Finally, the general came to. Drenched in sweat and so wrung out from the pain that he didn’t have air enough to yell. His throat was raw. He couldn’t remember screaming, couldn’t remember anything except Mr. Shunt’s laughter and the endless pain.
The echo of agony still rode the edge of nerve, skin, and bone.
Every heartbeat hurt.
Mr. Shunt straightened away from the general, his long, knobby fingers clicking down one by one to tuck into his palm like feathers on a wing.
Alabaster blinked, trying to focus. The room seemed too far away and too close all at once. It was nauseating.
“General?” Lieutenant Foster said from over his shoulder. “Are you well, sir?”
Alabaster unclenched his fingers from around the base of the chair seat, his knuckles swollen and sore. He ached. Every damn muscle ached.
He glanced over his shoulder at Lieutenant Foster and realized he could see, clearly, out of both eyes.
He had spent years carrying half a world of darkness with him wherever he went. And now, finally, the world was whole and his to see again.
To own, earth and sky.
He licked the salt from his lips and tasted blood there. “Perfectly well, Lieutenant,” he rasped. “See to Mr. Shunt’s payment.”
The lieutenant nodded once.
The six men in the tent all pulled their guns and leveled them at Mr. Shunt.
Mr. Shunt held very still. Except for his head. That he turned, almost unnaturally far, first one way and then the other to assess the men and the weapons aimed at his person.
“You, Mr. Shunt,” Alabaster said in his ruined voice, “have done us a great favor. We intend to thank you for it.”
Mr. Shunt folded his hands together in front of his breast and tipped his head down. “Are you sure you want to do that, General Alabaster Saint? Have we not an agreement already?”
“We got what we wanted, Mr. Shunt. I can’t say the same for you.”
Shunt hesitated, as if weighing that statement. Then he smiled.
“These stitches, these gifts are mine to give,” Shunt said quietly. “And mine to take away.”
One of the soldiers behind Shunt lifted his gun, aiming at Shunt’s head.
Shunt couldn’t see him. Shouldn’t be able to see him, since he stood well at his back.
Mr. Shunt flicked one finger and the soldier’s hand shook. A guttural scream started up out of the soldier’s throat. His eyes bulged in terror and pain.
The stitches around the man’s wrist slithered out of his skin, leaving a track of bloody holes behind. And then his hand, the hand Mr. Shunt had given him, crackled, wet and gristly as it separated from the man’s arm, and fell to the floor with a thump.
His gun fell to the floor with it.
The man was still yelling, couldn’t seem to stop yelling. He buckled to his knees, grasping at his stump that gushed blood.
“You have entered my agreement.” Shunt’s whisper could be heard, impossibly, over the soldier’s screams, as if he sat in Alabaster’s ear and murmured there.
“You will be useful to me, Alabaster, or I will no longer offer my kindness.” He flicked his hand again and the soldier writhed on the floor, limbs thrashing uncontrollably.
“Or mercy.” Shunt flared his fingers outward.
The soldier fell apart at the seams. It was as if each joint, each crease, each piece of his body suddenly separated, tied by different strings that had all, violently, been tugged.
The soldier was nothing but a quivering pile of flesh, bones, and meat in a bloody stew. No more a living thing than the sweepings of a slaughterhouse.
To their credit, the remaining soldiers did not fire on Shunt, did not move, did not say a thing. They awaited their commander’s decision.
“What game do you play, Mr. Shunt?” the general demanded.
“One with few rules,” he answered, “and high risk. To you. You are now a part of me, General Alabaster Saint. A part of my…kind. Held together with glim and strangework.
“My finger is pressed on the knotted string that binds your flesh together. And if I lift my finger…” Shunt opened his hand.
Alabaster’s new eye squirmed and pulled against its roots, lancing pain through his skull. Agony bloomed in his joints, fired down every inch of his spine. He held his breath, tightening muscles to hold his shifting bones where they belonged.
Shunt chuckled. “…you will come apart like a straw doll.” Shunt closed his hand and the sensation was gone.
“Fire!” Alabaster ordered.
The thunderous roar of guns unloading at point-blank range shook the tent and sent splinters flying through the smoke and flames.
Mr. Shunt rattled from the impact, one arm blown completely off, the rest of him crumpling to the ground.
“Lieutenant Foster,” Alabaster growled in the thick stench and smoke of spent gunpowder, “finish him.”
The lieutenant strode out from behind the general’s chair and stood above Mr. Shunt. He unloaded his pistol into the back of the strange man’s head.
Blood, black as oil, seeped from the holes peppering his body, mixing with the fresh ruby wetness that covered the floor.
Then, from within those holes, small brass clamps and bits of dull metal flickered like metal snake tongues, stitching up flesh quick as a blink.
Mr. Shunt stood in a fluid rush. Before Alabaster could react, the man was behind him, his remaining hand vised around the general’s throat.
“I am not so easily killed,” Shunt hissed. “Not by men like you.”
Mr. Shunt’s arm crawled across the floor, leaving a black, bloody trail behind it.
The soldiers in the room didn’t move, transfixed by the disembodied limb wriggling over to the hem of Shunt’s coat, where it then grabbed hold of the wool and clawed its way upward, slipping into the sleeve and refastening itself in place.
“So easy to unstring you, Alabaster,” Shunt hissed. “So easy to unstring all your little soldiers. And since you will not play my game—”
The men lifted their guns again, but Alabaster held up his hand. “Wait,” he groaned.
The men lowered their weapons.
“You want to play?” Shunt cooed. “My game. My rules: kill the hunter, kill the wolf. Bring me the deviser, and bring the witch. Both alive. If you wish to see the next season turn.”
“I agreed to kill the hunter and wolf. That was all,” Alabaster said.
“Then leave the witch behind. It is your suffering, not mine,” Mr. Shunt said. “And a short suffering it will be. You didn’t think my gift would last, did you, Alabaster Saint?”
He squeezed Alabaster’s throat, then let go, the razor tips of his fingers scratching delicately across his cheek.
“What do you mean?” the general asked.
“My gifts will not last. Without the witch’s spells, her binding of life to living, you will die. Soon, soon. Days, weeks. All of you dead.”
He clucked his tongue. “Poor men of dirt, bones of ash. So weak and frightened.”
He strolled out from behind Alabaster and offered him a wide, jagged smile. “Your grave hungers for the taste of you. If you do not kill my enemies, if you flee…I will pull the knots on your strings. Piece by piece, you will all fall down.”
The general pushed up onto his feet, holding the edge of the table and locking his knees. “I will not be threatened, Mr. Shunt,” he said. “And I will not bow to blackmail.”
“I do not threaten, Alabaster Saint. I make dreams come true. You took yours willingly. I gave you everything you desired. Dark wishes.”
“The witch for your bones, the deviser for mine.” He opened his coat and revealed the hole where his chest should be. In that ragged space was a terrible work of blood and bone and eyes and hands and mouths and things that should never be strung together. All of it moving, grinding, pumping.
In that strange work, dead center, was a gold and crystal clockwork dragonfly. So beautifully fashioned, Alabaster couldn’t help but be caught by the glory of it.