The Black Lung Captain - Chris Wooding [79]
Amalicia, for her part, was obviously on her best behavior. He knew what she was doing. Seducing him with her lifestyle. Intoxicating him with the dream of aristocracy. Think what your life could be, Frey, she was saying. Why carry on with this foolish scheme of riches? I have all the riches you’ll ever need.
With money like hers, he could do whatever he wanted. He could build a dozen orphanages. He could make a mark, something to leave behind that said: Here was Frey. He might not have been perfect, but at least his life meant half a shit.
But already he felt caged.
Damn it, what was wrong with him? This was exactly what he thought he wanted. It was everything he’d decided he needed to fill the yawning chasm that had opened up inside him. And yet now that it was within his grasp, he didn’t want it.
It took five days of living in luxury with a perfect woman to make up his mind. After the soirée, he was leaving.
HIGH SOCIETY—“WE DO MEET IN THE STRANGEST PLACES”—PARLOR GAMES—A WINNING SMILE
he soirée was hosted by the Duke of Lapin’s third cousin, Aberham Race, and held at his townhouse in the duchy’s capital. Unlike the Archduke and his wife, Race was a devout supporter of the Awakeners and not afraid to show it. He used these soirées to drum up support for the organization, which was suffering under progressively harsher edicts passed down against it by the Archduke. Frey thought that punishment was only fair, really, since the Awakeners were behind the murder of the Archduke’s son the winter before last.
Politics had always depressed him, so he paid only cursory attention to Amalicia’s explanations as they rattled along the cobbled avenues in the back of a motorized carriage. Crake sat opposite Frey and Amalicia, looking slick and composed. Frey had known him so long that it was easy to forget he was born to the aristocracy. His accent had become so familiar that Frey didn’t notice it anymore. But seeing him dressed up this way, listening to his polite banter with Amalicia, Frey was reminded of the vast difference in the circumstances of their birth. Amalicia seemed rather charmed by Crake, despite her initial reservations. She viewed all Frey’s companions with mistrust, as if she held them responsible for her lover’s long absences.
The townhouse stood in a tree-lined avenue facing a lamplit park. They pulled up outside and a doorman showed them in. A manservant led them upstairs into a series of large drawing rooms, where the soirée was already well under way.
Frey had to resist the urge to stare. There were glittering chandeliers, gold ceiling roses, and embroidered drapes. A glass swan presided over a table of canapés, none of which Frey recognized as food. Bizarre sculptures, apparently designed to intimidate the uneducated, threatened him from their pedestals.
The guests were no less magnificent and alien. The men wore jackets stitched with gold and silver thread; the ladies wore gowns and jewels and glittering headpieces. Frey felt suddenly and completely out of his depth. He was outnumbered here. What did he have in common with these people? Did they even speak the same language he did?
“You look a little gray, Cap’n,” Crake said, with a hint of amusement in his voice.
“Don’t call me that,” Frey replied. “You’re my cousin, remember?”
“I remember, dear cousin.” Crake smirked. Frey had the unpleasant feeling that the daemonist was enjoying his discomfort.
A manservant approached with a tray full of glasses of bubbling wine. They all took one.
“Stay sharp tonight,” Frey reminded Crake, indicating the drink in his hand. “We’ve got a job to do.”
“Oh, don’t worry about me,” said Crake. He glanced off to Frey’s right and muttered, “Incoming.”
A portly middle-aged woman was making her way across the room toward them. The wrinkles in her sun-beaten face were buried under a thick plaster of makeup. “Amalicia Thade,” she said. “So glad you could come.”
“I wouldn’t think of missing it,” Amalicia replied, smiling. She turned to Frey and Crake, offering introductions. “This is Lady Marilla Race, our hostess.