Ticker

FIVE

 

In Which Our Heroine Seizes an Opportunity and Is Left Holding the Bag

 

 

 

 

Wall sconces lit the way down the stone stairs and along another cold corridor. Once we reached a twisted iron staircase, modern blue phosphorescence yielded to vintage oil lamps. I could feel Nic’s wary gaze shift from our surroundings to me every so often, though he didn’t give further voice to his worries. Inwardly, I agreed this would be a most inopportune time and place to suffer an attack and issued my Ticker a severe warning.

 

Just in time, too, as I reached the third stair from the bottom and it gave way under my weight, unceremoniously dumping me into the lower corridor. Terrified that the least bit of noise would summon the Unseen, I did my best to muffle my squeak of alarm.

 

“Are you all right?” Nic asked as he picked me up off the floor.

 

I nodded, but I’d scraped the flesh on both palms, and pain radiated from both knees. My flashlight had rolled a few feet away; only when we recovered it did we notice that the lanterns along the next wall had been smashed. The Beetles in this corridor had been deactivated as well. They littered the floor, some of them crushed by boot heels, leaving smears of copperslip oil on the stones. The one nearest my shoe struggled to rise on shaky legs. With a flick of his wings, he began walking in erratic circles.

 

I carefully stepped over him and dimmed the flashlight to its lowest setting. The resultant darkness was an inky cloak, forcing us to make our way in a single-file procession, with each of us holding on to the person in front and behind. By the time we reached the end of the hallway, a hundred or more Beetles climbed the walls, scuttling with bent legs and broken antennae to their programmed stone quadrant. One ill-timed sneeze, and the Unseen would reappear.

 

Luckily enough, the final gate I encountered was no longer fastened. The lock had been forced, the iron lattice roughly pushed to one side. I squeezed Nic’s hand, using the same series of dots and dashes that I would with the RiPA.

 

THEY ARE HERE - PROCEED WITH CAUTION

 

Nic relayed the message to Sebastian who, in turn, passed it to Violet. The catacombs were as still as a tomb, but if I’d been expecting cobwebs, a fetid stench, or a skeleton rattling his bones, I was disappointed. Invisible heating vents pumped clean air into the room, maintaining the appropriate temperature and humidity for preserving paper documentation. Set few and far between, ox-eye windows transmitted the meager aboveground light, transforming it into something curious and thin and green. Throughout the room, papers and ledgers filled bookcases, cabinets, and tables. The knowledge of generations surrounded us, seeping into the stones and brushing over our skin so that the hairs on the back of my neck prickled up.

 

The dead were with us, even if their bones resided elsewhere.

 

NIC AND I GO LEFT - V AND S GO RIGHT

 

We separated, picking careful paths and sticking to the shadows. My eyes adjusted to the lack of light, but I still thought with longing of the Starshine goggles sitting on my desk at home. Of course, a MAG wouldn’t come amiss now either, especially when I recognized the outline of a man’s head just before me. I knew by the way that Nic tensed up that he’d seen him as well. Pixii charged, I crept up behind our quarry. With a leap, I discharged everything I had into his neck with a burst of light and the accompanying muffled pop!

 

Except the Pixii wasn’t designed to work on marble, so the bust of Malachi Baynard, one of Industria’s founding scientists, wasn’t at all perturbed by such an attack. I had no chance to recover my wits before a scuffle broke out to our right. Someone shoved Violet aside, and multiple dark figures suddenly dipped and ducked between the stacks. We gave chase, though pursued and pursuers alike moved in near silence. Papers took to the air like geese leaving a mill pond and then fell with whispers. A shelf started to fall, and Nic rushed to stabilize it. A thick ledger toppled off a podium, but I caught it before it could hit the floor. When I turned around, Sebastian had one of the burglars cornered, the tip of his short sword pressed to the soft skin of his opponent’s throat. Violet sat upon the back of another, twisting his arms behind him until he whimpered. That left a third for Nic and me: the one scaling a ladder set into the wall. A heavy satchel swung in his grip. In his haste, he missed a rung and slid halfway down the wall, cursing all the way.

 

The Beetles commenced their twitching dance. I froze, but my prey accessed a glowing device strapped to his wrist. When he depressed a button, the bird cry we heard earlier bounced off every stone, every pane of glass. As one, the mechanical bugs seized and fell. The burglar immediately resumed climbing, and I vaulted over a stack of ledgers, charging the Pixii as I ran. Arriving at the ladder, I had to put the device between my teeth before starting up the rungs, nimble as a monkey.

 

“I’m right behind you—” Nic stopped suddenly, and I twisted about to see a fourth thief catch my brother about the neck and pull him back to the floor.

 

Nic plowed three quick blows into the thief’s midsection. “Go!” he panted between punches. “Catch the one with the cards!”

 

I hesitated, as surprised by the swiftness and violence of my brother’s attack as I was by the dark expression on his face. By the time I resumed climbing, the burglar had reached the top of the ladder and disappeared through a narrow opening. Doubling my speed, it took me less than a minute to gain the crawl space with a heave and grunt; it was another matter entirely to scramble forward with yards of dove-colored foulard trailing behind me. On hands and knees, I moved through complete darkness, choking on dust, eyes struggling to make out anything at all.

 

Ahead of me was a dragging noise, the scrape of heavy fabric and metal on stone, then my right hand encountered the rough burlap sack containing the Eidolachometer cards. I tightened my grip upon it just in time for the burglar to pull both the sack and me into an alleyway. I lost my grip on the Pixii, and it skittered across the stones, disappearing into the thick fog that swirled about us.

 

“Leave off!” the thief growled, trying to shake me free of the bag. I refused to let go, though I was at a distinct disadvantage in both size and weaponry. He stood a head taller than I and wielded a short, wicked blade. He didn’t hesitate to swing it in my direction, either. “Troublesome little snip—”

 

My boot connected with his wrist. His knife went spinning down the alleyway. I lowered my head and charged, my skull connecting with his midsection, and the two of us went down in a tangle of limbs and a torrent of swearing.

 

All the colorful language coming out of my opponent nearly muffled the sound of approaching sirens and the hissing pops of a hundred activated Lampyridae mechanika. Falling like shooting stars, the Fireflies careened overhead in a blur of mica wings, exposed clockwork mechanisms, and blue phosphorescent abdomens. By their light, I could just make out the bandit’s face.

 

“Air support’s on its way,” I said. Not even a bluff, because the distinctive whirring noise of rappelling wires signaled incoming Araneae.

 

“The only one who’s going to get caught blazing is you.” The thief shoved the burlap sack at me.

 

Thrown back by the weight of it, I hit the side of the brick building hard enough to jar everything from my Ticker to my toes. The impact forced my eyes closed—only for half a second, but that was long enough for my attacker to disappear into the shadows. The next moment, a dozen Araneae landed in the alley with the silent precision of spiders on silk lines. Six of the specially trained Ferrum Viriae unclipped from their harnesses and pursued the burglar. The rest swiftly surrounded me.

 

“Well timed,” I said, scorn my only defense.

 

The tallest of them stepped forward like a jungle cat, with eyes that could obviously see far better in the dark than mine. Boots that should have made a heavy footfall on the cobblestones moved with uncanny silence.

 

“Of course it would be you,” Marcus said, removing his face shield.

 

“Did you miss me?” Even breathless, I infused the words with a surprising amount of sarcasm. Ill-advised, I’m sure, but the remaining vestiges of fear and adrenaline needed some outlet.

 

“I’ve no polite answer for that question, Miss Farthing, and so I’ll refrain from saying anything.” Such formality made him sound older, but the exasperation behind the words betrayed him as he reached for the bag of Eidolachometer cards.

 

I considered resisting and then thought better of it. Despite my irritation, some traitorous part of me was reassured by his presence. “You’re welcome.”

 

“For what?” Marcus asked, never taking his gaze off me.

 

“For retrieving the stolen property.” I scanned the alley until I spotted my Pixii in a heap of unidentifiable refuse. I retrieved it, wrinkling my nose and wiping off the device with my handkerchief. Depressing the resistance switch, I was gratified to see it still worked. “Isn’t that supposed to be your job? Shall I send you a bill?”

 

“Not unless you want to explain to a judge why you undermined a covert operation.” Marcus closed the distance between us; another man would have done it in ten steps, but he did it in five. “I knew the thieves were in the catacombs. We were trying to catch the gang red-handed, but thanks to you, one seems to have escaped.”

 

Startled by the note of anger, I looked up until my entire world consisted of dark wool and his broad shoulders. “I was only doing what was necessary—”

 

“Wrong,” he said, interrupting me. “We’ve met three times today, Miss Farthing, and thrice your reactions have put me or one of my soldiers in jeopardy. I can’t guess how you’ll behave in any given situation, except I can bet money that you’ll conduct yourself poorly, and that makes you a liability.”

 

“You certainly know how to turn a girl’s head with compliments, Mister Kingsley.” Cold fury iced over my Ticker, and slick silver needles coursed through my veins in place of blood. “Are you quite finished?”

 

“Not even close. You’re going to have to explain to my satisfaction why every site of destruction and mayhem today has centered around your family and property.” Marcus tapped out a message on his RiPA.

 

Violet emerged from the crawl space with Sebastian just behind.

 

“Can the interrogation wait a few minutes?” Sebastian queried calmly. “We have three criminals tied up in the catacombs. It wouldn’t have taken us so long to meet up with you, but there’s precious little rope down there, and we had to improvise. Nic is sitting on them right now.”

 

Marcus dispatched two officers with a flick of his finger just as a silver SkyDart landed a few feet away. Designed for swift transport to and from the Flying Fortress, the aircrafts were too new and too expensive for civilian ownership and certainly not yet for hire by the hour. I’d never actually seen one of them up close and tried not to stare at the sleek lines that reminded me of a crossbow bolt, the open cockpit, the tendrils of luminous smoke created by the air-breathing engines.

 

“Just what is that thing for?” I asked.

 

“That thing, Miss Farthing, is your ride. I’m taking you in for more questioning.”

 

I took a step back and found myself up against the wall for the second time in as many minutes. “I’m not going anywhere with you, Marcus Kingsley. I won’t be treated like a criminal.”

 

“I merely require a place of relative safety where I can offer you all due hospitality.” When Marcus took me by the elbow, my choice was to walk or be dragged.

 

I chose the former, but not by a wide margin. “While you torture me within an inch of my life?”

 

“While I take down your statement of this day’s events.” He unfolded the SkyDart’s metal stairs.

 

Though I liked it not a whit, I knew I had to go with him. Marcus was in possession of the Eidolachometer cards, and they might be the only way to get my parents back. The short exchange of words with the burglar had planted seeds of ice and fear in my midsection.

 

Caught up in my worries, I paused at the foot of the stairs. “I should wait for Nic.”

 

Marcus twisted about to address our somewhat dumbfounded audience. “Mister Stirling, would you please advise your friend on the gravity of the situation?”

 

Sebastian’s face was pale under his fashionable mustache. “Get in the SkyDart, Penny.”

 

Just because I had to go didn’t mean I had to be polite about it. I cast a deliberate glance at the burnished oxblood leather. “I never agreed to air travel. I’ll be sick all over your very expensive upholstery.”

 

“This should take care of it.” Marcus reached under the front seat and extracted a bottle of Doctor Westerley’s Vitamin-Fortified Liquid Courage.

 

I rolled it over in my hand.

 

A TONIC OF CONCENTRATED CURATIVE POWER & A MOST EFFECTIVE TINCTURE CONCOCTED FROM FENNEL SEED, PEPPERMINT, WILD LICORICE, AND GINGER.

 

GUARANTEED TO REGULATE AND STRENGTHEN THE DIGESTIVE SYSTEM!

 

WILL ALSO ADDRESS SYMPTOMS OF THE COMMON COLD AND EASE ACHING JOINTS.

 

50 PROOF

 

But I wasn’t done arguing. “This only has room for two. Where are the others going to sit?”

 

“The others are going to follow in a second transport as soon as we retrieve your brother,” Marcus said, impatience clipping his consonants. “Now, will you please take your seat?”

 

When I continued to hesitate, I thought he might pick me up and toss me in. Instead, he reached for my hand and gave me the bag of Eidolachometer cards.

 

“I’ll entrust this to you for the duration of the flight.”

 

A moment passed, with something more exchanged than just the bag of purloined and recovered goods. Energy crackled between us until I felt an unexpected kinship with Tesla coils. Marcus looked as though he very much wanted to say something, his eyes the same somber gray as his uniform, a bit of bristle standing out on his cheeks and chin. I wondered if it felt as sandpaper rough as it looked, but wouldn’t have dared remove my glove to touch his face.

 

Except to administer a right good slap.

 

I climbed in and tucked my hands firmly at my sides.

 

Marcus’s features shifted from searching to stern as he followed. “Please do me the favor of fastening your safety belt, Miss Farthing. It’s a long way to the ground.” He propped one foot against the door and made a great show of fastening his own lap belt. “Although every air transport must, by law, be outfitted with as many parachutes as there are seats, I wouldn’t care to test such devices unless it was a dire necessity.”

 

Reaching for the heavy safety belt, I fastened the connectors. “I would quite enjoy parachuting.”

 

“Have you ever parachuted?”

 

“I’ve read the manuals.”

 

“Theory and experience are two different things.”

 

“The last time I read a manual, I immediately climbed aboard a Vitesse and drove it all the way around the Heart of the Star.” I didn’t mention that shortly thereafter I’d taken a header over the handlebars and landed without ceremony in a hay cart.

 

Marcus handed me a pair of ornate aviator goggles. “This will be a bit farther to fall than off your cycle.”

 

The moment his hands returned to the controls, the flyer rocketed into the sky. I admit that I made an undignified noise that might have been a half-swallowed squeak. Torn free from its combs, my hair whipped about my face and shoulders, and I pulled on the goggles both to protect my eyes and relieve my squint. Soon, Bazalgate was no more than a collection of miniature rooftops and streets. The fog crept off the River Aire, and gas lamps the size of wax tapers burned bright.

 

Whatever I might have thought about Marcus as a conversational partner or a soldier, he was damned good behind the controls. His shoulders even relaxed a small measure while dealing with instrument panels and levers.

 

As opposed to people.

 

“This is marvelous!” I shouted over the mighty cacophony of the rushing wind and the engine. Remembering too late to whom I was speaking, I hastily downgraded my enthusiasm by adding, “If ostentatious. Hardly inconspicuous, either. Certainly not made for stealth.”

 

“The fog helps.” Marcus’s mouth quirked, though with irritation or amusement I couldn’t be certain. “When people can’t see the hand waving before their face, they don’t look to the sky.”

 

“Aren’t you afraid of crashing into the Carillon Bell Tower?” Dedicated to the city’s founders, it was Bazalgate’s tallest landmark and the most impressive.

 

“There are a thousand and one instruments in here, at least half of them navigational.”

 

“Naturally.” I would have traded my eyeteeth for just five minutes at the controls.

 

Though I couldn’t have leaned forward more than an inch, Marcus noticed. “Perhaps another time, when I’m quite certain my insurance premiums are up to date.”

 

Any rejoinder I might have made evaporated with the clouds as the Flying Fortress came into view. Sunlight glinted off white columns and sleek glass architecture. Smaller satellite buildings clustered around a singularly imposing main structure, like chicks to a mother hen. Under it all, turbines produced the necessary amount of thrust to keep everything aloft. I hadn’t any idea what the power source might be, nor could I fathom how Marcus’s engineers achieved a nearly clean burn, but the utter lack of emissions meant that the air around the Fortress was cold water sipped from a crystal goblet, a far cry from Bazalgate’s soot-smudged tankard. I adjusted my goggles and leaned as far out of the SkyDart as my lap belt allowed.

 

“Miss Farthing, please sit back so I might land without distraction,” Marcus requested as we cruised nearer to the landing platform. Blinking red lanterns lit the circle’s perimeter, though the sun subdued their brilliance. At night or in inclement weather, however, they’d be a veritable beacon of hope.

 

Marcus landed us with a gentle bump, no more than the basket of a hot-air balloon touching down in a grassy field. I remembered with a jolt that this was no mere pleasure jaunt, and all the fears I’d been holding at bay rushed back to weigh me down. Fumbling with the sack of cards, I released my belt and was halfway out of my seat before Marcus cut the engine.

 

“You have an Eidolachometer machine here, so we can read these?” I asked.

 

“I’ve sent for one.” Determined to maintain some semblance of authority, Marcus tossed his goggles onto a seat, opened the door of the speeder, and leapt down. “Allow me.”

 

Before he could unfold the filigree stairs, I gathered my skirts in one hand, vaulted over the railing, and landed next to him. Reaching back inside, I extracted the bag of cards and hoisted them over my shoulder. “Lead the way.”

 

“Patience is a virtue, Miss Farthing.” He turned on his heel and headed for a waiting elevator.

 

There was no way of asking him to hurry without explaining why, so, for once, I remained silent. The interior of the elevator was a capsule of elegance, with brass rails, etched mirrors, and thick Bhaskarian carpeting. Marcus operated the various levers with the same quiet assurance that he’d demonstrated in the SkyDart. A pulley system activated, and we glided downward. There was no floor indicator; it was only by counting off the seconds that I knew we’d descended at least three stories below the landing platform by the time the doors slid open.

 

The hall beyond was decorated with potted palm trees, jewel-toned rugs, and an extensive collection of curios alongside tattered leather-bound books, rolled maps, and globes of polished stone. Overhead, a system of bands and wheels rotated dozens of woven-straw fans. Formally dressed soldiers saluted as we passed. Plainly clad servitors carried silver trays set with message cylinders, ledgers, and other missives of importance. When the foot traffic cleared, a young woman sat in a chair opposite the elevator.

 

“There you are, Legatus.” Though the unfamiliar woman wore the drab gray of the Ferrum Viriae, it was cut in the newest of fashions and embroidered collar to hem with metallic silver stars. Dangling green esmeraude earrings grazed her shoulders. Waist-length black braids cascaded down her back, and a Logod?daly Multilinguistic Translator dangled from her belt.

 

Marcus drew up short. “What have you done to your uniform?”

 

The newcomer looked down at her clothes with the air of one surprised to be wearing any. “This? A few minor alterations only.” A dozen bangles jangled on her arms alongside her iron bracelets when she turned her gaze upon me. “And you have the famous Miss Farthing with you, just as I knew you would.”

 

I returned her keen look and raised an eyebrow. “I’m sorry, have we been introduced?”

 

“Not in this lifetime,” was her cryptic response.

 

Marcus located his tongue and his manners. “Penelope Farthing, I am pleased to introduce to you Philomena de Mesmer, recently appointed psychic consultant to the Ferrum Viriae.”

 

A professional medium in Marcus’s employ? I’d have been less shocked by a monkey hanging from the rafters. “I beg your pardon?”

 

Philomena cut in before he could respond. “I sent you a message, Miss Farthing. I hope you received it in time.”

 

“I . . . did receive it, in fact.”

 

Mind the third step from the bottom. It’s a bit tricky.

 

And then I’d fallen on that precise stair at the Bibliothèca.

 

Coincidence, surely . . .

 

“I hope the information proved useful to you.” Her forehead puckered in the tiniest of frowns. “Messages from the Great Beyond are often subject to interpretation.”

 

Now it was Marcus’s turn to be confused. “You sent Miss Farthing a note?”

 

“Little more than an hour ago,” Philomena confirmed. “A personal correspondence, so perhaps I shouldn’t have used official stationery. My apologies, Legatus.” She set off down the hallway at a brisk clip. “I was headed to your office to deliver my report, then realized I could meet you at the elevator.”

 

“Another premonition?” The words slipped out before I could stop them.

 

“That, and the announcement over the loudspeakers.” Philomena tossed the words over her shoulder as she walked, leaving us to catch them and catch up.

 

I glanced at Marcus. “The Ferrum Viriae subscribe to a belief in the occult?”

 

He kept his gaze fixed forward. “We’re conducting research in all branches of science and technology.”

 

“Science and technology? You can’t mean to tell me you’re counterweighing some of the greatest advances of this century with a belief in such jiggery-pokery. Parlor tricks? Smoke and mirrors?”

 

A muscle in his jaw jumped at the accusation. “I’ve seen enough things in my lifetime to contemplate the possibilities of the next, Miss Farthing.”

 

“As have I, and yet I refrain from such nonsense. As both an engineer and a person of science, I am absolutely appalled.” I had more to say on the subject, but Philomena whirled about to face us.

 

“Come on then, we haven’t all day.” She strode backward with the confidence of one unconcerned with crashing into a large potted fern.

 

I suppose psychic energy is good for more than just forecasting and fortune-telling. She wouldn’t need Starshine goggles to make her way through a dark room.

 

“Received a portent of doom, have you?”

 

“Oh, I receive all sorts of correspondence.” Philomena paused outside a carved door bearing Marcus’s name and rank etched in silver. “As I said in my note, your sister delivered another message to me this morning. Dimitria has been trying to reach you for some time.”

 

“Don’t.” I sucked in a breath and struggled to calm myself. “Don’t you dare drag my sister’s name into your crystal-gazing hocus-pocus.”

 

“Ordinarily I’d let you believe what you like, Miss Farthing, but your sister has been clogging up my communications with the Great Beyond to the point where I haven’t been able to meet with my other contacts at all.” The more Philomena explained, the more irritated she grew, until she prickled all over like a disgruntled porcupine. “I’ve important work to do here, and I don’t appreciate the distraction, to be honest.”

 

I leveled a freezing stare at the woman, the sort that Grandmother Pendleton would use on an impertinent lady’s maid. “Miss de Mesmer, my mother visited every clairvoyant in the city limits and most in Meridia. They bilked her out of quite a sum, promising her they could contact my sister, and I can see that you are in the same sort of business. Good day to you.” I turned to Marcus, who looked like he was struggling to decide which of us to admonish first. “I’ll be inside, Legatus. If you wish to speak with me at all, you will do so alone.”

 

Sweeping into his office, I dropped the bag of Eidolachometer cards in an empty chair. Curling in my fingers, I dug my nails into my palms and fought the tears that threatened.

 

Dimitria.

 

Thoughts of her were wrapped in fine linen, ribbon decorations, hushed whispers, Mama’s tears. Striving to put the here and now before the memories, I concentrated on my surroundings: the Ferrum Viriae shield hanging over the mantelpiece, the fireplace surround carved with images of the Twelve Engineers, the elaborate machines whirring away on marble pedestals. On the wall hung several pictures, a set of framed medals under glass, and an article from The Examiner, dated six months past.

 

FUNERAL CONDUCTED FOR HEIR TO INDUSTRIA’S LARGEST PRIVATE ARMY

 

By Orville Accardo

 

A memorial service was held Saturday for Viktor Augustus Kingsley. Heir to the Ferrum Viriae empire, the twenty-two-year-old was killed during a training exercise gone badly wrong. Mister Kingsley was commanding a twelve-squadron live-fire exercise when an interruption in service to the secure RiPA lines put the young man in the wrong field position. Formal inquiries found no wrongdoing by any of the instructors nor the other soldiers involved.

 

Like everyone else in the country, I’d read this in the broadsheets, but I’d forgotten until this moment that I wasn’t the only one suffering a loss.

 

A noise sent me scurrying back to my chair, then Marcus entered alone. Standing just inside the door, he studied my face like it was an illuminated manuscript, with all the answers he needed written upon my features. Certain I had smudges of dirt upon my nose, I did my best not to squirm under his gaze. There was no way to guess what his heart was doing, but the Ticker’s pace had accelerated enough to flush my neck and warm my cheeks. And I didn’t need a crystal ball to guess what he was thinking: we each needed information in the other’s possession.

 

With deliberate steps, he moved behind the marble-topped behemoth of a desk and reached for the intercom. Turning the side crank produced a series of hisses and clicks, then there was a muffled, “Yes, sir?”

 

“Tea and brandy, please.” Marcus put a hand over the mouthpiece to inquire, “Are you hungry?”

 

Luncheon seemed a distant memory after the excitement in the alleyway—not good for my blood sugar or the Ticker. As much as I would have liked to answer, “No, thank you, you may stuff your sandwiches somewhere most inconvenient,” I was forced to nod.

 

“And a light repast,” he added into the brass bell speaker. Clicking off the device, he pulled out several files and placed them on the desk. “Do you know what these are?”

 

“Lists of my many perceived shortcomings, alphabetized and arranged in descending order?” I volunteered.

 

“No, Miss Farthing, they’re intelligence files. On you, your brother, your parents, and Calvin Warwick.”

 

“How lovely.” The thought that someone followed me about the city and snooped in our rubbish bins should have disturbed me, but in comparison to the other revelations of the day, this was merely irritating. “I suppose, then, you know what sort of tooth powder I use and how Nic likes his trousers tailored.” The tirade was cut short by a knock at the door, indicating the swift arrival of food and drinks.

 

Then Marcus had a different query for me. “Cream or sugar?”

 

“Both, please. Two lumps.” Seeing an opening, I used his courtesy as an opportunity to put him on the defense. “So are you going to share the real reason you turned up at Glasshouse this morning?”

 

Marcus stilled, silver tongs hovering over my cup. “I beg your pardon?”

 

“Legatus, you have half the city convened at the courthouse and face the possibility of rioting in the streets when the verdict is announced, yet you thought it important to answer a call about a break-in?” Though I sounded amused, my palms had started to sweat.

 

“I think you ought to let me ask the questions, Miss Farthing.” He set my tea before me with a thump.

 

“You can ask.” I stripped off my gloves and selected a cheese bun from the platter. If I were to spar with him, it wouldn’t be on an empty stomach. “That doesn’t mean I will answer.”

 

He circled the desk with his own cup and unnerved me by taking the chair adjacent mine. “All right, then. Your mother is working as an independent contractor for the Ferrum Viriae, and she’s in possession of some important schematics. When the break-in occurred, I wanted to make certain she was safe and then secure the blueprints.”

 

I gaped at him. “My mother is working for you? How long has this been going on?”

 

“Approximately six months.”

 

“What’s the project?”

 

“I can’t answer that question.” Marcus spoke slowly, measuring out the precise amount of information he was willing to share with me and not another word more. “There are people who want the Augmentation technology Warwick developed. Dangerous people. We intercepted dozens of underground communications over the last few months, and that number spiked this week.”

 

“Is that why the city officials raised the alert level?” I asked. “You think something might happen when the verdict is read?”

 

“That was my suspicion, yes. Now I think it was just a distraction. As was the explosion at the factory.” Marcus gave me another searching look as he added, “It was a bomb.”

 

“A bomb?!” I sloshed tea over the lip of my cup and into the saucer. “Are you certain?”

 

“The preliminary tests came back positive for accelerant. That’s the quick and dirty way of confirming it.” Far from looking discomfited, there was a warrior’s readiness about the way he sat next to me. “What else can you tell me about the break-in at Glasshouse? Perhaps something valuable was taken?” The fire had time to hiss and pop before he spoke again. “Information is my best weapon, Miss Farthing. The more informed I am, the better prepared I can be.”

 

His honesty did ungodly things to me, and I found myself wanting to tell him. Dear Cogs! There was something so earnest about his face, about the way the words now poured out of him, but still I hesitated. “You have to understand . . . I’ve no reason to trust anyone right now.”

 

Marcus leaned forward a bit more, starting to reach for me. At the last moment, he reconsidered and retreated. “I am the proprietor and leader of the largest, most powerful private military in Industria. I have a network of informants larger than the number of workers at your factory—”

 

“None of whom can tell you what happened at Glasshouse, it would seem,” I countered softly. “So here’s the arrangement I am willing to make: if I disclose what I know, you will tell me exactly what machine my mother was working on. You’ll also give me access to your intelligence files and the messages you’ve intercepted.”

 

Now it was his turn to pause. “You’re not cleared for that information.”

 

I willed myself not to flush or stutter. “I guess that’s where it will come in handy, what with these being your files and your decision as to who should be able to view them. Now, do we have an agreement? My information for yours?”

 

Several seconds passed. Then, instead of answering, he went behind the desk and rummaged in a drawer. Withdrawing two circular bands, he approached me, went down on one knee, and took my hand in his. His skin was work roughened, marked by combat, and the Ticker gave a curious flutter.

 

“Marcus . . .” My voice trailed off when he kept his hands on mine. If there was anything to this—

 

And by this I meant us—

 

And the thudding of my clockwork ventriculator told me this was indeed something—

 

Then we’d gone about it all wrong. So many things should have happened before bare skin met bare skin.

 

The moment ended when he snapped an iron bracelet around my left wrist. Before I had a chance to process what he was doing, I wore a matching metal circlet on my other arm.

 

“I hereby swear you into unenlisted service in the Ferrum Viriae,” he pronounced, the words as solemn as his gray eyes. “And I assign you the rank of Tesseraria.”

 

I was startled by his use of the title; it was an old one given to the person responsible for safeguarding watchwords and delivering them to the commander on duty. A keeper and protector of classified information.

 

Marcus rose, brushing nonexistent dust from the knee of his pants as he addressed me. “Now, Tesseraria Farthing, we have an agreement. And more importantly, you have clearance.”

 

I looked down at my new jewelry, momentarily distracted by the way the embedded diamanté refracted the lamplight. Minutely etched white lines formed a three-dimensional image within the stone: the Ferrum Viriae crest surrounded by laurel leaves. “This has been, in all possible ways, a most curious day.” Looking up at Marcus, I felt compelled to add, “Don’t think I’m going to address you as sir.”

 

“Tesseraria,” he said, lifting his cup of tea to his mouth and frowning when he found it cold, “I dared not even dream of such things.”

 

 

 

 

 

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