Read Driftmetal Page 15

the crew cabin. The remote that controlled my sub-signal crackler had slipped from Blaylocke’s dangling hand and was resting on the ground next to his bunk. I snatched it up without a second’s hesitation and shoved it into my pocket.

  I was free. It took me a moment to come to grips with it. I had the remote; it was mine now, and I could walk away. I could abandon this fool’s errand—Blaylocke’s words, not mine—and return to what was important: getting my Ostelle back. Getting revenge on the parents who’d sold me to the Civs.

  Once I had my boat back, I’d throw every last one of those stinking traitors overboard. I could already feel the smooth spokes of her wheel in my hands, feel her deck tremble beneath my feet as the turbines thundered. I could see her skimming across the sky, cutting a knife-line path along a misty yellow morning. I wanted to be there, walking through the clouds. I wanted to shut off the engines and let her glide, let the stream carry us away to anywhere.

  No more thinking about it, I told myself. I’m going.

  I moved for the door, but when I got there, I found I couldn’t go any further. It wasn’t because there was some force field blocking me. Not a physical one, anyway. It was because somewhere, down in the dirty black depths of my soul, a hint of morality was piercing the darkness like an ooey-gooey, compassionate beam of light. If I leave, I’ll be putting an entire city full of people in jeopardy. A city that might be the only true lasting remnant of the species I evolved from. Humans—humans like they were meant to be.

  In that moment, everything in me wanted to leave those stupid primies behind and never look back. Everything, that is, except the one tiny part of me that knew I couldn’t. Curse that part of me.

  “Time to get up, fellas,” I said. “Wakey, wakey. We gotta get off this floater before we’re knee-deep in law-lovers.”

  Blaylocke jolted awake; Chaz shifted in his bunk and opened his eyes. The two men looked at me with bleary, uncomprehending expressions. It was dark in the cabin, so I lit an oil lamp and sat down to wait for them.

  Blaylocke felt around on the floor, in his pockets, under the bed. He grabbed the overhead crossbeam and pulled himself into a seated position. He narrowed his eyes at me, then glanced around on the floor. “Where is it? I know you took it.”

  “Get up,” I said. “Vilaris and I got into some trouble. Pack your things and gather all the food you can carry. We’re abandoning ship.”

  I packed my own bag, then climbed to the deck to look out for Vilaris. He hadn’t returned after another fifteen minutes, by which time Blaylocke and Chaz had joined me above. The crowds below the cliffside elevators were beginning to clear out as night descended, and the winds howling through the canyon put a chill in the air. Many of the fires around us had gone out, leaving the twin cities to gleam on their perches far in the distance.

  Seeing my chance, I slipped belowdecks. A rush of warm air assailed me when I entered the furnace room. The potbelly’s slatted iron door squealed as I opened it to reveal the warm embers within. I took out the sub-signal remote and split it open with a chisel, ripped out its guts, and tossed the remains onto the fire. No more crackler. No more listening in while I piss and brush my teeth. They have no choice but to trust me the rest of the way. I threw another shovelful of coals into the furnace and was back on deck in under a minute.

  Vilaris jogged out of the darkness and climbed aboard. “I found a boat. It’s not as big as we wanted, and the crew’s small too, but it’s something. Oh, I should also mention that there are police officers roaming the airfield, looking for us. It took me a long time to get back because I had to dodge them.”

  “How far away is the ship?” I asked. “I’m just wondering if we should try bringing some of the supplies and food with us.”

  Vilaris ran a hand through his hair. In the moonlight, I could see a sheen of sweat glistening on his forehead. “We loaded the Clarity with enough food to last us three weeks. Chaz has all kinds of tools and tech stuffed away in there, too. I don’t see a reason not to bring a little of it, if we can. The ship is further out, fifty yards or so from the aft edge of Mallentis. That way.” He pointed.

  Blaylocke grabbed my arm. “Get inside. Clint, you too. Cops are coming.”

  We hurried down the stairs and into the ship. When I glanced back, Blaylocke was standing on deck with his hands at his sides, fists clenched, taking a deep, calming breath. Chaz was hunkered down in the stairwell, staying out of sight. My fate is now in the hands of a guy who hates my guts, I realized.

  The furnace room was still warm when Vilaris and I entered. The new coals were glowing red above a layer of white powder, and there was a burning plastic smell in the air.

  “What is that?” Vilaris said, wrinkling his nose.

  I changed the subject. “This couldn’t get much worse, could it?” I said. “I’m sorry for being a wanted man. This is more trouble than you deserve.”

  “Gareth won’t give us away,” Vilaris said. “There are times when his being uptight isn’t such a bad thing.”

  Muffled voices came from above, reverberating along the rafters. A smooth, no-nonsense cop’s voice. Blaylocke’s cocksure drone. Another cop. Blaylocke again. “You’re welcome, officers. I’ll be sure to let you know if I see anything.”

  “This is bad,” I said.

  “It sounds like they’re going away,” said Vilaris.

  “They want us to think so. No cop gives up that easily. That customs officer by the elevators recognized me on sight. There must be posters of me floating around all over the place. A reward for my capture, maybe. What would be worse is if some officer up there thinks he hit you with one of those pulser rounds and you didn’t fall down. Either they’ll think you’ve got some sweet new tech that protects your whole body from pulsers, or they’ll figure out you’re a primie.”

  Vilaris’s face hardened. “Okay, screw the supplies. Let’s just lock up what we can and come back for it later.”

  “No arguments here.”

  Chaz was still crouched in the stairwell when I opened the door, clutching the bag he’d packed. Blaylocke was standing on deck, stiff and unmoving, his back to us.

  Chaz looked as scared as I’d ever seen him. More scared than the day I met him, right after he’d found out I was a murderer. “Gareth told the officers he was waiting for his shipmates to get back with food. Said he’d keep an eye out for any suspicious characters that came by.”

  “Why are you hiding?” I asked.

  “In case we had to run.”

  “We do,” I said. “Those cops aren’t gonna give up until they find me.”

  “I know,” Chaz said. “They’re still standing right there. They’re on the bluewave, talking to headquarters about something.”

  We listened.

  The cop was talking in that smug, cavalier way law-lovers so often do. “… airship, approximately thirty feet, lone passenger says he has shipmates who have not returned. Refuses to allow us to search the vessel. Asking permission to board.”

  We all heard it. We exchanged looks.

  “We have to go now,” I said. “The hole in the side of the hull is our only way out from belowdecks.”

  Vilaris stopped me. “What about Gareth?”

  What about him? I wanted to say. I thought for a moment. “How many cops are there, Chaz?”

  “Two.”

  “Vilaris… go down and throw a big pile of coals in the furnace. The Clarity is taking off… one last time. Meet us in the control capsule.”

  I can only imagine how surprised Blaylocke must’ve been a minute or two later when the deck lurched beneath his feet. I was busy below, opening the ballonet valves and cranking the engines to full vertical. I hopped off my chair and grabbed my pack as I felt the ground pull away. When Chaz and Vilaris joined me, we hopped out through the gash and hustled off into the shadows, even as the deck began to ring out with the sounds of the cops’ boots.

  Taking cover behind a nearby airship, we waited for Blaylocke. I figured he’d build up the
gumption to disembark sooner or later. It turned out to be sooner. When we saw him hit the ground, we waved our hands and whispered insults at him until we got his attention.

  The last time I ever laid eyes on her, The Secant’s Clarity was putting on a brave performance, making her cumbersome rise from the floater and giving the cops a bear of a time trying to bring her back down. She drifted backward through the sea of ships at rest, bouncing off hulls and masts until she’d risen high enough to clear them. I wondered how long it was going to take those law-lovers to figure out we were using the ballonets for hot-air lift instead of cold-air ballast. Thinking about it still makes me laugh.

  Vilaris led us to the far outskirts of the airfield. We were so close to the aft of the floater that it felt like the stream was going to suck me off the edge if I didn’t keep two feet on the ground. The city lights were distant and diffused, lost in a haze of nighttime clouds. I searched the sky for the Clarity, but either she’d been swept away into the gloom, or the cops had grounded her somewhere in the airfield.

  It was there, on that remote corner of Mallentis, that we first met the Galeskimmer and her crew. She was a beauty of a streamboat, slender and flat-bottomed, with a pair of silver turbines and a single sail for riding with the wind. Nothing close to the size or power of my Ostelle—she was even shorter than The Secant’s Clarity—but for our purposes, she’d serve just fine.

  We had only