Read The Kraken King, Part 7 Online

Authors: Meljean Brook

The Kraken King, Part 7 (10 page)

BOOK: The Kraken King, Part 7
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When he reached the top, Zenobia's brilliant grin could have been a beacon through the dark, but Mara was frowning at him. “What happened to you?”

“Tortured and drugged,” Zenobia answered for him, taking his hand as they moved swiftly into the chamber. “Do we run directly to the airship?”

“I'll make sure the courtyard is still clear first,” Cooper said, a crossbow in each hand.

“Wait.” Captain Corsair stopped him from opening the chamber doors, then tilted her head. “I hear my lady's engines. The gunship must have come round the—”

A blinding orange flash burst against the night sky. The floor shuddered beneath Ariq's bare feet. Zenobia cried out, then stumbled as a cracking
boom!
shook the tower. He caught her to him, looked down into her wide eyes.

Not a bomb. An airship had exploded. Shot out of the sky.

“Dear God,” Zenobia breathed. Her gaze shot to Captain Corsair. “
Lady Nergüi
?”

“No. But it will be my ship if we don't run. Go!”

No time to check for guards. Cooper slammed through the doors, looked down the courtyard. “Clear!”

Fast and precise, Cooper and Mara took positions at the center of the corridor—protecting Zenobia's back as she and Ariq followed Captain Corsair out of the chamber. The captain took the lead as they raced east. Ahead, the glow from the burning gunship lit the terrace, where armed crew members stood waiting. A sleek skyrunner hovered with its upper decks level with the terrace rail.

As soon as they emerged from the chamber, a blond man broke away from the crew to stand at the courtyard entrance, sweeping his arm as if urging them all to run faster. Zenobia huffed out a wild laugh and pulled Ariq along, their bare feet slapping the rough coral floor.

“Boots on the northern stairs!” Mara called the warning from behind them. “A dozen or more!”

Guards coming. Ariq slipped around to Zenobia's left side. Captain Corsair caught up to the blond man—
Ariq knew that face, he knew that man
—and suddenly the grin the man had been wearing hardened. He drew a pair of pistols and moved to the northern side of the courtyard's entrance, where the wall would protect his position. Captain Corsair knelt beside him, pistols in hand and her gaze fixed on the top of the stairs that opened onto the terrace.

Zenobia slowed. “Archimedes?”

“Get on board, Z,” her brother said. “We'll cover you.”

She only hesitated a second, but it was too long. Ariq swept her up and tore across the terrace at a dead run.

Not fast enough. In the dim orange glow, he saw the crew members ahead diving behind potted palms and to the ground. At this distance, the guards' swords couldn't touch them; only their crossbows could. Behind him, boots pounded and pistols cracked. Bolts fired with taut
thwack
s. Mara screamed, “At your back, Kraken!” and Ariq dropped to a crouch, cradling Zenobia tightly against him.

My body is your shield.

The first bolt thumped into his left shoulder like a hot fist. His arm went numb. Another pounded into the middle of his back, followed by tearing pain that ripped through his left side. His chest tightened, his lungs suddenly clamped in an agonizing vise.

No more followed. Zenobia was crying, pushing at him, trying to make him let go of her. And her brother was suddenly beside him, his green eyes just like hers. “It's done, Kraken. Yasmeen finished them but more are coming.”

“Help me, Archimedes.” His wife was sobbing again, terrified again as she braced her shoulder under his arm and attempted to push Ariq to his feet.

He tried to reassure her. His body was difficult to kill. But blood filled his mouth instead of the words, and as soon as he stood his knees gave out. More hands caught hold of him, but there was only one that he cared about, her fingers laced through his as they rushed him onto the skyrunner.

“Full steam!” Captain Corsair's shout echoed in his head. “Into those clouds, now!”

Engines growled. The orange glow swam into darkness. A table lay under his stomach. He heard voices. Mara. The captain. One he didn't know.

—
Jesus. We have to stop that bleeding or he's gone.

—
Help me stitch this.

—
Quick now! Get those fucking splinters out.

—
Zenobia, sweet. Go outside and wait. You don't need to see this.

Ariq knew that voice, though. Her brother. Who was coming in his airship and then she would go.

As if a thousand beetles burrowed along his spine, excruciating pain ripped up his back as he forced his head up. His bleary gaze found her, pale cheeks raw with tears, her expression bleak. She was still holding his hand, Ariq realized. He hadn't been able to feel it.

He made the words come, though they emerged on a river of blood. “Don't . . . leave.”

—
Fuck me. Get him down! Where's the goddamn opium?

“I won't. I swear I won't.” More tears fell down her cheeks. “I love you. Just stay with me, too.”

“Always.” A sharp pain jabbed his neck and the light around her face seemed to darken. “My . . . wife.”

“My husband.” All at once she moved in close, and her fierce jade eyes filled his collapsing vision. “Don't you dare let go, Ariq. Don't you dare leave me, because I will follow you. I swear to God that if you let go, I will tear down the heavens and drag you back to my side.”

He wouldn't let go. But he couldn't tell her. His body was here, but the rest of him was slipping away, and the dark rushed in until only her voice remained.

Then even that faded into silence.

Look for Part VIII

THE KRAKEN KING AND THE GREATEST ADVENTURE

Available from InterMix June 3, 2014

Keep reading for a preview of Meljean Brook's novella of the Iron Seas

HERE THERE BE MONSTERS

Available now from Berkley

By the time Ivy found Ratcatcher Row, a stinking yellow fog smothered the docks. She inched along the unfamiliar street, holding her right hand out to her side and using the buildings facing the narrow wooden walk as a guide. Though only an arm's length away, the thick mist dissolved Ivy's gloved fingers into ghostly outlines. On her left, the clicking, segmented shadow of a spider-rickshaw scurried by on the cobblestones, and the hydraulic hiss of the driver's thrusting feet seemed to whisper a single refrain.

Hurry, hurry, hurry.

Oh, she wanted to. Her humid breath filled the thin scarf she'd tied over her mouth and nose. Her heart pounded as if she'd sprinted through these streets instead of picking her way through the fog, stopping at each building to search for an identifying sign.

But at least she was moving. As long as she could move, she couldn't be taken.

Seven years ago, after two centuries under brutal Horde rule, the pirate captain Rhys Trahaearn had destroyed the tower that the Horde used to control the nanoagents infecting every person in London. For seven years, Ivy had been free to move as she wished, to feel as she wished—until earlier that night. Only hours ago, she'd been frozen in her bed with her eyes closed, unable to move, listening to strangers search from room to room through her boardinghouse. From blacksmiths to beggars, no one in that cheap tenement owned anything of value. But when someone had come through her door, stripped away her blankets, and prodded at her thighs and breasts as if evaluating her thin body, when the strangers had left and she'd seen the empty beds in rooms that had been earlier filled, Ivy had realized each sleeping person had been valuable—as workers, as slaves . . . which were the only uses the Horde ever had for them.

And if the Horde was returning to London with their controlling towers and paralyzing devices, nothing would stop Ivy from leaving.

A steamcoach waited in front of the next building, rattling and puttering, its gas lanterns penetrating the fog in faint glowing spheres. By the feeble light, Ivy found the establishment's sign, and almost moved on before her mind registered the painting on the wood: a compass.

The Star Rose Inn. She'd been looking for a picture of a flower, or even a woman, but it was a
compass
rose. A sailor wouldn't have mistaken it, but Ivy almost had—yet she was here.
Finally here.

Her heart slamming in her ribs, Ivy rose up on her toes to peer through the small glass window. No lights burned within. She'd have to wake up the innkeeper—who'd likely turn Ivy away after taking a look at her—or she could break the lock. A lock hadn't stopped her when she'd been a child, raised in the Horde's crèche, it hadn't stopped her after they'd taken her arms, and it wouldn't stop her now that the Blacksmith had given her new ones. But even if she broke through the lock, she wouldn't know which room Mad Machen slept in.

Raising her fist, she hammered on the door. A minute later, a stout man wearing a nightcap and with gray tufts of hair growing behind his ears swung open the small, hinged window. He lifted a gas lamp to the opening. Ivy squinted against the sudden, bright light, and tugged the scarf down, exposing her mouth and nose.

She knew what she looked like. Soot from the day's work still streaked her face; fog and sweat dampened her red hair. The buckles at the waist of her long coat didn't hide the threadbare nightgown underneath, and the trousers tucked into her boots had been old when she'd bought them. The satchel clutched to her chest was nothing but a shirt tied together, and held everything she owned. Her desperation must have hung around her as thick as the mist; she wasn't surprised when the innkeeper immediately lowered the lamp, swinging the window closed.

“We're full up tonight. You'll find rooms on the cheap at The Crowing Cock.”

“Wait!” She curled her fingers around the window frame, preventing its closure. “Please. I'm here to see Captain Machen. I've come from the Blacksmith's.”

She'd never used her connection to her mentor like this before. But two names in London would open almost any door: the Blacksmith's, and the Iron Duke's.

The innkeeper paused. “The Blacksmith?”

Ivy pulled aside her nightgown collar, exposing the guild's mark: a chain wrapped around her neck and a hammer poised to strike. When the innkeeper began to shake his head and close the window again, Ivy quickly stripped off her glove, exposing pale gray fingers and silvery nails.

“The mark is supposed to be around my wrist,” she told him. “But my skin won't take a tattoo.”

He stared at Ivy's hand before looking into her face again—perhaps searching for a hint of how she had managed to afford mechanical flesh. Finally, the innkeeper stepped back, opening the door.

“I'll tell the captain you're here.”

Ivy waited to expel her sigh of relief until after he'd moved to a door at the back of the empty dining room and disappeared up a narrow stair. Cool and dark, with well-scrubbed walls and floors, the inn's open dining room appeared cleaner than any she'd ever lived, worked, or eaten in. She was accustomed to pubs like the Hammer & Chain: dank and crowded, stinking of soot and sweat, and where fights broke out more often than not. But she returned every night, because the Blacksmith's workers could buy a hot meal on the cheap, and she went home to a windowless room that smelled of smoke and mildew, and whose north and south walls she could touch with both hands outstretched. This inn smelled of lemon wax and a warm, yeasty fragrance—a scent that reminded her of walking past the bakery in the crisp early morning, while heading to the smithy in the Narrow.

This was a good place. It gave her hope. Her grip on the satchel slowly eased as her nervousness and fear began to subside.

She'd heard of Mad Machen before he'd come to the smithy. Everyone in England had. Born to a merchant family in Manhattan City, the youngest of four sons, he'd been a surgeon in the British Navy when Rhys Trahaearn had attacked his naval fleet. Mad Machen had been among those forced to join Trahaearn's crew—then willingly remained aboard. He'd been with the pirate captain when Trahaearn had destroyed the Horde's tower.

Unlike Trahaearn, who'd been given a duke's title—and the king's pardon bestowed upon all of his crew—Mad Machen hadn't reformed. After taking command of his own ship,
Vesuvius
, he continued pirating from the North Sea to the Caribbean.

But despite all of the stories of murder, insanity, and pillaging, the Mad Machen that Ivy had met at the Blacksmith's hadn't been a cruel man. Big and intimidating, with a thick coarse scar around his neck and overgrown dark hair, he'd been a gruff man—but not cruel. Every morning for the past week, he'd accompanied his friend Obadiah Barker to the smithy, and sat with him through the excruciating process of exchanging a steel prosthetic leg for a limb made from mechanical flesh. Mad Machen had borne Barker's curses and screams without anger; he'd offered a hand for Barker to squeeze—and more than once, to bite. And every evening, he'd carried his delirious friend to the waiting steamcoach.

Ivy had assisted the Blacksmith in the surgery, and attended the two men during the long stretches between sessions, waiting for the flesh to grow. She'd listened to Mad Machen and Barker talk of ships they'd taken and ports they'd visited—Barker speaking a hundred words in his lilting accent to every flattened word of Mad Machen's—and when Barker's dread and fear of the next session became overwhelming, Ivy had told him of her own surgery, painting herself as a ridiculous shivering washrag until Barker had begun to laugh. Mad Machen's gaze had met hers then, and she'd seen his gratitude and appreciation.

She hoped he still felt them now. Her heart began pounding again as the innkeeper returned. He led her across the dining room and up the dark, narrow stairwell. At the top, he opened the first door on the left, revealing a dimly lit parlor.

Though midnight had passed several hours before, Mad Machen wasn't in bed, as Ivy had expected. He sat in a low chair, a snifter in hand and his long legs stretched out in front of him, knee-high boots crossed at the ankles. He'd unbuckled his jacket. His pale shirt opened at the neck, exposing deeply tanned skin and the puckered white scar at his throat.

He froze with the snifter halfway to his mouth when she entered the room. His gaze swept over her, taking her in, pausing on the makeshift satchel in her hand. Slowly, his gaze rose to her face. Dark eyes locked on hers, he stood.

“Ivy,” he said, in a voice deeper and rougher than she remembered. She realized he'd never spoken her name before.

And she expected him to grant her a favor?

Her nervousness came crashing back. Fingers twisting in the satchel, she glanced around the room. Mad Machen wasn't alone. On an armchair to her right, a woman with an angular face watched her with narrowed, cat-green eyes. A sapphire kerchief wrapped back from her forehead and tied at her nape, the blue tails tangled in the long black curls and tiny braids. Her short aviator's jacket buckled to her throat, and her hand hovered near the dagger hilt sheathed at the top of her brown, thigh-high boots.

To Ivy's left, Barker lay on a green sofa, bushy black hair falling back from his forehead. He hadn't bothered with a glass, but was drinking a deep amber liquid straight from the bottle. His boots and stockings were off, and he held his feet together as if examining them, pale gray against brown. He rolled his head to the side and looked at her when Mad Machen said her name.

“Ivy!” A smile broadened his mouth as he rocked up to sitting—and sat, swaying. With some effort, he focused on her again. “You've come all the way to the docks in this soup?”

“Yes.” Her pulse racing, she looked at Mad Machen. His gaze hadn't strayed from her face. “At the Blacksmith's, you said that you'd planned to weigh anchor tomorrow morning. I wondered . . . I hoped that you would allow me passage on your ship.”

His brows lowered, and the small movement seemed to darken every feature. “To where?”

“Anywhere.” She didn't know. She didn't care. Just away. “The first city you put in to port.”

He didn't immediately answer, and she became aware of Barker, no longer smiling. A grim expression had settled on his open face. In the opposite seat, the woman stared at Mad Machen, the gold hoops in her ears swinging with the tiny shake of her head.

Mad Machen either didn't notice them or disregarded them. He strode across the room, stopping only an arm's length away. Ivy had to lift her chin to meet his eyes.


Vesuvius
has no comfortable quarters. She isn't a passenger ship.”

“I know. But I can't afford passage on a—” She broke off when his face darkened further. Hurriedly, she assured him, “I'll work. I can repair engines, prosthetics . . . or windups, if you have any automata. I can build anything you need.”

“I already have a blacksmith onboard.”

Panic began to take hold. She looked past Mad Machen to the woman, then Barker. “Do you know of any ship that needs one? A ship that departs soon? I won't ask for a wage—only for board. Please.”

Closing his eyes, Barker shook his head. The woman didn't respond, only stared back at Ivy, her gaze cold and assessing.

In the quiet, Ivy's heart thundered in her ears. Smithing was her only trade. She owned nothing of value but her skill.

Nothing but her body.

Sickness roiled in her stomach, tasted sour on her tongue. She'd avoided this route for so long, but perhaps it always came to this. Feeling dull and worn, she lifted her gaze to Mad Machen's.

“I'm a virgin,” she said.

His broad chest rose on a sharp breath. A flush swept under his skin, his jaw tightening. Though his companions had been quiet, now they were still and silent—as if waiting.

His response was a low growl. “
Vesuvius
isn't a slaver ship, either.”

“I don't want to be sold. I want to be free when I get off your ship.” She tried to gather dignity and courage. “I'm offering it as payment. Some men prize it.”

His face continued to darken as she spoke, until the only lightness lay in the whites of his eyes, the tight line around his mouth, the rough scar at his throat. He looked . . . utterly mad.

By the starry sky—she'd made a horrible mistake.

Suddenly terrified, Ivy backed up a step, before whipping around and reaching for the door. “I'll find another—”

His hand slammed against the door, holding it closed. “You won't find another. You'll sleep in my bed. Not just once. For as long as you're on the ship.”

Barker's bottle clattered to the floor, as if he'd lurched to his feet and it had dropped from his lap. “Eben, you can't—”

“Don't.”

Barker fell silent.

Trembling, Ivy stared at Mad Machen's fingers, braced against the polished wood. More scars whitened his knuckles. How many people had he hit to accumulate those? Had any of them been women? Clenching her teeth against the scream working up into her throat, she swallowed it down. She strove for an even tone, but it emerged as a hoarse whisper.

“Will you promise not to hurt me?”

She felt him stiffen behind her, and the draw of a ragged breath. His right arm came over her shoulder, his palm flattening against the door, trapping her between. She squeezed the shirt and its few contents closer to her small breasts.

“We'll sail in the morning.” His voice was low and rough against her ear. His hand dropped to the door handle. “Come with me.”

Tension pulled her muscles tight when his left hand curved around the side of her waist. Stiffly, she stepped back, then hastily forward again when she bumped against his hard body. He guided her out of the parlor, and the only sounds in the cool hallway were their footsteps, her unsteady breath.

He caught her hand when she turned for the staircase. With a lift of his shadowed chin, he indicated down the length of the hall. “My bedchamber is this way.”

BOOK: The Kraken King, Part 7
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