The Scar - China Mieville [255]
I have to stop this.
And then she knew how.
She knew what had been stolen, and she knew where it was.
As the vampir sawed at the age-fused rope of the last of the Grand Easterly’s bridges, a sword-wielding figure hurled himself up the slats. The vampir stepped back in surprise and fumbled for their weapons.
Uther Doul reached the deck. The vampir closest to him brought out her flintlock and turned it on him, flickering her tongue and snarling, her fangs extending like a snake’s. Doul beheaded her with a kind of contempt.
Her two fellows watched the tattoo of her heels on the wood. Doul walked toward them without hesitation, and they ran.
“Where,” Uther Doul bellowed after them, “is the Brucolac?”
Crying out with every stroke, Bellis battered at the handle and lock with the candlestick she had grabbed, swinging it with all her strength. She wedged it into the crack and levered. The wood splintered and dented, but the door was thick and well made, and it was several loud minutes before the lock gave way. Bellis bayed in triumph as the door swung open, bleeding wood chips.
She threw open Doul’s cupboards and rummaged under his bed, kicking at floorboards, searching for the statue. It was not in the weapons rack, or by the weird instrument he had said was a Ghosthead artifact. Minutes passed and kept her in agonies as she imagined the bloodshed that must be continuing outside.
Bellis found the statue suddenly, wrapped in its cloth at the bottom of a cylinder in which Doul stored arrows and javelins. With a sudden reverential fear, she cradled the heavy thing as she ran through the Grand Easterly’s empty corridors, finding her bearings, remembering where she herself had been held in jail, searching for the secure wing of the old ship, looking very much as if she held a baby.
The Lovers were gathered in a meeting room with those few of their advisors they could find. The fighting was not yet an hour old.
The Lover was yelling uselessly at the frightened scientists, telling them that Aum and Tearfly were dead, and that there was something tearing their city apart, and that they had to know what it was, to fight it, when the door flew open, its bolt disintegrating.
In the shocked silence, everyone in the room turned to face the Brucolac.
He stood in the doorway, breathing heavily, his jaw stretched wide and his teeth wicked. He tasted the air with his serpent’s tongue and cast his yellow eyes over the assembled. Then he swept his arm quickly, encompassing everyone in the room except the Lovers.
“Leave,” he whispered.
The exodus took only a few seconds, and the Lovers and the Brucolac were left alone.
They watched the vampir, not fearful but wary, as he stalked toward them.
“This ends,” he whispered, “now.”
Without speaking, the Lovers moved slowly apart, making themselves two targets. Each had drawn their pistols; neither spoke. The Brucolac made sure neither could get past him to the door.
“I don’t want to rule,” he said, and there seemed to be a quite genuine note of despair in his voice, “but this ends. This isn’t a plan; it’s fucking lunacy. I won’t let you destroy this city.” He drew back his lips, and he hunkered down to leap. The Lovers hefted their weapons, knowing that it was pointless. They stole a glance at each other but looked quickly back at the Brucolac, who was ready to take them.
“Stand down.”
It was Uther Doul. He stood in the doorway, his sword glinting bone-white in his hand.
The Brucolac did not turn around. His eyes did not leave the Lovers.
“I know one thing about you, Uther,” he said, “one thing at least. Armada’s your home, and you need it. And I know that for all your stiff-faced shit about loyalty”—his voice became very hard for a second—“the city’s the one thing you won’t betray. And you know that they will destroy it.”
He waited, as if for a response.
“Stand down,” was all Doul said.
“If the fucking Scar exists,” whispered the Brucolac, still without turning,