best counter
Search
Report & Feedback

Chapter no 75 – Mercy is

Empire of Silence

NIGHT HAD FALLEN ONย the castle, and lights settled on the canals of Borosevo like the shimmering of swamp gas. Corpse fires burned, too, in plazas and on street corners, reminders of the plague, so long fallen away from my

everyday experience, that wracked the unhealthy commons in the world below. This high up, one could not smell the smoke, much less the stink of sickness and of rotten fish and algae that were the perfumes of the city.

A pair of watchmen passed me on the stairs up to the corner tower and terraced gardens that clung to the southern face of the ziggurat atop which the castle stood. In a strange way, the path recalled the winding stair down from Devilโ€™s Rest to the abandoned wharf I haunted in childhood. I no longer noted the heavy, cloying dampness on the air or the dull weight of Emeshโ€™s stronger gravity. The sea breeze cut wild and clean across me, gathering my hair in its fingers. High above I made out the blue-white spot of theย Obdurate, locked in stationary orbit above the city and playing host to a constellation of glittering repair crafts dimmer than the stars. Debris from the engagement with the Cielcin still fell at times, carmine scars on nightโ€™s blue curtain. I watched just such a piece fall across the heavens, turned to ash by the heat of entry.

A wind tousled the terranic palms planted like sentinels in the earth, and somewhere an ornithon hissed. That garden high above the sea was a beautiful place, as the wharf had been, and Calagah, and the seawall at

Devilโ€™s Rest. I think I might have been a sailor in another lifeโ€”or perhaps we all wereโ€”for always in such pelagic climes I have found a fleeting but instantaneous peace. Ignoring the printed warnings, I clambered up onto the parapet and turned my face windward, loose shirt billowing.

And I was alone.

There were always the cameras, but there at least I was free of the

servants and courtiers and their incessant whispering. Unsteady, I seated myself on the stone rail, feet dangling above the next terrace fifty feet below. Part of me felt like a child, and I must have looked like one

compared to that mighty edifice of stone. The castle lurked behind and

above me, hanging like the Sword of Damocles above my head. A thousand feet below, the bastille crouched, an ugly concrete structure beside the

Chantryโ€™s copper dome and slim towers.

I did not weep, though I had cause for weeping.

The only sound was the rustle of wind in the cedars, broken here and there by the quark of a night bird or the hiss of ornithons. Somewhere a frog croaked, and more distantly a manโ€™s voice carried on the wind.

I heard none of this, could hear only the screams and animal snuffling of Uvanari in pain. Whatever differences there were between our species, pain was not among them. I clenched my jaw until it ached, hearing in my head its desperate plea:ย Will you kill me, Hadrian?ย I wasnโ€™t sure I could.

The Cielcin fought for themselves, for their right to exist. We were no different. So long as their existence threatened our colonies, so long as our soldiers destroyed their worldship fleets, there would be no peace. So long as atrocity was met with atrocity, murder with murder, fire with fire, it mattered not at all whose sword was bloodier. The Chantry would torment Uvanari unto death. Then they would start on Tanaran or one of the others and achieve . . . nothing. All the torment in the universe could not give the priests coordinates the xenobites did not know, and nothing would change.

Where had I gone wrong? My good intentions had all boiled away, leaving only this labyrinth. Every choice I had bred suffering. Kill Uvanari

โ€”if I couldโ€”and Tanaran would be next upon the cross. Or I would. Do nothing, and the captain suffered, and I suffered with it, if only in my soul. We were at war, I told myself, and hard times called for hard choices.

Images out of spiritus mundi crowded my mind, recalled from that horrible nightmare I had seen in Calagah. The Cielcin marching across the stars. A great host, beautiful and terrible, its white hair streaming in the sun. I saw them burned away by that dying star and heard screams louder still. My hands shook, and again the screams became the wailing of the infant I had not seen. Then there were only the three words spoken to me by that Quiet voice:

This must be.

Despite the heat of the garden, I shivered. And after what seemed half of eternity, I called up a holograph on my wrist terminal and keyed a message.

I waited.

โ€œYou know, I think Gilliam was right,โ€ I said, hearing the approach of feet. โ€œYou really are a witch, sneaking up on a man like that.โ€

The footsteps stopped, and Valkaโ€™s bright voice rang out in the gloom, flattened somewhat by the wind. โ€œHow did you know it was me?โ€

โ€œI didnโ€™t,โ€ I said soberly. โ€œGlad it was, though. Iโ€™d have looked ridiculous if it had been anyone else.โ€ I looked back over my shoulder, patted the rail beside me. Whether more afraid of heights than I or less foolish, she declined. โ€œI was hoping we could talk. You know, quietly.โ€

She looked round the garden terrace, smoothed her shortened hair as she took in the palm trees and the bright flowers tamped to vague colors in the scant lighting set into the stone wall behind us. Behind her the safety lamps that lit the wall-walk dimmed, fuzzing silently out, then back on again. One continued to blink softly as if palsied. โ€œAll right, Iโ€™m running a loop on the three cameras out here, but we shouldnโ€™t talk long.โ€

I chewed on the remains of my thumbnail. โ€œThatโ€™s actually what I wanted to talk to you about: this thing you can do.โ€

โ€œWhat of it?โ€

โ€œI need your help. Uvanari, the Cielcin captain . . .โ€ I shook my head.

There was no good way to say it. There was no way not to say it. โ€œIt asked me to kill it, and I think I have to.โ€ I was not looking at her but down at the hulking bastille far below. She didnโ€™t speak, and I might have thought her gone but for the glaring sense that I was being watched. โ€œTheyโ€™re torturing it, Valka, despite all their promises and all the promises I made. I have a responsibility. I canโ€™t save the captain, and itโ€™s my fault itโ€™s in there in the first place, so . . .โ€ I told her my plan, all of it, withholding not even the

smallest detail. I spoke quickly, mindful of what little time we had. โ€œI might be able to get something out of it, something that will keep the Chantry from harming the others. I want to return them to their people, to use them to open a dialogue with their leaders. To stop the fighting.โ€ I swallowed.

โ€œTo end the war.โ€

Only then did I turn. Only then could I bear to see the judgment in those golden eyes.

There was none.

โ€œYou said once that what happened with Gilliam was my fault. You were right. But if I do nothing this time, then thatโ€™s my fault, too. And I canโ€™t do it alone.โ€

The way her lips pressed together, the way her eyebrows drew down . . . I could not read it. She chewed her lip. โ€œVery well, Iโ€™ll do it,โ€ she said. And then she added two words I have never forgotten or deserved: โ€œFor you.โ€

 

 

The other Cielcin shared a single cell in the bastille. Unlike the steel bubble of the interrogation room, the holding cell was sectioned concrete, walls

and floor and ceiling. What lighting there was hung from pendant cables, the yellow bulbs dialed low. I was not allowed inside, but the Chantryโ€™s own melodramatic tendencies had conspired to wall the front of the

communal lockup with actual metal bars, the white paint on them chipped and flaking. One of the Cielcin saw meโ€”the one Iโ€™d shot with the stunner in Calagah, perhapsโ€”and nudged its companion. Like a set of sails filling

with the wind, the ten Cielcin rose and turned to face me. Were they human,

I might have said they waited in quiet curiosity, or else that hatred burned cold in their corpse-like faces, but they were not human, and what they felt I could not say.

They had all been stripped of their armor, and but for Tanaran, they had only skintight unitards glistening with the coiled patterns of moisture-recycling and temperature-regulation tubing. Their clawed feet were bare

and looked more like hands than seemed right. One hissed, baring its teeth,

notย in the gesture its kind took for smiling. โ€œYou!โ€

Weeks had passed since last I had spoken with any of the xenobites save Uvanari, and never before had I addressed them as a group. Conscious of Inquisitor Agari standing at the end of the hall and of the cameras like

spiders in the corners, I said, โ€œI am sorry you are being kept this way. I had assurances it would be otherwise.โ€ย Always speak to one in a crowd,ย my father often said.ย A crowd can ignore you, but a man cannot.ย Tanaran was no man, not in any sense of the word, but I spoke to it all the same.

โ€œTanaran, I know what you are.โ€

The Cielcin noble narrowed its eyes. โ€œYou do not.โ€

A weak smile stole over my face. โ€œTheย ichaktaย told me you are a root.

Baetan.ย I do not know what that means, but it means you are important.โ€ I

darted a glance at Inquisitor Agari, then turned to speak to the other Cielcin, singling Tanaran out of the crowd.

But Tanaran spoke first, standing straight as the too-low ceiling would allow, its need to stand at attention defeating its good sense. โ€œHow is

Uvanari?โ€

I thank the Chantryโ€™s imagined gods that the creature could not interpret my facial expressions, for I opened my mouth, distressed. Again I looked to Agari. โ€œThey ask after their captain,โ€ I said to her in Galstani.

โ€œTell them heโ€™s being well treated but that the wound he took before his capture is not yet healed.โ€

Swallowing the lump of shame in my throat, I rounded on the Cielcin. I might have vomited had the past few weeks not put me off food. How was I to say that? But say it I did. It seemed to comfort Tanaran, who looked down at its bare, clawed feet, teeth glinting as it smiled. Unable to help myself, I added, โ€œThis wasnโ€™t what I wanted. If I had to choose, you would all be on your wayโ€โ€”I paused for a moment to draw them in and to ruminate on my next wordsโ€”โ€œ. . . on your way back to Aeta Aranata.โ€

The sound that greeted this was like nothing human, a ululating wail of equal parts grief and fury. I had to stifle an urge to cover my ears. Tanaran padded closer to the bars, prompting the two legionnaires near me to stiffen reflexively. It had to stoop a little in the cramped cell, so tall was it.ย How

can such a creature bear the Emeshi gravity?ย I wondered, remembering how I had suffered in my first months on this outsized world. And these creatures dwelt in space, on ships with a fraction of the gravity of Delos, much less Emesh. They must have laminated their bones, reinforced their muscles. Changed themselves, adapted in order to survive.

Tanaran wrapped its too-long fingers around the bars, pressed its flat face between them. โ€œTheย ichaktaย would never betrayย himย like that. What have you done to it?โ€

โ€œTo Uvanari? Nothing.โ€ I blinked, taking a step back in response to a nervous twitch from one of my bone-colored guards.ย Nothingโ€”how hard that word had been to say,ย Nothing.ย And how easy. Almost I can still taste it on my tongue. โ€œI spoke to it just last night.โ€ I glanced up at the pendant lights, frowning. Valka had said there would be a signal, said she would cut the lights in the bastille with her Tavrosi magic so I would know the audio pickups were severed. What was keeping her?

โ€œWhat else do you know?โ€ The young Cielcin let out a quieter, mewling version of the wail the collective had emitted mere moments before and

shut the liquid shadows of its eyes. โ€œYou know where ourย sciandaย is? Our fleet? You will destroy it.โ€

โ€œVeih!โ€ย I stepped forward again, coming to a halt at the painted red line on the floor that marked the minimum safe distance. โ€œNo. Theย ichakta

would not give us that. It said it couldnโ€™t.โ€ I looked at Agari again. I had to wait. Had to wait for Valka.

โ€œThat is what you would say!โ€ shouted another of the Cielcin, this one more square-jawed and strongly built than the skinny Tanaran. Without

warning it lunged at the bars, thin arms stretching between the peeling steel beams. They seized my shirtfront, and I realized too late that the line had been painted to account for the length of human arms, far shorter than

Cielcin ones. I moved without thinking, assuming the creatureโ€™s skeletal structure was similar enough to my own to make the break feasible. I

shoved both arms up between the xenobiteโ€™s closed fists and slammed my

elbows down on its wrists even as I went face-first into the bars. I staggered free, fell square on my backside.

Agari shouted an order, and the two legionnaires advanced, tugging stunners from thigh holsters.

โ€œStand down!โ€ I shouted, finding my feet again. My hair had fallen in my face. I blew at it, almost petulant. One of the legionnaires helped me to my feet. I thanked her and glowered through the bars at the other Cielcin, teeth clenched.ย โ€œRakur oyumn heiyui.โ€

โ€œIt was stupid,โ€ Tanaran agreed more vehemently, glaring at its companion.

โ€œThisย yukajjiย is the reason we are prisonersโ€”โ€

Tanaran cut the larger creature off. โ€œI know, Svatarom.ย Svvv.โ€ It made a buzzing, hissing sound that I took for hushing. Tanaran pawed at its roughly cut hair as if lost in thought. Presently its eyes narrowed. โ€œYou say our people are safe?โ€

โ€œUvanari has not betrayed you, no.โ€ I stayed carefully back from the red line now, estimating the full reach of Svataromโ€™s arms. Glancing up the dingy hall, I caught Inquisitor Agari watching me, offered what I hoped was a reassuring smile. โ€œBesides the name of yourย aeta, we know nothing. Only that yours was not an invading force.โ€

A third Cielcin spoke up in a voice higher and more feminine than the others, though such a gradation had no meaning amongst the xenobites.

โ€œAre we the only survivors? The other ships . . . Did anyone . . .โ€

Again I glanced at Agari. She would not want anything revealed to these creatures, no betrayals of fact or data. Sheโ€™d tell me to give them nothing. I shook my head.ย โ€œVeih.โ€ย This was so vague an answer that I had to start over. โ€œThe other ships broke in orbit.โ€ย Broke.ย What a telling euphemism.

The creature hung its head, air whistling from its nostrils as through broken teeth. Two other Cielcin hurried to catch the creature as it sagged to its knees. Was it sobbing?

Tanaranโ€™s own face hardened, and it shut its eyes. โ€œI see.โ€

The lights dimmed, replaced by red emergency lights low on the floor.

Agari said, โ€œWhatโ€™s going on?โ€ She repeated the question into her wrist terminal. โ€œAnother outage? I thought support had this sorted!โ€

Valka had done itโ€”or at least I hoped that she had. There wasnโ€™t much time; whatever sheโ€™d done with the neural lace implanted in her head, she had said it would not hold for long. Tanaran looked around, confused.

โ€œLook,โ€ I said, words soft beneath Agariโ€™s confusion and shouted orders. โ€œLook. Listen. I have a friend whoโ€™s grayed out the surveillance here, and none of the others speaks a word of this language. We can talk a moment.

You and me.โ€

โ€œIugam!โ€ย Svatarom slammed its hands against the bars. โ€œIt is a trick!โ€ โ€œI donโ€™t lie!โ€ I said, though I had lied for too long. โ€œWhatโ€™s wrong with

the lights?โ€ I asked Agari, feigning ignorance, pretending I knew nothing about the Tavrosi witch camped on the castle walls, her mind interfacing with the datasphere and the bastille security systems. She was, I reflected,

precisely the reason the Chantry kept so close a watch on technology within the realms and polities it policed. The inquisitor shot back the answer I

expected, and I rounded on Svatarom and the others. โ€œThis has not gone like I hoped, and weโ€™re wasting time. Uvanari asked me for mercy.โ€

โ€œNdaktu?โ€ย Tanaran echoed, its voice etched with a grief any species could recognize. โ€œWhy?โ€

I chewed my lip, then hissed under Agariโ€™s shouting from the end of the hall, โ€œBecause theyโ€™re torturing it, theย ichakta.โ€

My words seemed not to penetrate for the better part of a minute, and we stood in half darkness, staring at one another. At last, Tanaran spoke.

โ€œTheyโ€™re . . . hurting Uvanari?โ€ I nodded, then realized the futility of the

gesture and made the wordless grunt that was Cielcin forย yes.ย For a second I thought the xenobite might break into tears, saw a muscle in its jaw tense.

โ€œYour people do not want us to know.โ€ It was not a question.

โ€œVeih.โ€ย I shook my head, forgetting to make the alien gesture instead.

Tanaran cast its eyes down at the barren concrete floor, long scarred from countless eons of metal doors dragged across its surface. โ€œThen we thank you.โ€

Svataromโ€™s jaw hardened, glass teeth flashing. โ€œTheย yukajjiย must make it right. It is responsible.โ€ The Cielcin whom Uvanari called aย rootย was silent for a long while. Too long. โ€œTanaran.โ€

The robed xenobite stretched its lower lip down past its teeth. The

expression meant nothing to me, but it said, โ€œSvatarom is right. You are responsible.โ€

โ€œWhat does that mean?โ€ I asked. โ€œIt asked me to kill it.โ€

โ€œYes.โ€ In Cielcin, the word was barely even a syllable, an unvoiced breath of air. โ€œAmong the People, it is not right that one such as the captain should suffer.โ€

It was what I had feared it would say, what I had feared was true and

why I had come here in the first place. It was why Valka had grayed out the cameras.ย Not long now. Not long.ย โ€œSo I have to kill theย ichakta?โ€

โ€œThe one who causes dishonor to must do everythingโ€”everythingโ€”to end that dishonor. You say this is your fault. You are right. You say you wish you could send us home. But it is too late . . .โ€ Its voice broke.

โ€œ. . . too late for theย ichakta. To return home as it is . . .โ€ It could not finish its sentence.

โ€œWould be disgrace,โ€ Svatarom spat, then actually spat. โ€œYou did this.

You promised we would not be harmed. You gave your word.โ€

The safety lights flickered, causing me to glance at Agari as I said, โ€œI know! Why do you think Iโ€™m here? I understand what I have to do, but I need your help to do it.โ€ I had told Valka much the same thing the night before, whispered beneath the wind on the garden terrace beneath the terranic palms.ย I need to get them to leave me alone with Uvanari. Thatโ€™s when you sort the cameras, and I . . . I . . .ย My voice had broken then,

choked off into something very, very small.

Valka had lain a hand on my arm, had murmured that she understood.

But you donโ€™t have to do it.

I canโ€™t do this anymore, I canโ€™t.ย I tried to explain what I thought the Cielcin had been trying to tell me: that it wantedโ€”neededโ€”to die.

โ€œWhat are you going to do?โ€ Tanaran asked.

โ€œWhat are you saying to it?โ€ Agari demanded.

I waved her into silence. The cool air in the cell stank of rot, as if

something damp had died and taken up residence in the concrete. But I breathed deeply, eyes never leaving Tanaran. The lights flickered again, and I heard the faint whine of distant generators coming online. No time. No time. โ€œI am going to kill Uvanari.ย Ndaktu. Mercy.โ€ I tried to find refuge in a scholiastic aphorism, something to reassure me that I was on the right

course.ย Mercy is . . . Mercy is . . .ย There was nothing, or none that I had ever learned. โ€œI need you to do something next time these lights go out.โ€

And I told them.

The lights came on again within a minute of the end of my little speech, and the cameras with them. โ€œAnother thing, Tanaran,โ€ I asked, stopping as I pretended to turn away. โ€œUvanari called youย baetan.ย What does that mean?โ€

The young Cielcinโ€™s chalky skin flushed a dark gray, black blood flooding capillaries in its cheeks. The other xenobites nearest Tanaran hissed, startling the guards nearest me. I held up a calming hand, repeated my question.

โ€œIt means I belong to him. To theย aeta.โ€

โ€œI thought all Cielcin belong to theirย aeta, to his dominion.โ€ I caught Agari watching me, nodded as reassuringly as I knew how, though I am sure now the expression was strained. โ€œAre you not all his slaves?โ€

That outrush of breath, the slitted nostrils flaringย yes.ย Tanaran took a mincing step back toward the bars. โ€œI am his.โ€

A concubine? A wife?ย I squinted through the bars. I had begun to think of Tanaran as maleโ€”had begun to think thus of all the Cielcin, truth be told. I reassessed, reminding myself that neither was this a woman before me but something more, something less . . . something else entirely. I was beyond humanity here, beyond the grasp of translation. The Cielcinโ€™s sexual modes did not even map onto ours, not biologically, not sociologically. It was only our desire to humanize them that did. โ€œWhat does that mean?โ€

โ€œI am his. He is carried by me.โ€ It pressed a hand to its stomach in some gesture I did not understand.

โ€œCarried?โ€ I repeated. โ€œDoes this have something to do with children?โ€ It occurred to me that I had no notion of how the xenobites reproduced.

And I still have none, for Tanaran stepped back, startled. โ€œWhat? No!โ€ It rolled its head in a furious negative. โ€œI carry a piece of him. His authority.โ€

Images of the Imperial auctors flashed before me. Those elite were gifted with all the Emperorโ€™s authority, the ability to act in his stead, in his absence, so titled that they were equal with the Emperor in authority, though they had none without him. They shared in the Imperial Presence, spoke with its voice. Was this like that? Or something else? Perhaps it was

like that, and so Tanaran was the leader of this . . . expedition? Pilgrimage? I did not inquire further, pressed as I was for time.

โ€œOne other thing,โ€ I said hurriedly, conscious that I was once more under the ten thousands eyes of the state. โ€œUvanari said you came here to pray. To the others? To the . . . first ones?โ€ I wanted to say โ€œthe Quietโ€ but knew the label would mean nothing.

โ€œThe gods,โ€ Tanaran agreed. โ€œThe Watchers.โ€ It seized the bars. โ€œThey made us,ย yukajji. Us.โ€ It bared its fangs, somehow fierce all in an instant.

Sensing the change in Tanaranโ€™s attitude, the inquisitor approached.

โ€œThatโ€™s long enough, Marlowe.โ€ Agari grabbed me by the elbow. โ€œWhat did it say?โ€ She jerked her shaved head in the direction of the cell.

โ€œNothingโ€”they told me to go to hell,โ€ I said, shaking my head. โ€œI thought I was getting through to them, but . . . they blame me for it all. I can put together a transcript. Did you get a recording?โ€

โ€œPartial,โ€ the inquisitor said in answer. โ€œAnother one of those brownouts. Theyโ€™d been localized up in the castle, but . . . It shouldnโ€™t be possible.โ€

I tugged my arm free, bowed my way into the lift carriage that would take me back to the bastilleโ€™s processing level and the exit. โ€œIโ€™ll get the transcript written as fast as I can. It isnโ€™t much, but Iโ€™ve confirmed one thing.โ€ There was nothing for it; I had to give Agari something. Something to distract her and her superiors from what the Cielcin wanted of me.

โ€œWhatโ€™s that?โ€

I opened my mouth. Anything, to mask the true purpose of my visit. I only hoped that I was not dooming the young xenobite to hang on a cross of its own. Perhaps itsย baetanย status would protect it. I hoped so as I said,

โ€œThe one without the armor? The little one?โ€ โ€œYes?โ€

โ€œItโ€™s nobile, or whatever passes for nobile among the Pale.โ€

You'll Also Like