The Black Lung Captain - Chris Wooding [11]
“Need parts,” he said in his rumbling bass voice. After working on the engine for days, this was Jez’s first hint of a diagnosis.
“Expensive parts?” she asked.
“Yuh.” He took out papers and a pinch of herbs and began putting a roll-up together.
Jez watched his long, clever fingers at work. “What’s wrong with it?”
“Timing on the fuel injectors. All wrong. I keep fixin’ it, but it gonna get worse.” His accent was slow and hard, consonants like jagged rocks in the lazy tide of his vowels.
“Ah,” said Jez. She understood. Timing was everything in a prothane engine. If the mechanism was faulty, then it would need replacing. But the Ketty Jay’s engine was from a workshop that had long since closed down, and the parts could be tricky to find. She doubted Frey had the money to buy them anyway.
“Will it hold up?” she asked.
“She hold up for now,” said Silo. “But she could go any moment.”
Jez sighed. That pretty much summed up their whole operation. Held together with elastic and luck, straining at the edges, always ready to snap. Yet somehow it never happened.
Silo offered her a roll-up, out of politeness. She held up a hand and gave him a smile of thanks. Even if she smoked, she wouldn’t smoke that. Silo’s roll-ups were a blend from Murthia, strong enough to induce hacking coughs and limb spasms in even the stoutest of men. They were all he had left to remind him of the land of his birth, thousands of kloms to the south. Silo was an exile, unwanted everywhere, who’d found his home on the Ketty Jay.
As have we all, Jez thought.
She gave him a comradely slap on the back and left him staring up at the thrusters while she headed astern. The cargo ramp was down, leading into the hold.
A ball came bouncing out of the shadowy gloom and rolled past her feet. She stared after it, puzzled.
It was only the heavy thump of boots that warned her. She threw herself aside as an eight-foot-high armored monster thundered down the ramp in pursuit of the ball. Half a ton of dull metal and ragged chain mail plunged past her, missing her by inches.
Bess.
The golem pounced on the ball with a triumphant crash, skidding along the landing pad and fetching up just short of the landing struts of a nearby aircraft. She scrambled to her feet, her short, thick legs supporting a humpbacked, outsize torso. The ball was cupped in her huge hands, held in front of the circular grille that passed for her face. Twin glimmers of light shone in the darkness behind the grille, glittering eagerly as she stared at her prize. Then she raced back up the ramp and into the Ketty Jay, ignoring Jez completely.
“Crake!” Jez yelled irritably, as she picked herself up off the floor.
The daemonist appeared at the top of the ramp. He was blond-haired, with a close-cut beard, wearing an expensive coat that had frayed and faded with time. His forehead was creased with worry.
Jez regretted her tone immediately. Crake wasn’t looking good these days. His face was as worn as his coat. There were lines there, too deep for a man of thirty. Dark bags under his eyes.
“Are you alright?” he asked, wringing his hands. “I’m so sorry. The game got away from us.”
Jez softened. “No harm done.”
“She didn’t hurt you, did she?”
Jez waved it away. “You know me. I’m like a cockroach.”
“Honestly, Jez, that’s a little harsh. You just need a dab of makeup.” Crake cracked a smile, and that made her glad. She hadn’t seen too many from him lately.
She went up into the hold. Bess was sitting on the floor, her legs sticking out in front of her, patting the ball this way and that. An eerie cooing noise was coming from within her. They watched her together for a moment.
“She seems happy,” Jez offered. Crake didn’t reply. She looked at him. “How are you holding up?”
Crake frowned at her. As if he couldn’t understand what might prompt her to ask such a question. As if he couldn’t imagine what she