It brought Fogarty up short. He’d been so energised by good news that he’d been going off inside his head like a firecracker. His rejuvenation treatments must be affecting his hormones.
‘You’re not as stupid as you look, are you, Nyman? All right, let’s see… Clothes first. And a sonic shower. Then find me Madame Cardui – she can fill me in on what’s been happening. After that the Queen, then the Generals.’
‘She’ll be in the Situation Room, sir,’ Nyman said. He looked at Fogarty’s blank expression. ‘Herself, sir. Situation Room, sir. That’s where she told me to bring you.’
‘Yes, of course,’ said Fogarty.
The guards stopped Nyman at the first checkpoint – he’d insisted on accompanying Fogarty even though he had no security clearance whatsoever. Fogarty went on alone. His earlier ebullience had been replaced by a curious feeling of unease. For a palace that was no longer on Countdown, there were a lot of military personnel in the corridors and he even had to wait his turn at the suspensor shaft listening to stiffly apologetic guards as a stream of messengers took priority over the Realm’s Gatekeeper.
But when he did step into the shaft, his build allowed him to sink so quickly that he caught up with one group that had gone down before. They wore the armbands of reconnaissance messengers.
‘What’s all the activity about?’ Fogarty asked at once.
‘Wouldn’t know, sir.’
‘Couldn’t say, sir.’
‘Brass never tell us anything, sir.’
‘Thanks,’ Fogarty growled shortly, his head now on a level with their ankles.
‘You’re welcome, sir,’ the messenger’s voice floated after him.
What the hell was going on? With Blue back, the Countdown would be stopped at once. Unless there was some other factor he didn’t know about. It looked as though he’d come back only just in time.
He’d know soon enough.
At the bottom of the suspensor shaft, the lead corridor to the Situation Room was a bustle of activity as well. Fogarty used his elbows vigorously to push through the throng. Then the door guards spotted him and moved to clear a way. He pushed through the door and took in the scene at a glance. The war preparations had ratcheted up to high gear. Everybody was moving at the double. All three Generals were shouting orders. Every viewglobe in the place was live. Cynthia was reclining near the door issuing instructions to several of her agents.
‘Ah, there you are!’ she exclaimed as she caught sight of him. She must have been using some sort of suspensor technology on her gown for she floated towards him in the reclining position before rising gracefully to her feet.
Fogarty looked around him. ‘What the hell’s going on, Cynthia? Hasn’t Blue cancelled the Countdown?’
‘The Countdown is no longer relevant, dahling. Our friends the Faeries of the Night have launched a preemptive strike.’ Madame Cardui looked at him soberly. ‘I’m afraid the Realm is at war.’
Seventy-six
Hamearis Lucina, the Duke of Burgundy, projected a bluff, down-to-earth demeanour, but he had a romantic streak that showed in his taste in architecture. His keep was a Gothic nightmare, full of gloomy towers and turrets, pointed arches, flying buttresses and a host of gargoyle guards poised to spring down on the unwelcome. The whole structure clung to the edge of a remote, lonely cliff, constantly buffeted by the breakers of an angry sea.
Since a lifetime of military campaigns had collected loot aplenty, alongside several interesting scars, Hamearis could well afford the weather spells he needed to enhance the eerie atmosphere. Where others sought the sunshine, his lavish outlay brought perpetual fogs and rains, with frequent thunderstorms and howling winds.
It all meant his keep was the least visited of all the Great Houses… and the perfect place to hide a military secret.
Hairstreak’s black ouklo followed the cliff road, jerking erratically in the grip of the prevailing wind. His feeling of unease had nothing to do with the storm outside. The Faeries of the Night were united again. The war was under way. Burgundy was a staunch ally once more. In theory everything was going exactly as he’d planned and, with the element of surprise, victory was all but guaranteed.
Yet for all that, he had a feeling in his gut that the situation was somehow slipping away from him. It was a feeling that had been with him since the young Analogue boy had killed his vampire and disappeared with Blue. How had he managed that? There were aspects of the situation Hairstreak didn’t understand; and what you didn’t understand you couldn’t control.
The ouklo pulled into the keep’s cobbled courtyard – Hamearis kept horses because a horse had once saved his life and he’d been superstitious about the stupid creatures ever since. Hairstreak waited until his guards arrived to surround the carriage before getting out. He pulled his cloak around him and ran through the freezing rain to the great entrance door where Burgundy was already waiting for him.
‘Darkness’ sake, Hamearis, don’t you ever switch off this bloody weather?’ He threw his sodden cloak to a footman.
Hamearis looked at him in genuine surprise, then said, ‘Know what, Blackie – I hardly notice it any more.’ He placed a friendly hand on Hairstreak’s shoulder. ‘Come in and we’ll dry you off at the fire with a hot toddy before we get down to business. If you send your guards to the kitchens, the girls will entertain them. Last time I looked they had an ordle stew in the cauldron.’
Hairstreak ran his fingers through his hair and scowled when they came away wet. ‘I’d as soon we went straight to the tower.’
Hamearis shrugged. ‘As you wish.’
The tower was a remnant of the original keep. Some experts believed it dated to the time of the original Purple Palace. It certainly featured the same cyclopean stonework, on a larger scale by far than anything a modern spell could handle. Hairstreak always thought of it as one of those structures that would stand for ever, resisting everything that men and time could throw at it. He sometimes found himself wondering about the forgotten culture that built it. What sort of faerie had they been?
Small ones by the look of it. The only entrance to the tower was through a tiny oak door that gave access to a narrow spiral staircase. He wasn’t a particularly tall man himself, but even he found it cramped. Hamearis, who’d gone ahead, had to bend almost double and turn sideways. But at least it kept them safe from attack. An army would have to tackle those steps one man at a time.
He was sweating and his hair had steamed dry by the time they reached the turret room. Despite his discomfort, Hairstreak felt a tingle of anticipation. This was the real nerve centre of the Nighter attack. And what a contrast to the Situation Room beneath the Purple Palace.
Once, years ago, Apatura Iris, the late lamented Purple Emperor, had taken him to see the Situation Room in a misguided attempt at intimidation. Such scurry. Such bustle. So many people… soldiers on guard, women in uniform, messengers with bits of paper, aides to aides and aides to the aides of aides. There were three Generals, who looked old even then, and God alone knows how many wizards. There were viewing globes – scores of them – and cabinets full of elemental engineers. There were signallers and code-breakers, winter-makers and spell-breakers. There was a running armament tally. (What a mistake it had been to let him have sight of that!) There was a strategy table. There were seventeen communications consoles. All this and not even a war on. What folly! What incredible folly, exactly the sort of brute-force overkill the Faeries of the Light had always favoured.
How different to the turret room.
It was pleasingly spartan. It was pleasingly empty. There were no guards on the door to constitute a security hazard, no staff to listen in on every decision. None were needed, none were wanted. None could have gained access – the spirit guardians set along that exhausting staircase would strip the meat from the bones of anyone who set foot on it, excepting only Hamearis and himself. Thus Nighter secrets were kept to the Nighters.