‘Here,’ I say.
She dribbles liquid into the little mound of grit I’ve made on the windowsill and I have my mortar.
‘Right. You go first.’
‘Yes, sir.’
That’s when it occurs to me she doesn’t know about our girder. Leona thinks I’m telling her to drop four floors. The fact she’s willing to obey impresses me. Anton is looking at her as if she’s insane.
‘There’s a metal strut,’ he says. ‘About ten feet below us.’
‘Fifteen.’
‘If you say so.’
‘Yeah,’ I say. ‘I do.’
Climbing onto the ledge, Leona wriggles between the bars, grips my hand and winces. Her palms are sticky with blood.
‘Ready when you are, sir.’
She finds herself dangling four floors above the street, with her boots a few feet above the girder. Looking up, she gives me a twisted smile, and nods.
So I let go.
Landing on the girder, Leona tries to balance, loses her nerve and panics, throwing herself forward to wrap her arms round the rusting bar. Her yelp of pain when she hits is louder than I’d like.
I think she’s going to fall to the street below, but she locks her hands and holds tight. It’s not enough to stop her slipping sideways.
‘Fuck,’ Anton says.
As we watch, Leona tips off the edge and finds herself hanging. Should have locked her knees round the girder first.
‘You can do it,’ Anton says.
‘Swing your legs up. Lock your knees. Work your way round.’
She nods at my order. It takes her longer than it should to scrabble upright. When she does, her face is white with pain.
‘Ribs,’ she says. ‘Sorry, sir.’
‘Broken?’
‘Yes, sir. Sorry, sir.’
‘They’ll mend.’
She rewards me with a sour smile.
Anton drops next. He’s taller than Leona, so once we’ve locked wrists and he’s dropped over the ledge, his boot almost touches the girder. All the same, he decides against Leona’s plan. No balancing for Anton. Opening his legs, he lands on the girder as if riding a gyrobike.
‘Shit . . .’
Not sure it’s a method I’d choose.
The girder is old and rusting and fixed in place with only three bolts at each end. No point Anton and Sergeant Leona having their brains dashed out if my weight is too much and the bolts decide to give.
‘Crawl towards the attic window. Make yourselves secure.’
My first problem comes when I try to get through the bars. Even with one bar missing, the gap is tight. Gripping the window frame, I drag myself through, one-handed, and hear ribs crack. Feels like Leona got her revenge.
My next problem is staying put while I repair the bars. Sliding the missing bar into its upper slot and bedding it down is easy. Replacing the mortar is harder. Scraping what I don’t use off the ledge with my knife, I flick it to the street below. Should have crumbled it. Still, it looks like dog shit from this distance. So maybe we’ll get lucky.
‘Sir,’ Leona hisses.
Three soldiers are turning into the street.
Give me three bricks and I could kill them all. But we’re out of bricks and don’t want to attract attention. So I wait until they’re gone, before dropping from my position to hang by my one hand from the window ledge.
Sven,is this wise?
For a second, with metal creaking and dry mortar trickling from the three bolts at each end of the girder as I hit rusting steel and cling fast, I feel icy smoke swirl through my thoughts. Then it fades.
The air is hot and Farlight breathless.
Night hangs heavy, and sweat slides down my ribs. It drips from my eyebrows and runs through my cropped hair. As the kyp roils with excitement in my throat, a fever tries to shake me free from my perch.
‘You OK?’ Anton whispers.
‘Of course I’m fucking-’
What’s the point of saying OctoV is watching me?
Even if it is true, which isn’t definite . . . But a wave of static makes the kyp sour my throat, and I suspect it is. The kyp’s faulty. Can’t remember if I mentioned that. It’s been faulty since it was fitted.
Gaining a kyp is a one-time action. Well, mostly. You could replace it. But then you’d need to rip out my throat and give me another.
I’ve never been worth that kind of money.
‘Catch,’ I tell Leona.
A second later, she’s balanced at the far end of the girder, gripping a shutter with one hand. We all hear the click as she uses my knife to lift its lock. What happens now depends on what we find.
Legba is kind.
Our attic has no bars. And its window is partly open. Lifting it, Leona tumbles through the gap. Anton follows.
Takes me longer. Reaching back, I close the shutters and click their latch in place. Then I shut the window and lock that.
‘Sir,’ Leona says.
Something strange about her voice.
A young woman struggles in my sergeant’s grip. Leona has one hand over the girl’s mouth and my dagger to her neck. She’s young, with blonde curls falling across her naked shoulders. Her dress is low-cut. So low, her breasts threaten to spill free as she struggles.
Anton’s spellbound.
‘Deal with it,’ I tell Leona crossly.
Dropping my blade, she digs her thumb into the girl’s elbow and grips. When Leona lets go, the girl’s too shocked by the pain to resume struggling.
Works for me.
‘Scream,’ I say, ‘and we’ll kill you.’
‘Sven!’
I ignore Anton. ‘Understand me?’
Blue eyes grow huge with tears.
This girl is pretty, in a useless sort of way. Some men like that. From the look on Anton’s face he’s one of them.
‘Do you understand?’
She nods.
‘OK,’ I say. ‘Release her.’
As the girl fills her lungs to shout, Leona muffles her. The look Leona gives me says it all.
‘You’re not listening,’ I say, picking up my blade.
Now the girl’s watching the knife.
Very carefully.
And she’s still watching when Leona removes her hand to leave the four of us alone in the attic with silence.
‘Anton,’ I whisper. ‘Try the door.’
It’s locked. Now how did I know that?
The attic is clean. Someone recently scrubbed its floor, but badly. There’s a bed, with a mattress, both old. There are no clothes on hangers, no hangers come to that. This isn’t a room for living in. It’s a place families dump junk they can’t be bothered to throw away.
‘You being punished?’
That’s the usual reason to be locked up in places like this.
‘No,’ she whispers. ‘At least, I don’t think so . . .’
‘My dear.’ Anton comes forward.
His face is grave. Something about her worries him. I should have known it would be her accent. ‘What’s your name?’
‘Sef Kam- Lady Serafina Kama.’
Leona slides me a glance. My face is neutral.
‘That’s high clan?’ I say.
‘Obviously,’ Serafina says. Then mutters an apology. Can’t work out why she’s bothering, until I remember she’s seen me tell Anton what to do. And he’s obviously from her world. So . . .
So simple these people.
‘Have you come to rescue me?’
‘Do you need rescuing?’ Anton asks.
Since she asked, the answer is obviously yes. But Anton and Sef are too busy being polite to follow the logic of that. The captive has a lamp by her bed. An old-fashioned lamp with a wick.
Power cut. Lamp.
What are the chances of that?
The attic has a small alcove containing a lavatory. So this was a bedroom once, before it was a storeroom. I do what my old lieutenant told me to do when entering any new situation. Take an inventory.
One door in, locked. One window, now bolted.
Shutters safely closed and locked.
One skylight in the alcove, too small to let me or Anton through. Although Sergeant Leona might manage it.
‘I could climb out, drop down, unlock the door from the other side,’ the sergeant says. She’s obviously been watching me read the attic. Bar, brothel, bedroom or battlefield, doesn’t matter which, there are times you need to lock them down or get out fast. First rule of anything: Know where you are. Second rule: Know how to get somewhere else.