becoming more monstrous? Will there
be a point at which humanity is so alien to him he turns feral, dangerous?
She thought of the extra limbs, the malformed mouth. No...not malformed, not for a kraken.
Shuddering, she looked around quickly, but the traces of
the Pilot’s presence seemed hours old; no telling where he might be right now.
Drawing closer to the filthy tub, she reminded herself there was no one else to
clean it. If I demanded he scrub up after
himself he’d likely only make it worse! Taking a deep breath through her
mouth to avoid the foul odor drifting up from the slurry, she carefully rolled
up her sleeves. As swiftly as she could, she plunged her hand in, unstopped the
drain, and backed away with a sniff of disgust, slime clinging to her fingers.
She trembled while turning on the sink tap. Ice-cold water gurgled out, and she
washed her hand and arm thoroughly, not allowing herself to speculate on what
the slippery, soapy substance might be now glugging down the tub drain.
What does happen to the Pilots? Didn’t
Mikael cover that in his book? She recalled the transformation only
vaguely, though she remembered Mikael nattering on about that and other
disturbing aspects of krakendom often, while he was writing it. If this Pilot is going to become a threat,
he must leave; I don’t care what else he knows about the wreck of the
expedition! She calmed, however, drying her skin and considering the
matter. I was asleep, and he didn’t
bother me. Betsy is worse...but surely that’s the consumption? Would he be
immune to the disease? Could being in the vicinity of that awful rock have
caused this decline in her? I should summon Vonken... But what could the
surgeon do? He’d stated repeatedly he didn’t believe the child would live.
Uncertainty dogged her. She paced from Betsy’s room,
where the hearth spread warmth again finally; to the foot of the attic stairs,
silent as the grave; to the library. She picked a book on wasting diseases from
the reading desk, and opened it to the section on White Plague. The words told
her nothing more than what she’d read a day ago, when she’d pulled this volume
from the shelf in hopes of gleaning some hint of successful treatment beyond
what Vonken knew. She had no idea whether she should fetch the doctor, whether
he might even be at his clinic at this late hour, whether his automatron-nurse
could be of any help.
Frustrated, she turned her scurrying thoughts to the
other problem, since she knew of nothing else she could accomplish where the
progress of the consumption was concerned. It seemed all that could be done,
was. She shied away from the nagging sense that she should have tended the fire
earlier, never allowed the room to grow cold. She opened Mikael’s book on
kraken and flipped impatiently through it. Absorption
of oils...slow process, estimated to culminate over a twenty-five year period
by most biologists...well, that’s not helpful. Clearly, the element from
the Crater had greatly accelerated the process, to judge from what she’d seen
of the Pilot’s grotesque form, but this didn’t tell her whether she ought to
fear him. Where is he? Tracking more
sea-slime around my home? I’ll probably have to throw out those carpets...ugh. She
glanced out the library doorway to the attic stairs, loathe to venture up to
see what had become of her bizarre guest. She returned her gaze to the book,
flipping pages and squinting at the fine typeface in the extensive tome. A dull
ache throbbed in slow waves behind her eyes. Tea. I need tea. Then tackle all this afresh. There must be answers here.
She’d finished spooning the leaves into a strainer, the
kettle heating on the warming stove, before she noticed the back entry was
unlocked. “Oh hell,” she muttered, tiptoeing to the door and creaking it open
to peer outside. Flecks of that same seafoam substance clung to the doorframe. Has he simply left? Oh no. What about
Villard’s spies? The dark hillside beyond the wan reach of the kitchen
lamplight revealed nothing. Have they
already reported to him that a Krakenpilot is staying here? What if they’ve
taken him, or killed him? Will they try to come inside? She shut the door
hastily and bolted it. Wait. The wards.
Are the wards yet up? Taking a deep breath, she opened the door once again
and checked. The faintest shimmer caught the light, tremulous as cobwebbing,
just a step down from the back stoop. Presumably, only a skilled Coldspark
would be able to breach that. Holly shut the door once more, considering what best
to do.
Why would he have
gone outside? Did he crave the embrace of the sea? He didn’t seem agitated
earlier... The effluvia left in the bathtub, however, suggested the Pilot
might be even less capable of rational, human thought than before. Would Villard’s man have followed him?
Certainly, if he’d seen him. Does that mean the house is unwatched at present?
What if the Pilot doesn’t return? There could be more to the expedition story.
She fretted for several minutes until the screech of the
kettle startled her. She poured water into the teapot, and by the time she’d
snugged down the porcelain lid to hold in the heat, she’d decided on a course
of action. She hurried upstairs, gathered up a basket of bloodstained cloths
from Betsy’s room, and checked again on the child. Betsy slept restlessly,
rolling her head from side to side, moaning low through closed lips. Holly
cleansed and blotted her forehead, but she felt neither chilled nor feverish.
At least the room had warmed, and the comforter seemed to be serving its
purpose. In tending to the child, Holly suddenly realized she’d misplaced the
contagion mask Vonken had given her. Serves
you right...should never have let the fire die out.
She ventured out the back door a few minutes later
bearing the soiled cloths, a bullseye lantern filled with krakenoil, a small
spade, and a poker from the kitchen stove. If anyone was watching the house,
surely disposing of White Plague-contaminated things from a quarantined home
would be enough to ensure her safety. She lit the lantern, casting its circle
around the rear of the house. A careful look into the tall ash and elm closest
to the back walkway revealed not so much as a sleepy bird. Past those, the firs
swayed and whispered in a high breeze, then fell silent right as Holly turned
the lantern in their direction, trees caught gossiping. Her resolve faltered,
but she took a moment to tug the rubber galoshes higher over her shins, a
careful eye on the forest the whole while. Nothing moved.
She picked her way along the bricks of the rear walkway,
pretending to seek a soft patch of dirt by thrusting the poker down here and
there along the way. She didn’t find any traces of the odd foam, but in looking
occasionally at the earth she noticed some odd tracks...as though an enormous
snake had slithered by while she slept inside. Another worried glance around
the treetops showed only leaves and soft dark needles. She followed the strange
marks in the dirt, seeing dead grass pressed flat; whatever came this way
hadn’t been concerned about being followed. The first chunk of ripped flesh
stopped her, but it wasn’t until the lantern beam caught the gleam of a pewter
gun-stock that she understood she was looking at what was left of a man.
Holly turned away, sickened. Oh my god. Like the red-eyed man in the attic. More bits of
crimson-soaked clothing, a whole finger torn from a hand, a heavy shoe...with a
stump of a foot protruding. Holly gagged, and put one hand against the nearest
tree trunk to steady herself, but jerked it away wet. The whole trunk shone
rust-red when she turned the lamp upon it. Oh
all the gods of the deep and the light, what has the monster done? The
answer was obvious. And when the spy
doesn’t check in with Villard? What then? Has he already sent someone to take
this man’s place? Wouldn’t they have cleaned this horror up, to avoid questions
from me? Where in all ugly hell is the Pilot?
Despairing, she looked in every direction, lifting the
lantern high as she could, but saw no sign of the Pilot. After discovering this
messy feast, she didn’t think she ever wished to see the hideous creature
again. Let Vonken track him down, if he
wishes to continue his interrogation!
I’m done with this awful business! She could hardly bear to view the
scattered carnage. At least, the head seemed to have been consumed or carried
off entire...
Shuddering, Holly set down the lantern and struck the
small garden spade into the dirt. Wait.
This ground is so rocky...there’s no chance I’ll be able to dig deep enough to
bury this without some stray dog digging it up! But I can’t let it lay... Her
eye halted upon the lantern.
She was fortunate; she’d saved the bloodsoiled rags for
last. As she doused one in oil and tossed it upon the small blaze, twigs
snapped nearby. Holly whirled, raising the poker. “Who’s there?” She feared the
return of the Pilot. Instead, the portly form and bewhiskered face of Chadwick
Atherton stepped into the ring of lanternlight.
“Hullo, dear. What’s all this?” Her neighbor shaded his
eyes, peering at the small firepit she’d scratched into the dirt.
“Mr Atherton. Hello,” she said, hoping she’d found every
last bit of the late Company man and consigned it to the flames already. Only
the gunstock and boot had been flung far back into the woods. After this, the
stove poker was certainly not welcome
back in the kitchen.
Atherton rubbed his bushy beard, giving her a puzzled
look. “Bit late to be burning trash, isn’t it? I saw the light through the
trees, and worried your house might be catching fire!”
She waved him back from the basket of rags just as he was
bending to examine it. “Oh, please be careful! Those are tainted with
consumptive blood.” He straightened up swiftly, startled. She hooked a cloth
with the poker, dribbled oil from the lamp on it, and cast it into the fire.
“My dear...I had no inkling...” Atherton’s expression was
one of pity, making Holly feel guilty.
Nothing but a
sympathy bouquet since Mikael died; I’d thought they didn’t care for me
overmuch...yet he’s come to help. “Oh, not I. I’ve taken in a street child...she
had no family to care for her. The house is under quarantine by order of the
Surgeon General,” she explained.
Atherton nodded slowly, unsure of his response. Holly saw
a preponderance of white hairs in his beard; she wondered whether his age was
encroaching on him, or if some anxiety for his business had hastened this
elderly appearance. She explained further, “I...had to wait until the child was
sleeping soundly, to spend a few minutes away from her, and dispose of these.” Plausible, surely. “I ought to have
asked the doctor to place a seal of quarantine on the back door as well as the
front, but as I have so few tradesmen coming to the house these days, it simply
didn’t occur to me. Thank you for thinking to check on my safety, sir.”
Atherton looked well turned-out even at this early hour of the morning. He
could afford excellent fashions; he owned several textile-houses. Factories
such as the one which had turned Betsy out on the street, too young to entrust
to the machines yet.
Factories, she suddenly remembered, which her father had
mentioned more than once, near the end of his life, when he bemoaned his
decision not to sell out to the Northern Pacific when he’d had an offer.
Chadwick Atherton had subsumed his industry to the Company. Didn’t his
workshops sew all the uniforms for the Company now?
“No bother at all, wanted to be sure you were all right.
Gerty worries about you, up here on your own, you know,” Atherton said. He
continued to watch from a few paces distant. “Are you certain you’re taking
enough precautions, my dear?”
“The doctor assured me fire will destroy any lingering
contagion; you needn’t fear that the smoke will spread the disease,” Holly
replied, checking the direction of the wind. It blew very faintly toward the
west, into the trees. She glanced southwest, where she knew the Atherton’s
house was...somewhere, past the thick firs, just over the hump of the hillside.
She couldn’t see any lights.
How did he see the
fire? The flame was low to the ground, eating up the rags. Her nose had
deadened to the scent of cooking meat; she could only hope the smell had
dissipated before Atherton walked up. Too
dark to see the smoke. Unlikely he could see the fire from his windows. Why is
he here? “It’s been far too long since we’ve had a visit,” she said,
tamping down the shiver in her breast. “How is
Mrs Atherton?”
“Oh, quite well, thank you,” Atherton replied, appearing
discomfited. Holly repeated the oil-soaking and fire-feeding of another bloody
cloth, her deliberate movements holding Atherton’s gaze. “I’ll tell her you
asked after her. Yes, yes, it certainly has
been too long, you’re right. Been so busy, stepping up work in the uniform
productions, you know...ahem, erhumm.”
He cleared his throat for several seconds. Holly thought of what Vonken had
said: I’ve seen the factories in the
north assembling what looked very like a battalion... No matter what the
armaments, surely more men would be needed to deploy them. Men who needed
uniforms, to carry the colorful glory of the Northern Pacific Company forward. “White
Plague, you say? A street child? How very Christian of you.” Atherton nodded as
he said this, though his eyes bespoke doubt. “Charity is surely the best use of your time, I should think, with your
brother gone.” Holly clearly heard the unspoken assumption that she was unsuited
for respectable marriage. She knew Atherton disapproved of female education
beyond what was needed to manage a household of servants. She wondered if the
rest of the Hillside Ladies’ Association also thought her fit only for
charitable spinsterhood.
She couldn’t quite keep the heat from her tone. “I’ve
found that, oddly enough, Mikael’s death has opened a number of interesting
avenues for me. I’m not certain what
I shall do next. However, I find it strange that so many working-class children
are uncared for by the alleged philanthropic organizations in this city.” She
angrily tossed the last sick-rag on the flames. “She might or might not
survive. She was living in squalor, in Wharfside.”
“How very sad,” Atherton murmured, watching her. “Well. I
hope you and she will be safe enough here... Have you heard about the burglars
who’ve been seen roaming the neighborhood? Terrible, terrible. The Watch has
increased their patrols, you know.”
“I’m sure not the foolhardiest robber would dare enter a
house under quarantine.”
“Just so, yes, naturally. Still, it never hurts to be
cautious. Would you like me to take a look around the property for you, my
dear?”
Holly almost wished the nosy old man would find some scrap of a belt, or knuckle of a finger. “Not
necessary, Mr Atherton. Thank you for your concern.”
Atherton looked at the house as if debating risking a
peek inside. “Are you sure you’re managing well enough, dear? I could – I could
send Mathilda over, to help with the cooking and washing-up! I believe she went
through a bout of White Plague some years back...yes, yes; her husband, I
believe, succumbed, but she survived.Very hardy, she is: Polish stock, you
know. She’d be the perfect –“
“Mr Atherton, I am under strictest orders from the doctor
not to permit anyone into the house at present. I do thank you. Good night.” She
smiled thinly at him, and used the poker to push loose earth over the guttering
flames. Atherton stood there a moment more, at a loss for words. Finally he
nodded, and turned away. Holly continued to tamp out the fire, watching him
recede down the pathway. She slipped to the corner of the house, in its shadow,
to see him hesitate at the apex of the drive, staring up at the brightly
glowing quarantine warning in the air before the front door. Finally he walked
down the driveway. Holly wondered if he had a televox machine at home; if his
first act upon his return to the fine manse next door would be to call the
Sheriff, or some other representative of the Northern Pacific Airways &
Transportation Company. Perhaps even Villard himself.
She didn’t notice she was shaking until her hand slipped
on the latch to the kitchen door. Inside, she doused the lantern. Her pot of
tea sat lukewarm on the counter. She washed her hands, poured a cup, and drank
it black. The bitterness calmed her somewhat. It tasted ordinary. Nothing else
this night could be called that.
Betsy slept, so motionless that Holly put her hand below
the girl’s nostrils to feel the feeble respiration. At least she’s asleep. Dear god, what if that monster had decided to
sup on her instead? Angry again
at her negligence, Holly swept from the room in a swirl of skirts, ignoring the
dirt her galoshes tracked across the rugs. Likely
have to replace them all anyway. Wherever the Pilot is, hope he never comes
back. Hopefully, once out of the protective ward guarding the house, the
fiend wouldn’t be able to re-enter. But Vonken
said the Krakenpilots are so full of Dust-energy, they can absorb even his most
powerful blasts, didn’t he? Think how much it took to subdue the Pilot this
past morning! And if he’s become even more krakenish since...
Troubled, she looked through Mikael’s treatise again, but
saw only the most cursory paragraphs concerning kraken and Dust, mostly focused
on the effects of the Cataclysm on the original sea-dwelling animals. He had more than this. I know he did. Reams of notes he said the Zoology
Society insisted be cut. I remember him complaining about their interference
with the publication! Where are they, where are they...
One drawer of the desk was stuck. When she wrenched it
open in frustration, papers burst out everywhere. “Damn it to the Crater!”
Growling curses at her late sibling’s lack of neatness, she gathered up the
pages. Several references to kraken met her eye. She shuffled through the
papers, her eyes skimming through the familiar handwriting, then laid them all
out on the desk. They were completely out of order, not even numbered. Of course not. Damn you, Mikael. She set
her cold cup of tea on the desk, and grimly began to read.
Two hours later, in the first dim grey of dawn, hacking
coughs from the turret bedroom brought her running. Betsy spewed a bluish fluid
from her mouth. Alarmed, Holly sat her up, held a basin to her lips, noted the
flush on the child’s cheeks and the coolness of her skin despite the heat
beneath the blankets. She coaxed the girl to drink a little water, and when the
fit seemed over, laid her on her side. Betsy swooned, her breathing shallow,
giving not even a flutter of her lashes when Holly repeatedly spoke her name.
Holly no longer cared about the people spying on the
house, or whether the Pilot lurked in the woods nearby, or what Henry Villard
was up to at this moment. She wasn’t sure when Vonken’s mechanical nurse was
scheduled to visit. She needed help now. “I’ll
be right back, duckling, I’m going to fetch the doctor,” she promised. Betsy
didn’t seem to hear her. Holly threw on a coat over the plain skirt she’d
donned to burn the rags, not caring about mourning clothing. She snatched up
the silver coin Vonken had left her. She thought to buckle on the portable
quarantine ward the doctor had given her to avoid anyone interfering with her
purpose, and strode out of the house in urgent hope of finding some cab plying
the road at this early hour.
She passed the velocipede before she noticed it. She
stopped. The segmented, metal construct uncurled at her touch like a pillbug.
It was larger than she’d supposed, with huge faceted glass eyes set low to the
ground to avoid large rocks and obstacles. The saddle-piece was fashioned for a
taller person than herself, not surprising given the common proscription
against women riders. But there’s no
actual law against it. She swung herself up, gripping the handles tightly
when the construct quivered. She had no idea how to direct it. She looked down,
saw plates positioned just below where her feet hung, and gave them an
experimental kick as she’d seen men do astride horses. To her relief, the
velocipede crawled forward. She turned the handles set before the saddle,
somewhat clumsily, and the construct veered toward the front gate at the bottom
of the drive as she’d wished. This will
be faster, much faster, she thought. She was in too much panic to feel
giddy at how many simultaneous social niceties she was flaunting.
She remembered to tuck the hem of her skirt between her
legs to keep it from flying up, kicked the metal sides so that they rang
sharply, and yelled “Yah! Yah there!”
By the bottom of the drive, the ‘pede was moving at a faster clip than a
trotting horse. She yanked the handles roughly to the right, onto the street,
and gave it another two heel-kicks. And then she clung to the handles as the
metal bug undulated, its hundred feet thumping the cobbles in perfect
coordination, racing toward the confluence of the rivers and the clinic where
she hoped Vonken would be. She couldn’t spare an instant to look at the
cart-merchants who gawped at her flying past. Speed was everything.
If Betsy died, Holly felt sure it would be her fault.
She’d never been responsible for anyone’s life but her own, and only lately
that; she would never forgive herself
for this death.