Un Lun Dun - China Mieville [96]
“He led it away,” Hemi whispered.
“Good man,” the book said.
“Brave man,” Deeba said.
“Now can we please get out of here?” Hemi said.
They opened the front door, and stumbled out of the forest in the house, bedraggled, sticky with resin and plant juice, scratched, bruised, hungry, and exhausted, into the afternoon of UnLondon.
66
Skipping Historical Stages
People stared at them curiously. Sitting on his step opposite was the old man they had spoken to before entering.
“So in my opinion,” he said, “you should avoid going in.”
Deeba gave him a scorching look. “Let’s get out of here,” she said. “Hemi, can you find somewhere?” They stumbled off to a less crowded street, and Hemi read the signs until he found them an emptish house, where they washed as best as they could under the taps, went to the living room, and collapsed.
“What exactly was that…smombie?” Deeba said.
“They used to be really rare, but these days there are more of them,” Hemi said. “Smog gets everywhere. Into cemeteries, and through the earth into the graves.”
“How do you know so much about this?” said the book.
“Do you remember where I’m from?” Hemi snapped. “There’s not much gets people in Wraithtown more riled than mistreating the dead. We’ve been complaining about this for ages. Not that anyone listened.
“Smog gets inside bodies and pulls them around like puppets. Some are nothing more than skeletons with clots of Smog around their joints. Some are like the one we saw in there.”
“Aha,” said Deeba. “And sometimes they might look even more as if they’re still alive.”
“Yeah…Of course,” Hemi said, his eyes widening as he remembered the Unstible-thing.
“And how’d it find us?”
“The Smog must’ve sent them all over the place.”
“It probably didn’t expect to find you,” the book said. “There’d have been more than one. But the forest is well known enough that it was worth staking out. Which means that there may well be others, waiting for us elsewhere.”
Deeba held up the feather and turned it in her fingers. Its key-shape was made of intricate whorls and beautifully plaited threads of matter. Its reds and blues glinted like colored glass.
“So what now?” Hemi said.
“Well,” the book said. “That was the first task. There are six more. The next thing we have to fetch is the squidbeak clipper. That’ll mean going to the docks. After that we need the bone tea. After that…”
“We can’t,” Deeba said, twirling the feather.
“What?” said the book.
“What?” said Hemi.
“Look…what are we supposed to do with all these things once we’ve got them?”
“It depends,” the book said. “The clippers are supposed to, well, to snip something open. The bone tea’s there to send something to sleep. The snail…it’s not exactly clear what the snail’s for, but there are two distinct schools of thought—”
“What do you mean ‘it’s not clear’?”
“Don’t take a tone with me! I told you, prophecies can be vague.”
“Yeah, and wrong,” muttered Hemi.
“A lot of these things,” the book went on, “the idea is that as situations arise you’ll…sort of know what to do. Some stuff is explained in detail, some isn’t. Or it’s…well…contradictory.”
“This is ridiculous,” Deeba said. “Trying to follow prophecies is obviously way too hard.”
“But this was your idea,” the book said. “And look, we got what we needed, didn’t we?”
“Yeah, and it took us two days, and we lost two people!” Deeba yelled. There was silence.
“Diss is dead, and Cavea probably is,” she said. “Do the maths. We still have six more things to get. At this rate that’s going to cost us twelve people, and there are only six of us left, and that’s if we count you, book, and Curdle! And, it’s going to take twelve days. And I haven’t got twelve days! You know that. I’ve got seven at the most.”
“That started again, though,” the book said tentatively. “After the phone call. And the number may not be accurate…”
“It’s too long. And too risky. You saw what happened to Diss! We can’t do it this way. Like you said, we don’t even know what we’re supposed to do with this stuff.” She held up the featherkey. “Like, what do