The Black Lung Captain - Chris Wooding [176]
Jez stared. He wasn’t only after immortality in the literal sense. He wanted to be a legend. The smuggler who destroyed a city. Who joined with the Manes. And who one day might return at the head of a fleet of dreadnoughts. A man to strike fear into the hearts of everyone. They’d use his name to scare children. Be good, or Cap’n Grist will come for you.
“I’m a Mane,” she said. There was desperation in her voice. “You don’t need to do this. I can turn you!”
“Can you?” said Grist skeptically. “A half-Mane like you? I don’t reckon so. I know what you are, Miss Kyte. You ain’t the first. I had my suspicions back on the dreadnought, and I knew for sure on the Flashpan, after we’d dealt with the All Our Yesterdays. Should’ve taken you then, saved us all a lot of trouble. But I got you now.”
“Let me try!” she begged.
“You ain’t capable of giving the Invitation,” he said. “You ain’t even accepted it yourself.”
“The Invitation?” said Frey. “Is that what you call it?”
“Ain’t what I call it. That’s what it’s called. But I got another use for a half-Mane.” He tossed the sphere to Jez. She caught it automatically. “Make it work.”
Jez gazed at the sphere clutched in her hands. Just holding it made her nerves crackle. She’d known this moment would come, ever since Grist had confessed his desire to summon the Manes. No wonder nothing had happened during the month when they were searching for him. They’d been expecting news of some catastrophe all that time and questioning why Grist, who finally had his prize, wasn’t using it. Here was the answer. He didn’t know how.
But neither did Jez.
“I can’t,” she said.
Grist motioned to two of his crewmen. They seized Frey and pulled him over to a nearby table. One of them pressed a pistol to his head; the other was carrying a machete and forced his hand down onto the wooden surface. Frey struggled and swore, but they were too strong for him. Trinica folded her arms and watched, not a flicker of distress on her face.
“Try,” said Grist. “I done everything I could, but there ain’t no notes on this thing in my father’s research. And what I come to conclude is, it takes a Mane to activate it. You’re only half o’ what I need, but you’ll do, I reckon.” His eyes were dark chips of stone beneath his heavy brows. “So now I’m gonna give you one minute, then I’m gonna chop off your Cap’n’s hand. Then I’ll do the other one. Then I’ll start on his feet. When I run out of limbs, I’m really gonna start hurtin’ him. So I suggest you put your mind to the task, ma’am.”
Jez barely heard him. The crackling in her nerves had got stronger and stronger. The power in the sphere was reaching out to her, flowing into her, overwhelming her. She could feel the onset of a trance, the flip into the surreal otherworld of the Manes. She fought against it.
I can’t be responsible for this.
Thousands of lives. All that death would be on her head. Because she was a Mane. Because of the daemon that dwelled inside her.
I can’t.
The Manes would come, and they’d give the Invitation to anyone they could, and they’d kill everyone else.
But there was Frey, still struggling, even with a gun to his head. Frey, her captain, the man who’d given her a home on the Ketty Jay when she’d despaired of ever finding one again.
“Thirty seconds,” said Crattle, who was consulting a pocket watch. Trinica looked on, unmoved by Frey’s plight.
It wasn’t a matter of making it work. It was a matter of preventing it from working. The sphere wanted to be used. Its power leaped eagerly to her, threatening to tip her, to bring on the trance that she knew would be the final step in activating it. Once she let her daemon have its head, it would call its brethren. The eager voices from the Wrack howled encouragement, battering at her resistance.
All those people on one side of the equation. Frey on the other.
“Twenty seconds.”
How could she watch while his hand was chopped off, then another, then a foot? If