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Authors: Jenna Burtenshaw

Shadowcry (16 page)

BOOK: Shadowcry
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Those Who Wish to See the Dark,
Be Ready to Pay Your Price.

A shout of surprise echoed up from below, and it was only then that Kate sensed how high she was above the ground. She clung to the ladder for safety and looked down. “Artemis?”

It was too dark to see anything. She stuffed the book back into its pouch, grabbed it and the candle in the same hand, and clambered back down the ladder as fast as she could.

“Artemis?”

“Kate, no! Stay up there!” Artemis cried out in pain.

Kate stopped twenty rungs from the bottom, close enough to see Silas's gray eyes looking up at her.

“Your warnings are unnecessary, Mr. Winters,” he said. “I have no interest in taking your life. All I want is the book.”

Kate climbed down the last few steps and saw Artemis curled up on the floor with Silas standing over him, one boot pressing down on his injured ankle. “Stop! Don't hurt him!” she said.

Silas's sword shone deep blue as he stabbed it into the library floor beside Artemis's neck, splintering the ancient wood and sending shards of it across Artemis's face. “Give me the book,” he said, lifting his foot from Artemis's leg and pressing it against his neck instead, forcing his quivering throat closer to the blade.

“It's yours,” said Kate. “Take it!”

Silas held out his hand. Kate passed the pouch to him and he checked inside it before tightening the strings again and tucking the precious book into his coat.

“Now we leave.” He wrenched his sword out of the ruined floor and grabbed Kate's hand.

“Leave her alone!” cried Artemis, struggling to his knees, trying to heave himself to his feet as Silas dragged Kate away. “You've got what you wanted! Leave her. Please!”

Silas kept moving, pulling Kate along past the bookshelves and moving quickly through pools of light cast by people working on a platform overhead. Kate looked back at Artemis's face until it was swallowed by the darkness. Her candle blew out and she let it fall to the floor, listening to the blood pounding in her ears as they raced between the shelves. Silas may have gotten what he had come for, but she was leaving something far more precious behind.

Silas stopped suddenly as they came up against a solid wall. Kate could feel the coldness of the stone and Silas's hand upon hers as he forced her palm against it.

“Ask it to show us the secret way,” he ordered, his voice vicious and cold. “Ask it how to get out.”

A sharp point stabbed into Kate's skin and the sound of a moving spirit wheel rumbled through the wall. The tiles rattled into place around her hand and the floor shifted beneath her feet.

Silas pulled Kate back as part of the floor slid to one side and revealed a shaft thick with cobwebs, with rusted metal hooks marking where a ladder had once been. Kate could smell water. Deep water.

“There's no way down,” she said.

Silas peered out over the edge of the hole. “Only my way.”

Then, without warning, Silas pulled her to his chest, engulfed her in his arms, and jumped.

Chapter 16
The Thieves' Way

K
ate and Silas plummeted down through the hole and plunged feet first into deep black water. Kate's blood pulsed deafeningly in her ears and she fought hard to swim up to the surface. Her heavy clothes pulled her down, but she kicked hard and burst, gasping, out into the air.

“Artemis!” she sputtered, as the secret door ground back into place above her head.

Kate struggled against Silas's grip as he dragged her up onto a wide point of stone that jutted out into the calm river, and then the shock of the cold water hit her, making her shiver. She cried for her uncle, her only chance to help him lost. “We left him behind,” she said. “I can't believe we left him behind.”

“Do not waste your time crying for a fool.”

Kate glared at Silas, angrily wiping her tears away.

“You are out of Da'ru's reach,” he said, looking across the water. “We have the book. That is all that matters.”

The stone they were sitting on was all that was left of an old jetty. Most of the wooden landing stage had rotted away, leaving behind only the mooring posts where boats had once been tied. The skeletal remains of a forgotten boat lay moldering beneath the water, a large oil lantern spluttering light from the ceiling was dangerously dim and two more lanterns farther along had already gone out. No one had been to fill them in a long time.

“I know this place,” said Silas. “It is the Thieves' Way. A smugglers' tunnel.”

The light splash of oars echoed along the walls and a puddle of light turned around a distant bend.

Someone was heading their way.

“Stay here.” Silas slipped silently back into the water, as lithe as a fish, and disappeared beneath the surface. Kate clambered to her feet, soaked to the skin, and looked up. Artemis was so close, but the shaft she had fallen down hung over the water and the ladder that had once led up to it was long gone. There was no way to reach it.

She looked out over the river, trying not to think about how far underground she was and how far she was from home. There was no sign of Silas. He had not even come up for air and there was only a faint ripple in the water to mark where he had been.

The sound of oars splashed closer and the dark shape of a rowboat paddled into sight. Kate could see two men on board, one holding a lantern out over the front, the other rowing steadily behind him. The boat traveled low in the water, weighed down by sacks overflowing with bones and old pottery that were slumped around the two men.

Kate did not like not knowing where Silas was and she definitely did not like the look on the lantern carrier's face when he spotted her standing there alone, soaked and shivering in the dark.

“Hey! What do you make o' this?” he said, patting the shoulder of the man behind him. “Where do you think this 'un came from?”

Kate stepped back until her spine was pressed against the wall.

“Looks like a runner,” said the rower, twisting his neck to look around. “Serving girl maybe. Reckon there's a reward going? Rich folk'll pay good money to get their servants back.”

“The whisperers haven't said anything about a missing girl.”

“Maybe she's fresh out. The whisperers mightn't even know about her yet.”

The lantern carrier grinned. “Turn the boat,” he said. “They'll name her soon and we'll be ready when they do.”

The side of the little boat scraped against the stones as the rower steered it in to the bank, and the lantern carrier stepped off onto land before it came to a full stop.

“Nice an' easy,” he said, approaching her warily, as if she were a wild animal. “Don't want no trouble now, do we?”

Kate spotted a short knife tucked into his ragged belt.

“That's right. Nice and—” The man's sharp eyes locked with hers and he stared at her, fear claiming his face as his hand reached quickly for his knife.

“She's one o' them!” he cried. “Get out of here, Reg! Row! Row!”

The man turned on his heel, skidding on the wet ground in his hurry to get back to the boat. But his friend was already gone. The oar blades lay abandoned on the water and Silas stood in the center of the little vessel, dripping wet, looking wilder and more dangerous than Kate had ever seen him before. The lantern carrier gave a small cry of fear. Silas leaped for the bank and with one sharp snap the man's neck was broken. His body slumped onto the jetty and one lifeless arm stretched out and floated upon the water, bobbing gently beside the boat.

“Get in,” Silas said to Kate. “And throw some of these sacks out. They'll only slow us down.”

Kate stared at the dead man. It had been so quick, so sudden.

“Now!”

Kate climbed into the boat and pushed the bags out one by one while Silas balanced the lantern on the bow. He had killed the two boatmen just for being in his way and seemed to have forgotten about them the moment they had breathed their last breaths, but Kate could not take her eyes off the dead lantern carrier. If she leaned far enough, she could reach his hand: the same hand that had held his useless knife, which was now sinking to the bottom of the river.

Silas dipped the tip of his sword in the water, letting the ripples reveal the current's direction, and when he looked away, Kate got rid of one last sack and reached out to touch the dead man's hand, hoping it would be enough.

“I'm sorry,” she whispered, feeling the energy of the veil rushing to her fingers and leaping out like lightning through her skin. The man had not been dead for very long and she did not feel the same pull into the veil as she had felt with Kalen. She was not even completely certain that anything would happen, and so she jumped when the man's neck cracked suddenly back into place and his hand moved slightly in the water. The lantern carrier's eyes snapped open, his pale face caught in sheer surprise as life flooded back into his body.

“Sit down,” ordered Silas, taking his place at the oars.

Kate looked back as the little boat headed out into the middle of the river and there, in the very edges of the lantern light, she saw the man's chest heave in a sudden, living breath. He sat up, one hand going immediately to his neck, watching the stolen boat float away.

With a few powerful strokes the boat soon left the lantern carrier behind and Kate sat on her narrow seat, hugging her knees and resting her head upon them, wondering if he was going to be all right.

“That piece of filth would have sold you to the wardens for a pitiful price,” said Silas, looking up at her from beneath his eyebrows, letting her know he knew exactly what she had done. “Your compassion was undeserved. Do not waste your time on his kind again.”

The Thieves' Way was a sluggish river, its current too weak to carry the boat very far. Silas had to work for every foot they traveled, and the boat cut slowly through the tunnels, the silence broken only by the slap of the oars and the squeak of rats scuttling away from the light. Kate wrapped herself in a blanket to keep warm and, if she concentrated hard upon the sound of the water, it was almost possible to forget that Silas had just killed two men, that Artemis was still trapped, and that Edgar was missing. But when she closed her eyes all she saw was the fear on the lantern carrier's face—the same look that Artemis had given her in the library. The last thing she had done was betray him. She had left him behind and now she might never see him again.

“It will take some time to find our way out of here,” said Silas. “I know some of these tunnels, but there are many paths in which to get lost. I will need to get my bearings, and there is no use in your just sitting there wasting time.”

Silas took
Wintercraft
out of his coat. The leather pouch was damp, but it had protected the book inside from the worst of the river water.

“Read it,” he said. “There is a lot in there for you to understand.”

Kate did not want to read anything. She wanted to throw the book into the river, tear it, or burn it, but she knew Silas would stop her.

“Greater minds than yours have hunted for that book for centuries,” said Silas, noticing the look of rebellion on her face. “Many would kill to possess it.”

“Just like you,” said Kate coldly.


Exactly
like me. And you are here to make sure those people did not die for nothing.”

Kate heard the darkness in his voice. He was in no mood to be challenged and she was too cold to argue with him.

“You should appreciate this opportunity,” said Silas, his oars splashing across the water as they passed beneath the dark shape of a ceiling lantern that had flickered out. “
Wintercraft
is unique, and as a book alone it should be of interest to you. The people who wrote it had their own ways of dealing with the veil. They did not see the point in being able to glimpse one of the greatest mysteries of the world and not do anything with it. They were Skilled, like you, but they pushed themselves farther and deeper into death, stretching the bond that linked their spirits to the living world. Many went too far and died for their work, but that, I believe, was the point. Very little worth knowing is discovered without risk.”

“Have you read the book?” asked Kate.

“I know enough to be sure that it is no use to me without someone who understands the veil completely,” said Silas. “You are that person. You cannot doubt that you have a natural ability. This book will help you to hone that ability even further.”

“I don't see how,” said Kate.

Silas scowled at her, impatience spreading across his face. “You will not find the writers of
Wintercraft
mentioned in your history books,” he said. “Your ancestors, and people like them, called themselves Walkers. Some lived among the bonemen, but they had more of an affinity to the veil than most of the people who worked with the dead. Walkers embraced their higher level of natural abilities and trained their own spirits to walk fully into the veil, as you have already done. The Skilled did not agree with what the Walkers were doing. They preferred to watch the veil, not enter it, and they continued to study it from a distance, choosing not to push themselves into the unknown.”

“So the Walkers knew how to go into the veil,” said Kate. “That's what
Wintercraft
is about?”

“There is far more to it than just that,” said Silas. “The Walkers had one thing in common that ordinary Skilled did not. Whenever they entered the veil, frost spread across their skin, just as it spreads across yours. It is a phenomenon so rare that no one has even tried to understand why so few people react that way. The Skilled chose to ignore it, seeing it as something to be prevented rather than explored, and at the time
Wintercraft
was written, they turned their backs on anyone who could enter the veil in that unusual way. The people they cast out grouped together, and so the Walkers were formed. They decided to examine their abnormality and explore it for themselves and, judging from that book, many of them succeeded. You should be looking to them for your answers, not to the Skilled.”

The book felt warm in Kate's hands, so warm that the watery cold that had gripped her fingers slowly began to fade away. There was something very strange about that book. It felt as if she had owned it for a long time and the longer she held it, the more she felt as if it belonged to her.

“The Skilled would have driven you out eventually,” said Silas. “They would have lied to you and stripped your abilities down until you were as limited and closed-minded as they have always been. No good can come of a Walker who lives her life in their hands.”

A gentle whisper echoed around the river walls but Kate ignored it. She had to think. Anything else was just a distraction.

“I have no reason to lie to you,” said Silas, and despite everything else Kate knew about the man, she believed him.

She opened the book reluctantly and, in the light of the boat's swinging lantern, began to read.

Wintercraft
was divided into seven sections, each with a title that would make anyone but the most determined reader put down the book and never open it again. The title of one section—“The Tearing of a Captive Soul”—made Kate think the Skilled might have been right to turn the Walkers away, but as she read on, the book revealed its own strange story.

From the different colored inks and styles of handwriting, it seemed at least twenty people had contributed to the creation of
Wintercraft
over a long period of time. Most of them had been obsessed with stretching the essence of a person's spirit to the breaking point, but as far as Kate could see, they had only ever experimented upon themselves, leaving what was left of their notes to be finished off by someone else after their death.

The neat handwriting of one Walker detailed her early experiments into using the veil to heal the body. She included a list of complex equations that Kate did not understand and detailed instructions for a process she called “Focused Reunification,” which could magnify the healing energy of the veil by focusing it on a specific spot instead of spreading it across the entire body at once. That one woman had suffered dozens of deliberate injuries in order to test her theories, from a cut hand to a broken leg, and had to instruct an apprentice to apply her healing techniques when she discovered that she could not channel the veil to heal herself.

Wintercraft
was a complicated text, meant to be studied slowly, not skipped through in a single night. Kate found herself leafing through many of the pages, turning past the more intimidating subjects, such as “Compelling the Dead to Speak” and “Wearing the Second Skin,” which—in spite of its gruesome title—was something Kate had already managed to do when she had seen the world briefly through Da'ru's eyes. She turned instead to the section that looked most useful to her, one named simply “Life & Death.”

BOOK: Shadowcry
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