Read The Phenomenals: A Game of Ghouls Online
Authors: F. E. Higgins
Outside, the sleet that had been slapping wetly against the window was turning to snow; Gevra was harsh in Antithica province, and the approaching thirteenth month the harshest. Over the coming
weeks Degringolade’s steel rooftops and copper domes would be concealed under a thick white counterpane. Edgar swirled his drink in the glass and slicked back a stray lock of hair that was
brushing his forehead. The firelight overemphasized his dark good looks to the extent that he almost became a caricature of himself. He
tsk
ed and gestured at the newspaper on the floor.
‘You see, Leucer, that the
Degringolade Daily
got the news about the warehouse? I didn’t speak to them. No doubt Hepatic Whitlock persuaded one of my loyal workers
to.’
‘What state are they in, my order of special Cold Cabinets?’
‘Damaged by the earthquake, though not beyond repair. It will take time. I only have a few workers on the job, the ones I can trust.’
Leucer smiled broadly. ‘Imagine it! With the help of those cabinets I, and you of course, will have a workforce that never tires, answers back or makes unreasonable demands. An
industrialist’s dream.’ He shrugged. ‘So, for now, I can wait. Besides, it would be prudent to let the dust settle over that Tar Pit incident first. It’s still the talk of
the taverns. Everyone is in a state of hysteria about Lurids and Superents and Domne knows what. What the people want more than anything is the capture of these brass-necked toerags.’ He
frowned and sloshed a mouthful of Grainwine noisily between his teeth. ‘And the sooner the better. I didn’t become governor to deal with common vandals. I have far more important
matters to attend to. Professor Soanso will be here in a couple of days.’
‘Who?’ Kamptulicon was only half listening, still ruminating on his own problems.
Edgar, who had been regularly checking the time and peering out between the parted curtains, looked up at the mention of the professor. ‘Arkwright Soanso,’ he said. ‘Surely you
have heard of him? The famous scientist who discovered kekrimpari. Hubert was always talking about it – he said it could be another source of energy at the manufactory.’
‘It’s all part of the greater plan,’ explained Leucer impatiently. ‘I reckon this kekrimpari could be used with the Lurids, when we have them. Professor Soanso is doing a
demonstration at the Degringolade Playhouse. Everyone will be there.’
‘Speaking of plans,’ said Edgar, ‘if we want to catch the Phenomenals, we have to draw them out, on our terms. Get one, the others will follow. We’ve enough on them now
to throw them all in the penitentiary and toss the key.’ A loud clatter at the door made them all jump. ‘And speaking of keys, my visitor has arrived.’
Edgar left the room and returned shortly with a man of dubious-looking appearance (and, it was quickly established, character). He was short and sinewy, with big dirty hands and one of those
faces that are most often described as ‘shifty’. The black grime under his fingernails and the faint odour of metal that hung about him caused Leucer to grimace and sniff. The man
smiled crookedly, revealing an odd assortment of teeth. He doffed his cap defiantly rather than deferentially and spoke stridently with a strong Degringoladian accent, admittedly that of the lower
classes.
‘Gud evun, gennerlmen, Quinque Boughton at yore servus.’
He pronounced his name with a hard
q
, in the classical way, and the
gh
was like an
f
, so he actually said ‘Kinky Bofton’.
‘I bin tolled yews are having trubble with a certain young Vincent Verdigris.’
Leucer looked at the man through narrowed eyes. ‘And what if we are?’
Quinque moved his own eyebrows rapidly, a habit that lent an air of conspiracy to whatever he said. ‘Some years ago I wus travellin’, as yer do, when I came across a group of fellers
deep in the Antithican Peaks. A contest was underway, and the challenge wus to open a lock that was deemed unbreakable. I watched ’em come and fail and go, but then, when the day was nearly
done and the lock near declared impossible, this feller stepped out of the crowd and within moments he had it picked and the safe door open. There wus a boy with him, and all the while he was
begging his father to give him a go. To cut a long story short –’ Quinque’s attentive audience looked somewhat relieved at this – ‘the man’s name was Linus
Verdigris.’
‘Verdigris?’ Kamptulicon’s eyes widened and he leaned forward. ‘Vincent’s father!’
Leucer too was now listening intently, turning his gold ring round and round on his finger, setting aside his revulsion and scepticism.
Edgar had folded his arms and was looking particularly smug. ‘It struck me that young Vincent might be just like his father,
unable to resist a challenge
.’
Leucer was already one step ahead of him. ‘Then a challenge he shall have.’
Nox blanketed Degringolade greedily, spreading itself across the city, no corner or alley or doorway out of its tenebrous reach. Degringoladians, having worked all day and
dined on horsemeat pie and supped glasses of ale and read the paper and dozed by the fire, roused themselves from their chairs and made their weary way to bed. Some stopped a moment on the stair to
listen, pondering on the unusually loud wailing of the Lurids.
It was indeed loud. Down at the Tar Pit everything was very much awake.
The nebulous Lurids were flocked together in a shimmering crowd right in the middle of the unhallowed lake. They were all facing the same direction and howling in unison at the tops of their
ghostly voices. A disturbance had started up under the inky surface. The tar rose but stayed intact, and whatever was beneath it travelled steadily towards the shore. The Lurids’ moaning
reached fever pitch as there emerged from under the tarry cloak a creature of great size and breadth. By means of four huge legs it dragged itself out of the lake and stood on the shore, dripping
tar and bones and whatever other detritus it had brought with it from the stinking depths. It spat and coughed and sneezed and lay down, exhausted, on the charred and bony shingle.
Katatherion was free.
‘Triskaidekaphobia’ is the fear of the number thirteen. Degringoladians, being so superstitious, always consider it an unlucky number. So, in keeping with
Degringoladian tradition, there is no chapter thirteen in this book.
‘Ow!’ Vincent yelped and squirmed in his seat. Citrine, standing over him, grimaced and apologized. ‘It’s done,’ she said. ‘Look.’ She
held up the mirror from the manor so he could see her handiwork. Vincent looked at his reflection, specifically at the browpin that now pierced the soft flesh above his right eye.
‘Where did you say you found this? In the dressing room? It might be one of Lady Degringolade’s, you know.’
‘I suppose it’s possible,’ he said lightly.
But highly unlikely
, he thought, with a surreptitious glance at the casket of bones. What Citrine didn’t know was
that he had pulled it from a mummy’s brow. In fact, in his retelling of his discoveries in the manor, he had also omitted to mention the room behind the mirror. It wasn’t that he was
deliberately keeping it from them, but every time he started to say something about the dried-up body and the secret room he broke out in a sweat and felt nauseous. So he had glossed over it and
tried to put it out of his mind. His brow was throbbing, despite the fact that Citrine had numbed the area first with some ice from the Cold Cabinet wrapped in a cloth.
‘Well, whoever owned it, they had excellent taste,’ said Citrine. She had polished the stone and the silver pin until it shone, and secretly Vincent was very pleased with his new
look.
‘So, do you know,’ he asked Folly, ‘what the inscription means?’
‘“
Decus et tutanem
”? Yes, I do. “An ornament and a safeguard”. Sums up the purpose of a browpin, really. Fairly common in these parts.’
Jonah had watched the whole procedure with a wry smile. ‘You’re the last fellow I thought would do that. You laugh at Degringoladian superstition and now you’re wearing a
browpin.’ He fingered his own earlobe and the protective earring he wore. Sailors favoured earrings over other jewellery.
‘When in Degringolade . . .’ said Citrine.
Vincent shrugged. ‘I like it,’ he said.. That much was true. He did like things that sparkled. But what he didn’t say was how, ever since the Pluribus attack and the sight of
such evilry in the manor, he was beginning to feel the need for such superstitious crutches. ‘And who knows, maybe it will bring me luck.’
Folly examined the stone. ‘Hmm, a sapphire. I don’t know about luck, but it should afford you some protection.’
‘From what?’
‘From anything or any person who wishes you harm. It turns the evil against them.’
‘That’ll do. Though a Blivet would be even more useful.’ Vincent handed back the mirror. ‘Here, Citrine, I’ve got something for you.’ He gave her the brown
perfume bottle and she smiled.
‘Why, kew, Vincent! I wonder how it has kept its smell.’ She squeezed the bulb and inhaled the mist of scent.
And promptly fell to the floor in a swoon.
Jonah came to her side immediately and lifted her head, and Vincent fanned her with a copy of the
Degringolade Daily.
Folly took the brown bottle and gave it a very cautious sniff at arm’s length. She quickly replaced the lid and Vincent took it back.‘This isn’t perfume. This is narkos, a
knockout potion. Domna, we’re lucky the bottle didn’t break. We’d all be asleep.’
‘Will she be all right?’ asked Jonah.
Folly nodded. ‘She didn’t inhale much. Give her twenty minutes. Your Lady Degringolade had a strange taste in scent.’
After the grand decay of Degringolade Manor, the Kryptos seemed even smaller than ever. The snow had not quite settled on the marsh, on account of the salt, but the ground was
hard and the watery pools were thick and slushy. The temperature in the Kryptos had dropped and the days the four companions had spent huddled around the fire, eating and drinking, seemed like
weeks. Their physical appetites might have been satisfied, but mentally they were not at ease. The cracked slab was a constant reminder of what had happened in Degringolade Manor, and the
malevolent host of Pluriba was very much at the forefront of their minds.
Vincent was sitting on his bedroll rubbing unguent into his scar. It was still swollen, but not such an angry red now, and he was gradually getting used to its appearance. Citrine, fully
recovered from her brush with narkos earlier in the week, was examining the metal hand that Vincent had unscrewed from the arm piece. ‘Is this the magnetic switch?’ she asked.
Vincent nodded and there was a soft click as Citrine flicked it. Just then Folly offered her a bowl of slumgullion, so she passed the hand back to Vincent. He reached for it but she jerked it
away from him. He tutted. He hadn’t been feeling quite right since the visit to the manor and he wasn’t in the mood for jokes.
‘Citrine,’ he said, ‘just give me my hand.’ He reached for it again, again she jerked it away and this time she dropped it and
it began to walk away on its
fingers.
The two of them stared at it dumbstruck. ‘It’s not me,’ she said quickly. ‘It did it all by itself.’
Now the others were looking. ‘Vincent, what did you do with that impedimentium you took from the tunnel?’ asked Folly suddenly.
‘It’s still in my pocket,’ he said slowly, transfixed by the walking hand. In a flash he realized what she was getting at. ‘Switch off the magnetism,’ he
ordered.
Citrine grabbed the hand as it passed her feet and flicked the switch. Instantly the hand came to a stop. Excitedly, Vincent took it and set it in front of him, arranging the five fingers like
the legs of some sort of crawling creature. He dug into one of his many pockets and took out a pebble of the copper-coloured rock. He flicked the switch again and held out the pebble in the
direction of the hand, as if taking aim. To everyone’s astonishment, the hand began to walk slowly on its finger-legs away from him.
Jonah was the most affected. His mouth hung open for some seconds before he spoke. ‘Well, by the seven seas, I never thought I’d see anything like that. It looks alive.’
The hand continued across the floor. Vincent moved the pebble and it changed direction. He did this a few times, sending it back and forth, right and left, before scooping it up, laughing.
‘The impedimentium seems to work
against
the magnetic force. With a bit of practice, who knows how useful this little trick could be!’
Folly raised an eyebrow. ‘Against a Pluribus?’
‘I thought you said they were rare,’ chipped in Jonah.
‘They are. And when they do appear, it’s usually alone. They’re not like Phenomenals, who gather in groups.’
‘So, nany for years, and then a whole load of Pluribuses all come at once. Strikes me as odd, don’t you think?’
‘Pluriba,’ corrected Citrine without thinking, and then immediately flushed and apologized for her bad manners. But Jonah didn’t care.
‘So, what is to be done about them?’ he asked. ‘Will they just go away?’
‘Why does anything have to be done at all?’ asked Vincent, examining with a new-found respect his remarkable metal hand.
Folly breathed out heavily through her mouth and shook her head slowly. ‘Nothing
has
to be done, but if
we
don’t take action, they might well do something about us.
It’s not as if they have our best interests at heart. They are harbingers of danger and discord.’
‘There must be a reason they’re all at the manor. Maybe they’ll just stay there.’ Citrine was trying to sound hopeful.