Read God's War Online

Authors: Kameron Hurley

Tags: #Fiction, #Science Fiction, #General, #Action & Adventure, #Military

God's War (11 page)

She took a deep breath, exhaled, and
pulled the letter out of her dhoti.

Recompense for
the apprehension of the terrorist is negotiable
.

She closed her eyes. She was thirty-two
years old, and every bone in her body hurt, every joint, every muscle. Some
mornings, she woke up so stiff she had to roll herself out of bed and stretch
for a quarter-hour just so she could stand without pain.

Nyx sat on the edge of the desk. She
didn’t have the money to replace any more body parts, and she wasn’t so sure
that any magician could tell her what needed replacing even if she could afford
it. Yah Tayyib once told her she needed a new heart.

She’d thought he was serious.

This bounty wouldn’t buy her a new
heart. It wouldn’t fix anything she’d broken. But it might get her out of this
hole and working closer to the wealthy Orrizo district in Mushtallah, dressing
real fine, getting patched up by the best, and getting all the good notes.
My life for a thousand
.

She wanted a new life: a life she
could trade for something more worthwhile than twenty bloody notes and the
contempt of a bunch of refugees.

 

7

At dawn, Nyx made Khos drive her and
Rhys out to the central train station in Basmah, following the long scar of the
elevated tracks the whole way. The local, intercity trains didn’t run anymore,
and hadn’t in about three years. The Chenjans had taken out the main line
between Punjai and Basmah so many times that the Transit Authority had stopped
sending out tissue mechanics to fix it. They used to come back at least one
woman short after every run. Most of the busted tracks were planted with mines
and bursts now.

The threat of Chenjan terrorism kept
train tickets on the working long-distance lines exorbitant. Nyx had ridden the
train only twice in her life—to and from the front.

Khos got them within a hundred yards
of the station before the crowd of bakkies, rickshaws, and pedestrians brought
them to a standstill. Half a dozen security techs dressed in red burnouses
prowled the station with enormous sand cats on heavy chains.

Nyx shouldered her pack and slammed
the door. She said to Khos through the open window, “Don’t give Anneke any
shit. Taite’s in charge. If he says fuck off, you do it.”

“He knows where to find me,” Khos
said, and grinned. He and Taite were fast friends, disparate brothers from
foreign countries who went to mixed brothels together, back before Taite had a
boyfriend. Nyx wasn’t sure why the friendship annoyed her. Maybe because she
didn’t understand it. When had she ever had a friend close enough to go to
brothels with? Not since grade school.

“Just don’t blow all your money on
girls and wine. I need you to keep your head clear for whatever I bring back.
Don’t throw it all away on some green girl.”

“I like them green.”

“Virgins are boring,” Nyx said.
“What is it with Mhorians and virgins?”

She caught Khos blushing before he
turned away. It was remarkable how red he could get. Nyx waved him off. He gave
a blast of the horn and backed away from the station. She watched him go. She
was worried about what all that time at the brothels meant. She was worried,
too, about the team, about how long she could keep them working for so little.
It had been a long time.

Nyx turned and saw Rhys standing at
the edge of the crowd. They didn’t give him much space. He kept a firm footing,
though creepers bumped into him with their nets and at least one child spit at
him. He was the only black man in view for as far as Nyx could see—a black
roach skittering along a sea of sand.

The station reared up behind him,
gold-colored stone perched on a series of pointed arches that the bustling mob
slowly pushed through on their way to the platforms and ticket desk.

Nyx elbowed her way into the swarm
and looked back once to make sure Rhys was following unmolested. The arches
leading into the station were plastered with martyrs’ letters from women who’d
volunteered for the front. A couple of pushy women dressed in the prophet’s
green were handing out copies of the latest propaganda sheets and shiny
carcasses of pretty holiday beetles, insects known for their cowardly aversion
to loud noises.

Nyx shouldered past, and the look
she gave the green-clad women was enough to make both of them jerk their hands
away from her, withdrawing their insulting little beetles.

Once inside the station, Nyx found
some room by the empty fountain and shuffled around the tickets.

Rhys looked at her dubiously. “You
do know how to use those, right?” he asked.

Nyx turned the tickets over a couple
more times until she matched the gate numbers at the station to the ones on her
card.

“Fuck off,” she said.

They got lost on one of the
platforms and had to double back. Once they were on the right platform, Rhys
bought himself a purified water. Nyx bought a whiskey, straight.

Rhys watched her take a swig with
his usual distasteful eye.

“I can get you a soda,” he said.

“I’ve had enough of soda,” Nyx said.
She wanted to be drunk by the time the train arrived in Mushtallah. She knew
Mushtallah. She had done all of her bel dame training there. Most magicians and
bel dames worked out of the capital, and she expected she was going to run into
a lot of women she knew. In the border towns she was somebody to fear, to
loathe—a former bel dame who brought in every bounty with the same
determination and brutality she’d taken in her bel dame notes. But in
Mushtallah, she was just another criminal. Nobody. Nothing. Just like she’d
been when they threw her in prison.

Rhys pulled out a slim volume of
what looked like poetry from his robe.

A voice came on over the platform
radio, and a misty woman’s head came into view just over the train tracks.

“There will be a slight delay due to
unrest along the Bushair line running north-northwest. This will affect lines
Zubair, Mushmura, and Kondija. Thank you for your patience.”

Somebody had blown up another track
along the Bushair line, then. Nyx allowed herself a minute to wonder how many
people had died. She wondered if it mattered.

She sipped her drink and watched
Rhys while he read.

“Would you mind reading out loud?”
she asked, hoping she sounded nonchalant. It felt too much like she needed something.

He raised his gaze above the ends of
the pages and looked at her.

Nyx kept staring at the tracks. She
wanted to do something with her hands.

“You nervous?” he asked.

“I’m never nervous.”

“Of course not,” he said. “This is
Petal Dancing
.”

“Oh, God, this isn’t something soft,
is it?”

“Not everything that’s beautiful is
weak.”

“No, it just makes you that way.”

He smiled. “We disagree, then.”

“We do,” she said.

Nyx cupped her glass in both hands.
Rhys began to read, in that voice that could calm her during the worst
days—days when bugs got into the money bin and bodies piled up in the freezer
like cheap popsicles. Time stretched. His accent had gotten better since she’d
started asking him to read out loud. It had been a couple years now, she
supposed. She insisted he read in Nasheenian, not so much to improve the accent
but because hearing him speak Chenjan—hearing him speak the same language as
the people she’d spent two years throwing bursts at on the front felt obscene,
and there wasn’t much anymore that made her feel so fucked up down to her
bones.

After a time, Nyx stopped her
fidgeting. She let herself forget some of the worst of the fear. Another
announcement came on over the station radio. The delay had been extended.

She finished her drink.

They boarded the train two hours
later and found their way to a private first-class cabin whose bench seats were
nonetheless so close that if they sat directly across from each other, their
knees touched. They didn’t sit that way.

Rhys opened his copy of the Kitab,
and Nyx fixed herself at the window and watched the Nasheenian desert roll past
them in a blur of umber brown and violet blue. The sky was a pale amethyst
today, bruised purple along the western horizon, the direction of the front.

“How fast do you think these go?”
she asked.

“A hundred, hundred and twenty
kilometers an hour,” Rhys said.

“Huh,” Nyx said. She wasn’t going to
argue. “You know anything about courts and royalty?” she said.

He did not raise his eyes from the
Kitab. “I thought bel dames held intimate soirees with queens and politicians
all the time. You should be an old hand at this.”

“We don’t flirt and whore ourselves
out like dancers,” she said. He flinched. Why did she always want to twist the
knife with him?

“Just make it look good, all right?
It’s bad enough you’re Chenjan.”

“I didn’t ask to go along. If you
take offense at the—”

“It’s your fucking accent I can’t
stand.” Something roiled up in her, something old and twisted. She hated it
even as the words slipped out. She pressed her fist to her belly.

He shut his book and stood. “Excuse
me.”

“Sit down.”

“I signed an employment contract
with you,” he snapped. “You did not obtain a writ of sale. I’ll be in the
dining car.” He rolled open the door. It banged behind him.

Nyx rubbed at her face. The worst of
her troubles always started with what came out of her mouth.

She heard a knock at the cabin door.
She stood and slid it open, trying to come up with something that sounded nice
but not like an apology.

But it was not Rhys at the door. A
young woman wearing a blue Transit Authority uniform offered her a
complimentary newsroll.

The scrolling text that slid across
the translucent projection of the newsrolls was even tougher to read than
static text, but Nyx figured Rhys would want to read it when he got back. An
offering. She could look at the pictures. Her teachers at the state schools had
called her dead dumb because she got all her letters backward. Some of the
better newsreel companies had an audio option, but this wasn’t one of them.

“Thanks,” she said, taking the roll.

She sat back down, but before she
twisted the news back into its thumbnail-size roll, she looked over the
projection. Bundled between two articles about border skirmishes near Aludra
was a picture of the gates of Faleen. The nose of a star carrier reared up
behind them.

Nyx stared at the carrier a long
time. She’d seen that carrier before. She tried to find an article with it, but
all she noted was a short blurb before the picture scrolled over to the next
image of three beaming young boys heading for the front.

Star carriers didn’t get lost in
Faleen twice, and even if it was a different carrier than the one she’d seen
the last time she was there, it was the same make as the last one. Aliens
interested in boxers were back in Nasheen. What the hell was up with that?

Nyx spent a long while staring at
the scrolling pictures, but the image of Faleen didn’t pop up again.

What did an off-world carrier want
in Faleen? What did the queen want with her in Mushtallah? Being a bel dame had
taught her that there were no coincidences, only cause and effect.

She was going to need another drink.

 

8

Rhys could recite the Kitab by
heart, but he never quoted it at Nyx.

He sat in the dining car reading for
hours, yet no one came to wait on him. He even stayed long enough for the wait
staff changeover. Three women gave him openly hostile stares as they passed his
table. A Transit Authority agent asked to see his papers. The few times he’d
dared to go off on his own outside the Chenjan district since joining Nyx’s
team, he’d been beaten up, cut, and much worse. He didn’t travel alone anymore.
Much as he hated it, knowing Nyx was just two cars away was somewhat
comforting, though her sharp tongue was not.

What finally drove him back to the
cabin was the conductor’s announcement that they were nearing Mushtallah and
were about to go through customs. Customs agents were as violent with Chenjan
men as security agents and order keepers.

Rhys put his things away and passed
between cars. The stricken Nasheenian landscape rolled by. The world outside
did not look so different from Chenja here: There were fewer minarets, and some
of the older, mostly untouched villages were tiled in ceramic and still bore
huge gold-gilt inscriptions from the Kitab above the lintels to all of their
village gates, groceries, and the wealthier houses. He saw old contagion
sensors sticking up from the desert, half buried, some of them with the red
lights at their bulbous tips still blinking. There were fewer old cities in the
Chenjan interior. The oldest relics, Rhys supposed, would be farther north, in
the Khairian wasteland, where the first world had been created and abandoned.
Out here, though, was the most he had seen of old-world Nasheen. He had never
been to Mushtallah.

Rhys knocked at the compartment
door. As Nyx pulled it open, a passing member of the Transit Authority paused
in the hall at the sight of him and asked Nyx if Rhys was bothering her.

“It’s all right,” Nyx said. “He’s
mine.” The Transit Authority agent gave them both a good long look before
moving on again.

Rhys shut the door.

“Here, I kept the news for you,” Nyx
said. She tossed him a newsroll. He pocketed it. She had the red letter in her
hands again. He pretended not to notice. He had spent six years with her—five
and a half longer than he’d expected. She was supposed to be his way out of the
boxing gym and on to more lucrative contracts with universities and First
Families. But even with an employer on his résumé, his middling talent was not
great enough to make up for his ethnicity.

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