Worlds of Ink and Shadow (26 page)

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Authors: Lena Coakley

BOOK: Worlds of Ink and Shadow
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“It is I who am to blame!” the Viscount Castlereagh cried, stepping forward. “Zamorna, hear of my degradation! I was foolish and gambled away my vast inheritance until there was nothing left.” He pointed to Rogue. “This nefarious creature, this devil in human form, threatened to ruin me unless I helped his men gain entry to the cathedral. My family honor, my mother's home—all would have been lost if I had not complied. It
is because of me that Mary Henrietta lies at death's door.” He pulled a knife from his robes. “I have betrayed you, and I know of only one remedy.”

“No!” Zamorna and Rogue shouted together, but the viscount plunged the dagger between his ribs and buckled to the ground.

“My friend!” Zamorna cried.

Castlereagh, on his hands and knees, coughed a spray of blood. He held out a hand to Zamorna. “Forgive . . . me,” he moaned, and with that he fell dead.

We've gone too far
, Charlotte thought, sickened by the sight of the blood pooling around Castlereagh's body.
Zamorna was right to call us cruel.

“What could be clearer?” Rogue said. “The Genii hunger for our lives today.”

“You corrupted that poor young man,” Zamorna said darkly. “Ruined him. Not the Genii, but you.”

“Yes,” Rogue agreed. “But what is worse, the man who does evil things, or the god who watches them for sport?”

“My husband is right,” said the Countess Zenobia. She had recovered from her faint and now sat upright on the floor. In her hand she held out a green vial that glittered like a jewel. “I found this on my person, but I've never seen it before. I think . . . I think I was meant to end my life with it.” She stood, brushing off her peer's robes. “But why should I do that? We've had a few dances, Zamorna, you and I. A few kisses. But you never loved me.” She set the green vial on the first step of the dais. “You are not worth
dying for.” She straightened, and with her head held high, strode away down the center aisle of the cathedral.

“I begin to see why I married that woman,” Rogue said. “Well, Zamorna, are you with me or against me? Shall we forge a truce?”

Zamorna considered this, his sword still lowered. After a moment, he seemed to come to some steely resolution. “A truce. Yes. But not with you.” He turned to the crowd. “Genii! Wherever you are! For many years I have lived a charmed life, but now it seems you desire my end. If that is your final say, stay silent, and I will lift my sword against Rogue. He and I shall kill each other as is your will. But if there is some other path we might take, show yourselves now, and we shall find it together.” His eyes searched the crowd.

Charlotte hesitated. She saw that she was standing at a forked road. She could stay silent, or she could step forward. It came to her with perfect certainty that if she did nothing, her story would roll on, no matter what Rogue did. The two heroes would kill each other. The plot would stay in her hands. It would be a tale of bloodshed and meaningless death, but it would be hers. But if she tried to change things now, take the fork she hadn't planned on, there was no telling where her story would end.

“Emily,” Charlotte said softly, putting a hand on her sister's shoulder. “It's me. It's me who's not ruthless enough.” Emily turned, her eyes wide.

Before Emily could stop her, Charlotte stepped forward. “I am here,” she called. “I am the fourth Genius.”

BRANWELL

Y
OU, BROTHER? YOU ARE . . . ONE OF THE
Genii?”

Zamorna's face was white with shock. Branwell had never seen him react in a way that wasn't wooden, but now there was something more vivid about him than before, more real.

Charlotte came forward to stand in front of the two men. She was still Charles Wellesley, and her slight boy's frame was dwarfed by Rogue's bulk and by Zamorna's willowy height, but she held her chin high. Branwell could only hope she had some plan, now that she had scuppered the previous one.

“Let me say . . . ,” she began, looking up at them, but Zamorna held up his hand.

“No!” The word echoed through the cathedral. “I want no words from you.”

“Seize this boy!” Rogue called to some of his men. “Quickly, now!”

Charlotte looked back to Branwell in panic as two of Rogue's cutthroats grabbed her by the arms. “Zamorna!” she said. “I took you at your word. You said you wished to find some compromise—a second path!” The duke only turned away in distaste.

“She's got no plan at all,” Branwell hissed.

“We should run,” Emily said, but it was too late.

“Over there,” Rogue called, pointing. “Lord Thornton and the girl in red—white—the one in plaits. They're Genii as well.”

Peers turned to stare at Emily and Branwell, looks of fear or hatred on their faces. Branwell stood and tried to bolt up the aisle, but many hands reached out to stop him. In moments he and Emily had been half dragged, half pushed to the front of the cathedral. He saw that Charlotte was trying to turn up her palm and return home, but to no avail.

“What do you think?” Rogue said to Zamorna, his arms crossed. “Will we blink out of existence the moment we slit their throats? Even so, I'd say it's worth it.”

Zamorna's face was sad and stony. “There is a better punishment,” he said.

•••

There was rioting on the streets of Verdopolis. All around, Branwell could hear shouting and breaking glass. The three Brontës were being taken in a mob down a wide avenue that ran alongside the public park and led to the Tower of All Nations. It was a strange group: Verdopolitans still dressed in their coronation finery and cutthroats brandishing knives—people who under normal circumstances would have nothing to do with one another.

“The end times are upon us!” a drunken man cried at them from a park bench. He threw a bottle that crashed at Branwell's feet, making him jump.

“This is terrible,” Charlotte said beside him. “Are we doing this?”

“I don't know.” Branwell glanced at Emily on her other side. There was something quite disturbing about her dress. It seemed to be going scarlet again in places, but it was the scarlet of fresh blood, not fresh roses. She had been nowhere near Mary Henrietta, and yet she seemed to be stained, and she left a trail of blood and dead flowers as she walked.

“I believe we're all making these things happen,” Branwell said. “All of us and none of us. Our characters, too, for all I know.”

Charlotte turned away with a deep frown. “
Stop
,” he heard her say as they walked. “
Stop, stop, stop.
” There was no effect.

Ahead of them the great tower loomed, and beyond it, small fires had broken out over the hillside.
My city is coming to an end
, Branwell thought, but above the hills the sky was strangely
beautiful. The stars were bright as polished diamonds, and the twilight was a shade of indigo he'd only ever seen in Verdopolis.

I made that blue
, he thought.
I made this place. I will never write or paint anything to rival it.
But even as the words came to him, he saw: This was a child's world. He and Charlotte hadn't even tried to make it like Africa. The flora was pure Yorkshire, with the exception of a few palm trees. And the buildings—cobbled together from maps of London and a few John Martin engravings. Still, he loved it. He loved it.

Ahead of them at the end of the avenue, a man with a bucket of paint began to deface the Tower of All Nations with graffiti. A riderless horse galloped by. Somewhere a child cried.

“Charlotte,” Branwell hissed. “This was your plan. Remember what you said about being strong willed and taking control of the plot?”

“You always said I kept too tight a rein on my stories,” she said. “Perhaps that's why they didn't breathe.”

“A little more rein might be required at this point.”

“We deserve whatever our characters do to us,” Emily said darkly, staring straight ahead. “For what we tried to do to them. For Castlereagh. For Mary Henrietta. For trying to kill our heroes.”

“Don't say that!” Branwell said. “If you believe that, who knows what will happen!”

“Even if we don't say it, I think we all feel it,” Charlotte said. She took him by the arm, looking up at him. Her eyes were
ridiculously large and blue at the moment—Charles Wellesley's eyes. The boy had always looked to Branwell as though he'd been painted by the worst kind of sentimentalist.

“Will you change into yourself, for the sake of reason?” he implored. “I'm tired of talking to a ten-year-old boy.”

“Yes, brother. Do turn back into your true self,” said a voice behind them.

Charlotte dropped Branwell's arm and they separated immediately. He hadn't thought Zamorna could hear.

“He always was a little too articulate for a ten-year-old,” Rogue said. “You should have realized.”

“Yes,” Zamorna said, “he was always present at the seminal events of my life—my great joys, my wretched lows. Strange I never wondered why.”

“What will you do to us?” Charlotte asked, not turning around. Branwell could hear the fear in her voice.

“What
can
you do to us?” Branwell said, trying to sound defiant. “We are the Genii.” He tried not to think of Anne's burned fingers.

“The worst punishments are the ones we devise for ourselves,” Zamorna said.

Branwell didn't know what this meant, but it gave him a sinking feeling all the same. The fires were bigger now. He saw that they would soon envelop the whole hillside. From the indigo sky a star fell. Then another. And then all the stars began to rain down—dazzling streaks of white light. Branwell remembered
the time with Emily when he'd thought Armageddon was upon them. Then, he'd been terrified, but in reality, the end of the world was only terribly, terribly sad.


Stop
,” he pleaded to no one. “
Stop
.” They all trudged on.

The man who'd been painting graffiti on the Tower of All Nations was gone, but he'd left behind some words in red, dripping paint. They said:
Mene, mene, tekel, upharsin.
These were the words that were written on the wall by the hand of God at Belshazzar's feast. They meant:
You have been weighed on the scales and found wanting.
Branwell was sure they were meant for him.

ANNE

A
NNE SAT ON THE FLOOR OF THE CHILDREN'S
study. She had taken up the secret floorboard, and all her brother's and sister's writings were laid out in orderly rows.

There is something I am missing
, she thought.

She had tried ordering the papers by author, and then by date. Now they were ordered by character—a line of Rogue stories, a line of Zamorna stories, each going back in time to its beginning. Newer characters like Castlereagh had shorter rows. She had spent a good deal of time considering where a story with multiple characters should be placed. There was something here. She knew it. There was something in all this paper that would help her siblings and herself, but she didn't know what it could be.

At the back of the cavity under the floor, Anne had found two
flat boxes. She opened one now. Inside were twelve battered toy soldiers. She took one out, marveling that she remembered his name, could still distinguish him so easily from the rest, though to other eyes he might seem identical. It was Napoleon, Branwell's favorite.

She pulled out the others, laying them with reverence on the floor. They had given the Brontës something precious, these little men. They had inspired some of Charlotte's and Branwell's earliest stories.

Here was Gravey, Anne's favorite, so called because his face held a grave look. This one was Sneaky, because of his shifty eyes. This one was Butter Crashie, named for an unfortunate kitchen accident. And here was Charlotte's favorite, the Duke of Wellington.

After a while Charlotte and Branwell hadn't needed the little men for inspiration. In fact it became an embarrassment that many of their best characters could trace their lineage back to toy soldiers. Even Alexander Rogue, Anne now realized, had his beginnings in an English child's notion of Napoleon, the wicked and fascinating villain.

Anne stood and set Napoleon at the top of the row of Rogue stories, the Duke of Wellington at the top of the Zamorna stories. Then she opened the second box, which held a set of ninepins. These had been the ladies, but the ribbons and carefully fashioned paper hats that had distinguished one from the other were all gone now, so Anne didn't bother setting them out.

Still, she could see how the characters of Verdopolis had developed and changed from these humble beginnings. Some
characters were really the same person, she realized. Mary Henrietta and Marion Hume were the same, she decided, and after some thought she put Zamorna's wives and lovers together in one row.

“What am I missing?” she said aloud. “What am I . . . ?” She stopped.

“No. Who?”

There was a character who didn't have a row. He was never the main character. He had no beginning as any soldier or nine-pin. He hadn't grown and developed, but he had always been the same man with the same name. Since before Glasstown. Since the beginning. He was outside. Separate. It was as if . . .

It was as if the Brontës hadn't made him.

“He was always there, watching us,” Anne said aloud. “The old fox.”

Two papers sat on the desk, writing themselves, Charlotte's and Branwell's, but they had long since become unreadable. The tiny handwriting had covered the margins and was now crossing the page lengthwise, words weaving through other words, tangling into knots. Still, Anne understood what her siblings were trying to do, and she knew it was a mistake.

“You are fighting the wrong enemy,” she murmured.

Anne sat down. Without any hesitation or ceremony, she held out her hand, palm up.

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