The Prophecy Machine (Investments) (30 page)

BOOK: The Prophecy Machine (Investments)
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Finn fairly shuddered at the thought of that crazed old man poking grubby fingers in Julia's tiny parts. Why, a mote of dust alone from this sty was enough to spoil the crudest device—what havoc it could wreak on Julia Jessica Slagg!

A touch here, a nudge there, with a needle fine as any ever made, a tool Finn always pinned to the collar of his coat. One more twist and he was done.

Julia's belly closed with a snap. Finn turned her over, and watched her ruby eyes glow, watched her snout clamp shut.

“How's the leg now? Give it a shake and let's see.”

Julia dutifully shook. The leg seemed perfectly fine.

“I think I had a dream,” Julia said.

“That's what you always say. I strongly doubt that.”

“Doubt if you will. Why would I remember something if it wasn't truly there?”

“Maybe you did. I don't want to hear it, whatever it is.”

“Are you two done over there? Could you possibly spare the time for something else, like getting us out of here?”

Finn knew that when Letitia's voice reached a certain pitch, one should consider an intelligent reply.

“Is Squeen still spooking about below? Can you see him from there?”

“Where would he go, Finn?”

“I'm working on a plan. I truly need to know.”

“What kind of plan?”

“It's not in the talking stage now. As soon as it is I'll let you know.”

Julia made a lizardy sound in her throat. “She's not buying that, Finn.”

“Don't talk, please. I'm trying to think.”

“You could ask me, you know.”

“What?”

“I said—”

“I heard that, Julia. Ask you
what
?”

“How to get us out of here.”

“If I do, will you shut up for a while?”

Julia didn't answer. The light went out in her eyes.

“All right. I'm sorry. If you really have something to say, don't keep it to yourself.”

“You haven't asked.”

“I'm asking now.”

“I'm not overly certain, but I think we can get out the same way I got out before.”

Finn was listening now. “Don't play games with me, there's no time for that.”

“You're talking about when Calabus was up here, right?”

Letitia was across the room before Julia could get the words out. “When you went looking for Finn?”

“Certainly. If there was another time I left, I don't recall.
I didn't slip out the door, as you perhaps imagined, I was gone before the old man came in. I got out over there.”

Finn and Letitia turned in the direction of Julia's nod. Neither saw anything but a wall. Both looked back at the lizard. Finn was certain Julia smiled, though he knew for a fact she didn't have the parts for that.

“Patience,” Julia said, “and all will be revealed.”

Sliding off the table, she scampered across the floor. At the wall she stopped, hesitated, moved her snout an inch to the right, then another to the left.

Finn glanced away for an instant, looked back again. When he did, Julia was gone.

“Finn … !”

Letitia squeezed his hand. Finn went quickly to his knees. He rubbed his fingers across the ancient wood where it met the grimy floor. Nothing. No cracks or seams. Nothing to suggest a secret panel or a hidden entryway. Yet, short of sheer magic, Julia couldn't simply disappear. There was something here, something that plain confused the eye. Something he—

“Well then, what do you think? Is that not a fine deceit or what?”

Julia's appearance brought a gasp from Letitia, and a muttered oath from Finn. The lizard's red eyes blinked from a narrow hole. A veil of cobwebs hid her snout, and her scales were coated with dust.

“It was no illusion,” Julia said, “it's architectural folly's what it is, a madman's dream, a builder gone berserk. Rooms don't begin where another room ends. They stop short, leaving dark canyons in between. Roofs come through the ceiling and up through the floor. Some doors open on walls. Some doors open on doors. Corridors begin and go nowhere at all.”

Julia tended to irritate Finn with her frequent rattling on. This time he truly didn't mind. This time her chatter
gave him hope, a new chance to leave this wretched place behind.

“And all these chambers, passages and such, they lead outdoors, they take you out of here, and it's safe all the way?”

“Safe enough,” Julia said, “if you don't meet a Vampie with a broom somewhere.”

“Don't worry,” Letitia said, “he's only got a musket now.”

“That's not our problem anymore,” Finn said. “If you please, grab a handful of those smelly candles, dear.”

He turned back to Julia. “That hole looks fine for lizards. I guess I'll have to widen it a bit.”

“No problem but have a care when you do. One wrong move and you'll bring the house down. Oh, neither of you care for creatures of the insect persuasion, I recall? Lice, beetles, spiders and flies? Mites, millipedes, bugs of every sort?”

Finn looked at Letitia, Letitia looked at Finn.

“Anything bites, don't scratch,” Julia said. “That's what you get for not wearing tin …”

 

E
VEN AS JULIA SAID, IT WAS NO GREAT EFFORT TO
make the very small hole large. She was also right about bringing the whole wall down upon his head.

“I would say I told you so,” Julia croaked, and rattled off into the dark, “but I'm fairly sure I did.”

“I am grateful for your help,” Finn said, wheezing, gasping through a cloud of dirt, rot and old debris. “I don't know what I'd do without your good advice.”

Letitia appeared through the gloom, holding a candle high, a pale and dusty apparition with wide and anxious eyes.

“I don't care for this, Finn. I'm not sure it's a good idea.”

“We haven't even started, dear. I don't think we should judge it quite yet.”


I've
started. I've started to itch. I don't like it in here.”

“I don't either, but I don't see anything for us back there.”

Letitia didn't answer. She followed Julia, whose lizard eyes could penetrate the dark far better than any human or Newlie born.

As Julia had warned, insect life of every sort abounded in the maze behind the walls. It was heaven for spiders, a termite delight. There were bugs that crawled and flew, bugs that liked to bite, bugs Finn couldn't even name.

Once, ducking wooden beams, bending nearly to the floor, Letitia cried out, stood and cracked her head. The candle flew away and rolled across the floor, the wick still lit. Finn crawled across to get it, stopped in his tracks. The dusty floor was teeming with roaches. A swarm of thousands of the ugly, writhing creatures, frantically running from the light that intruded on their dark, unwholesome world.

They moved like the undulations of the sea, wave after wave, one mass scrambling atop the next, another and another after that. Worst of all, the thing that made Finn's skin begin to crawl, was the color of the things. Neither brown nor black, like their ordinary kin, this dreadful mass was deathly white. Pale, swollen, disturbingly fat.

“Here's your candle,” Finn said. “You ask me, that was not a pretty sight. If you'd like, I'll trade places and carry the light awhile.”

“So something can find me in the dark? No thanks, Finn. You're not getting away with that.”

Before he could answer, she turned away again. Finn let her go. This was clearly not the time to speak of anything at all.

It all made a certain kind of sense, Finn thought. The outside of the house set the theme: every room, every hall he'd seen, was cockeyed, leaning, listing left or right. Why shouldn't the spaces in between be as peculiar as the rest?

Sometimes Julia took them ways so narrow that Finn could scarcely squeeze through. Sometimes they climbed, sometimes they crawled between floors. Once, Finn pulled his
way hand over hand, under a set of stairs. When he reached the bottom, a section of roofing blocked his way. When there was finally room to pass Letitia, he brushed a mess of cobwebs aside and told Julia to stop.

Letitia looked alarmed. “Where are you going? Is something wrong, Finn?”

“Not a thing. I'm going up to see Julia.”

“Don't, please. Stay right here.”

Finn reached out and touched her. “You feel rather cold. Are you all right?”

“No, I'm not. Thanks for asking, dear.”

Julia's eyes were dim points of light against the dark.

“I have to ask. Are you certain you know what you're doing, are you sure you got out this way?”

“No, I'm quite sure I did not.”

“What?”

“If I went the way I did before, you and Letitia would never get through.”

“But you know where we are.”

“You put a compass inside me, remember? I couldn't get lost if I wanted to. That flooring, just below the stairs? The one that slants forty-two degrees? The one where you saw the mottled centipedes? Where you—”

“All right, I remember. What's the point here?”

“You asked me where we are. We're just below the hall outside our room. Where we
were
was directly beneath that heavy object Calabus set before the door. Did you notice how much the floor sagged? I'm surprised it didn't come right through …”

Finn drew a breath. “You're telling me that's as far as we've gone? We're on the same floor, out in the hall?”

“Below the hall, to be exact, not in it. If we were
in
it now—”

“Bogs and Frogs.” Finn wiped a sleeve against his face.
“Why didn't you tell me that? You never tell me anything I need to know.”

Julia hesitated. She lifted herself up slightly, flexing her silvery legs.

“I saw no reason to alarm you. There are unusual conditions here—vibrations, emanations in this house. They come from that machine down below.”

“I know that. I nearly threw up down there.”

“Yes, but it isn't just down there. I can sense them all the time, you can't. I've been trying to get us out without getting too close to that thing. It affects my parts to some degree, but I've seen what it does to humans and Newlies. It's best to take the long way.”

“Fine, then, if it doesn't take forever.”

He tried to swallow, but only managed to stick his throat shut. He wished he had a mug of cool ale to cut the dust.

“You did the right thing, Julia. But I wish you'd told me. Calabus could find out we're gone anytime. Then what? Letitia's wearing out, and I'm getting there myself. One more roach parade, one more spider—”

Finn was suddenly talking in the dark. He turned, quickly, back the way he'd come.

“Letitia? Letitia, are you all right? Just stay there, don't move, I'm coming back.”

“Finn. She's not there.”

“She
has
to be there.”

“I can see, and she's gone. She's not there.”

“Letitia!”

Finn felt the hairs tingle on his neck. “Say something, please. Answer me, love!”

“Hold it down, Finn. That won't do us any good.”

Finn searched for an extra candle in his pocket. Drew it out, found a firestick in his vest. His hands were shaking so badly he could scarcely get the thing lit. At once, he saw
Letitia's candle. There was still a wisp of smoke rising from the wick.

When he turned again, Julia was gone. He caught a blur of copper as she scrambled to the right, under a row of crooked joists. Finn made himself follow, leave the spot where Letitia had disappeared. He felt drained, empty, terribly frightened, terribly alone.

He followed Julia on hands and knees, squeezing through the narrow space between the walls. A splinter sliced his palm. He winced but didn't stop.

She's all right, nothing happened … a spider startled her, she dropped the candle, the candle went out … she tried to find me, took a wrong turn somewhere …

“Why didn't she call out? Why didn't she make a sound?”

When he caught up to Julia, he found her rigid, perfectly still. Her lizard snout twitched, tasting the air. Finn wanted to yell, tell her to hurry, damn it, they didn't have time.

Finally, she moved, off to the right with a glance back at Finn. He tried to hold his candle low, away from dusty walls, the timbers just above his head. If a flame ever licked that dry and rotting wood …

At the end of the crawlway, he was able to stand and stretch his legs. Holding the candle high, he saw a wide shaft crossing his path just ahead. Six, maybe eight feet across. It started somewhere above, dropped into smothering darkness far below. A place for a chimney, perhaps, a project that never got done. In a house like this, he thought, there must be a number of things that ended before they were even begun.

“Finn.”

“I'm here.”

Julia's eyes blinked. “I know that, I can see you there. There's a ledge around that pit. Come that way.”

“I see it.”

“I think it ought to hold.”

“You think?”

“It will. And Finn …”

“What?”

“There's a strong emanation and a smell. You'll know it easily enough while you're crossing the shaft. I'm telling you so you won't panic and run across. It's a very long drop.”

“I'm not going to panic, I've never fallen in a pit in my life. Did she come this way? Do you have any feeling about that, anything at all?”

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