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Authors: Anne Nesbet

0062104292 (8UP) (14 page)

BOOK: 0062104292 (8UP)
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“They mess with our land,” said another fellow.

“They do, they do, don’t they?” said Rodegar Malkin. “They won’t be content before they’ve put every last inch of the world on their grid, and taken all the wrinkles out of everything. I see how it is. The wrinkled hills cry out to us to do something to protect them. Enough, already!”

And his huge hands made a large gesture that was a
kind of silent explosion:
KABOOM!

“Ha!” said one of the others. “Tempting thought, of course.”

“Let me remind you that I offer all you need to make it happen,” said the magician. “And by way of providing a public service, as you might say, the prices for my, ahh, special tools are set, I think you’ll find, at very reasonable levels.”

He leaned forward with what his size made an impressive show of drama.

“Think! All that wicked waterworks machinery gone, in one sweet moment! That building that chokes our poor river now! Gone! The Surveyors would never recover from that blow.”

“What does our Girl say?” interrupted the brown-bearded man, turning to stare at Linny some more.

“She agrees completely, of course,” said the magician. “She is tired of waiting around for the
madji
to become bolder in their dealings with the Surveyors.”

“But—” said Linny, and the magician pinched her again.

“Remember
your brother
, out there with the
madji
, trying to undo the harm of the Plain,” said the magician pointedly. “Don’t say anything
your brother
might not be happy to hear you say. Sometimes you have to destroy what you want to heal, you know.”

“Hey there, ease up on the girl,” said the bearded man to the magician, with something almost like disgust. “What I don’t understand is why she would throw her lot in with a two-faced old arms dealer like you. Malkin, stay calm there, man! Just stating the bald truth, as you know well enough.”

Rodegar Malkin stood up. His head almost grazed the wooden beams of that back room, and his face was beginning to flush red.

“Your long-looked-for Girl with the Lourka finally appears, you
madji
fools, telling you it’s time to rise up and fight, and all you do is dither! As you wish. I can do business with a thousand other people, can’t I? Just because I’m giving you first crack at the best goods doesn’t mean anything much, I guess. Come along with me, Girl. We’ll leave them to bicker among themselves till the Surveyors nab them all.”

That was when something peculiar happened. The five people around the table all stood up, too, and somehow arranged themselves so that some of them were standing in between Linny and the magician, just as simply and instantly as that.

Linny felt alarmed. She did not trust or like Rodegar Malkin, true, but she didn’t know these people any better.

“Hey!” said the magician.

“Hey, yourself,” said the man with the beard. “We’re
just saying, you don’t get to bluster off. We are thinking over your generous offer, and we will come to a decision about it soon enough.”

“We’re also thinking the Girl with the Lourka might be better off staying with us,” added another, darker-headed man.

The magician and the
madji
glared at each other, and Linny felt herself beginning to smoke, like linseed oil just before the test feather dips into it. She was not, she thought, another crate to be lugged around town or sold to the buyer with the most coin money or finally thrown at something and made to explode.

The feather went in; the feather was scorched!

She caught the merest flick of a cat’s tail, silvery golden, back in the dark places down the hall, and without thinking a single thought more, she ran right out of that room, somehow dodging the arms of all of those
madji
, somehow even dodging the grasp of the enormous (and bellowing) magician. Quick as fire, quick as scorching, she raced through the Death and Dollop and out onto the street beyond.

14

RACE TO THE RIVER

S
he couldn’t believe it at first, that she had managed to slip through all those angry people. Probably it had helped that she had had no idea she was about to bolt; she had just up and bolted. But this was no time to think real thoughts about anything. She hoisted the skirts of that dress safely away from the cobblestones, and she ran down the street as fast as she could go, turning off the main road once she was around a bend and out of sight of the tavern, and following what she sensed must be a slight slope downhill toward the river.

A Bridge House, near the river. That was where her Aunt Mina would be. A house near a bridge. Linny kept running.

When she paused to catch her breath, some minutes later, a faint hiss from the roof of a nearby house startled her. The Half-Cat was there, walking calmly along, all silver on this side. As soon as the cat noticed her staring at him
(or so it seemed to Linny), it turned around and walked (all golden tabby) for a few paces the other way. And then it turned again. She was panting after all that running, but the Half-Cat didn’t have a whisker out of place.

“Are you following me, then?” she said to the cat. “Why?”

No answer from the cat; it picked its delicate way along the roof of the house and pretended not to notice Linny staring up at it. So she shrugged and kept running, while the Half-Cat shadowed her, up above.

Fifteen minutes later, a lane so narrow that Linny began to worry it would dead-end and become a trap instead changed its mind and spat her out into bright sun—on a street that ran right along the bright sparkling blue-green laciness of the river.

The Half-Cat leaped gracefully down from the last rooftop onto the balustrade and turned its odd face in her direction, almost as if saying, “See? See? Here it is!”

“Ah!” said Linny, and even though she was running, running, she breathed it all in, the world she saw now.

This was what she had tried to explain to Sayra, how it felt for her when she climbed a tree up high enough to see the world, or got to the top of a little ridge and could look out and see the rippling earth and stone everywhere around, or that time when she had found the outcropping of rock halfway up the Middle Woods, from which you
could look down on the actual village of Lourka and see all of its rooftops and alleyways and laundry lines out back. It was like some part of her was always ravenously hungry for views, for overviews, for anything that gave her a taste of the lay of the land.

“Hungry?” Sayra had said, laughing. “Hungry, like your tummy rumbling, for a
view
?”

Oh, how she missed Sayra! That brought her back to herself. There were still angry
madji
and one very enormous magician coming after her. She trotted along the side of the river, gasping a little for breath and eyeing the world that had just come into view.

How strange the buildings looked, on the other side of the water! They were squarer and shinier, Linny noticed, almost as if they had been made with metal and glass, but why would you build a house out of metal and glass? Wouldn’t it be awfully sunny and hot in a house like that? So maybe she wasn’t seeing things properly. She would have to cross the river to get a better look at those houses.

That must be Angleside, over there, she realized with a start. The other half, the Plain half, of the Broken City. Over on this side of the river, meanwhile, in Bend, the streets were winding and chaotic, as if they belonged to some overgrown village. Linny could well imagine the people of such different places not liking each other overmuch.

Faster, faster!
Every muscle in her legs was smoldering by now, and the stones of the city streets were beating bruises into the soles of her feet.

The river was quite wide in this part of the city, she saw, but ahead it narrowed some. And there, farther yet, was a great white structure that went right from one side of the water to the other: a bridge.
A bridge!

She wrapped the cloak around herself so as to look like nobody in particular (tucking the lourka away under her arm, out of the way), and set off at a trot down the embankment toward the bridge. The river’s edge became busier the farther she went, and although her heart pounded a little as more and more people showed up on the streets or even brushed by her, she calmed down some once she realized that no one took notice of her. To them she was just a girl hurrying on some errand, not a fugitive from the
madji
. Not the Girl with the Lourka. It is a pleasant feeling, being anonymous in a city.

Linny slowed her trot to a walk, figuring that looking unhurried was as good as a disguise, and took note of everything: of the way the streets on the Bend side of the river arrived at the embankment from all sorts of odd directions, while way over there, on the other side of the river, what must be Angleside, the streets seemed to open up at quite regular intervals.

Here was an odd thing, however: across the street from
her now was a girl, a few years older than Linny, with a fancy dress on and an instrument in her hand. What was that? Linny stared. A wooden box with threads running across the sound hole, rather than strings. What kind of sound would that make? But the girl was arm in arm with a friend and heading toward the bridge. The friend pointed—almost, but not quite, in Linny’s direction—and the two of them doubled over in laughter. They looked quite merry, really. Linny turned to see what they were pointing at and stopped in her tracks for a second.

Another girl, wearing something that looked like a reckless copy of Linny’s dress, made of whatever scraps she had found in the rag bag. But the oddest thing was, this girl also had an instrument in her hands—an actual instrument this time, though nothing like a real lourka, with strings that looked like maybe they were perhaps even capable of making a sound, if you plucked them with enough force.

Linny could feel the hair on the back of her neck spring to attention. Who were these girls?

And then a third brushed by Linny. Her dress was a better copy—the buttons were even of metal, though perhaps not quite of silver—but the “lourka” she wore on a cord around her neck was made of something that looked more like a pressed-paper hatbox than anything else.

“Where are you going?” breathed Linny as the girl
paused to hitch up her stockings.

“Taking the long way to the fair!” said the girl happily. “Today’s the day! My mother was a claimant once, said it’s huge fun—and they feed you free food all the days of the fair!”

Linny’s stomach rumbled immediately.

It had taken passing by a pretzel stand and then a soup merchant to inform poor Linny that she was hungry not just for views, but for a “little something,” as her father used to say in the middle of a long afternoon. But she had no coin money in her pockets, and it would be foolhardy indeed to start strumming on the poor lourka when she was trying not to be found! That thought—and all these girls around her in the crowd with their odd parodies of real instruments—made her tuck the lourka away even deeper under her cloak, and while she was at it, she tucked the thoughts of food away, too. You have to be tough, when you’ve just made a break for it.

As she got closer to the bridge, it became ever larger, shinier, and more splendid. It was built of white stone, a rising and falling swoop of a bridge, with four great pediments reaching down into the water. A pattern was carved into the arch: geometrical on the Angleside end, it became ever more recognizably wild looping vines by the time it reached the nearer bank of the river. It was a wide bridge, too, wide enough not only for people and
carriages to hurry across it, but for bright awnings and tents to be pitched in the middle of it. It seemed to be a market as well as a bridge, and over it rippled a long bright banner:
HAPPY CLAIMANTS’ DAY!
Except that something peculiar appeared to be going on in that market. Men in gray, moving forward in a line across the bridge; people shaking their hands in the air; a man on a ladder grabbing at the rippling, bright fabric of the banner—what was that about?

And she didn’t see any house at all, not right here nearest the bridge. Perhaps on the other side?

Something furry wound itself through her ankles and made the strangest sound, a low warning squeak. The Half-Cat wanted her to keep moving, apparently. There was a small commotion over there on the street to the right—Linny caught a glimpse of yet another girl in a bright dress with a child’s pretend version of a lourka in her hands, this one being descended upon by a very large person, an enormous person, colorfully dressed. The magician!

Linny put her head down and slipped deeper into the crowd, grateful for the blandness of her cloak and for her own lack of height, and tried to move at the crowd’s own speed, keeping large bodies and pushcarts in between herself and the side of the street where she thought the magician must be moving along.

She flowed along with the crowd to the very foot of the bridge, and there the flowing crowd was brought up short and began to get tangled. A line of men in gray uniforms had formed about forty feet up the bridge, and behind them, other men, also in uniform, were putting together a makeshift fence out of metal grates. The crowd grumbled and surged, and the uniformed men barked orders at them and pointed at a large sign hanging on the central panel of that brand-new fence. It was hard for Linny to catch proper glimpses of the words on that sign, as the crowd thickened and became (from Linny’s perspective) a solid mass of shoulders.

She saw
NOTICE!
and
CITIZENS OF BEND
and something about an
EMERGENCY DECREE
and
FALSE CLAIMANTS
and
DEATH
. That was not very promising at all. She stood on tiptoes for one last look, and saw this:
GIRLS WITH LOURKAS
.

Her heart stopped for a second. Just stopped and froze and then began galloping forward again.

“What’s that mean?” she said to herself.

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