Read A Clockwork Fairytale Online

Authors: Helen Scott Taylor

A Clockwork Fairytale (18 page)

“Why did you run away? Tell me what happened,” he demanded.

He gripped her shoulders and tried to look at her face but she hung her head. She didn’t feel like explaining anything to him. When he’d rejected her, it was as if he’d put a wall between them. “I wanted to see old Maddox,” she whispered.

“I told you he was sick, Melba. You should have waited for me to check on him. Come back to Waterberry House with me and we’ll get you cleaned up.”

She stared at her filthy, wet suede boots, meant for walking the skyways. When she ran from the infirmary, she’d forgotten to go up to the skyways. She’d instinctively gone down to the waterways she’d used all her life. How would she survive in the Royal Court if she forgot everything Turk had taught her the moment she panicked?

After what Gwinnie had said about the nasty nobs, she didn’t want to go to the Royal Palace alone. But Turk didn’t want to go with her, so there was no point in harping on about it. She had to be strong and look out for herself. Releasing her breath slowly, she pulled out of his grip. She raised her gaze and looked him steadily in the eye. “I’ve decided. I’m ready to go and meet me pa now.”

***

Turk had been frantic with worry when he discovered Melba was missing and he blamed himself for her running away. She’d knocked him for a loop with her proposal and he’d upset her with his fumbling idiotic response. He had no experience with emotional matters, or with women. He should have told her he was a monk, but he couldn’t bring himself to admit it when she thought the Brothers were unnatural.

According to Gregorio, Melba had witnessed Maddox being cleansed of the Foul Jinn and had run from the infirmary in a panic. Turk had expected her to be upset, but she stared at him with calm determination in her eyes.

Beneath the brown cap, her pretty face and bright blue eyes were no longer those of a ragamuffin. A few gold curls peeped out of the cap, and the brown suit stretched tight over her shapely chest and hips. She looked like a young lady dressed down for a lark. He glanced around the disorganized storeroom and then back at Melba. Perhaps returning to the bakery had made her realize that she no longer belonged here and it was time to move on.

Turk stood and helped Melba to her feet. “Keep your hat pulled down and your face averted so nobody recognizes you’re a young lady, Melba. We don’t want to be stopped by any bluejackets asking awkward questions.”

“Why would the bluejackets stop us?”

He was fed up with telling her half truths. It was time to be honest. “They’re looking for you.”

He expected her to question him, but she simply nodded. Her calm acceptance unnerved him. What had happened to the spirited, curious Melba he knew? Maybe her lack of reaction was caused by shock and she’d relax and be herself once they got home—not that they would have long to relax. He touched his pocket containing a note inviting him to an audience with the king that afternoon.

He grabbed an old blanket from the cot and draped it around her shoulders to hide the obvious female curves. The Flower Jinns danced around her head, sensing they were going somewhere. “You’ll have to hide them on the way back.”

“How?” she asked.

Turk rubbed his temples. He’d intended to explain this and so much more. “It’s very easy. Decide where you want to hide them, up your sleeve is usually a good place, then connect with them in your mind and instruct them.”

Melba closed her eyes and screwed up her nose in concentration. The three Jinns fluttered up her jacket sleeve. Her eyes opened and she peered after them. “It worked.”

“Don’t sound so surprised. You’re capable of much more than raising and controlling Flower Jinns.”
I wish I had time to teach you more myself
. But they were nearly out of time. The realization settled like a cold hard lump in his gut. From now on it would fall to the king to arrange her tutoring. Turk suppressed a sigh of disappointment and ushered her toward the back door. “We cannot use the skyways at this time of day. We’ll be seen.”

The early morning flurry of people had calmed as the sun rose toward the noon hour. They hurried along the rutted lanes of the third circle into the second circle, then took the quieter streets so they didn’t attract too much attention. When they started along the service track at the back of the elegant row of tall palaces where Waterberry House was situated, Turk started to relax. Then he caught the glint of the sun on gold buttons. He pulled Melba down beside a trash barrel at the back of a neighboring property and put his finger to his lips.

“What’s the matter?” she whispered.

“Bluejackets.” He angled his thumb toward his palace. And they weren’t just ordinary bluejackets. The smart uniforms told him they were Royal Guards, directly under Vittorio’s command.

Melba peeped out. “I see three bluejackets. Why are they here?”

“They’re the Royal Victualler’s men. He must have heard you’re staying at my palace.” How casual he made it sound when Vittorio had been scouring the island to find him and Melba.

“Should I go in then and he can take me to me pa?”

“No!” Turk’s heart nearly burst out of his chest. “He wants to find you
before
you return to your father. He wants to marry you and present you to the king as his wife.”

The little bit of color in Melba’s cheeks drained away. “I don’t want to marry
him
.”

“No. You don’t,” Turk agreed. “He doesn’t want
you
, Melba. He sees you purely as a way to gain the throne. He is not to be trusted. Remember that, my little Star.”

She peeped out again and Turk pressed his back to the wall, considering what to do next. They couldn’t risk entering Waterberry House, even via the skyways. If Vittorio had tracked him here, he might also know about the bunkhouse, and there was little point in going to his bolt-hole. That really left only one option—Turk would have to take Melba to the Royal Palace
now
. He glanced down at his grubby bluejacket’s uniform. Because he’d spent last night scouring the city for Melba, he hadn’t changed or bathed since he’d visited the trash barges yesterday. For the visit to the Royal Palace, he had planned to wear his best frock coat and have Melba beautified and resplendent in her blue silk dress. What would King Santo think when they turned up looking like scoundrels?

“Our only choice is to go straight to the Palace,” Turk whispered.

Melba nodded.

“But there aren’t any skyways into the Palace,” he added, thinking aloud. And if they presented themselves at the door looking like this, they would be tossed back out on the street.

“We could go in via the waterways,” Melba suggested. “I went right to the chamber beneath the Royal Palace once for a dare.”

In the interests of research, Turk had traversed the major drains beneath the city when he first became a spymaster. He had studied the layout of the minor pipes on diagrams, but he was no lover of crawling through wet muck in the dark. “The waterways it is,” he said, trying to sound encouraging. “As you’re the expert, I’ll follow you.”

Chapter Fourteen

The wise man sets a firm course. Only a fool lets the wind blow him where it likes
.

—Gregorio, Primate of the Shining Brotherhood

Melba crawled along the flood defense pipe that led from near Waterberry House to a main drain. She glanced over her shoulder at Turk as they passed under a patch of light coming through a grating. Poor Turk had bumped his head twice, and he was frowning with a mixture of concentration and distaste. He might be agile and fast on the skyways, but his tall frame did not fit so well in the narrow flood pipes.

When they clambered out into one of the bigger main drains, she heard him stretch and rub his dirty hands on his trousers. “Thank the Great Earth Jinn we’re out of that rat run,” he grumbled.

Melba stood for a moment in the darkness, nerves over meeting her father adding to the awful tightness gripping her insides at the thought of leaving Turk. She glanced over her shoulder at the deeper patch of shadow that was all she could see of him. How could he not want to be with her when she wanted him so much? She nearly pleaded with him to marry her, but pride stopped her making a fool of herself again. She had always made the best of her lot and that was what she must do now. She blinked, making out the curved walls of the tunnel in the faint ambient light, clenched her teeth in determination, and set off at a trot along the large drainpipe. The sound of boots slapping in the shallow water behind her confirmed that Turk was following.

The center of the flood system under the Royal Palace was close as they were already in the inner circle, and they didn’t encounter any other thieves or runners. They traveled in near darkness, their way lit only by the faint light penetrating through the air vents. When the echo of their footsteps grew loud and hollow, Turk touched her arm. “Sounds like we’re nearly there. Let me go in front now.”

She moved aside and he brushed past. Ten yards farther on, he slowed and halted. She came up behind him and peered out of their tunnel into a circular chamber built from ancient red bricks that must have come from the mainland. All six main drains fed onto the chamber, the dark openings evenly spaced around the wall. A draft brushed her face, carrying a strange cocktail of city, woodland, beach, and marsh from all corners of the island. The place was eerily silent except for the occasional drip of water. At the top of the chamber, light penetrated through four windows, revealing a staircase circling the wall.

“There’s a door near the top of the steps.” Turk raised an arm to point and she squinted, making out a small opening high on the opposite side of the chamber. “Let’s go up,” he said, jumping out of their pipe. He stopped and peered through a huge metal grate in the center of the chamber floor. “Don’t stand on that. It’s rusty.”

“What’s down there?” Melba joined him. She picked up a stray beach pebble and dropped it into the dark hole beneath the metal grating. She listened for a plop but instead heard a strange whistling. Dark smoke streamed up through the metal grid. She stumbled back and would have landed on her backside, but Turk caught her. She hardly had time to right herself before something crashed up through the grating, sending it clattering aside. She and Turk ducked to avoid the flying metal and then he was dragging her back, pulling her close to his body and trying to shield her.

“Keep down.” They ran back to the black circular opening of the drain they had come out of and clambered inside. Turk pushed her behind him and she crouched in the darkness, peering around his shoulder. A huge metal thing that looked to be half beast, half humanoid had climbed out of the pit beneath the grating. Its metal body was stained and dented and as it tried to raise itself from four legs to two, the old metal creaked and groaned, joints popping and tearing. The lower section of one of its upper limbs broke off and clattered to the stone floor, rivets tearing out where the joint had rusted.

“Great Earth Jinn,” Melba whispered, “what is that thing?”

“An automaton, probably animated by a Jinn. I’ve read about big ones like this but never seen one. It must have come from the mainland because it’s made of iron. We don’t make anything this big on Malverne Isle as iron rusts too fast in the salty sea air, and the tin we use to make mechanoids is not strong enough. It’s obviously protecting the palace, but I can’t think how it came to be here.”

“Me ma was from the mainland,” Melba said thinking back over her conversation with Gwinnie. “Maybe she had it put down here.”

They both stared at it in silence for a moment. It had stopped moving now and stood skewiff like a drunkard, one leg partially collapsed under its own weight. Melba pressed her tongue on the back of her teeth. “How will we get past it?”

“Stay here. I’m going to try something.” Turk slid quietly out of the pipe and took a step toward the machine. It immediately roused itself and with a terrible grinding and creaking swiveled to face him. He sketched the shape of an Earth Blessing in the air and his lips moved in a silent incantation. A tornado sprang up out of the rock at his feet, gathering dirt and pebbles into itself as it spun around. Turk directed it toward the mechanoid. With a crash, the metal creature toppled over, buffeted by the force of the vortex Turk had raised. As it crashed down onto the stone floor, bolts, cogs, and rusty shards of iron burst out in all directions.

Melba leaped out of the pipe to his side as the dust settled. “Hang on.” Turk put a hand out to hold her back. “Let me make sure it’s safe.” She crept a few steps behind Turk as he advanced cautiously and prodded the heap of bent metal with his boot. The arms and legs trembled as it tried to move, but Melba could see the thing was done for.

She crouched and picked it over, examining levers, cogs, riveted joints, and springs that protruded through holes in the body. “I wish I could see a mechanical creature this big working properly.”

Turk crouched beside her. “Maybe one day we’ll both have a chance to see such a thing.”

“Was that an Earth Jinn you raised to destroy it?”

He nodded. “Not a very sophisticated one, but it did the trick.” Turk rose and brushed off his clothes. “We must watch out for more traps.” He started up the crumbling brick steps. Melba followed cautiously with a hand on the wall to steady herself. Her fingers trailed through a slimy patch of algae and she wrinkled her nose. A few months ago, she would have wiped her hand on her breeches without a second thought. Now that she was used to being clean, she didn’t like having dirty hands and clothes.

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