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45. Unlikely friends

Caught and pulled in by both the Moriarty gang and Drood Clan, Algernon and Tobias have both made deals with the devils.  Now, rejoining after exploring the Drood mansion, the group decide their next move.

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“I was hopeless in there.  Maybe they should have shot me and put me out of my misery…” Grumbled Tobias as Algernon and Bruce found Peggy and himself in the market,” Algernon, you were marvellous against Moriarty’s men,  That attempt at pick-pocketing showed your legitimacy.  What did I do?  I have Lightfeather’s knives on my person. Did I give him one?  Use it to show my legitimacy?  No…”

“So…what happened?” Bruce asked, and between Peggy’s matter of fact report and Tobias’ self-recriminations, Algernon and Bruce learnt about Terilis Lightfeather, and the deal struck.

“Sounds like you were picked up to be interrogated, and you found a way of walking out having made a deal,” Bruce said as Tobias shivered his feathers uncomfortably, “I think you did great.”
“Yeah, well, it didn’t feel great,” Tobias slouched, and Bruce realised it wasn’t so much the deal-making as the situation he’d been in that upset the little man so much.  

Tobias shivered again and looked to the others for the first time, “So, what next? Algernon, are you going to go back to Rodney Dodd and his crew?”

“Ah yeah, I found some things in the house, so I might as well keep up the act.”

“You can mention that Terilis is keen to get Elvin back if that helps. Oh, and Caw Ek Carve, or at least the top twelve percent of him.”

“Won’t that mess up your plan with the Drood clan?”

Tobias shook his head emphatically, “I don’t intend to help them get back Elvin Lightfeather, I don’t intend to do anything for them,” He said with real loathing, a look of disgust somehow expressing itself on a beaked face, ”No, if it feels right, you use it.”

‘Okay…”

“Oh, and your dynamite.  I may have panicked and made the guy throw it out of the tree,” He now confessed, “We could go and look for that too.”

“No, we don’t need to,” Bruce commented, but Tobias and Algernon had already leapt out of the tree and were already gliding down.

It was a long way to the roots of the tree.  Even then, the ground was thick with massive dead leaves the size of bed quilts, making the ground spongy and soft.  If the dynamite had fallen this far, it had a good chance of surviving the impact intact.  Algernon Hovered above the roots keeping a lookout.  Peggy and Bruce finally joined Tobias walking amongst the leaves in the dappled shadows of the tree.  From above, Algernon was first to spot the leaves moving towards the group.  Tobias heard the sound of dead leaves crunching and rustling in Bruce’s direction.

“Heads up!” He called, as a giant raccoon the size of a horse leapt out of the leaf litter.  It caught Bruce by surprise, plunging four canines into his shoulder.

Reflexly, Tobias sent Avel out screaming at the creature.  Petrified, the raccoon went to run, but now it was Bruce’s turn.  Breaking free, he rolled away, withdrawing his crowbar in one smooth movement.  Standing now, he stepped forward, the forward movement only adding to the power of his swing.  The crowbar crashed down on the raccoon’s head.  The soft ground around muffled the cracking of bone and the thud as the creature returned to the leaf litter dead.  

Tobias turned his head away from the final blow and spotted the dynamite sitting on a large leaf not far away.

“That reminds me, I guess it was you two with the gun in the Drood mansion.  What happened there?” He asked, passing the dynamite to a landing Algernon.

“If you don’t want to see what happened to the raccoon, you don’t want to know about the thug,” Bruce said coolly, checking his shoulder.  Tobias didn’t ask again.

It was a long climb back up the tree to the pub specified by Rodney “Firetop” Dodd.  One by one, the group walked into the bar, taking up positions at random tables.  Tobias sat nursing a glass as he watched Algernon through the phylactery, Peggy sat at the bar and Bruce around the corner from the red-feathered Dodd and his group.  Algernon walked up to the barman, “Excuse me. I was told to ask for a Clovis Miller. Is he in?” 

“I don’t know anyone called Clovis Miller.  Hold on.”

The barman called for help at the bar and then went around the tables.  An unknown Cro, followed by the one with bright red plumage on the top of his head, left a table and ushered Algernon forward.

“Didn’t think you were supposed to come back without something,” Rodney Dodd said, looking down on the smaller Algernon.

“That’s right, I haven’t,” Algernon replied and pulled out the piece of Spiral Dust rock and a bunch of Bywindine leaves, “These looked like they were being protected. I thought they could be something interesting.  Was that the sort of thing you were after?  I didn’t have much guidance on what to find,” Algernon commented, but the derogatory remark was lost on Dodd as soon as he saw the Spiral Dust.

“It is, it is.  You are indeed full of surprises,”

“Is it worth the agreed ten crow coins?” Algernon held out his hand.  Grudgingly Dodd pulled out six crow coins then nudged his companion, Clovis, for the other four.  Clovis Miller sighed and held his hand above Algernon’s. Out of seeming nowhere four crow coins fell between them.  

“Come and have a drink and tell us your tale,” Dodd ushered Algernon across to their table where Clovis, Toby “Mutton Chops” Waltham and another Cro that reminded Algernon of the sniper from Dreamland all sat.  

“I found a back door, waited when they weren’t looking and walked in,” Algernon shared his vague tale as a cranberry juice was brought for him, “I walked around a while, found a room with the herbs and rocks and left.”

“You just walked in….” Dodd asked, sceptically.

“I have an honest face,” Algernon replied, and from somewhere behind the group, Bruce stifled a laugh.  Dodd didn’t question further.

Algernon gave them a layout of the house on a napkin and talked knowingly of the staff and security.

“What of the people?  Whose in charge up there?” Dodd asked, now fascinated by this young boy.

“There’s a very angry Cro, Terilis.  He’s missing his brother.”

“Oh? Who’s that then?”

“Elvin, Elvin Lightfeather,” Algernon replied as if it were common knowledge.  He saw a light of understanding move between the Cro at the table, “I didn’t go near him. He’s very aggressive.”

“Quite right, anyone else?”

“Salvin is Terilis’ second and deals with security down the markets.”

Algernon stood up to leave.

“Hey, kid.  If we want more work done, where can we reach you?” Rodney Dodd also stood. 

“You can leave a message for Cheezels here,” Algernon gestured to the barman back behind the bar.  He then gave them a second glance, “You guys do work for the Dona, don’t you?”

Dodd and Clovis looked at each other, “Yeah, of course, we work for Dona Ilsa.”

He went to go again when Dodd showed his hand, “This blue stuff,” He picked up the lump of blue-grey rock, “Do you know where they get it from?”

Algernon shrugged nonchalantly, glancing over his shoulder, “I could find out that.”

“There’s fifteen crow coin in it for you,” 

“I think more now,” Having proved his abilities, Algernon waited for Dodd to agree.

Rodney Dodd raked his fingers through the red feathers on his head, making them stand up on end, “Okay, we could go to twenty,”

“Half up front?” Algernon now returned to the table to the grumbling Dodd.

“Half up front, Clovis,” The boss gestured to his underling, who was already looking woozy.  Though his eyes may have pleaded for a break, Clovis Miller silently stretched out his hand.  Ten coins appeared and fell onto Algernon’s receiving palm. Across the bar, Tobias smirked into this glass, proud of how well the kids had hooked these crooks.

“I need to lie down now, boss,” Said Clovis once the transaction was completed.  Dodd gave him his leave, and he headed up a set of wooden stairs, leaning heavily on furniture and walls as he went.

“Maybe you should buy a drink,” Algernon quipped at the fleeing back of Clovis. “Pleasure doing business.”

Stashing his twenty crow coins away in a pocket of his backpack, Algernon left.   Tobias and Peggy left soon after, but Bruce stayed, overhearing the gang’s conversations.  Dodd and the remainder of his gang continued drinking. As he listened, he matched each Cro at the table to one of the Moriarty gang.  Toby Walsham was there, as was Ignatius Jessen, the sniper they’d caught in the Celephais docks.  They said nothing of consequence, but it was clear the group had no idea who Algernon was and thought him some enterprising street kid.  His group safe for now, Bruce left the thugs to their drinking.

“If we’re leaving, I better get my phylactery back,” Bruce heard Tobias say to Algernon, “ I don’t want to translate back without my soul.”  Algernon reached into his pocket to retrieve the puzzlebox when Tobias was bumped into from behind by a large round Cro.

“I do beg your pardon,” Tobias said, quietly checking his pockets for any lost items.  He had very few to lose and found them all present and accounted for as he turned to face the clumsy Cro.

“Do mind where you’re….Rain?  My dear chap, is that you?” The Cro’s consternation quickly turned to surprise and even relief as he looked down on the small, neatly dressed Cro he’d stepped into.  

Tobias was bemused to be looking up at the round face of a plain-looking Cro with a huge neatly combed walrus moustache going over the beak.

“Maximilian?”

“Rain!  My dear chap!  What a splendid coincidence! What brings you here?”

Tobias wasn’t so sure it was a coincidence but was willing to play along with the old rogue from the Implausible Geographic Society.  

“The same old business, and yourself?”

Behind Maximillian and out of his line of sight, Peggy was lifting her hands to zap the one she blamed for stealing away Noel and ruining her life.  Bruce quickly interceded and stayed the plasma blast for the moment.

“It’s wonderful to see you again, Mr Von Candlestick, “Algernon interjected, putting out a hand to shake Maximilian’s, “How are things with the Society?”  Enamoured with the old world charm of the Implausible Society, Algernon continued to try getting on the good side of Maximillian in the hope of being accepted into their ranks.

“My boy!  The Society does well, thank you for asking,” Maximilian shook Algernon’s hand jovially, seeming pleased to find allies in Crow Hollow.  Tobias’ suspicions grew.

“Why are you here, Maximilian?” He asked again, drawing the Society Agent’s attention.

“Ah well, I’m working.  I tracked several of Moriarty’s gang to Crow’s Hollow, but I’ve lost them in this crowd.” Maximilian looked around him and the thick crowds of all black bird people, “See, I’ve come alone. I wish I’d brought some bruts with me.” 

Regardless of his initial intentions, to Tobias, it looks as though Maximillian was in over his head. Though sociable, he was not the brains of his team and looked a little lost.

“Alone?  Where’s Noel,” Tobias looked around, expecting to find a tall, lanky Cro not far away, Noel Hargen.

The stout Cro sighed, “He took a leave of absence.  It seems someone got into his head, made him think about his life choices.”  Tobias smiled to himself.  He didn’t need to be linked to Peggy to hear her mumbled,
“About bloody time!”

“I say, you couldn’t help a chap out for old time sake,” Said Maximilian confirming suspicions.

“I certainly can. We’ve just left Rodney Dodd and his group of bully boys at the pub…spending their own resources, if you know what I mean.” Said Tobias, pulling Maximillian out of the flow of the crowd to a quiet spot by market stalls.  Maximilian said nothing, but it was clear from his blank expression that he had no idea what Tobias meant, “It would be a good opportunity to nab the four of them while their guards are down.”

“Oh, splendid!” Exclaimed Maximilian, “Are you free?”

“Ah…” Tobias looked to Bruce at that question.  The violence required to tackle Moriarty’s gang was not his strong suit.

“Tempting…” Bruce stepped in, still holding the irascible Peggy to his side, “Moriarty’s gang are distracting our guy, Don Wyclif and his people.  They’re a useful blunt instrument for us.”
At this, Maximilian looked crestfallen.  It seemed the capture of the gang was important.

“But Maximilian, I can share what we know about their business here in Crow Hollow.  That may be useful to Sir Raymond and the Society.” The mention of Maximilian’s superior drew the moustached Cro’s attention.

“Oh, do tell,”

Tobias gave a brief overview to Maximillian of Moriarty’s desire to break into the Spiral Dust market.  Dodd and his men were trying to find a way in with the Drood family and their connections. He also told him about the Drood’s desire to find Lightfeather.

“Moriarty took him at the fight in Celephais, “ Algernon said as he watched the crowd around them, “ Why don’t you organise trade and when they arrive, bump off Lightfeather.  It would create a lot of bad blood and keep both sides busy fighting each other.”

“Oh, could a trade be likely?” Maximilian leapt at the offered suggestion as Algernon spotted a figure not far away a little too still for his liking.

“It’s an option,” Tobias replied, lamenting the fact that Algernon’s solution to any problem person was to murder them. At long a range if possible.  

Algernon scanned the surface thoughts of the large Cro watching.  

A deal for Elvin? Maybe it could be arranged. Terilis is hard to control.

Siddling through the crowd, Algernon got up beside Bruce and quietly mentioned the big Cro listening in. Out loud so Tobias could hear, he said, “Oh look, is that Will over there?”

Picking up on the code phrase, Tobias took Maximilian’s arm and started moving him along as the larger Cro looked around for a friendly face “ Max we need to leave, move in the direction, Algernon indicates. 

“Is that Salvin, do you think?” Bruce asked as Tobias moved Maximillian past.

“It seems so. I’m not waiting around to find out,” Tobias replied, risking a glance at the Cro in question. He didn’t seem to be following, and the group soon left him behind.

As the group walked down the tree in a straggling line, Algernon continued to ingratiate himself with the Society member.

“I love your moustache, Mr Von Candlestick.”

“Why, thank you,”  Maximilian preened. It was his pride and joy.

“And the pith helmet.”
“Well, one must be fashionable,”

Behind them, Peggy seethed, “Are you sure I can’t plasma bolt him?  No one’s going to miss him, surely.”

“I’m sure,” Bruce replied patiently.

“Can you tell me what’s going on?” Maximilian asked, still baffled by the group’s actions.

“We were being listened to by one of Don Wyclif’s men,” Algernon was quick to explain, “We’ve left him behind, but he heard the discussion about Lightfeather.  He may try to make his own arrangements.”

“Is that a problem?”

“Hmm…” Tobias thought for a moment.  If they could destroy the Spiral Dust from its source, Moriarty and the Droods can do what they like.  It all hinged on stopping the Dustman. For the first time, they had a real lead, not that he was going to tell Maximillian that, “It all depends on how quickly we can move.  We need someplace safe to talk.  What do you think about Earth?”

“All right,” Maximilian agreed all too readily.  

As soon as they found a clear space to gather, Algernon led the translation back to Earth and Peggy’s lab. Once more, under the fluorescent lighting of Peggy’s bunker lab, the first voice to welcome them back was that of Hertzfeld, Peggy’s supervisor.

“Who the hell is this?” He asked as they translated in with a stranger into the most secure lab in a highly secure complex.

“Doctor Hertzfeld,” Tobias turned at the sound of the superior’s voice, “I’m so pleased we bumped into you.  This is Maximillian von Candlestick of the Implausible Geographic Society,” 

“Oh?” Hertzfeld said and tidied up a stack of papers he had been going through on Peggy’s desk.  Peggy gave him a look of disapproval and paranoia but said nothing. “Why did you bring him here?”

At that moment, Tobias was suddenly distracted as the heavy weight of the amulet was suddenly lifted from his neck.  Clutching his chest, he found the amulet had shrunk to a small flat oval about the size of a hens egg.  He quickly pulled away his tie and shirt and found a silver locket on a delicate chain.  Now oblivious to everything, including the demands of a superior, he opened the locket to see a picture of a smiling young woman, a red scarf wrapped casually around curls of light brown hair.  The similarity with himself was so striking it was clear who she must be.  As a film of tears obscured the image from his sight, Tobias drifted away from the others, nursing the locket like the long lost connection it was.

“Excellent question,” Peggy snapped, looking from Hertzfeld rummaging to Maximillian taking up space in her lab, “Rain?”

“So he wouldn’t die,” Bruce noticed his friends distracted air and interjected.

“Oh, so he’s that Maximillian,” Hertzfeld nodded, “Do you think it appropriate he’s in here?” It was time to leave.

Algernon, always at Maximillian’s side, now turned to him, “Mr Maximillian, do you like bacon?”
“One of the basic food groups I understand,” Max replied, now on firmer ground when it came to bacon.

“Follow me,” Algernon led the way out past Peggy’s traps and to the mess.  

Bruce made to follow and realised that Peggy, looking daggers at Hertzfeld and Tobias, were not following.

“How long are we staying?” He asked the two of them but directed the question to Tobias, lost in his own world.

“Huh?  Oh…” Tobias straightened, wiped his face with a colourful handkerchief and tucked the locket back under his shirt, “Um… Rest up, find out what we can about Whole Body Grafts and then off again, I should think.” 

“And you wanted Peggy to ask something of The Strange?” Bruce prompted, and Tobias leapt at the memory.

“Oh yes, Peggy, I was hoping you would ask if The Dustman and Nakarand are the same?”

Peggy dragged her eyes away from Hertzfeld, who by this time was feeling more than a little intimidated by his protege.

“The Dustman and Nakarand…?  Who was he again?”

“The one in control of the Spiral Eyes, back in Nederland,”

“Right, so you want to know if they are the same being?”

“Yes, it would narrow down our leads if we knew they were related somehow.”

Peggy, her hands laid on her stack of notes, closed her eyes and asked the question of The Strange. Instantly the reply returned like an echo, her voice speaking the answer, “The Dustman is a mere part of Nakarand.”

With the ominous and mysterious pronouncement made, the three friends split up to their own tasks.  Bruce left to find Katherine Manners to check in and give her a rundown on their activities.  Tobias followed the bacon clue to the mess and found Algernon asking questions of Maximilian, filling him with bacon sandwiches and coffee laced with maple syrup.  Peggy stayed in her lab.

“So, how was your trip?” Hertzfeld asked innocently, starting the conversation that was sure to escalate.

“Oh, exhausting.  Unprecedented, do you know there are recursions where you can just think a thing, wave your hand, and that thing happens?”  She brought her gaze around like a searchlight and fixed it on Hertzfeld,

“Why were you in my lab?”

“I am your supervisor. I have that right,”

“The right to die a grizzly death to one of my many traps, you mean,” She said, with all of her significant force of will bearing down on her boss, “You do know the meaning of the term, paranoid, don’t you?”

He sighed.  Brilliance often came at a price, and he’d known Peggy’s price from the very beginning.  She was paranoid, highly suspicious and uncommunicative, but he also knew he would get nowhere without her intuitive spark of genius.

“I was looking for your notes on energy sources. I’ve got an idea of expanding the phasing glove’s properties to encase a vehicle, but I need more power.  I need your help.”

“Hmmm, “ She stared at Hertzfeld, who, not for the first time, was wondering if the help was worth the trouble, “You could have at least said please.”  She opened the drawer of her desk and pulled out a set of long rubber gloves.  She slipped them on up to her elbows and turned to the fish tank, empty of fish.

“Again, your supervisor.”

“Is that an excuse for bad manners?”  From the fish tank, she took out a small Tupperware container.  From the container, she took a key and walked across the lab to a set of metal lockers.  Opening one of the top lockers, she displayed a collection of keys, all different sorts from different locations.  She selected one and once more crossed the lab to a filing cabinet.  

“You’ll want to stand back,” She gestured for Hertzfeld to move as she stood to one side of the cabinet and unlocked the drawer.  A dart shot out a predrilled hole followed by a flash-bang explosion that would have rendered anyone standing in front deaf and blind.  The dart embedded itself into a pockmarked wall showing where it had impacted previously.  

From a repurposed takeaway container, she sorted through a selection of near-identical USB drives and chose one.  She now plugged it into a modified standalone DOS computer and entered a long, complicated password that Hertzfeld had no hope in following.  Text started filling the screen, but it was jibberish, a mess of ASCII coding that meant nothing to everyone except Peggy.  She scrolled through the text as if she could read it, found the specific notes he wanted and typed in another password to decrypt the section.  The text resorted itself. Finally, the jumble became the legible, concise, and precise notes he’d come to rely on with Peggy.

“Thank you,” He said, sitting down at the green-black CRT screen, “You know we need to work on your teamwork.”

“I don’t understand,” Peggy replied with a flick that sent the rubber gloves flying, “My teamwork is great.”

“So, how did you first join the society, Mr Maximillian?” Algernon was making what looked like a second bacon sandwich as Tobias entered the mess.  Algernon spotted him enter and ushered him over to a table where Maximilian was just polishing off the first.

“I was just telling Maximillian that we should take him to go see Keaton and fill him in on all that’s happening,” Algernon was acting as the proactive team member.  He was doing an excellent job at impressing the wrong person.

“Yes, who is this Keaton and is it really necessary?” Maximilian asked Tobias, who was enjoying this little piece of theatre.  He took a moment to think seriously about the subject and then nodded gravely.

“I’m afraid so. Lawrence Keaton, he’s our direct supervisor.  We’ve broken more than a few protocols bringing you here, and he does deserve a debrief on our activities,”  Tobias glanced at Algernon and gave him a wink.  

Keaton was going to hate this.

Keaton hated it.  Surrounded by leaning towers of paperwork that never seemed to impact either Katherine Manners of Hertzfeld, Keaton sat with his head in his hands and asked for the second time.

“Why is he here?” He pointed at Maximillian, his elbows never leaving his worn leather tabletop.

“We helped Max get out of a sticky situation, and now he’s helping us with the London side of our investigation,” Tobias explained simply as she scanned the room for clues to their supervisor’s mental state.  It seemed he wasn’t doing too well.  The drinks cabinet, usually closed and locked on previous visits, was open. A half bottle of bourbon with initialled golf balls sat inside.  

A glance at Algernon confirmed he’d also noted the same thing as him. They shared a look as Maximilian blustered in his chair.

“I’m helping you?  I thought you were helping me?”

“Of course, but we need access to London.”
“Which one?” Maximilian asked, worried they’d want to go to his London.  It was one thing collaborating in an unknown recursion, but London was his patch.  It would be highly irregular for him to let the dreaded Estate have access to his world.

“Moriarity’s London,” Tobias smiled.

“I can help you with that,” Maximilian finally said, seeing sense in letting the Estate make things difficult for Professor Moriarty.

“Thought you could.” Tobias patted his arm and started the debrief with Keaton.

In the end, they gave Maximillian a lot of good information about Don Wyclif, Moriarity and the connection with Elvin Lightfeather through the unstable brother, Terilis.  After they’d said all they could in front of Max, Algernon took him back to the dorm to freshen up and relax before he headed to the library.  That was when Tobias informed Keaton about Dona Ilsa, her stolen eggs and the Dustman connection in Ruk.

Algernon was back at the library once more, but this time he had new information, a company, a name and a face.  The searching did not go well at first.  There was no reference to the name ‘The Dustman’ or Whole Body Grafts.  The first seemed too obscure, the second too small.  He looked at the sketch he made of The Dustman and remembered the facial recognition software they’d used to find Sharon Cooper-Smith.  Using the descriptions of the Dustman’s features and what they knew of Spiral Dust, he started an Image recognition search.  Excluding images of monks, superheroes and other unrelated results, he finally found two likely images amongst surveillance. The first was a few months old, the image of a robed figure talking with Eldin Lightfeather and Don Wyclif in Crow Hollow.  Another was along the same stretch of road they had just travelled in the Ardeyn.  A robed figure on horseback heading towards the Mouth of Swords.  

These two images he fed back into the search making special note of the cloak with the blue dust staining.  This brought up a third image, one where The Dustman was not the image’s subject, just a bystander watching from a distance as Caw Ek Carve received crates in a Steampunk London.  This image was only two weeks old.  Carefully, Algernon timelined the three images fitting them into the facts as the group knew them. With everything the archive had to offer at that time, he headed back to the dorms to share his discovery with the others.

Peggy had not returned to the dorms.  She had not forgotten her thwarted attempts to injure Maximilian. She didn’t feel he understood the gravity of the crimes he had committed, stealing Noel away. That in taking Noel when he did, Maximilian saved Noel’s life didn’t enter into her reckoning.  Maximilian and his Implausible Geographic society were to blame for her untimely fall from grace and ridicule.  With what materials she had to hand, she made a mechanical spider complete with shaving razors for fangs.  When she retired to the dorms after lights out, she set her little pet under the door of the men’s dorm.  

As Peggy did not pay attention to much that went on with the others, she didn’t know that Algernon hardly slept anymore.  An hour or two was all he needed to recharge his mind for the new day, and he often spent hours sitting up in bed watching the others unconscious around him.  He had been going over his notes from the library when a dark shape started making its way across the floor towards Maximilian’s bed. Reaching out telepathically, he caught the mechanical spider and lifted it into the air in front of him. Twirling it around, its legs kicking out trying to gain purchase on something, Algernon examined the spider and discovered the razor-sharp fangs equipt below its head.  

“Someone in the Estate wants to kill Max!” He said to himself, now very worried for his meal ticket into the Society. Then again, if he could be seen to be the hero of the moment…

“Look out, Max!” He yelled loud enough to wake the whole dorm.  Grabbing his crossbow, which was always beside his bed, he shot the spider at point-blank range.  The bolt rocketed the spider to the far wall above Maximillian’s head and pinned it there.  It looked to everyone watching that he’d shot the arachnid from his bed.  Bruce bleary looked at what the commotion was about, noted that everyone was safe and out of harm’s way, and rolled over, going back to sleep.  Maximilian, startled from sleep, turned to face the giant black spider dripping mechanical parts down the wall. Round eyed and ghostly pale in the dark he turned to Algernon.

“Good shot!  But, what is that thing?” 

“Never fear, Mr Maximillian, I will protect you with my life.  I will not rest so you can,” Algernon stated, standing on guard, his crossbow held across his body.

“Thank you, my dear boy. ”

Tobias, who had watched silently from his bed, now padded barefoot across the room to examine the spider more closely.  He pulled the bolt from the wall and saw the bolt had gone through the spider a long way before hitting the wall, possibly longer than would have been possible if the spider had been crawling down the wall to its victim.  He noticed the detailed mechanical and computer work required to create the spider. It seemed a work of genius.  Considering that they had only been back for a few hours and very few people would know that Maximillian was even there, it had to be an inside job.  Algernon could have made something like the spider, but he’d been busy at the library and had his images to prove it.  The spider was well beyond both Bruce and his own capabilities to conceive of, little lone make. And then he remembered Peggy’s expression at Crow Hollow.

“Will you excuse me,” He said quietly, handing the bolt back to Algernon he left the men’s dorm. Walking down the hall, he rapped quietly on the women’s dorm door or Peggy’s room as she never let anyone else in there.

“Peggy, can I have a word with you?” He said quietly so the others still talking in rasping whispers couldn’t hear.

“Go away, I’m meant to be asleep,” Came Peggy’s voice, muffled by bedclothes.  He could imagine her huddled in bed, sheet and blankets over her head.

“And yet you’re not.  Peggy, was it meant to kill?”

“What?!” Came the clearer exclamation.

“Don’t bullshit me, Peggy,” He said seriously, “It had razor blades. I need to know if it was meant to kill him.”

A moment’s silence from behind the door, ”I have no idea what you’re talking about.  What spider meant to shave off moustaches are you talking about?”

He smiled now, understanding her nasty little prank for what it was.  

“Goodnight, Peggy,” He said and returned to the men’s dorm. Maximillian, by now, was mollified by Algernon’s diligence and shooting skill. Tobias said nothing, just handed the remains of the spider to Algernon and went back to bed.

Several hours later… click click click click click click click click click click click click TWACK!

This time Algernon shot the spider as it crawled along the ground.

“Peggy, stop it!” Moaned Tobias, half-heartedly knocking a balled fist against the adjoining wall, “I need my sleep!”

“NO!” Came the sulky reply from the other side of the wall that no one but Tobias heard.  Maximilian was terrified and curled up on his bed, glancing around to see where the next attack would come from.

“Someone really wants you dead, Mr Maximillian,” Algernon said, pulling his bolt from the ground and pocketing the spider’s remains.

“But how am I supposed to sleep like this?”

“I’ll guard you, sir.  Never fear.” Algernon assured him, and with no better solution, the Society member curled up in his blankets and sheet.  

It is unclear how well Maximillian slept, but the following day he was quiet and jittery at breakfast. As Peggy walked into the mess, Algernon came up alongside her, handing her the two spiders, now thoroughly examined and pulled apart. 

“Can I suggest for Mark three, a mottled grey colouring? Black is too stark against the shadows and possibly rollers instead of the legs. They’d make less noise.”

“Thank you, I’ll take those suggestions on board,” She said equally as quietly before reaching up and grabbing ahold of Algernon’s ear.

“I know I’m breaking a promise, but this is a special occasion.  Don’t get between me and my quarry.”

“Doctor Peggy!…Yes, Doctor Peggy…”

After breakfast, the group took a short walk out of the Estate campus, across the road to Gasworks Park. In the shadow of industrial piping, the group prepared to translate to Steampunk London.

“Does Moriarty have the translation place watched?” Bruce asked before Maximillian started the translation process.

“One would assume,” He replied dully.  

The translation was familiar and uneventful, and they soon found themselves in a furnished apartment that smelt heavily of stale pipe smoke. Outside the irregular glass windows of the time, a neat and busy London street scene was revealed under a thickening blanket of fog.  

“Nice,” Bruce commented, looking around.

“Yes,” Maximilian preened. Obviously, this was his find, ”It once belonged to a detective who went missing.  I took up the lease.”

“Are we on Baker Street?!” Tobias rushed to a window and took on the view with the excitement of an avid fan.

“Yes,” Maximilian replied, surprised, “How did you know?”

“Max, do you ever read?” Tobias replied derisively without looking back to see Maximillian’s face fall in disappointment.

Now in Steampunk London, the group had access for future adventures. Right now, the clean, crisp skylines and futuristic world of Ruk and The Dustman called.

“Max, you need to go home, report all that we’ve told you about Moriarty, and if your superiors still want to pick up the gang, please take friends, okay?”

“As you say,” He said with little energy.  It was clear he’d thought he’d found some friends.  They let him translate out alone before setting up their circle to Ruk.

Soon the fog and coal smoke was replaced by clean air and the smell of ozone.  Algernon and Tobias were reconnected with the Allsong, and Peggy was once more the box with a hologram.  As Algernon remembered, Whole Body Grafts advertisements were all over the Allsong. It was quickly established that the company was associated with the Zal and unfriendly to Earth and its allies.

 Looking for information on the company, they quickly had the location of the Semiramis Tower and brought up a basic plan.  The first two levels were dedicated to Showrooms and the sales side of the body grafts business.  The third and fourth levels were the surgical suites and theatres, the fifth and sixth were Research and Development.  What was on the top four floors was a mystery.  No amount of snooping could find out what was going on there and the roof.  As with all Zal operations, a set of coloured rings allowed access to whatever floors the ring was set.

Moving on to the individuals that ran the operations, Tobias gave a rye smile,

“The owner of Whole Body Grafts is one Ur-Dust,” He shared with the group.  A search of the Allsong brought up nothing on Ur-Dust, unusual in such a connected world.  They quickly collected the names of the six heads of departments and likely red ring wearers.

Security Chief – Mu-Duggan

R&D Chiefs – Pra-Qatum

Ipqu-Adad

Iphur-Kishi

Dram-Shara

Bel-Tamar

“So, what first?”  

To be continued……

44. Deals with Devils

With all five eggs in hand, the group return to Crow Hollow with the expectation of learning a little more about the Spiral Dust network from Dona Ilsa.

**************************************************************************

“Maybe we should sell them to the highest bidder,” Algernon mused as the group settled themselves back into their Cro forms after translation from Ardeyn.  Behind him, Bruce gave the young man a scowl that would have made him take back his thought, if he’d seen it.

“I thought money was a transitory power, not worth your time?” Tobias asked as he threw the chain of the necklace around his overside bird head and hid the soul gem amongst the white feathers on his chest.  The heavy stone nestled above his heart, cool and present.

“Let’s just get to Dona Ilsa and find out what she knows,” Peggy yawned, exhausted from their ordeals in the Vaults.

They hadn’t bothered to rest, leaving Ardeyn as soon as they cleared the Mouth of Swords and the entrance to the Vault. Though now in new bodies that hadn’t endured the security and traps of The Vaults, some of the group were exhausted.  But, the end was in sight, and they went without tending to injuries to see the eggs safely delivered.

Once they climbed through the canopy of the great tree to the Conaro mansion, they were ushered straight into the great woman’s presence, a sitting room, genteel and refined.  Few words were wasted. Tobias let Bruce lead with the box as he stood aside to watch as Dona Ilsa was reunited with her lost eggs.

A relaxation of the shoulders and posture was all there was to see as Dona Ilsa opened the box and the five eggs were presented to her. She picked them up, one by one, examining them in detail before moving to the next. With each egg, a feeling of genuine happiness and relief suffused the lady, transforming her before their eyes, from the hard edge businesswoman and leader of a family dynasty to a mother.

“Thank you for returning my eggs to me,” She said simply, putting the box to one side, a protective hand on them at all times.

Tobias had to drag his attention away, deeply moved by the sight of a mother’s love. Clearing his throat, he opened the conversation.

“Lady, we have proven ourselves true to our word. We have an agreement.  Tell us what you know of the Spiral Dust trade.”

“Yes,” Instantly, the image of a doting mother was gone, the businesswoman returned, “He calls himself The Dustman though what he is…I can’t say. His supplies originally came through Ruk, from a business called Whole Body Grafts.”

“Algernon, do you know anything about that place,” Tobias asked, giving up a little push of The Strange to help the memory.

“It’s one of many body modification stores.  Nothing exciting,” He replied, remembering their advertisements on the Allsong.

“So you met with the Dustman? “ Returning to the Dona.

“From time to time.  He doesn’t come anymore, just sends the stock.”

Tobias looked at Algernon, who had his hand on his backpack. Both knew inside was a picture of the Dustman drawn by the golem of The Vault, Rimush.  There was no particular benefit in showing her the image of the being who had stolen her eggs. She’d confirmed they were after the same person already, so Tobias said nothing and eventually, Algernon dropped his hand.

“Dustman?  Wasn’t he one who took the eggs to The Vault?” Bruce said, oblivious of the non-verbal interaction between the other two.

“What? I should have known!” The Dona pounded her fist on the arm of the lounge chair she was sitting in.

“Yes,” Tobias sighed.  He admired the Dona, and he hated being the bearer of bad news,” So our contacts in Ardeyn told us.  I’m sorry, you were played.”

“What a fool I am!” She fumed, “When he came to me with the proposal, all I thought of was the chance to make a little extra money to find my eggs.  It never occurred to me he had arranged the whole damn thing!”

“I have had reason recently to see how far a parent will go for their children.  It can make you blind, I think.” Tobias said quietly, and the Lady turned to face him, all mask of authority gone.

She nodded, accepting his words, but the fire was lit.  She fumed silently where she sat.

“Dona, what would you like us to do?” He asked, hoping to soothe her, give her a moment to stop and think.

“End him,” She said, her voice and posture full of venom.

“Which end?” Bruce replied.

“The very end.  I want him and everything he is destroyed.”

That was certainly clear. Tobias changed the subject.

“Dona, do you know anything about the Drood side of the Spiral Dust trade?” 

“Only that their arrangement was made at about the same time as mine.”

“Would you be able to provide an introduction to Don Wyclif?” Bruce asked.

She laughed humourlessly, “Only to getting shot. We exchange nothing but gunfire these days.”

“Possibly we could go in as mediators between your two houses?”

“Only for your own executions, I’m afraid.”

“Dona, what does he like?” Algernon asked

“The Don likes power, power and fear over others.” Was all she would say, and in the end group were floundering for more questions to ask.  Algernon had at least one that was important to him.

“Dona, do you have an inapposite gate?”

“No, I do not.”
“Do you know the location of one?”
“I’ve heard the Drood might have one,” She said with a sigh. It was clear it was all they were going to get from the Lady, for now, so Tobias made their farewells, and they left.

“Could we demolish his house, do you think?” Algernon was musing as they walked back into the crowds of the branches of the tree.

“Oh yes, we need to see about getting that dynamite for you,” Tobias replied, only half attentive to the conversation.

“No, we do not,” Bruce interjected, “Are you sure that blowing up the Drood mansion isn’t more for your enjoyment?”
“I can’t help if I enjoy my work!” Retorted Algernon, “Say, what if I turned the metal wires holding the house to plastic?”

“We’re in a market,” Tobias was still bumbling along on his thoughts, “I wonder if there’s anything like the rumour markets here?  We could do with more information about the Droods and their organisation.”

“I could watch the Droods, maybe that back entrance, you know who comes in and out,” Algernon suggested.

“We have a disguise cypher. One of us could go in and scope out the place,” Bruce added as Tobias yawned, swaying on his feet as he nodded agreement to Bruce’s idea.

“You’re still hurt. Let me heal you up a little, at least before we go on with our plans,” Bruce offered, and Tobias stopped him with a wave.

“It takes effort for you even to try and heal us. I need your good right arm strong, don’t short yourself trying to patch me up,” Tobias looked around the buildings and businesses nearby, “Maybe I should just find us a place to rest.”

They continued to move down the tree. Tobias did find an inn and arranged accommodation for the night.  While waiting, Bruce and Algernon spotted two Cro talking at a market stall. They stood out as one had a shock of bright red feathers sticking out the top of his head. The second was a large Cro, with a sledgehammer strapped across his back.  His grey feathers seemed groomed to stick out each side of his beaky face.

“Say, doesn’t that one look like Muttonchops from Dreamland?” Algernon asked, subtly pointing the two out to Tobias walking back, now lighter of all his Crow coins.

“Toby Walsham…well, and that must be Old Firetop himself, Rodney Dodd.  Now, what do you suppose they’re doing here?”

“Moriarty wanted in on the Spiral Dust trade,” Bruce reminded him,” Seems he still does.”

Without seeing the group’s attention on them, Rodney and Toby moved further into the market.  Algernon gestured he would follow and, with a push from Tobias, started moving through the crowd.  Grabbing hold of Bruce’s armoured arm, Tobias focused on his phylactery, and they started following at a distance.

Firetop and Muttonchops visited several stalls, all asking their questions and moving through the crowd as if native to it.  It wasn’t until Rodney turned to glance through the crowd that he saw Algernon watching.  Their eyes locked, and Algernon knew he’d been made.  Rodney said something to Toby, who started pushing through the crowd towards Algernon.  A whistle from Rodney also brought another Cro, looking at rifles at an adjoining stall, and all three started circling Algernon.

“He’s in trouble. Dodd’s seen him,” Tobias whispered to Bruce, who moved them through the crowd.

Algernon stiffened, and like a deer, sprung away from the encroaching thugs.  He knew the others were behind him.  Even as a Cro, Bruce was very identifiably Bruce, and these men had fought him twice before. With this thought in mind, he started moving away from their direction. 

From within the crowd, Bruce noted Algernon wasn’t moving through the crowd as smoothly as he had.  People seemed to be getting in his way , slowing him down and then finally, he fell as Mutton Chops reached him.

“He’s caught!” Tobias cried, almost fighting against the bulk of Bruce in front of him.

“Yeah, I think the kid meant to be. Let’s just hang back and watch a bit.”

“Well, what ‘ave we got ‘ere?” Said Toby of the Muttonchops, lifting Algernon off his feet to face Rodney.

“Thank you, sir,” He bluffed, nervously smiling at Muttonchops.

“What for?”

“For helping me up.” Large black bird eyes looked innocently from Toby to Rodney and back as if an evil thought had never entered their head.
“What are you up to?” Rodney said, his red feathers swaying like flames as he moved.

“Oh!  Lovely red feathers, sir.  I was just shopping, sir.”

“Thanks,” Rodney eyed Algernon suspicious as Toby put him down.  If he could just show them he could be clever…Algernon shot a hand out to pickpocket Rodney, but the thug was ready for that game.

“Oi!”

“Sorry, sir!”

“What are you playin’ at?” 

“I work for you now, sir.  Now.”
“Now?  Who before?”

“No one, in particular, sir,” Algernon looked downcast, as if life had been very unfair up to that point, “But I can be useful.”

Toby growled and pushed Algernon close to Rodney, “Talk to the boss.”

“So, you want employment?” Rodney finally said, looking down on the small non-descript Cro.

“Yes, sir.  I can be very useful.”

“Doing what?
Algernon thought a moment, “Pickpocketing occasionally, I’m pretty stealthy…blowing things up…”

Rodney did a doubletake, his red feathers swinging back and forwards like a wildfire. 

“Tell you what.  A friend of ours has things we would like…back.”

“Recovery mission.  Where would you like me to go?”

“His place, we’ll show you. ”
“And pay, sir?  For this job?”

Rodney smirked, “Very little, and on completion.”

“How…little would that be?” Algernon asked timidly.

‘Oh, I think five crow coins would be little enough.”

“Bringing something back is surely worth…ten?”

At this, Rodney laughed out loud, “You come back, I’ll make it ten.”

“What do you want me to recover?

“Hmmm, our friend is not willing to share.  We need something that will…encourage him to share.”
“Something to inspire sharing.” 

The thugs gave him the directions to the second-largest house in the whole Great tree.  Algernon guessed correctly that this was the home of the Droods and Don Wyclif.

“And where can I find you afterwards, sir?”

Rodney named an inn further down the tree, “Ask for Clovis Miller.”

“I’m on my way!” Algernon almost saluted and ran off in the direction of the house.  

Bruce stood to one side and watched the murder of thugs.  They followed the kid with their eyes, bemused expressions on their faces.  They chatted for a moment or two. The third guy went back to the stall of rifles.

“Algernon’s just said we should probably regroup,” Tobias said, tugging on Bruce’s feathers.

“Yeah, just what I was thinking.” And, leading Tobias, moved back towards the inn they had booked for the night.

In the small but comfortable room, the group met and prepared to rest.  Not taking no for an answer,  Bruce prepared to do what healing he could for the two most injured in the party, Tobias and Algernon.  His first aid worked well on Tobias, who relaxed a little easier into a chair. For Algernon, he failed to make an impact.

“Is there a psychological reason you don’t heal me?” Algernon asked the frustrated Bruce, who made him sit down again.  This time, the healing took, and he was able to rest well.

The next morning, Peggy, Bruce and Algernon were all up before Tobias, who was still looking poorly and not moving with his usual speed.  It couldn’t be helped. At least the day held nothing more strenuous than talking.  They breakfasted and headed out into the market to each of their assigned tasks for the day.  Algernon found a good vantage spot to watch the back door of the Drood mansion and noted those coming in and out, how they were received and what was required for entry.  Two thugs were on guard at all time, and they seemed to expect a password from fellow security and generic house staff alike. Unfortunately, his hiding position was too far away from the guard to pick up a stray password from their minds.

Bruce was further away again, perched on a branch that overlooked Algernon’s hideout and the entrance.  Too far away to hear or see anything at the door, he was still within distance if Algernon got into trouble.  Peggy moved through the stalls keeping close contact with Tobias, who was gathering information.  Tobias was out talking to stallholders, especially those the Moriarty gang members had spoken to the day before.  He started by trying to sell the dragon marionette he had carefully brought back from Ardeyn.  He felt lousy and knew he looked it as he failed to gain the interest for the marionette he expected.

“It’s nice. I’ll give you twenty-five crow coin for it,” The Stallholder said.  Tobias almost kept it at that price, having grown fond of the thing, but he needed the information more.

“Tell you what.  I’ll sell it for ten if you tell me what the gentlemen yesterday wanted.”

The Storeholder looked around the crowd for anyone listening as he exchanged coins for the marionette, ”They wanted to know about the Droods.”
“And what did you tell them?”

“Wyclif has been busy focusing his attention on a special trade.  He’s fuming about the loss of his favourite lieutenant into the hands of an enemy.”

“So if the Don lost this second, whose taken up that role at the moment?”
“The younger brother, Terilis Lightfeather.”

“What sort of character is he?”

“He’s a mean one.  Real vicious.  He brings out the worst in the boss. He used to sit in his big brother’s shadow, but no more. I’ve heard some wish for the good old days of Elvin Lightfeather. He was tough, but you knew where you stood with him.  His brother is wild and can go off at nothing…”

The shopkeeper went quiet and looking past Tobias.  Tobias could feel a presence behind him, and something like a static shock ran through his body. He knew this situation of old.  Stepping aside, he looked at the new arrivals through his feathers.  Five big Cro had walked through the markets and now stood in front of the market stall.  One was a little taller than the others and seemed to be their leader.  Feathers matted down each side of his beak make this Cro look scruffy, not that anyone would have told him that to his face.  On each hand, he carried a large metal claw that flashed in the morning light. 

“I hear people have been asking about me?” The Cro asked the stallholder. Tobias could feel the stallholder’s eyes on him already.  Focussing on a calm like the one Dona had presented to them, he squared his shoulders and faced the goons.

“Ah, yes.  That would be me.  Not just me, of course.” He said, with seeming ease, all the while thoughts were churning.

“You?” The Cro said, turning to take in the small, dapper Cro in front of him, “What about this red-feathered guy…?”

“That’s the one.  Goes by the name Rodney Dodd and works for…hmm, have you heard of the Professor?”

The Cro cracked his neck menacingly and, without warning, punched the tree branch they were all standing on with this metal clawed fist.  The violence of the action set Tobias’ heart racing as he realised the quality of the Cro in front of him.  He’d suspected this was the infamous Terilis Lightfeather and now knew that the stories were true.  Suddenly he was back in New York once more working for the organised crime syndicate run by Louis Astra.  It was a life that he had run from, fleeing blindly to New Orleans in the hope of something better.  It seemed a cruel irony that having come so far, he was right back where he started.

“Moriarty?” Peggy added, honestly inserting herself into the conversation, “What a jerk!”

“Yes, that’s the one.  He has your brother,” Tobias confessed, knowing that right now, the difference between life and death may hinge on Terilis’ interest in his brother’s welfare.

“Go on,” The Cro said, brushing his long oily feathers out of his eyes.

“I wanted to talk to you.  That’s why I was asking around.  I can be useful.  Can we talk?” Tobias was aware he sounded like Algernon. His words came out at the speed his heart was racing.

“I’m listening,” 

Tobias looked around the market place as the stallowner had, checking for others listening and took a moment to centre himself. Didn’t they want inside the house?  

“Here? In the markets?”

Terilis nodded, “Take him.”  Suddenly the other four surrounded Tobias, and the panic in his chest spiked.

It’s okay.  Peggy will tell the others.  You’re not alone anymore, remember.  You don’t have to do this alone. He said to himself as the group started moving away.

“Excuse me, where do you think you are going with him?” Came Peggy’s voice from behind, and Tobias almost wept.

“And what’s it to you?” He heard Terilis say.

“I look after him. Where he goes, I go.” Peggy pushed through the group and stood beside Tobias.  He could feel her solid presence, the warmth of her beside him and felt that everything would be fine if she would just stay close.  

At the same time, he knew the others had no idea where they were or what was happening.  She needed to let them know.  With a wrench, he touched Peggy’s arm.

You have to tell Bruce and Algernon what happened, He said within the mind link.  Outside so all could hear, he turned and smiled indulgently at her, “Get out of here. We have business to discuss.” He looked to Terilis and ruffled his own feather to cover his discomfit, “She doesn’t need to be involved.”

“Scram, don’t you hear you’re not wanted,” Terilis added gruffly, and Tobias had to stop himself from contradicting him.

Why? You need me. She replied telepathically, though externally it was almost the same message. “No, I won’t.”

Please, go. He pleaded in her mind as he said out loud, “Go on, go find your brother.”

Why?

Because they don’t know where we are, He was going to add the truth, that she was right. He couldn’t do this without them but was sure that would keep her from leaving.  In the end, Peggy agreed grudgingly.

“Fine, fine!” She complained and pushing her way through the goons, and stormed off.  The Cro thugs laughed at the sight of her climbing higher through the tree.  Tobias watched her receding back until she was lost in the crowds.  He closed his eyes and could still feel the link between them.  Her quietly fuming as she found new words for idiot.  

No, these weren’t the bad old days at all.  

A slight shove in the small of his back told him it was time to move.

It had been a very dull morning.  Algernon had thought that spy work would be more of the infiltration, stealth missions and secret codes. All he’d done since coming to Crow Hollow was follow and watch.  Now he was watching.  He was in a good enough spot between stalls to get a good view of the door, the guards and those who came in and out but not close enough to hear what they were saying.  High above, within gliding distance, he could just make out Bruce’s bulky shadow.  He wished he had some way of talking to the others, or at least Bruce at this moment. It would have helped fill the time. 

Suddenly a rustle of feather and a harrumph, Peggy was beside him, taking up all the space in his tiny hidey-hole and making a scene.

“Budge over. I don’t fit.”

“No, you don’t. Why aren’t you with Rain?”

“Rain got himself caught. He sent me to let you know.”

“O-kay,” Algernon looked up to Bruce’s nest.  He was no longer there.

“What’s going on? Our canary’s being marched up the tree surrounded by heavies,” Bruce’s deep bass came up behind both Peggy and Algernon.  

“Terilis Lightfeather, Elvin’s little brother, is now Don Wyclif’s right hand. He caught Rain asking stallholders questions.  Rain sent me to tell you, and I’ve done that now,” Peggy replied and pushed past Bruce and was soon lost in the crowd of market-goers.

It wasn’t until the marching group of goons were within sight of the back door that Tobias realised they might see Peggy talking to Algernon and suspect something.   In a panic, he looked around for a distraction, something to stall the group so Peggy and Algernon would have time to clear the door.  He saw the market stall Algernon had been interested in before the trip to Ardeyn.

“Oh, my good man!” He exclaimed, pointing to the bundle of dynamite on the stall and aiming his suggestion square for the stallholder, “Can I suggest to you that dynamite is weeping nitro-glycerine and is highly volatile!”

The Cro grabbed the dynamite and, in a blind panic, threw it out of the tree.  It sailed away into the crowds of shoppers and stalls far below and was lost from sight.  The whole transaction took less than a few seconds and didn’t even slow the marching group down.  Tobias chided himself, remembering Peggy’s link.

You’ll have to get out of the way. We’re following you.

Why?  Came the same stubborn insistence for facts.

The goons want to use their back door.

Doesn’t everyone? He could almost hear her roll her eyes.

Exactly! And I’d rather they don’t see you lurking around.

Oh, they’ll see me,  She said through the link. 

He almost groaned. What could that mean? Tobias glanced around the crowds. With a determined look on her face, Peggy marched in from the right. She barged her way through the knot of thugs and stood beside him.

“I’m coming with you,” 

Thank god! He said via the link, Thank you.  He took her hand in his cold, shaking one.

Peggy blinked, surprised. Not so much for the physical contact, but from the force of his need. 

Idiot, She responded automatically, unsure how to react to the intense emotion, We’re a group. We look after each other, don’t we? 

It’s not a concept I will ever tire, I assure you.

Besides, I’m not leaving you alone with the bully brother of Lightfeather. The image of Elvin Lightfeather throwing his murderously accurate dagger in a narrow alley of Bollons, Railsea, was shared.  

Tobias’ grip on Peggy’s hand tightened. Together then?

No other option.

“What?  You again?” Terilis growled, oblivious to all that had been said in the moment she’d pushed through. Peggy paid Terilis no attention.

“You’re an idiot, and I’m coming,”  

Tobias turned to Terilis, “Little sisters, they think they own you.”

Without another word, they was pushed through the door.  They were bundled quickly down a narrow hallway, a door was opened, and they all entered the small private space.

“Okay, so talk,” Terilis barked, taking a seat behind a simple wooden table.  There were no other chairs, and the other four goons loomed over Peggy and Tobias.  Never letting go of Peggy’s hand, Tobias slipped into a new persona, one he hadn’t needed for a long time.  Dropping his head to define the change, his usual polite transatlantic accent was gone. When he next spoke, replaced with a broader cockney.

“Right, I’ll come clean wi’d you gents. Moriarty is a thorn in me side.  Dat’s my patch, that London, and ‘e don’t seem ta think there’s room to share.  So, when I found out ‘bout your brotha, I figured we ‘ad a mutual enemy.” 

You sound like an idiot, Peggy said via the link, I’m glad you don’t go around sounding like that.

Terilis nodded, this was something he could understand,” And what do you want from me?”

“He’s all gun-ho ‘bout dis Spiral Dust trade.  I want in before ‘e does.  I want ta cut ‘im out, know what I mean?”

Algernon and Bruce moved into the crowd and watched silently as Tobias and Peggy were marched up to the door by five Cro.  The guards snapped to attention, and though no password was given, they were let in.  Algernon skimmed the mind of the nearest guard and found the password.

“Usually, the guards give the password,” Algernon murmured to Bruce as they finalised their plans to follow, “I can probably pass myself off as staff…”

“And I’ll use the disguise cypher,” Added Bruce, who had made a note of a Cro about his size leaving for down the tree earlier.  Algernon handed over his crossbow to Bruce and made himself look neat, presentable and unnoteworthy.  Bruce used the Cypher and seemingly didn’t change much, remaining a larger than average Cro, now with a crossbow on his back.  Together they walked up to the door, and Bruce gave the password.  The Cro on guard said nothing, and they were let in without a question. Now, to find the other two.

A long hallway lined with doors faced them.  At the far end, a set of stairs led seemingly up to the main house.  Nearby a set of stairs led down into darkness. Algernon went to work looking for a trail, a blood smear path, anything that would give them a clue as to where Peggy and Tobias had been taken.  He didn’t find anything, as there was nothing to see.  Bruce stopped and listened.  Faintly he could hear a conversation being held behind one of the doors.  Drawing Algernon’s attention to it, they crept down the hallway, listening to doors until they could discern a higher voice in London accent amongst the deeper vocalisations from behind one of them.  Bruce rolled his eyes, they’d found their room all right.  Getting down on one knee, Bruce looked through the keyhole.

“So, you want into the Spiral Dust trade for your London in exchange for…what, my brother?” Terilis summarised, looking through his shaggy mess of feathers at Tobias across the table.

I wonder what makes his feathers all straggly like that? Peggy thought via the link,  Do you think it’s intentional or some sort of scalp condition…

“Sum fink like dat.  ‘Cept I was thinking a little bigger.  This universe is big, a lot bigger if ya get my meanin’.  D’ere no need ta step on each other’s toes,” Tobias paused, seeming for effect, but mostly to give himself time to figure out what he wanted from this conversation. What information do they have on the Dustman?  What were the Dustman’s intentions? “If we go into  for a partnership I want a bigger slice.  Say, I run my London and…Earth?”

 I wonder if Cro’s suffer male pattern baldness? I’ll have to ask someone when we get out of this stuffy room. Haven’t they heard of ventilation?

Terilis scoffed and gestured to one of his goons.  With a look and a sign, the goon crossed the room and opened the door.

Bruce peered through the keyhole.  At one moment, he was looking into a room filled with Cro, Tobias’ yellow suit clearly visible amongst the black.  The next moment, the scene was blocked by a body, and the door opened.  Instinctually, he grabbed the Cro by the throat with one hand and yanked him out of the doorway, throwing him across the hall.  That the Cro did not hit the wall was Algernon snapping him out of the air.  Controlled for the moment, Bruce quietly closed the door. Peggy, wide-eyed, the only witness.

With a single gesture, Algernon threw the Cro down the hall towards the stair heading down. The Cro tumbled out of sight as both Bruce and Algernon moved quietly as possible down the hallway. The Cro was stunned, sprawled on a landing half way down. Levitating his crossbow off Bruce’s back, Algernon shot him almost point-blank as soon as the goon was in sight.  Bruce closed the stairwell door, but no amount of wood was going to muffle the sound of gunfire as the goon pulled out his gun and shot.  It missed Bruce by inches.  Pulling out his crowbar, Bruce lept from down the flight of stairs, landing full weight on the Cro. There was a crunch and Bruce felt the body of the Cro give way beneath him. Standing, the Cro slumped down to the bottom of the stair, very much dead.

The gunshot was clear from inside the room, and Tobias instinctually flinched. He stopped his sales pitch to Terilis as all Cro heads turned to the door.  

“Go see what’s happening out there,” Terilis ordered, and another of the four opened the door.

Just Bruce and Algernon as usual.  Do you think they’ve ever heard of subtle?

“Everything okay?” The goon called down the hallway.  There was a sound of a door opening.

“Yeah, boss,” Came a voice, distinctly Bruce’s for those who knew it.

Yeah, playing with guns again.
“We heard a gunshot.”
“Yeah, sorry accidental discharge.”

Terilis slammed his metal claw into the table, the blades slinking through the wood, the fist leaving an impression on the surface.

“Don’t let it happen again,” Said the goon, translating his bosses body language and closed the door.

“Where did we find these idiots!” Terilis bellowed.

“They’re all over, gov,” Tobias sympathised, and Terilis focused his attention back on him.

“Here’s my idea, “Terilis said, straightening up and retracting his clawed fist from the tabletop,” You get my brother and one more thing.  I want the head of a traitor that left our organisation and joined Moriarty.”

A flash of Caw Ek Carve directing crossbow fire from on top of a warehouse room sprung to Tobias’ mind.

“Oh yeah, new bloke.  Sharp, but officious,” He mimed Caw Ek Carves wireframe spectacles, and Terilis nodded.

“That’s a lot of work, close to Moriarty.  Not saying it can’t be done, but that’s tipping my ‘and,” Tobias looked up as if collecting his thoughts. “ I was thinking more of a trap.  Moriarty’s safe in London, within his network like a spider, in ‘is web.  I can get information to Moriarty about your Spiral Dust contact’s location.  It would have to be legit, Moriarty’s smart. He’d see through any porky pies. We lay an ambush the other end and nab him outside of London and all his protections. Later, I can sweep in collect your brotha, find this traitor of yours and make London me own.”

Terilis seemed to warm to this plan for a moment.  He leaned back in his chair and watched Tobias, who fixed all his thoughts on just keeping up the mask and not crumbling into a shuddering wreck.  After a moment or two, Terlis shook his head.

“No good, the Dustman doesn’t tell us where it comes from.”
“Could we contact this Dustman, arrange somfin’?  It’s in his best interests that someone like Moriarty is not involved in his business.”

Again, the head shook, sending the dangling feathers drifting back and forward, “He stays out of things. He won’t get involved.”

If Terilis knew more than Dona Ilsa about the Spiral Dust, he was doing an excellent job of keeping it close.  Frustrated now, Tobias realised it was time to leave.  The hard part was getting Terilis to think so too.

“Hmm, so your brotha and this traitor and what, I become a junior partner is dis Spiral dust?”

“That’s how I see it?”

“Yeah, right, I’ll be in touch,” He gestured to the door, and the goons looked to Terilis.

“See them out, boys.”

With a shove from one of the two goons behind them, Peggy and Tobias were marched out the room and back through the rear door.  

Bruce dragged the body of the Cro down the stair and along another corridor as Algernon went ahead checking rooms.  So far, they seemed to be storerooms or currently unused workrooms.  Algernon had grabbed six grenades out of an armoury.

“I could probably bring down half the tree if I could find its weak points,” Algernon said as he tucked the grenades under his wing.

“I’m sure you could, but right now, I’d like if you could find a spot to put this one before someone finds us,” Complained Bruce. Algernon closed the armoury and opened another door.  It was a large workroom set up with two stations.  One for processing Spiral Dust and the other Bywandine. There were even separate tools to avoid cross-contamination.  Algernon took a few samples of each and handed them to Bruce before closing that door too. 

“We need somewhere they’re not likely to go for a while.”

The next-door offered them a better solution. It was a general storeroom, complete with mops, cleaning products standard, handyman tools.  With a little luck, the unlucky Cro goon wouldn’t be found until the cleaners arrived the next morning.  Propping him up in a corner, they close the door and started back down the hallway.  Now, which way should they go out?  The rear exit was closest, but as they’d just come through there, it could look suspicious, and they wouldn’t get to see any more of the house.  

They climbed the stairs from the storeroom, through the door at the top to the first corridor.  At the other end, the second staircase beckoned. They were almost there when Terilis Lightfeather walked out of the room flanked by one of his bodyguards.

“You! Are you the new guys setting off guns in the house?” He fixed both Bruce, hidden in his disguise and Algernon with a gaze that seemed to look right through them.

“Ah, yeah.  Sorry boss,” Bruce replied as Algernon silently tried his best not to be there.

The clawed fist slammed into the wall beside Bruce’s head, and snow of gyprock landed on his shoulder.

“Don’t do it again.  I don’t need more idiots, but all we seem to do is lose good hands and find idiots,” He said more to himself than to Bruce or Algernon, “Well, hasn’t Salvin got a job for you?  Get going!”

“Yes, sir,” Bruce replied smartly, and both he and Algernon walked on and opened a random door.  

It was a kitchen. The staff looked like they were preparing for a midday meal and had little time for security staff not where they should be.

“Ur…sorry, do you know where Salvin is?” Asked Algernon of one of the junior staff, peeling vegetables.

“Wouldn’t he be down in the market somewhere?” Replied the kitchen hand who thought he’d found someone lower ranking than himself and wasn’t afraid to show their disdain.  It was utterly wasted on Algernon.  He knew the vegetable peeling Cro was beneath him and was content to let him fall with the house when he got around the destroying it.

They waited thirty seconds to let the hallway clear before heading out again.  Climbing the stairs to the main house, they got a feel for the layout and where Don Wyclif would be further up in the building.  By now, they had pushed their luck as far as they were willing to go. They made their exit through the open front door and left the Drood residence for the genteel part of town.

To be continued….

41. An interview with the Dona

The group had finally made it to Crow Hollow to follow up the Spiral Dust trail.  Having made a contact in a local called Paco Derois, they were attacked by henchmen of Don Wycliff and the Drood family.  Out of thankfulness, Paco promises to make an appointment with Dona Ilsa as soon as he could.  But the goons have found them again.  This time the party are ready.

*******************************************************************

At the table, all eyes focused on the bolt quivering in front of them until the two words resolved themselves into one clear message.

Will Robinson!

“Will Robinson!” Tobias yelled, “Avel, quick! Do your shout!” And out of the tattoo, a wisp of something flew across the cupola at the four Cro goons.  From inside the bar, they could see very little of the attack.  A terrifying scream of anguish and terror was all they could hear. The Cro goons, they’d come to call Pushkin and Mauley, and a third looked disturbed and thoroughly spooked.  Algernon witnessed Avel’s true form from behind the goons, that of a very familiar-looking human woman, her face distorted in fury, screaming and spitting in a language he couldn’t understand.  

Back in the bar, Tobias cringed at the foul language and ducked under the table as Bruce pulled out his guns.  Three rapid shots at Mauley, and the two as yet unnamed Cro.  Their guns flew from their hands and into the crowd of shoppers desperately tried to escape the violence. Algernon spotted his favourite, Pushkin, closer to the end of the branch than the others. Pushkin sailed out away from the market with a sudden and violent push, leaving his gun behind.  Now all four Cro goons were disarmed. It was Peggy’s turn.  With a word from her book and a flick of a wrist, she sent a ball of fire at Mauley, singeing what was left of the feathers on his shoulders, neck and chest.

Out of the corner of his eye, Bruce spotted the movement as three more thickset Cro rose from their seats around a table in the bar.  Ready for more trouble from a new quarter, Bruce spun his pistols on his fingers.  Once the group had their say, however the new goons looked at each other and sat back down and returned to their drinks. It seemed they weren’t fussed that four of Don Wycliffe’s boys were being roughed up. 

It was the goons’ turn.  The three remaining didn’t hesitate.  They picked up their guns and ran back the way they’d come, leaving Pushkin’s gun behind.  Algernon picked it as he followed their disturbance through the market.

“That was amazing!” Came Tobias’ voice from under the table.

“Yes, well, that worked,” Bruce said more to himself as he turned back to the table and looked underneath.  Tobias’ eyes closed, was patting his chest tattoo cheerfully, “Thanks, Avel!”

“Did you do that?” Bruce asked, and Tobias’ eyes flicked open and found Bruce’s.

“What?”

“The…spooky fear thing?”

“That was Avel,” Tobias’ replied proudly, “She’s amazing.  Terrible potty mouth though, did you hear her?”

“Didn’t understand it, but I don’t hold with no cussin’”, Bruce drawled as Tobias crawled out from under the table.  Spotting the bolt, he pulled it from the wooden support and took it out to Algernon, still watching the goons.

“Great idea,” He handed the bolt back to Algernon, who accepted it and the praise with a nod of his head.  

“The sneaking around thing, also good.  But, I think I have something that might help,” And Tobias reached into a hidden pocket and produced his puzzle box.

“While this is on you, I can hear and see everything around you.  So, while I concentrate, we can still keep in touch…at least one way,” Tobias went to hand the puzzle box to Algernon before pulling back, “Now this is precious to me, more so now as…I think my soul is in it.  Nice to know I have one.” He laughed nervously at the thought and offered the box to Algernon, “Just keep it safe. I know you will.”

“Are you saying that you possess that box?” Bruce said, trying to make sense of what was going on.

“Yes. Avel possessed me, and I guess you can say, I possess the box,”

“What if it breaks or is lost?”

“Lost…?” Tobias thought, concentrated on the box.  He could see them all standing around it, “I think I could find it.  If it’s broken?” At that thought, his whole being seemed to pale, and he shivered, “Bad things for me.”

“Thanks, Rain,” Algernon tucked the puzzlebox away carefully.  “I’m going to follow those guys. I’ll be right back.”  With that, Algernon slipping into the crowd and disappeared.  

Tobias focused on his box and could see Algernon gliding through the shoppers, always keeping contact with the goons ahead.  He watched them head towards a hollow in the next branch up, guarded by Cro goons with guns.  Words exchanged, they disappeared inside.

“I’ve just seen them enter a hollow.  I’ll head back now,” Algernon murmured, and Tobias passed on the message to Bruce standing beside him.

Bruce scowled, unhappy with the whole possession situation. He looked from Tobias beside him up into the market where Algernon had disappeared.  

“Tobias, you may want to talk to those three big guys back in the bar,” He bent down and murmured to the distracted con man.

“Hmm?” Tobias glanced around, not letting his eyes stop at the table groaning with feathered muscle,” Hmmm…good pick.” Sauntering back into the bar, he went straight back to Paco, quietly still drinking his drink as nothing had happened.

“See, you’re in good hands,” He smirked, patting his chest where Avel had returned, warm and reassuring.

“It seems so,”

“Say, what do you know of the three heavies across the way?” Tobias leaned out of the way to allow Paco to see around him at the goons.

“I’ve seen at least one of them around.  They work for Dona Ilsa, I think,” Paco replied, and Tobias’ grin broadened.  A quick word to the barman and the exchange of two crow coins later, and he was standing in front of the three Cro offering fresh drinks.

“Gentlemen, it seems we have a mutual friend,” Tobias gestured to Paco, “As you witnessed, we helped him out of a spot of trouble.”

“What, so is he yours now?” Asked the centre goon who by size alone seemed to be their leader.
The thought of running a protection racket in Crow Hollow made Tobias shiver, and he ruffled his feathers dramatically.

“On the contrary,” He stepped back, allowing the three of them a view of the bar and what they had just witnessed, “ I want a word with the Dona, at her earliest convenience.”

The three goons look at each other once more, downed their new drinks in one and stood.

“Wait here,”

“Wouldn’t think of being anywhere else.”

“Who should we say you are?”

“Tobias Cudo and associates,” Tobias nodded and watch the Cro’s leave the bar and head back up the tree.

Algernon had arrived back by that time and joined the others at their table.  A fluttering sound and the shimmer of golden wings caught his eye.  A moment later, there was a plop! And something landed in his drink. Slowly, without drawing attention to the glass, he slipped it under the table and fished out of the liquor a set of keys.  Motorbike keys.

The Motobike’s keys.

The keys carefully stowed away into his pocket, he smiled in remembrance of the tiny fairies and their desire to pay back a favour.

Now, how was he going to get that bike back to Earth?

“Um…I’ll be back in a bit,” He said, suddenly remembering something else he’d seen on a stall.

“Where ya going, kid?” Bruce asked, casually sipping his drink. Algernon was a highly competent agent with many wins behind him, but to Bruce, he always looked suspicious when up to no good.

“I saw something in the markets. I won’t be long,” Algernon replied as casually he could and rose from the table.

“Well, don’t be. We don’t know when those goons will be back,” Bruce admonished, and Algernon nodded his agreement before disappearing once more into the crowds of shoppers.  

Without a word, Tobias focused on his puzzlebox. He watched as Algernon made his way back to the stalls they had visited earlier that day, particularly one with several weapons on display, including a bound stack of dynamite. Just from the way Algernon’s eyes kept darting to the pile and away showed Tobias that the dynamite was the aim of this expedition.

At the stall, Algernon allowed his eyes to fall on a number of interesting items.  A glove that seemed to be some sort of Strange touched artefact, a brain bug cypher and of course, the dynamite.  There were fourteen sticks of nitroglycerin and clay, all with inserted detonation chords.  He was trying to work out how much damage that sizable stack would do when he was interrupted by the stall owner.

“Interested in the dynamite, then?” Asked the Cro without interest.

“Possibly,” He replied, “How much is it?”

“Twenty crow coin.”

Algernon nearly choked.  That was twice as much as he had.

“So, what’s it good for?” He asked as if only remotely interested.

“Mining,” The Cro replied tersely.  

“I have ten coins for half?” 

But the Cro was only interested in selling the whole bundle and not parts.

“I think I need more?  Where can I get more?”

“You were just talking about half a moment ago. Now you want more?”

“Miscalculation, can you get more?”

“This is all I have and it for twenty,” The Cro repeated, sticking out his feathered hand to complete the sale.

“I don’t have enough, but I do want it.” Algernon waivered.  If only he’d thought to ask for a little extra cash from Rain.

The Cro looked him over, “You look like your good for it, shake my hand, and the dynamite is your,” He said in a tone that suggested that more than just the few coins he had would be part of the transaction.

“Urr…no, thank you,” Algernon kept his hands to himself and walked away from the stall.

At another stall, he found a group of Earth tech and went over to examine them.  With the shopkeeper’s keen eye on him, he started up an old laptop, and a primary coloured black-bordered window on a cloudy blue sky filled the screen.  Passworded, he figured he could get around the security…until he couldn’t and locked the computer instead.

“What did you do? You’ve broken it!  That’s worth fourteen crow coins. Hand them over!” The owner cawed sharply.

“I assure you, I can fix this.  Please, let me try again,” Algernon said, sure if he could bypass Ni’Challan’s systems he could get passed this machine’s security.  Grudgingly, the shopkeeper allowed him to try and within a few keystrokes, he had returned the computer to its former state. With that little excitement under his belt, he started back for the bar where the other waited. 

It was odd for Tobias to see himself from Algernon’s point of view as his friend stopped a hundred metres out from the bar and watched the crowd.  Tobias waived and saw himself waive.  Algernon nodded back, a small gesture of acknowledgement.

“He’s back, watching,” Tobias told the others, still sitting around the table, “ What are you all up to?”

Paco seemed to be drinking himself into a quiet stupor. Peggy was working out complicated mathematics related to the Angels by the images she sketched on the back of a napkin.  Bruce was just people watching, keeping an eye out for anyone who was taking a little too much interest in them.  Avel was a comfortable warmth on Tobias’ chest and he held his hand there for a moment enjoying the feeling when a movement from Algernon alerted him to the goon’s return.

“Where’s the other one?  Weren’t there four of you?” Said the big goon, he certainly thought himself the boss of this trio.

“Just there, didn’t you see him as you came in?” Tobias asked politely of the goon while giving a wink as Algernon stepped out of the crowd and stood behind the Dona’s heavies.  With a start, the realised the young Cro had snuck up on them.

“Ur…The Dona will see you now,” Said the leader. 

Giving their farewells to the now inebriated Paco, the group followed the goons through three levels of the tree.  As each level passed, the markets and stalls slowly gave way to buildings of more prominent and grander proportions.  Eventually, they reached a branch reinforced with massive metal bands. Cables as thick as Algernon or Tobias around connected the bands to other branches further around the tree, creating a latticework of support.  In the centre of the spider’s web was a mansion, suspended in thin air.  A white spiral staircase led up from the branch to a roof garden, complete with a gazebo. 

In the shade of a white flowering climbing rose, the lady sat like a Queen at court.  Dressed in an elegant black evening dress, rings, and jewellery flashing in the bright sunlight, only found this high in the canopy.  As they walked up Tobias paid close attention to her posture (rigidly upright), her arm and legs (quiet and seemingly relaxed in a studied way) how the light flashed off the gems on her jewelled fingers (they fidgeted and moved to show agitation that the rest of the body didn’t) and he watched her eyes (flicking between each of the group trying to gauge them as well).  She was hiding it well, but there was something very wrong with the Lady’s world, and she was wondering if these were the ones to help.  

Tobias lifted his head, did his best to smile with a beak, and gave the lady a short bow.

“I’ve been waiting a long time for this meeting, Dona,” He said respectfully, not just for her rank but because he found her a woman worthy of respect.

“Oh, how so?” She asked imperiously.

“It has been almost a year since we met your mutual friend, Lydia Lance.”

It had been during the Frozen Dead Guy Days in Nederland when the party had almost caught the Dona making a delivery of Spiral Dust Rock to Lydia Lance’s store, The Dreaming Crystal. 

“Oh yeah, the basement,” Peggy said, remembering how long they’d fought and planned to create a trap only to have it fail because of their own stupidity.

“What the hell, Peggy?” Tobias turned on Peggy, his standard London accent slipping to a rough cockney. This was his moment to make an impression on the Dona, and Peggy reminded her that she was dealing with a group of thugs and pranksters.

“That was your doing?” Dona Ilsa asked, her beak in the air as if she could once more spell the bitter smell of spider parts and alkaloids.  

“It wasn’t how I would have wanted it, but there it is.  Even then I knew we were dealing with someone who wasn’t afraid of the dirty work, who didn’t palm it off to underlings but saw them through themselves.  I knew I wanted to meet that person.” 

“And now?”

Tobias thought for a moment.  He looked around the garden and noted several of her henchmen, possibly loyal but who knew. With a thought his card appeared in his hands and he shuffled them absently, “Can I tell you a small story?” He fanned the deck revealing all the cards faces to the Dona, “Do you know Earth playing cards?”

Her head dipped and something within her expression relaxed, “I’ve counted a few,” 

“A woman of my own heart, “He replied, drawing the cards back into a deck to then fan them out again, this time only revealing the Kings and Queens of every suit.

“Four noble couples, eight powerful people throughout history, mythology and religion.  King David from ancient Judea, Charlemagne who united Europe under Rome, Pallas, a goddess and queen, Judith and Rachel saviours to their people,” Each time he mentioned a name the card would rise out of the fanned deck before sinking back into the whole. He went through the spades, hearts and diamonds before folding the deck back on itself again,

“All except one.  One who stands out, “ He gestured to a wine glass that sat on a small table by the Dona’s chair. In the glass was a card, the Queen of clubs, “She is sometimes called Regina, which only means Queen, “She alone is nameless, she alone rules alone.”  Tobias tapped his cards and made an apologetic gesture.

“Of course, this is where my story falls apart because “He once more gestured to the glass.  Tucked in behind the Queen of clubs was the King of clubs, only just peeking over the edge of the card,” There is a King, but I can’t see him.  He manipulates the Queen to do his bidding, but how?  For what purpose? I can’t tell.  It is, for this reason, I am here today.  Good Dona, do you have the answers I seek?”

What Dona Ilsa thought of the story, she didn’t say, but something in it made an impression. Her imperious self-control slipped, and she revealed the worried woman below her facade.

“To save my children,” She said quietly and instantly Tobias took a knee before the Dona.

“Dona, in this, we are engaged in your service.  You have heard of our power? Our deeds today have gone ahead of us to you?  Your children will be found,” He bowed his head and smirked a small victory smirk.  She was who he thought she was, “Only tell us how this all came to be?”

“A year ago, my five eggs were stolen.  Cro eggs are viable for years unincubated, so I held out hope for their safe retrieval.  But, money was demanded, money I had to find. Then a business proposal was offered, sell the blue dust to the humans, it seemed an answer I hadn’t dare hope for.”

Now that the story was out and the diplomacy had done its best, the others started to ask questions.

“Do you know who would have your eggs, how they got access?” 

“No.  All I have were the vague recollections from a traveller from Ardeyn.  They seemed to think that Cro eggs were taken to the Mouth of Swords.”

She gestured to one of her guards and spoke to them in a voice too low to hear. The guard left and returned sometime later with a hand-drawn map of Ardeyn with the Mouth of Swords circled.

“No more details?  Could we speak to this traveller?”

“Long gone, but I believe their story, I have to.”

“What do the eggs look like?  Is there any special treatment?”

“Each fits within your hands thus,” She held out her feathered hands and made a cup with both indicating the size of a small melon or grapefruit, “They are blue with white speckles. As to care, they are eggs and are fragile, but if you are gentle…?”
“We go through ungentle places, do you have something in which to keep them safe?”

Again, the guard was ushered over and they returned with a handled box, padded with cushions to keep the eggs safe.  This was handed to Tobias, who quickly indicated that Bruce was the best to keep the little ones from harm.

“Do you have any aids, ciphers and artefacts that could help?”

A third time the guard was sent. This time they returned with three ciphers, a force screen projector, friction reduction gel and a psychic communicator that could speak across recursions.

“Do you know what we are likely to meet in this Mouth of Swords?  What being holds sway or claims ownership?”
“I do not know.  I have had no one who can go there, no one who I could turn to for this.” She looked around the group and returned back to Tobias, still kneeling in front of her.

“For my children, I will tell you what you want to know.” 

“It will be done.” He replied, with such finality, it was like she had spoken a prayer, and he’d given his Amen. 

 He stood and joined the group.  Beside Dona Ilsa on the small table was a stack of playing cards.

“One last thing, Dona?  You do not think that Don Wycliffe would be behind the kidnapping of your children?”
“Why?  Of what purpose would they be to the Droods?” She replied in all sincerity.

“You compete with him over the Spiral Dust?”

“The Don was only angry with our house after we started the trade into Spiral dust.” The Dona acknowledged the feud between the great houses.

“Thank you, Dona.  We will not take up any more of your time.” Tobias bowed his head, never dropping his eyes from hers until he turned to leave with the others.

“I could have got to the point of our visit more hygienically,” Peggy grumbled as the group walked away from the mansion and back into the Glittering market. 

“ A little diplomacy costs nothing,” Tobias replied, “We don’t know the politics.  That the Droods and Cornaro’s have only had issues since the Spiral Dust was news.”

“So, Ardeyn.  Do we know how to get there?” Algernon asked.  It seemed that in The Estate Orientation sessions he had been the only one to pay attention to the history of Ardeyn and knew how to get there.  Bruce had listened, but it had lacked practical application and had slipped out the way it had slipped in.  Peggy had been far more interested in The Strange’s science than the actual locations, and Tobias had bunked off the classes as soon as he’d been able. 

“So are we going now?”

“Sure, I guess…” Tobias said before stopping mid-walk and clutching his chest, “No, I can’t leave yet.  Oh no, this is bad.  I can’t leave her behind.”


“What? Who?” Bruce asked, everyone was there.  For a moment, he thought maybe Ish-Ma-El, but it didn’t seem likely and said nothing.

“Avel!  She’s been wonderful.  She was all alone before we came, I couldn’t leave her behind now.”

“Ah, Rain…” Algernon tried to interject, but Tobias was too caught up in his thoughts to listen.

“Avel,” He said out loud for the group to hear, “ You are part of us now and I won’t leave you behind.”

Behind?  I don’t understand, She replied and hugged Tobias.  The embrace that seemed so warm, so familiar… Tobias’ heart sank in his chest.

“She doesn’t understand about us leaving.  She doesn’t know.  She’s a manikin,” 

“Rain, I don’t think she’s a manikin.” Algernon said, and Tobias clutched hold of the lifeline he offered.

“Of course, she isn’t!  She’s special, we all saw it! That’s why she had to go with us!” He prattled on, hoping someone could make sense of what was going on. 

“She’s not from around here,” Algernon persisted, and somehow, his words got through.

“No?”  Tobias stopped and thought, “ Of course, she spoke Slavic. She must be from Earth.  But now I’m confused…” Tobias sank onto his haunches, sitting on the branch in a very bird-like way.

“She’s not from here, because you brought her.  I…I think you’ve been dragging her around.”

“Dragging…wha…?” Reaching up to where he could feel Avel’s hand on his cheek, “What do you mean?  How do you know?”

“Well, she may not be related…?” Algernon said, trying to be helpful without saying what he thought he saw during the attack.

“Related…what do you know?”

Algernon squirmed under the cross examination, ” I saw her. There’s a resemblance…to you…not that looking like someone means anything.”

That wasn’t true.  Tobias knew it.  She was too familiar, her touch too comforting, her presence too calming.

“Well, are we going?” Bruce asked again, not unkindly.

“We have to go. You’ll have to translate us,” Finally Tobias said in monotone before drawing his arms around himself (and her).  He had no concept of the others adding him to their circle or the travel through the Strange. 

The first thing he was aware of was Avel, settling herself back into her tattoo on his chest.  He looked down not to see the white scarred Cro feathers or even his new yellow suit and shirt but a dark violet coloured exoskeleton and the tattoo now an inlaid crystalline design in the carapace.  He breathed out, thankful Avel had not been lost in the translation and looked around.

Bruce and Algernon looked as usual, though Bruce’s crowbar was still made of some fine-grained hardwood. His armour was heavy fabric with hundred of metal plates riveted into scaled brigandine. Algernon still had his crossbow on his back over the top of a thick gabeson, all in natural colours.  On top, they both wore heavy woolen cloaks and where Algeron wore a close-fitting hood around his head and shoulders, Bruce has a shiny metal bascinet over a chainmail coif.

Peggy and Tobias were something else again.  Thin and dark-skinned, the creatures seemed to be based on someone’s idea of Anubis, the jackal-headed Egyptian god.  Unlike Algernon and Bruce, these creatures didn’t seem to need a lot of clothing, decorating themselves in tinkling crystals and the barest essentials for modesty.  

On her dog-like face, Peggy had a curious look aimed at Tobias.  A slender dark hand reached out and touched the tattoo mark on Tobias’s chest.  

She screamed as her mind was swamped by anguish and terror that she had no defence for.  She was blind, deaf and dumb to everything except the mind-numbing grief and loss.  For a moment, Peggy strained against the emotion and felt too, underpinning it all, the terrible strength of protective love.  Eventually, when she felt she could take no more, she disconnected the link and slid ungracefully to the ground. Her first breath was a scream, and it didn’t abate until there was no breath left.  Her next breaths were uncontrollable sobs, the grief was too much, and it poured out of her like an overfilled vessel.  Tobias sat down next to her and reached out a hand in comfort.

“Peggy?”

“Don’t…touch! Not…just yet.” Was all she could say as she pulled away.

She wept unrestrainedly until either by exhaustion or the last remnant of the link disappeared, and she was able to gain a little control of herself again.

“I can’t describe that, not yet,” She said in a husky whisper, her throat now hoarse from screaming.

“I don’t think you need to, not with me,” Tobias replied just as quietly, his throat tight with emotion.  She had heard the screaming, but she had not connected to him.

Silently Bruce wandered off and came back sometime later with a large steaming teapot and mugs.

“Here, I think you both need a good strong cup of tea,” He handed each of the Peggy and Tobias creatures hot mugs and they all stood or sat drinking the bitter brew as reality reasserted itself.

They were in Ardeyn.

It was early morning, and the air was chill and damp.

It was market day in Citadel Hazurrium and people were staring.

They were not human.

Peggy had heard the voices… and not from Tobias.

Avel was…

“You live with that?” She finally asked, the practical Peggy reinforced by the hot bitter brew.

“It’s not always so…unrelenting, not for me, not since…well, not for a while,” Tobias stumbled over his words.  He felt numb and stupid and just wanted to curl up in a corner and sleep.  To sleep and dream of Avel.

“How long for?” 

“As… far back as I remember,”

“She’s…very aware of you…and protective.”

“And I’ve been dragging….her…? She’s been with me…” It was just too much to comprehend.

“Well, if you two are ready we need to purchase equipment and get moving,” It was Bruce. His words were enough to get the two creatures on their feet again.

“What are we?” Tobias finally asked Algernon who looked relieved to have an answer to that question.

“Qephilim, the original inhabitants of Ardeyn and the servants to the Maker.”
“Avel is here,” Tobias wrapped his arms around his chest and felt her warmth there, “So, there’s that.”

“Yes, what are we going to do about this parasite on Rain?” Peggy asked the group.  Tobias winced and shied away protectively.

“It’s not a parasite,” Bruce replied gently as neither Peggy nor Tobias looked up for much at that time, “It’s Rain’s Mama.”

“What?” She asked, stunned.

“It’s my m…” Tobias started to say but the word caught and eventually, he just gave up. 

“Come on, let’s start moving and see what we can find, hey?” Urged Bruce and the group  trudged together through the market, stopping every now and then for supplies, camping equipment, horses, tack and fodder.  Algernon remembered to buy a decent map and was given a detailed one of the whole of Ardeyn.  With it and the horses he worked out, the Mouth of Swords was a two days trip.

Horses were a revelation.  Tobias had never grown up around animals of any sort especially nothing as large and imposing as a horse. While the others put away their kits and saddled their horses, he stood and watched his, paying attention as he did a human he wanted to understand.  The horse looked back warily, a one-eyed stare over its big lippy face.  It spoke of fearfulness of the strangers and a tentative acceptance of new members of the herd.  The ideas were simple and appealed to Tobias at that moment.  He stood beside his beast and leaned into its warm side.  It turned its huge head and huffed in his face.  He breathed in its horsiness and breathed it out again for the horse to accept in return.  A handful of oats from the travel rations and a sprinkle of Spinner’s ideal and the horse soon relaxed and was resting its head on his shoulder.

“Calliope, that’s your name, isn’t it?” He asked her quietly and there was a tension of recognition. He soaked in its warmth and smell until the others asked if he was ready to go.

The day warmed as they travelled through the rolling hills of Ardeyn.  Very little was said, and soon, Algernon got bored of the constantly dull scenery.  He pulled out the puzzlebox and started fiddling with it, pushing sections this way and that, trying to find the part that moved to reveal the next step.  He wasn’t having a lot of luck when Bruce’s eagle eyes spotted what he was doing.

“Should you be doing that?” Bruce asked quietly so Tobias especially wouldn’t hear.

“Nobody said not to,” Algernon replied innocently.

“Which usually means you don’t,” 

“I guess,” Algernon signed and put the puzzlebox safely away.

They rode throughout the day until they found a suitable camping site. By the light of the fire, Algernon bound pieces of goose feather to a  thin sapling trimmed down to size.  On the other end, he glued a bodkin head of cast iron bought from the market  and checked it’s straightness by lining the whole arrow up with his eye.  Bruce watched until he was too tired and asked Algernon to keep an eye out while he slept. Across the campfire, both Peggy and Tobias has collapsed into bedrolls too exhausted to even eat.  As Tobias lay looking out into the darkness beyond the campfire, the sound of a lullaby drifted through the air around him.  Bruce and Algernon looked up from what they were doing and listened to the gentle song, in a language they could not understand.  Over the dark mound that was Tobias, a feint figure hovered.

Algernon didn’t understand the purpose or benefit of the song and worried that it might draw enemies to their camp. In the end he recognised the music itself was not maliciously intended and at such a low volume was not going to draw anything dangerous.

“That’s a mighty lovely tune.  Where’s that from?” Bruce said conversationally remembering it from their trip through the caverns under Dreamland.  Tobias himself had hummed the tune to his echo in the cavern and then sung harmony with himself.  It was as eerily beautiful as it had been back then.

Avel ignored the question.  Avel sung in Bosnia for only one and stroked his cheek.  

“Hush my little one, close your eyes,

The tears of day have all ceased.

Your cries are stilled and your tears have dried,

Hush, my darling one, sleep.”

The tune and the gentle hand were so exceedingly comforting to the restless Tobias that all pretence of sleep was soon given up for the real thing. 

The following day Bruce and Algernon went out hunting, testing out Algernon’s new arrow. They returned to companions refreshed and ready for the days travel and ready too for the feast of wild foods and game the foragers had found.  That day’s travel was as uneventful as the previous days and they made it to the Mouth of Swords before nightfall.   The camp was located and made a little way off from the foreboding portal.

40. The Glittering Markets

Having freed the mining town of Omoko from destruction by the Manihiki Ferro Navy, the group returned to Seattle.  Ish-Ma-El experienced a small part of the multiverse, realising that a world could have seas and lakes of water, and millions of people can live in one of thousands of glittering city. The wake celebrated, Ish-ma-El returned to the sands of Railsea as Bruce returned home to New Orleans with his Father.

**********************************************************************

KNOCK! KNOCK!

The old wooden flyscreen rattled in its frame as a heavy hand knocked at Yvette front door.  The day was unseasonable hot, and Yvette had welcomed the moisture-laden breeze off the Mississippi down the hallway to the kitchen where she sat.  The knock startled her, and she looked at the starburst clock on the wall.  Where had the time gone? She’d taken a break from her chores at ten, and it was almost twelve.  She swirled the remains of her now cold, chicory coffee and tried to remember what had startled her.

KNOCK! KNOCK!

“Oh!  Who could that be?” She said aloud to herself and then to the stranger at the door, “Coming!”  

She emptied the remains of her coffee down the sink, washed the cup, placed it on the sideboard to dry, and then looked around the kitchen.  Spotless as ever.

“It’s me, Ma,” Came her Bruce’s voice from the front door, “I’ve got a present for ya.”

“Bruce?”  What a surprise!  His job in Seattle kept him busy, but he did try to sneak down to see her when he could.  But why was he standing at the door? “Come in, boy, no need to stand on ceremony at your own door.”

She walked out the kitchen into the hallway, the breeze gently flipping her hair away from her face as it used to when she was a girl.  Bruce (was that boy still growing?) stood in the door looking…expectant? Concerned? She couldn’t tell. As she gestured for him to step inside, he instead leaned to the left, revealing the gravel path and front lawn behind him.

Yvette’s breath caught as her heart leapt into her throat. She reached out for the wall beside her, sure she’d soon run, faint or be sick.  It was the very last thing she expected to see, and like seeing a ghost, she found it hard to make sense of what her eyes were telling her.  

Standing in a patch of sunlight, enjoying the same breeze she had only a moment before, was Jimmy. Jimmy, her sweetheart, her love, her husband and the malignant shadow over her life.  He was older. The hair was greying at the temples in that way, they say, gives men more gravitas.  He was also thinner, unhealthily so.  But as he turned away from the breeze and fixed his steel-blue eyes on her, she knew.

“Now, Ma…Ma?” Bruce said from the other side of the screen door.  She felt her slippered feet shuffle back towards the safety of the kitchen, her refuge (outside of church, that was). Behind her, a murmur of low voices and the screen door hinges squealed .

“No…no Bruce, no..” She said as her hand moved from the wall to the vinyl backed kitchen chair, “Please, we’ve had enough ghosts in this household.”

“Ma…it’s not how you think.  It’s not how any of us thought…”

“When that…” She could taste the foul words on her lips and denied their expression.  Instead, she licked her lips, their saltiness adding a sting to her thoughts, “When he left that last time, I knew it was for good. I shut that part of my life down.  He was dead to me…and so was I. All that mattered was you and Johnny. “

She could feel the tears welling in her eyes and knew they weren’t for the her wayward man, “Even then, I saw how the loss of him affected you both.  John went wild, just like his daddy and you…oh, Bruce, I thought I’d lost you too when poor Chris died.  Such a big boy, you shrunk into yourself and almost disappeared, do you remember?”

 He winced, and he nodded, able to say nothing.

“And when you came back, you were…different.  There was no more talk of college or the future, just making sure that John and me were alright.”

Bruce stood silent, head bowed.

“But that was never your job.  That was…his!” She pointed a finger down the hall, past the flyscreen into the sunlight with a bitterness she never knew she had inside her,” He never saw his boy torn apart and have to put himself back together, never saw the sacrifices he made.  He never felt…” The words stuck in her throat.  She leaned into her son’s broad chest and cried.

They stood there in the cool of the kitchen as the clock ticked away the time.  

“Ma,” Bruce whispered after her sobbing ceased, and they stood in the easy comfort they had learned to share over the years, “He was taken away by some bad people, to a place he…he never hoped of escaping…”

“He chose that life, the one that had those people.  He chose!  For what he did to you boys… I will never forgive him.”

“Maybe so. But for your boy’s sake, will you give him a hearing?  He has a strange story. Trapped in a strange place.  My group went there, found him, brought him home.  He’s done strange and wonderful things, things you’d be proud of if you heard them,” He placed his large hand on either side of his mother’s face and lifted it until she was looking him in the eyes, “I am.”

Yvette stood and searched her son’s face for signs of falsehood or dissembling.  She could always read him like a book and was surprised to find none. All she saw was the kind of peace she knew from church—the peace of forgiveness.

“You’re proud?  You forgive him?”

“For my part,” Bruce nodded and gave a weak smile, ”I can’t hold him accountable for all the terrible things that happened to us after he left. For John or Chris.  And for the terrible things he did before…yeah, I forgive him.  Not to say I didn’t give him a hard time about it.”

Yvette snorted a laugh, imagining that first encounter between father and grown son, “I bet you did.”

“Ma, you have to at least listen to him.  I think…I think he’s now the man you saw in him.  I hope so…”

Yvette lifted her chin defiantly and pushed her son away.  She crossed the kitchen to sink.  After a few splashes of water, Yvette felt better equipped to deal with whatever happened next. She turned back to her son, who looked like he was holding his breath.

“Alright.  But out on the porch, I won’t have him in the house.”

“You’ll listen and believe what he says?”

“I won’t promise to believe anything that comes out his mouth,” She retorted, a spark of her former self returning, “I will listen as is my duty…I don’t promise anything else.”

Bruce held out his strong hand, and his mother placed her worn one in it.  Together they walked down the hall to the screen door.

He was still standing in the sun as they came out of the dark of the house.  His eyes closed, a small smile on his lips.  As the door creaked open, he turned once more to face them, the look of contentment melting under Yvette’s glare.

“I never thought I’d miss the smell of the Mississippi,” Were his first words, “But there was never a day I didn’t miss you, Evie.”

Yvette’s sniffed at the sloppy compliment, and she let go of Bruce’s hand.  She walked up to Jimmy and looked him square in the face.  

“You look well,”  She said cooly as he raised his left hand to touch her face.  She pulled away and glanced at a gold band that still wrapped his finger.  She shoved her own left hand quickly into the pocket of her apron and walked around him. Gripping his arm she felt the hard muscle like that of Bruce, brought on by physical labour.  She allowed her hands to slip across his back, broader than she remembered and felt a roughness to the skin under the thin homespun shirt.  She traced lines crossing and recrossing his back as he turned his head to look at her,

“They’re lash scars,”

She pulled her hand away as if burnt, “Lashes?”

“For insubordination.”

“Ah, so that’s what I did wrong, didn’t beat the sense into you.”

Jimmy turned away, and she could hear his voice was strained, “It was never anything you did or did not do, love.”

Yvette placed her hand gently on her husband’s back, “Bruce, could you please fetch the pitcher of lemonade from the fridge and two glasses?”

“Right, Ma,”  And Bruce was gone. He could certainly move when it called for. 

“I hear you have a story to tell?” She walked around to face Jimmy as he brushed away a revelaing tear falling down his face. It was more telling than anything he had to say.

“Yes, Mam.”

“It better be a good one.”

“Yes, Mam.”

Later that evening, as Bruce waited for his flight back to Seattle, he received a call from his mother.

“Ma, how are you?”

“What do you mean, how am I?  What am I supposed to think?”  Over the phone, he could hear her strength, her practical level-headedness had reinstated itself, “He comes back after twenty years, and the best you two can come up with was this story of kidnap and high adventure?  Who do you think I am? Robert Louis Stevenson?”  

He smiled. ”Does it make a difference if I say I was there? I saw what those people were capable of and fought the same fight.”

“And this is the Seattle job?  You said that was security.  I asked John about it, and he went and found excuses to be somewhere else.”

Bruce grimaced. He never told her about the work. He’d said he worked for the Estate, a well known philanthropic institution, as a member of their security department.  When talk of work came up, he always mentioned the personalities, Algernon the wunderkind, Peggy, the nutty professor and…Tobias. Rain. Never their exploits.  

“It is security, Ma.  We’re like police, keeping the world safe,” He finally admitted.

“And here I thought you were the one person I could trust to tell me the truth,”  She said heavily like the idea was almost too much for her to carry, “What a fool am I.”

“You’re never a fool, Ma.  I couldn’t tell you. These things are secret for a reason.”

After a long pause, she sighed, “Yeah, I get that, I suppose,” And Bruce knew that somehow his dad had got through.

“So, you catch the people who do things like what happened to your dad?”

“Yeah, we do.” He confirmed and was pleased to be finally honest with her, “So, does this mean you’ve given Dad another chance?”

“Oh honey, we’re very different people now,” She cooed in a manner he was very used to and realised she was trying to let him down gently, “We don’t fit those moulds anymore.”

“Oh, I’m sorry to hear that.”

“People change,” She said casually enough before,” He is taking me out to Old Town tomorrow night.”

“Really?”

“You know, I don’t remember the last time I went out, just for fun.”

“Good for you, Ma.” Bruce beamed. The sign for his flight flicked to “boarding”, and the announcements began.  He ignored it all, “You deserve a little happiness.”

“If you call scouring my wardrobe for something decent to wear happy, I’m delirious!” She chirped, and he laughed out loud in the near-empty gate, “Did I hear your flight called?  You better go.”

“Yeah, love you, Ma.”

“Keep safe out there.”

Tobias left the Estate early that morning, saying he had to go shopping.  It wasn’t until early afternoon when he finally went hunting for Algernon in the library.  Now free of the fear the tabooed subjects forced on him, Algernon was now spending his time researching information on an individual, entity or organisation called, Nakarand.  He was not having a lot of luck.  Even with a whole day’s work on the subject, he found himself covering ground that Rain had covered months before.  As he pulled over another report with the ubiquitous R.B. initials last on the check-out slip, something yellow caught his eye. 

He glanced up and saw nothing amiss but felt the weight of eyes on him.  He lowered his head, paying no attention to the words in front of him.  Instead, he focused all his thought on sound, smell and peripheral vision. A faint smell of the gunk Rain put in his hair each morning wafted through. Algernon found it a regular feature for people in this society and disregarded it.  He could hear someone walking behind the shelving beside him. The Librarians were omnipresent as always, it could be one of them? A splash of colour caught his eye, but peripheral vision is blurry, and when he tilted his head to look, the colour was gone. 

 He had no weapon with him and felt exposed.  Spotting a pair of scissors last used by the librarian who opened the files for him. He covered the scissors with his arm with a simple stretch and pulled them back into his lap.  Algernon had just swapped it to his main hand when a soft voice whispered over his shoulder.

“Studying on such a lovely day?” 

“If you want to sneak up on people, you should refrain from wearing yellow,” Algernon said without lifting his head from his reading.

“Why?  I snuck up on you, didn’t I?” The voice said as Algernon tapped the tip of the very sharp scissors against the fine yellow material of the new suit trousers.

“Ah.  I’ll remind you I was born Muslim and am circumcised,” Tobias gingerly moved around the scissor point and took a seat beside his friend, “A new look for the new me, like it?”

Algernon now raised his head and took in his friend’s new clothes.  A finely cut three-piece suit in egg-yolk yellow, a white-collar shirt and a dark blue tie spangled with stars.

“Not good for infiltration missions. You’d stand out too much,” Was Algernon’s honest assessment.  

“Standing out is what I do best,” Tobias sifted through the physical reports on the table between them, “I’ve read these… when looking up Nakarand.”

“Yes, I have been woefully remiss in my research of our enemies,” Algernon admitted, and Tobias’ eyes grew wide in realisation.

“No more verboten topics!  How is it to have a mind of your own?”

Algernon had to stop and think.  In one way, there had been no change.  The relationship between his senses and his body was as usual.  He had no memory difficulties or issues with cognitive abilities. 

“About the same,” He finally said, and Tobias shook his head.

“I noticed differences.  You don’t seem so afraid.  When did you last ask,’ was it safe?’”

Algernon frowned.  Fear had kept him alive all his short life. To not fear couldn’t be a change for the better, could it?

“I don’t know if I like that,” He admitted, and Tobias laughed low so as not to attract the librarians’ attention.

“There are other things.  The first time we were in Railsea, you tore apart a giant rat with your bare hands and a knife in a sort of frenzy,” Tobias started looking at little green at the thought of Algernon covered in the creature’s blood and shook it off, “This time, you were cool and calm.  Sabotaging trains, taking long-range shots from on top of moving carriages and sailing into combat, a serene force of nature.”

Not used to such effusive compliments, even from Tobias, Algernon blushed, embarrassed.  

“And now….Crow Hollow,” Tobias said expectantly, watching for Algernon’s response.

“And planetovores.”

“Yes!”

“I’m scared of planetovores,” He admitted, and to this, Tobias nodded his head.

“And for good reason. They eat planets.  How do you reason with them?  How do you fight them?” He agreed, flicking absently through the files in front of him, “ Fear is not a bad thing, but we can’t live a life of fear anymore.”

Tobias caught Algernon’s eye at this point.  It was always a topic they had in common, even if their response to fear was different.

“And how about you, Rain?”


Tobias’s usual gentle companionable smile faltered, and his eyes darted away and down as if checking behind him.

“Ah, seriously?  About the same.  You studied psychology for a while, didn’t you, ever heard of closure?”

“It was neurology, but I’ve seen it mentioned in the documentaries.”

“It’s overrated.  I guess you’re meant to walk away with a little peace, a little wisdom,” He raked a hand through his hair nervously and sighed,  “Well, at least Tobias is a good guy. It will be good to be him again.” He said, talking about himself as another person.  It would have sounded odd to anyone else, but Algernon was well used to his friend’s idiosyncrasies.  In fact, without them, Algernon would have thought him strange.

They spend the rest of the libraries open hours in research.  Algernon, continuing to find out what he could about Narkarand, Tobias on their next destination, Crow Hollow,  its social structure and culture.

…Though one of the more established recursions, Crow Hollow is not a large place, really only encompassing the Great tree (30 miles in diameter) that holds the Glittering Market, residence and industry of Crow Hollow.  

The people call themselves Cro and are sentient crow-humanoids.  Though flying is almost impossible at their size, gliding is available to all Cro and can be very effective with the help of thermals.  

The Cro industry is “acquiring” items from other recursions for sale at the Glittering Market.  The Glittering Market is the centre of Cro life and culture. 

There is no seeming governing body.  Instead, a set of families all related and allied to each other in a complicated web keep control of the Glittering market and therefore Cro society.  Two families are most prominent, the Drood family led by Don Wyclef and the Cornaro family, led by Dona Ilsa Conaro.  Most other families are either directly linked to one of the two ruling families or stay independent and pay protection money….

At the same time, Peggy was busy putting the knowledge she gained from their last trip to Railsea to practical use.  Seeing into the Angel’s mind had been a revelation. Though the Angels’ energy system eluded her, she was able to created a prototype of their propulsion system.  Still only small scale (a disc the size of a large plate), with more research, she was sure one could make one to carry a vehicle through the air.

At Bruce’s return to The Estate, they all gathered, as usual, to translate out from Peggy’s lab.  From her desk drawer, she pulled out a coin with a crow’s head on it.  It reminded Tobias of the small chest of such coins taken from Eldin Lightfeather in Celephais, but this one was a key, a direct route to Crow Hollow.  

“Who is leading the translation?” She asked, holding it out.  No one replied.

“Fine,” She replied tiredly.

“I just assumed you or Algernon would,” Tobias said, “I can. I did with the triplets.”
“We all can. They just do it better,” Bruce added, looking back at Peggy, who rolled her eyes.

“It’s fine. I’ll do it” They all stood in their accustomed places in the circle, holding hands, and she concentrated on the coin.  Minutes past, and nothing.  Finally, Peggy gave up and handed the coin to Algernon.

“I’ve just got my floating disc working, and all I can think about is that,” She sighed as Algernon flipped the coin over in his hand before closing his fist over it.

“You can do it. Just breath and focus,” Tobias said as a shot of the Strange tingled Algernon’s hand. 

“Oh,” He complained good-naturedly, “I wanted to do it myself,” Tobias just shrugged.

This time the translation went through, and the group were once more sailing through the Strange.  Once more, Tobias’ sped them through the inky blackness only punctuated by the fractal starscape.  Once more, Bruce’s ability lessened the shock of impact of translation into their new selves.

And new selves they were.  All four were now Cro.  Algernon was gangly and thin but otherwise unremarkable in his black feathers and wings.  Peggy also looked herself , with her lab coat over the scruffy dark feathers.  She had appeared with a book under her wing and was now beak deep in its pages.  Bruce looked most like himself, a huge Cro covered in a thick layer of black with his crowbar now in heavy wood, strapped between his wings. Initially, Tobias looked much you’d expect, a small Cro with a yellow suit, the slick metal Ruk wings folded behind his back.  Warmth from the pocket he kept the puzzle box made him examine the item. It looked the same as it ever did, but he felt a strong connection to it, a binding of sorts as if he himself were protected within its wooden mechanics.

“Ah, now that’s interesting,” He said, more to himself than anyone, ”I’ll have to keep this close, it seems.”

Simultaneously, he was aware of a voice speaking to him as if from a long way off.

Are you a magic user, a soul sorcerer? Said the female voice. It echoed as if they were a long way off, but he could almost feel a gentle breath against his ear. He turned to look around them, but though the place was full of Cro, no one paid them any attention.

“I imagine you could say that. Who are you?” He asked out loud.

Avel, I’ve been so long for this chance.  I know soul sorcerers can shelter ones like me.  In return, I can do things for you.

“O-kay,” He replied, more as an acknowledgement of what Avel had said than anything.  It seemed she took it as a sign of acceptance as there was a rushing of wind and burning heat on his chest.  Quickly pulling back his new tie and unbuttoning the collared shirt, Tobias revealed the feathers down his keel bone marked in a white pattern, like a tattoo.

“What is that?” Bruce asked as Tobias quickly redressed.

“More she than it,” He clacked, surprised to find smiling difficult with a solid beak, “I have a new friend, and her name is Avel.”

“And she’s a tattoo,” Bruce asked doubtfully.

“She manifests as such,” Tobias acknowledged with a shrug, “ I think I’m going to have fun in Crow Hollow.”

“Cool!” Algernon nodded as together they turned and took in their surroundings for the first time.

They stood, as much of this place did, in the shade of a massive tree.  The lowest branches swept the ground, making a path that climbed up the tree and through the canopy.  The higher branches were lost to leaves, but occasional rooftops or chimney stacks could be seen poking out.  The whole tree swarmed with black bodies, either Cro, walking on two legs and wearing clothing or actual crows, flying in small groups through the branches.  Beyond the shadow created by the tree, a thick cloud obscured everything.  Peggy could feel the Strange’s electrical buzz beyond those clouds and surmised that if one were to fly through them, they would end up floating physically in the Strange.

Cro glided from higher branches down to lower ones, and both Bruce and Tobias started testing their wings, jumping and letting the air drift them back down to the ground.  It was a revelation, and they acted like naughty schoolboys with a new toy.  Algernon casually scanned the crowds around them.  They’re antics were getting looks from the locals.

“You’re drawing attention to us,” Using his levitate he picked up
Bruce just as he leaped into the air to attempt a glide.  Bruce complained as he watched Tobias swoop around effortlessly, but had to admit they were making a scene.  With a shrug to Algernon’s carefulness, Bruce dragged Tobias back himself.

“We’re at the market, we’re going to want these,” Tobias remembered the chest of coins and started sharing them out. Though fifty crow coins sounded a lot at the time, it came to only twelve each with a couple of remainders, but it was better than having to use your resources to dabble in the market.

“It’s the magic of this place.  You can buy whatever you like. However, once you run out the payment in crow coins is made from your lifeforce,” Tobias explained, “Keep your purchases to these twelve, and you should be fine.  After that, I don’t know how it will affect you.”

“Okay.  We’re here, and we have money.  Where are we going, and who do we kill?” Algernon asked, his crossbow sleeky hidden under ruffled black wing feathers.

“No one, just yet, I hope.  I’d like to set up an interview with Dona Ilsa, we owe her an interview, and I feel she may be the most amenable of the two Beak Mafia bosses,” Rain suggested looking to others for ideas.

“ We don’t even know where their place of business is. Why don’t we walk through the markets and get a feel for the place first,” Said Bruce, and it was decided, at least until their coins ran, that they’d check out the markets.

The legend of the Glittering Market did not convey its scope.  Taking up most of the thirty-mile-wide tree, the Glittering market held anything that would fit on a stall and many things that didn’t.  Peggy eyed a stall full of handguns and lamented her steampunked pistol from 1890s London.  Then, on the stall was what she was looking for sitting amongst other odds and ends.  

“Fifteen crow coins, “ The Cro owning the stall said to her enquiries, far more than she had on hand.

“I do have this Beretta M9. Can I use this for trade?” She asked, and the Cro’s eyes flicked between his stock and the offered gun.

“Deal, “ The feathered hand extended over the stall.  As Peggy reached out and completed the handshake, two crow coins and the flintlock pistol left the stall owner, and the Beretta  replaced it on the stall, “Thank you for your patronage.” Peggy was now slightly richer than she had been at the start of the markets.

At another stall, Algernon and Bruce were going through the assortment of odd products of offer.  A sachet of powered pet, “…just add water!”  A third arm that grafts directly into its owner’s body.  A globe of glowing winged humanoids that was as bright as a torch.  Bruce watched as the little fairies tapped on the glass, begging to be let out. As they walked away, he sidled up to Algernon and whispered so the stall owner couldn’t hear, “Hey kid, levitate the globe and knock it off the stall.”

“Why?” Algernon asked, perplexed that Bruce would be a party to vandalism.

“I want it to break and let the fairies out,” He replied as they joined the other two at the next stall.

“Then how will they pay off their debt?” 

“Debt?  How do you know they have a debt?”

“They were obviously captured during some criminal activity and are now serving time.  What you’re asking is to aid in the escape of criminals. That’s very unlawful of you, Bruce.”
“That’s why I’m asking you to do it?” Bruce replied with a grim smile on his face.

“Oh, in that case,” Algernon looked back at the globe.  With a flick of his fingers, the globe rolled off the stall, bounced off the branch, down through the canopy of the tree and disappeared.  Bruce leaned over to watch as the globe shattered on the ground, fairies flying away in all directions.  

The stallkeeper rounded on a customer who happened to be the closest at the time.  A fight broke out, and the group quietly just left the area.

Further up the tree, Algernon saw something that made him stop in his tracks. Besides a stall was a low-riding red motorcycle.  Decorated in various company logos, the swept-back style was unique and unmistakable as the Akira bike.  

“How much is it?” He asked the stall owner without preamble.

“Five hundred crow coins,” The stall owner replied cooly.  It was more crow coin than all the party combined were likely ever to see.   Even pooling all their resources, they would have been lucky to make more than two hundred crow coins.  On top of that, there was the issue of getting the bike back to Earth without it translating into a standard Earth road bike.

“Five hundred,” Algernon scoffed at the man, “Does it even work?”

The stall owner turned the key in the ignition.  The thing purred like it had found its master.

“Sure, it turns over, but does it actually work?  I could take it for a test drive. Check it out?”  He tried for nonchalant and failed.  The Cro stall owner turned off the bike and pocketed the keys.

Slipping into the Cro’s mind, Algernon asked, “Where did it come from?”

“Bought it off another traveller,” He replied. The image of another Cro with spikey head feathers in a red leather jacket suspiciously like the one Algernon had back in Seattle appeared. The bike was genuine and out of their league.

“What get’s me is, if that’s the actual Akira bike, what’s the one at Ni-Challan’s?” Tobias asked as they began to walk away.  A bright something flitted through his view, and he turned to watch a group of fairies flitting around the stall owner.

“We should ask him-”  Algernon started before Tobias dragged him across to a nearby stall.

“Let’s look what this one has,” He said aloud before commenting in a much quieter tone, “Don’t look now, but there’s a group of those fairies you help escape flitting around the bike owner.”

Algernon made a casual glance back at the bike stall but didn’t see the fairies.

“You think they may want to help?”  He asked, turning to the new stall’s wares.

“Possibly, you did free them.  I just wanted to see what they’d do.”  

Algernon pulled out a few items from the new stall that looked Strangely interesting: a repellent for spore worms, a speed boost and a cloak that made you look ten years old.  Tobias was interested in the speed boost, but at ten crow, coins balked at spending all his coins on one purchase.  All thoughts of fairies disappeared as the old con-man awoke and made his play.

“It’s a one-use item, too rich for me. I could be interested in purchasing the cloak and the speed boost for five crow coins.”  

Tobias and the merchant haggled for a moment or two, and in the end, he walked away with all three items for the ten coins.  The speed boost went to Bruce and the repellent to Peggy, who thought it would make a good stink bomb. That left the cloak with Tobias.

“Why do you want to look ten years old?” Peggy asked suspiciously.

“I don’t, but it could be a good disguise, or maybe we can just resell it.  Buying and selling it seems the way this place works.” 

Peggy rummaged around in her bag with the suggestion of reselling and pulled out a well-worn but intact packet of hygiene pads.

“Here, see what you can do with these?”

Tobias laughed as he gratefully took the packet.  It was the exact same one Algernon had purchased for Peggy while investigating the Spiral Dust trail in Seattle more than a year before.  At the time Algernon had, had no idea what he’d bought, only knowing it was for Peggy.  Now Tobias looked at it with the critical eye of a seller.

“Hmmm, original packaging, good but not mint condition.  An intact, complete set of multi-use, high absorbent adhesive pads.”

Now the spiel was established, he found another stall and started chatting to the seller.  Building a rapport was easy.  Tobias had picked the Cro because he looked bored and ready to chat with a stranger to past the time. 

“The names Paco Derois,” He replied to Tobias’ query.

“Derois, so not of one of the great families?” Tobias noted, “But you would be in with either the Conaro or the Drood?”

“We’re independent mostly, though I do pay protection to Dona Ilsa. You can’t run a business in Crow Hollow without protection.”

As he chatted, Tobias wove his spinner’s ideal into the conversation, making the merchant feel at ease.  

Tobias is trustworthy

The hygiene pads were presented for sale, and the price of ten crow coins suggested.  They were something new and unexpected, and Paco accepted the deal without question.  A small silent cheer filled Tobias’ soul as he and Algernon turned to follow a murmur of upset voices coming through the crowd.  

Pushing their way through the throng were four large well-dressed Cro, all in black suits making a beeline for Paco’s stall.  As they cleared the crowd, each of the four pulled out automatic weapons and fired.

At the sight and sound of guns, Tobias leapt the trestle table that made up the stall and dragged Paco down to the branch.  Algernon took the opportunity to slip into the crowd behind the four goons unseen by anyone.  In comparison, Peggy lifted her head from the book she’d been reading and spoke a word that held more power than the force she gave it. From the word, a human-like creature made of smoke and shadow rose and formed from the branch’s dark places. Sensing its mistresses intented it launched itself at the first of the goons. Flying feathers turned into coin shreds as the umber wolf torn at the Cro. The crowds watching in horror now turned and flocked in to pick them up. Two of the goon’s companions came to his rescue as the third stepped forward to finish what they started.  

Bullet flew over Tobias’ head, and he knew nothing but flight, literally.  Dragging Paco with him, he fell off the branch and down through the canopy of the tree.  Stretching our their wings, they glided out away from the tree and away from cover. The goon taking his chance, shot after the fleeing merchant and Tobias.  He could hear the sizzle of bullets as they flew passed and he could feel his panic rising.  Pulling his wings back, he dove to the ground, outflying the bullets and Paco still carefully gliding away.  With a flip practised over the sand of  Railsea, Tobias used his diving momentum to curve back up towards the tree and catch up with Paco. He grabbed paco and sent them both diving into the markets lower levels around the trunk of the tree from the machine gun goon. 

Algernon watched the goon shot at the disappearing Tobias.  From the anonymity of the crowd,  he gave a small gesture, a sudden hard thrust forward, and the third goon was sent flailing off the branch.  Three goons left, and one wasn’t doing so well. Peggy checked her book and found a page that gave details about the umber wolf she’s summoned.  Realising the strength and ferocity of the beast, she closed her book and, like Algernon, disappeared into the crowd.  

Bruce alone was taken by surprise by the goons.  Watching from the edge of the crowd, he could see Peggy’s handiwork and her curly feathered head slipping away.  Algernon was nowhere to be seen, as was Tobias and the merchant.  There seemed little reason to get involved in the squabble with the mobsters and the shadow monster. He too stood back and watched the two goons struggle to keep the umber wolf off their friend.

Below, Tobias pulled Paco into the relative cover of a sunshade.  With the sounds and smells of gunfire still ringing in his head, Tobias was finding it hard not to curl up into a ball.  But, he needed to focus if he was going to make something out of this mess.  He was alone with a complete stranger. His friends left with four gun-wielding thugs.

Suddenly he was less alone than he imagined as the voice of Avel piped up, insisting she could help.

I can manifest for a short while and use my scream, She suggested, Or if you prefer, I can take control and make you strong…?

No, right now, I…I just need you to be quiet. I need to t…think.

I’m sorry, He could feel her agtitation and a desire to be of help to him.

No, it’s fine. He sucked in a shuddering breath and found the distraction of Avel’s conversation soothing. You’ve already been a help. We’ll need to have a chat very soon, I promise.

 He turned to Paco, a shaking hand checking for injuries.

“Are you okay?  Did they hit you at all?” He asked Paco, who checked himself and shook his large beaked head.

“No, I’m fine,” 

“Ah, what was that about?”

“I don’t know, looked like Drood’s boys.”

“But they attacked your stall. Why come down so heavy on you?”

Paco turned away, seemingly to check the crowd around them. Tobias got the feeling he was stalling.

“Um..I…I don’t know about you, but I could use a drink,” He said, and the shaking of his feathered hand set off sympathetic shivers to the rest of his body, “Do you know a place we can hold up for a bit?”

Paco nodded and led the way to a copula open on four sides with a bar in the middle.  Buying them both drinks, Tobias directed Paco to a table at the far end, facing the entrance.

Above their heads, the umber wolf ripped the last few feathers off its victim and disappeared in a puff of black smoke.  Algernon, Bruce and Peggy watched the goons help their companion back to his feet. They looked around the crowd menacingly before starting the walk back down the branch to the lower reaches of the market.  In the crowd picking up the last coins, Algernon pocketed what he had and turned to watch the goons leave.  Recognised him through the thining crowd Peggy joined him.  Soon Bruce made three, following Peggy’s lead.

“Well, come on, we have to go find Tobias,” Bruce said and started for the edge of the branch.

“You go on, I’ve got something I want to follow up on,” Algernon said, not taking his eyes off the disappearing goons.  Without another word, he moved off through the crowd in pursuit and was soon lost to them.

Peggy tapped Bruce on the shoulder, creating a link.

He’ll be right. Let’s find Rain.  She thought and leapt off the branch into the clear air.  Bruce silently followed.

It wasn’t hard to find Tobias in the end. As soon as they landed on the lower level, Bruce started asking the local stallholders,  “You see a wannabe peacock in a yellow suit?”  Spreading out they covered more territory. Peggy found him first and directed Bruce via their link to the pub where Tobias and Paco were talking over their drinks.  As soon as Tobias spotted his companions, he introduced Paco formally and ordered drinks for the table.

“I was terrified, Paco. We must do something about this! I won’t rest easy knowing you’ll be facing those goons again sometime soon,” Tobias cajoled Paco, one time leaning on their new friendship, another moment making the most of his still shaken state.  As Tobias kept pushing the subject of why the Drood’s would be after him, he could see the Ideal at work and Paco seemed to accept his desire to help.

“I did help Dona Ilsa store a shipment of blue powdery stuff for a discount on protection this month,” Paco confessed after a few drinks.

“This month, as recent as that?” Tobias looked at the other two, who had already made the connection.  Don Ilsa was still trading in Spiral Dust, “Well, that must be it.  Please, let me talk to her. Let me sort this out. You shouldn’t be a target for any of her schemes.”

Paco hung his head, a forlorn look on a Cro whose large beak nearly reached his lap, “I’m not important enough to get an interview with the Dona, but I can tell you where she lives, and I’ll ask if she’ll see you.”

“Well, you tell her what happened here, and you tell her that Tobias Cudo wishes a word with her.” Tobias took Paco hand companionably.

“Why?  Why are you doing all this?  For me?”

Tobias snorted, an unusual sound through a beak,” Of course, we’re friends now, and like pads, we stick together!”

It was all Paco needed to hear.  His shoulders sagged in relief, “Okay, I’ll see if I can set up an interview with the Dona.” 

Tobias sighed and smiled inwardly, knowing they were on the next step of this mission.

Now Avel, you were saying?

Algernon walked a few metres behind the three goon, completely unremarked and unnoticed.  The goons followed the path through the markets down to where they saw Tobias and the store holder go.  Along the way, the fallen one rejoined his friends with a clatter of feather.  Taking advantage of the momentary disturbance, Algernon moved in closer to pick up their conversation.

“What happened to you?” Asked the umber wolf savaged one.

“I was pushed! “ Replied the clumsy one, affronted.
“Yeah, right…” A third spoke up.
“I was. You must have seen them…”
“There was no one near you!” The first grumbled, dabbing at his wounds.
“Yeah, stop making excuses for being clumsy.”

He followed them down to the lower market where Tobias and the merchant were sitting in an open pub with Peggy and Bruce.  Algernon saw them first, and stepping aside, he took a knee and pulled out a crossbow bolt. He wrote two words on the shaft before carefully loadin the bolt into his crossbow. The asked a stall owner and were directed to the copula and the group sitting together. As a wedge, they cleaved their way through the crowd.  Algernon brought the crossbow up and aimed through the sights at Tobias.  Squeezing the trigger, the limbs jumped and threw the bolt forward, past the goons across the pub and into a wooden beam by Tobias’ head.  

At the table, all eyes focused on the bolt quivering in front of them until the two words resolved themselves into one clear message.

Will Robinson!

7. New and Old Business

The group, finding themselves in the deserts of Railsea, walk towards black smoke on the horizon and are rescued by The Limness, a moling train out of Bollons.  Things are looking up as their target, Caw Eh Carve, is a valued passenger aboard.  After giving directions to a fabulous black mole, the Captain welcomes the group to the Limness.

    *     * *    

Algernon spotted Captain Alavanti’s cabin boy and introduces himself.  Desperate not to let Algernon out of his sights and keen to learn the language of this new place, Rain follows along quietly.

Peggy followed the sounds of the engine down ladders into the darkened interior of the engine itself.  Black smoke meant leaking oil or insufficient burning of the fuel, either was inefficient and detrimental to other systems.

Bruce found himself alone on the top deck with the Captain wondering where everyone had gone.  

“Captain, need anything wrecked?”  Bruce asked hesitantly, unsure of the roleplay and lies the party had agreed.

The Captain looked the big man over and nodded sagely, 

“Let me introduce you to someone.”

Leading the way, Captain Alavanti walked back along the engine and down a ladder to the lower deck of the crew sleeping quarters.  Here the night shift were trying to sleep as others like the Captain and Bruce used the carriage as convenient passage to the rest of the train. From the second to the third carriage and up another ladder to stand on top  of the currently stationary train. Bruce looked around for the usual safety equipment he was familiar with from working on construction. Scaffolding, harness or something for the inevitable fall. Nothing but a wielded railing that looked like it could just about hold Algernon in place.  Walking along the top of the third carriage Bruce couldn’t help but hum the James Bond theme. Though the carriage roof was not flat but round and still swayed even when the train was still, he felt perfectly at ease and matched the Captain’s confident gait. They passed by two large crossbows that he was informed were ballistae.  Each was crewed by two heavily built characters whose job it would be to train their harpoon ladened ballista on whatever creature the Captain chose to pursuit. Right now, it was the Dreaming Sable.

The third ballista was crewed by only one strongly built woman with arms that rivaled Bruce’s own, covered in fine black tattoos.

“We lost someone a few days ago.  This is Taki, you’ll be with her while you’re on board.  Taki, this is Bruce. Show him the ropes.”

This is useless being parked up here –  this is not the job we’re here to do. Bruce thought to himself.  He looked at the contraption, a mix of metal, wood, rope and sinew and internally sighed.

“So, what do we shoot?”

“The …Mole.”  The Captain replied simply and left Bruce and Taki to get to it

Peggy had found the engine, a huge block of metal surrounded by two sets of stairs that lead down either side and in turn, were surrounded by a metal housing that was all that was visible from the outside.  It was twice her height and three times her length and accessed via attached running ladders on both sides.Here she found the engineer, a greasy runt of a man with an immaculately trimmed handlebar moustache.

“Engine burning low, why?”  She blurted out, her phrasing truncated from exhaustion from days of travel.

“Er…?”

“You’re wasting twenty percent of your fuel as black smoke, I followed it for six miles across this mole infested place.”

The engineer shrugged, 

“Diesels are smokey.”  This response did nothing to improve her mood.

“Who are you?”  She demanded as she walked the engine taking note of everything that needed doing.  When she reached the front of the engine, she stopped and closed her eyes, just listening to the engine as it idled on the spot.  The little engineer, not use to the technobable, slouch along behind cowed.

Through the constant and unceasing clack and growl of the engine she could hear the irregular rhythm of the engine as each piston pumped in sequence.  There was a timing issue with one of the pistons. It would need a tuneup and that would mean turning off the engine completely.

“Follow me, apprentice.”  She beckoned and the engineer complied.

“Make a list.  Get permission for an overhaul, a day minimum.  Replace all oil and resump. Replace this….” she said pointing to something streaked with residue from broken seals.

“Replace with what?”  he replied looking completely dumbfounded, “Do the Captain look like he’s made of money?”

“Right, well then we’ll just do what we can.”  She turned back to the engine and contemplated her next move.

“Hi, Elvin El Fawhl, is the name, “ said the young man about Algernon’s age extending a grimy hand, “welcome aboard The Limness.”

“Thank you Elvin.”  Algernon replied politely then steered Elvin away from the  rest of the crew, “How long have you travelled with the Limness?”
“Oh, this is just my first trip out of Bollons, just a few months now.  What happened to your train?”

“It fell through some weak rail a ways back, “  Algernon replied falling into a similar pattern of speaking as Elvin. “The crew were attacked by mole rats, we were the only ones to survive.”

“Mole rats!  We get our fair share of moles too. Caught ourselves a smaller great southern only just last month, plenty of meat in the chiller carriage.  What was your train?”

“Um…er…merchant, “  Algernon was starting adlib now in earnest as he tried to fill in the gaps of their lie.  “Yeah, we had a load of fine costumes.”

“Fine costumes?  Who’d want that?”

Algernon shrugged, “Someone with money.”

“I bet they’d be going to Manikiki, that’s where all  the money is.” Elvin nodded sagely now the expert in this conversation.

As the two talked, Elvin good naturedly gave a guided tour of the train from engine to the third carriage looking back onto the fourth and last in the train.

“We stays clear of the fourth carriage unless we really need to.”

“Why that?”

“Dunno, before my time. Er, fancy a meal?  Mess will be open ‘bout now.”

As they walked back Algernon had got to the heart of the matter, 

“So as cabin boy, what are your duties?”
“Stuff for the Captain, sometimes the trains Doctor, sometimes for the passenger.”

“If I’m to help you maybe I should be introduced to the passenger, what’s his name?”

“Er…sure, he’s Mr Caw Eh Carve, nice enough, keeps to himself mind.”

“Does he disembark much when you get to town?”

“No, not really.  Mostly just stays on board.  That is when we’re not picking him up or dropping him off at his tiny island in the middle of the Railsea.”  Elvin dangled out that tidbit of gossip like some sensational secret.

Caw Eh Carve was in the mess, sitting alone when the three of them arrived and Elvin pointed him out.  He was a thin gentleman with an impressive hooked nose made even more prominent by the addition of a pince nez. He wore a waistcoat and long sleeve button up shirt and looked nothing like the Cowboy as confirmed by Kamn Sharn.  If anything he looked something like a fussy business man on an enforced holiday.

Algernon steps up to Caw Eh Carve’s table, 

“My name is Algernon, I’m here to be your cabin boy.  It is a pleasure to make your acquaintance.”  

Rain gave an audible groan.  He’d had a plan for confronting Caw Eh Carve and now he was seeing the result of not sharing that plan.  With a defeated look, he sat down with a group of train’s crew and with his newly acquired Railcreole chatted to the like a native.

Bruce on the top deck of the third carriage was wondering how long until break.

“What do you do for a meal or a drink up here?” he asked Taki who, he had found out, was a woman of few words. She opened up a small compartment meant to for storing rope, spare bolts or harpoons and tools for the ballista.  Here she had stowed a bottle of warm cloudy-water and a few snacks from the mess. Bruce eyed the water, figured it was no worse than he’d had on other building sites and took a swig. It tasted of barrel but otherwise hit the spot.  Now he realised there were other bodily needs that were pressing.

“How about the facilities?”

She replied with a gesture to a patch of the roof where the railing was missing and a sturdy pole had been welded.  It seemed that the pole was a safety feature.

“Right.”  Bruce nodded and sat back down.

Rain was feeling better about chatting with the crew.  Once he’d opened them up, the crew were full of gossip about their infamous passenger.  It seemed that Caw was a regular on the Limness and the Captain often called in at the little rock island of his to drop him off with a load of cargo or to pick him up empty handed.  Though the crew were clear that moling was good money, they were sure that it wasn’t enough for the sort of travelling the Captain could afford and gossiped about whether the Captain was in on whatever Caw was.  They were also very informative as to why no one travelled on the fourth carriage.

“Ah well, see the Captain makes Eh Carve put his luggage there don’t he.” said one of the master butchers hired by the Limness to deal with the molemeat and make it ready for sale. “After last time, hey boys?”

There was general laughter and they all fell over each other to tell the tale how the Captains philosophy, the Dreaming Sable, was particularly fond of whatever is in Caw Eh Carve luggage and nearly wiped out the whole train trying to get access.

“Now we leaves it at the back of the train, less likely to derail the whole thing if the talpa gets a hankering.”

They also had a lot to say about almost anything.  Rain, by training, was a good listener and encourage talk on all subjects including the myths and legends, the gods and above all the Godsquabble that had created the Railsea.  Two gods particular caught Rain’s attention as they were described. The first and greatest of the gods was That Apt Ohn, a fat man dressed in black with a chimney stack for a hat.  The other was Rail-Hater Beeching. As the two gods were introduced, Rain smile widened as he realised the first was a clear description of the Fat controller from the Thomas the Tank Engine books he’d read as a child.  The other was a real person who had been infamous for closing down a lot of smaller lines all throughout Great Britain in an attempt to nationalise the Rail. Instantly Rain burst into a ditty:

Oh Doctor Beeching,

What have you done.

There once were lots of trains to catch, 

But soon there will be none.

I have to buy  a bike for I can’t afford  car

Oh Doctor Beeching what a Naughty Man you are!

Silence followed his song as it sunk in that the new chap has just called one of their gods a ‘naughty man’.  Taking the hint, Rain left the table and join Algernon with Caw Eh Carve.  Algernon applauded loudly at this sudden and surprising little song from his friend. It was the first time he’d heard live music and encouraged Rain to continue.

“Play it again!” he said as Rain slunk into the seat beside him.

“Maybe later.” Rain replied sotto voce, before turning to Eh Carve now all business.  

“I see you’ve been talking to my associate, that’s good Mr Eh Carve, because we have quite a few things in common.”  From his coat pocket, Rain pulled out his puzzle box and opened it to the only compartment that he could. It was full to the brim was a sparkling blue dust.

“So. You didn’t get that off me.”  Eh Carve bluffed.

“Sure we did, Kamn Sharn was so very helpful.  You see we took all that was left, and we took over the warehouse and we now own the other side of your little venture.”  Rain gestured to the dust and put it away, the impression made.

“You come here threatening me…” Caw Eh Carve started shouting getting the attention of the crew still in the mess.  Rain held up his hands in a conciliatory gesture. 

“Never threaten, not I.  I want to give you…advice.  My Earth does not need this stuff and so my advice to you is that you move on and pursue…other markets.  You are a well travelled gentleman, you must know of other places?”

His words had the desired effect and Caw Eh Carve seemed to deflate a little where he sat.  Now it was his turn to be conciliatory.

“Be reasonable.  Surely we can come to some arrangement.  I have a person I need to keep happy.”

Rain zeroed in on this.  Another person, someone bad enough to scare Eh Carve?

“What if that person wasn’t a problem.  We are also pursuing a murderer. Now I believe, Mr Eh Carve, that is not you.”

Caw licked his lips nervously as he weighed up what he had been told in the last few minutes. 

“I don’t think you realise what you’re getting yourself into.”

“Maybe, but surely that is up to myself and my associates to decide?”  Rain leaned back, he had his fish was just reeling him in. “Rest assured, Mr Eh Carve, we control the globe and the skull, you will no longer be doing business in my Earth.”

The silence between the two of them was physical.  Rain held the other man’s gaze with the full confidence of someone who had no idea of the consequences.  Eventually, Caw Eh Carve relented, taking off his pince nez to clean them on his sleeve.

“Don Whitecliff at Crows Hollow.  But I didn’t tell you.” He finally whispered low and painfully, like pulling a thorn from a deep wound.

“And Crows Hollow, where is it?  Here or…” he left it hanging unsure what talk of different worlds would mean to the crew.  Caw Eh Carve said nothing, but gave a withering expression to show that whatever Railsea was, it was not where people that frighten Caw Eh Carve lived.

“No, not here. Very well Mr Eh Carve.  I knew you could be a reasonable man.” Rain got up to leave Eh Carve when a cry echoed across the train.

“MOLE BREECH!” The cry filled the whole train and was repeated from mouth to mouth along its length.  The mole had been spotted! It’s breached! All hands on deck!”

Taki jumped up from her resting place leaning against the ballista and searched the sand either side of the track ahead.  Bruce stood up too in time to see the massive mountain of beast fall from breech to crash into the sand one side of the line, dive under and pop back up the other side.  It was in line with the train now and moving fast. Now that he knew what he was looking for, Bruce could see along the creatures flanks a line of harpoons broken, spears and trailing rope from previous altercations.

“How often have you shot this thing?”  Bruce asked trying to determine the best spot to hit the beast to have the most effect.  

“A few.  One time he pulled a ballista clear off the train.”  Taki tapped the bolts and metal plate holding the ballista in place. “But the Captain, must have his philosophy.”

“Philosophy?”

“I took you for a seasoned hand.  First time on the rails? Sheltered life?  The beast that gives the Captain’s life purpose.”

“Star’b!” A call from the Captain rang out over the ship and the train clattered across the switched in pursuit of the Dreaming Sable.

“Maybe we should aim for a soft target, like the face or maybe an eye.” Bruce mused as the creature leaped once more out of the sand 100 yards off beside the train.  It was heading straight for the last carriage. From his view on the third, Bruce couldn’t see the face, but another soft target was presenting itself.

Between the two of them, Bruce and Taki moved the ballista around until it lined up with the creatures behind.

“Come on you bastard, I want to take your temperature!”  Bruce roared as the ratchet was released and the limbs threw the harpoon straight and true.

“Bullseye!”  Burce cheered followed similar cries all over the train.  The beast was harpooned!

In response, the mole arched skywards.  As it fell it brought its entire weight down on the last carriage.  The train shuddered and rolled and the squeal of tearing metal could be heard.  Tossed sideways, Bruce lost footing on the carriage roof and was saved from being thrown off completely by grabbing the piss-poll.  Tika stumbled but also righted herself as she looked back to Bruce.

“Yeeha!”  Bruce cried again, swinging back on the carriage as the train tacked again.

“Port!  Port!” Came the cries over the train, once more the clatter of switches and the harpoons were back in range again.  None too soon as the ballista assembly groaned and yawed sideways under the strain of the beast and finally…

SNAP!  Like a gunshot the metal gave way and the harpoon and its ballista sailed through the air towards the monster.

Like a flash Bruce ran back up the train to the next ballista.  Its crew had difficulties in bringing the ballista to bear the first time the beast was in range.  Now, with four of them, they pulled it into place . The sable now free of the line rummaged in the fourth carriage for the luggage as Bruce released the ratchet.  The aim this time was a little off. The harpoon penetrated the skin on the flank but couldn’t burrow deep into flesh to hold and was quickly broken off. The line dropped and the talpa, its prize of crates in its mouth, flipped and dove directly down, back into the depth.

Inside the train, the few crew and the train’s passengers picked themselves up and assessed their bruises.  No one was badly injured, though from the look on Caw Eh Carve face, he had taken a fatal blow. He looked out blankly at what was left of the last carriage as the train pulled up alongside.  

“I guess that’s where your stock was kept, Mr Eh Carve.”  Rain commented making the connections.

“What makes you say that?”  Eh Carve vainly tried to bluff again the con man, more out of habit.

“Something the crew said.  The mole has a taste for your wares, this venture was not going to last long with those sort of loses.  You need us to deal with… your employer, if only to give you a chance to find another business.”

Caw Eh Carve said nothing but stare at the passive faced little man and then back at the ruin of this spiral dust empire.  

While the last carriage was assessed and hauled back onto the rail, news of Peggy working on the now silent engines had started spreading through the crew.  Opinions were mixed, but it was said the bullied engineer was abusing her name and praising her knowledge in a single breath which impressed many that heard him.

“Should we let Doc Peggy work on the engine?”  Algernon pulled Rain aside as the crew made themselves busy getting the Limness train-shape for travel.

“I don’t know anything about engines, better her…” Rain shrugged, just glad to have a moment to talk to his young associate.

“But we’ll end up going through a portal!” 

“I don’t think that’s likely here,“ he smiled relieved that Algernon’s fears were all the old reliable ones.  He changed the subject, “While I have your attention, when were you going to tell your bro’ about all these powers?”

Rain may have dropped the subject for the sake of survival, but he’d not forgotten that everyone in the party, to the exclusion of himself, had only the day before manifested superhuman powers.  It particularly galled him that Algernon, what he considered his partner against bureaucracy and mediocrity, had not once mentioned his theories.

“I…I’m sorry…”

“Like I know the word brother couldn’t possibly mean the same to you as it does to…”

“I wanted to…”

“And you talk to Peggy first?  You? I should at least be happy it wasn’t Bruce!”

“I was hoping she could help me work it out my theory.”

“Well, when we get back, we’re going to work it out.” Rain looked pointedly at Algernon who nodded wholeheartedly.

“It’s part of what we all do, even you.”  Algernon insisted, but was only acknowledged by the slow sad shake of Rain’s head.

“No, no Algernon.”  he held up his slender clever hands as if to demonstrate, “Nothing, nada.  It’s very nice of you to say, but don’t think I haven’t tried?”

The exploits of the new ballista crew member swept through the train as was the fact that the Captain himself was very pleased with the skill and commitment the recently trainwrecked, Bruce had shown in the hunt.  While the train lay idle on the tracks as part of Peggy’s stellar repairs, the Captain welcomed Bruce and Peggy, as well as their other associated to his dinner table that night. It was a small affair, the Captain, the four companions and Caw Eh Carve, quiet and withdrawn over his meal.

“With all your good work on the engine we’ll be ready to limp back to Bollons by the morning, eh Engineer Peggy?”  Captain Alavanti tried drawing the preoccupied scientist into conversation.

“Hmmm, yes.  I was wondering if you wouldn’t be interested in a duel engine system for future travel.  Crew could do repairs as required while still maintaining at least half power.” Peggy had been putting her sizable brains to the problem of keeping a training moving while also keeping up her heavy maintenance schedule.

“Duel engines!  Why I never…” the Captain replied flabbergasted.  And that was the problem, there were very few people in this world that ever thought outside of their preprogrammed existence.  It made Rain think of the difference between those with the spark who could travel The Strange, and those without. He turned to speak quietly to Eh Carve.

“You are well travelled man, I wonder what do you know about the awakened?” 

“Not much.  The awakened are more myth than fact.”

“So you’d have no information on spiral dust and its effects on the awakened?”

Caw Eh Carve looked up at Rain silently reassessing the little man.

“Toast.  To a brilliant shot and may there be many more until that black rogue is finally caught!” the Captain stood and raised his glass of rum.  The rest of the party did likewise. 

“I bet he’ll feel that one in the morning.”  Bruce added enjoying his new found celebrity.

“What we need sir is a stronger cable, maybe chain?” the Captain mused as they sat back down, now talking about his favourite subject.

“With all due respect sir, it wasn’t the line that gave way, but the wielding holding the ballista to the carriage.  What we need is to figure out some way of hurting it.”

Rain handed Bruce the Spying grenade, 

“That has an explosive. Not much, but get it in the right place…”

“What about that other cipher, the freezing one.” Bruce looked to Algernon who pulled out a small cipher that when connected to ammunition caused a cold effect.

“We could freeze it’s nuts off with that.” Bruce proclaimed making the Captain laugh.

“When the beast comes at us head on, you won’t know what to shoot, sir.”  Which made the table laugh, except for Eh Carve who silently drank his rum.

“Excuse me Captain,” Algernon interrupted, “the crew mentioned this was not the first time the Dreaming Sable had gone for the cargo.”

The Captain lost his jolly glow and glanced at Caw Eh Carve  nervously.

“Ah, that is correct.  We needed to move the goods to protect the train.”

“Does the creature hang around the source?”  

Now the Captain looked perplexed, 

“The source…?”

Rain made an intuitive leap, 

“Another recursion?” he suggested to Caw Eh Carve who replied with two words.
“Crows Hollow.”

“You speak plainly enough, but I can not make sense of your meaning.”  the Captain said and Rain turned back to the Captain, topping up both Eh Carve’s and the Captains rum.

“As I said when we first met Captain, fortune was indeed smiling on both me and Mr Eh Carve when you stopped to pick us up, we have much in common.”

Eh Carve scoffed and drained his glass.

Algernon also swigging down the rum was almost bursting with an idea and once again engaged with the Captain.

“Sir, on the …island I come from we attach large hooks to chains, baited with meat.  These we throw out into the sands and draw back, in the hopes of attracting a mole to our line.  This we also call moling. If we were to scale up the process, possibly use some of Mr Eh Carve product as bait…?”

“What and interesting thought!  What do you say Caw, how much would it cost to get some of your stock?” 

“Cost is not the issue sir, it is getting new supplies.” Eh Carve replied now more than a little drunk.

“Eh-Carve, are you really going back to Crows Hollow?” Rain asked again quietly once the talk moved back to the mechanics of fishing for the Dreaming Sable.  

“I’m thinking of looking for another place.”
“Probably wise.  Your key, could I take it off your hands?”

Caw Eh Carve shook his head in disbelief and laughed,

“I don’t think you know what you’re getting into but, sure you can have the key.”

The limping trip to Bollons took less than a week in which the companions entrench themselves into life on the Limness.  Peggy spent her time on the engine for which she was showing her usual focus and ingenuity. Algernon spent time on the top deck of the carriages in crossbow practice,  shooting and whatever he could spot. Sometimes Rain would hang out here and at those time Algernon noted that the conman did not show any of his nervousness around the crossbow as he did with the gun.  As for Rain, he spent a lot of time with the crew learning and teaching railshanties. His Beeching ditty had taken on a notoriety among the crew who were not as strictly religious and they were keen to learn more.

Railsea Shanty

(Bound for Botany Bay)

Alavanti, is our gracious Captain, 

There’s the first mate and all the train’s crew

There’s Eh Carve and any train passengers

What will us poor trainwrecks go through.

Chorus:

Sh-rash-shaa, Sh-rash-shaa Ras-kaba-tak

Sh-rash-shaa, Sh-rash-shaa Shrae

Sh-rash-shaa, Sh-rash-shaa Ras-kaba-tak

We follow the molin’ rail.

Dreamin’ Sable, the Captain’s philosophy, 

Will make all the Limness Crew proud.

When they catch it and take it back westward,

To ac-o-lades and great renown.

Chorus:

Miss Peggy she works on the engine,

Making it work smooth and slick.

She won’t care a toss for your favours, 

And she knows how to land a good kick.

Chorus:

Algie’s a crack shot on crossbow,

And Bruce smashes giant rats blind.

Havel can chat up wholesalers, 

Gaining best deals for mole meat you’ll find.

Bruce alone seemed the only one not content with life on the rails.  There were constant discussions of translating back to The Estate, which all lead to the inevitable problem of the globe being many miles behind them.  After days of being the “…train wreck survivor that hit the Dreaming Sable…”, Bruce was growing tired of telling the tale. He found satisfaction in helping Peggy in engineering, though mostly it just felt hot and crowded. When Algernon and Rain were on the top deck he sought them out trying to build a rapport. The rest of his time was spent on top of third carriage with Taki in companionable silence. Here he could exercise himself to exhaustion, practice with his crowbar and keep his deeper thoughts at bay.

On the sixth day after rescue, his keen eyes first glance land ahead even before the lookout at the bow of the train.  A long stretch of plateau covered in tiny buildings rising from docks down at the sandfront up to larger stone fronted buildings on the higher ground.  Bollon’s was a city of 50,000 souls and was the home of the Limness and much of its crew.

“Land ho!

The group, first off the train, followed Caw Eh Carve through the crowd of dock workers and family waiting  for the Limness. He lead them confidently through the main streets and thoroughfares as they made their way to his home in Bollons, a dingy one room apartment only just off the docks. It consisted of a bed and a small kitchen and a window opposite the only door.  As the group waited, Eh Carve pulled items out of his kitchen cupboard to reveal a false back. The back was removed to reveal…nothing, the space was empty.

“Ur…who has access to this place?”  Rain asked as someone knocked on the door.

Algernon’s crossbow came up and ready.  Bruce’s crowbar the same. Rain got the door.

“Yes…?” Rain stopped as present and past crashed together on the other side of the door.  Two men one tall and thin the other stocky, both in bowler hats. Rain’s eyes were only for the thin man with the cold stare. He clearly remembered numerous occasions when the gentleman before him was respectfully, almost reverently welcomed by Rain’s boss at the time, a gangster by the name of Louis Astra.

“Ah…Mr Lightfeather, what a surprise.” Rain said very politely almost bowing.  The thin man started at being recognised.

“It’s nice when my reputation precedes me,”  Mr LIghtfeather now focused on Rain who clutched at door for support. “How do you know me?”

“I worked for Mr Astra at The Last Shot, sir.  We were very impressed with your work.”

As Rain stumbled over his own racing thoughts, Algernon turned to Caw El Carve who looked desperate to find a way out.

“If you were to run, what would your key look like?”

“What?  Er…it’s a coin, with a crow.”

“Do you need to run?”

“That sounds like a good idea, yes.” Eh Carve agreed as Algernon put down his crossbow and opened the window.

“We’re here for Caw Eh Carve, give him to us and we won’t say any more.” Mr Lightfeather said from the doorway as Rain recognise the telltale bulges of hidden knives in his sleeves.  He turned to look at Algernon as the window opened and a silent decision was made. Rain slammed the door shut in Lightfeather’s face and locked it.

“I shut the door on Lightfeather!  Ohshitohshitohshitohshit.” 

Caw Eh Carve dove through the window followed by Algernon as Rain bounded across the room. Bruce and Peggy looking dumbfounded between them.

“What’s going on, why aren’t we fighting them?  Why were you all weird and polite all of a sudden?” Demanded Bruce, as Rain climbs out the window.

“Later speak, now run!” was the only reply as Rain dropped out of sight outside.

The party all follow Eh Carve out the window and down the alley between two buildings towards the busier main road ahead.  Behind, Lightfeather and his brawy companion, gave chase. Bruce and Rain were only just behind Eh Carve, Rain clumsily keeping up as he lept over mounds of waste and crates.

“Use to be good at this, I’ve got rusty at running away.” Rain thought,  “Damn, Bruce was right, I need more practice!” Two cries from behind made him and Bruce stop in their tracks.

Both Peggy and Algernon were caught each by their arm by the thick set man who was whipping them around to face his boss.  Peggy gave one of her piercing screams that rocked the thug on his heels, leaving him stunned. She then kicked him expertly between the legs before both she and Algernon continued to run down the alley.  

Faster than most could see, Lightfeather threw two daggers one towards Algernon and the other at Peggy.  Horrified, Rain and Bruce could only looked on as Algernon dodge his, Peggy screamed in pain and stumbled.  Again Lightfeather threw two daggers. This time Rain tried to deflect Peggy’s with his own, but Lightfeather’s daggers were too fast and both found their marks.  Peggy stumbles again, only just keeping on her feet. Algernon puts his hands up in surrender.

Desperate and searching around, Rain was surprised when Caw Eh Carve came to the rescue.  Pulling a device from his jacket Eh Carve threw it and a thick cloud of smoke settled on the area.  Beside Rain, Bruce looks down at him and smiled grimly before hefting his crowbar and running into the battle.  Lightfeather had by this time caught up with Peggy as Bruce rushed in, bringing down the crowbar in what would normally be a devastating blow.  Lightfeather brushed the attack aside, but it was enough time for Peggy to get away and around the corner out of sight of Lightfeather and his daggers.

The Bruiser dragged himself off the ground and squared up to Bruce  swinging with a haymaker that would have taken Bruce’s head off his he hadn’t dodged it in time.  As it is, a fist the size of Rain’s head whistles past Bruce’s own making it very clear how uneven the match was.

Lightfeather’s daggers flew once more.  Algernon and Rain dodged and together they ran up the alley to Peggy.

“Love your work Bruce, but the better part of valour and all that!” Rain calls to Bruce.  Peggy screams once more focusing her thoughts on the man who caused her so much pain. Lightfeather’s hands went numb and the dagger he had poised to throw fell to the ground as he was physically rocked by her attack.  While Lightfeather was distracted, Bruce made his escape and the party, now sans Eh Carve, ran out into the busy streets of Bollons.

“I think we’ve provided sufficient cover for Eh-Carve to get away.” Algernon said moments later as the group slowed and collected, trying their best to patch wounds on the move.

“Who the hell was that!” Bruce demanded again of Rain.  This time the smaller man obliged.

“His name is Elvin Lightfeather.  When I worked in a nightclub owned by a man named Louis Astra, Mr Lightfeather would occasionally come by and see him.”

“And…what was all that ‘love your work, sir’ stuff?”

“Look he scared my boss and Louis Astra didn’t take shit from anyone!”  Rain exclaimed, hoping to end the conversation. Bruce stared at him silently, the steely gaze more gripping than any bowler hatted thug’s.

“Alright.  Louis Astra, he liked to call himself King of the Stars…” when there was no obvious response from that revelation he took a deep breath, “…he was a mob boss. He had a lot of scary people who worked for him but everyone was polite to Elvin Lightfeather, even Louis Astra.”

“So, why didn’t we kill him?”  Peggy complained holding her wounded side.  Blood seeped slowly through her fingers and her face was deathly pale.

“We just tried to do that, “ Algernon retorted just as testily, “I don’t think we have a chance.”

“I can’t even comprehend the thought of fighting Elvin Lightfeather.” Rain said his face as pale as Peggy’s though he was uninjured, “These are people you run away from, not face off against in dark alleys.”

“But why did he attack.” Bruce wanted to know and Rain could only shrug.
“We got between them and Eh Carve.” Algernon supplied.

“No we weren’t, the door was open.” Peggy retorted as Rain moaned in horrible realisation.

“And I shut it in his face!” If it was at all possible, Rain went even whiter, “What did I do?”

“I don’t know why you didn’t go on one of your stabby-stabby attacks.” she rounded on Algernon ignoring the cowering Rain.

“I don’t know what you mean?” Algernon replied wanting the discussion to end. Rain looked from Algernon to Peggy now aware of his companions fighting.

“You know, the way you did with that mannequin in the wasteland.”

“I didn’t!” Algernon exclaimed harassed and…was that a little guilty?  Rain decided to step in.

“Now Peggy, you only say such things when you’re poorly.  Let’s get you somewhere quiet to rest.”

“No I don’t.  I always speak my mind.” she barked back noticeably swaying on her feet.

“Exactly.”  He replied as he looked around for a place for the group to hide, heal and rebuild.

To be continued….