Read The Wind City Online

Authors: Summer Wigmore

The Wind City (36 page)


Rongo
. I hadn’t even thought about him,” Tony said, and stared at the space between the pillars. “Do you think he… ”

Steffan shook his head. “His kind don’t just die,” he said, then coughed violently, hackingly, his whole body shaking with it.

Tony grimaced. “I don’t know. There was a street spirit who ought to have been really powerful, and Saint killed him easily enough.” Too late she remembered it was Steffan who had told her of Cuba in the first place, and she winced.

Steffan looked up at her, his pupils blown wide with shock or fear or coldness. “You mean… Cuba?” It was sad to hear his voice, pleading and thin like the voice of a child. “No, no, that can’t be, no, he – he sang bad pop songs, but like he meant them, you know? He can’t, he
can’t
.”

“I’m sorry.” Tony put a hand on his shoulder, but Steffan flinched away.

“Oh, no, don’t… don’t be offended, I just don’t, don’t much like the idea of
anyone
touching me at the moment. Everyone just
kills
,” Steffan said, and he raised one hand to cradle his head.

“You should go home,” Tony said. “You’ll catch your death.”

“No, I… I shouldn’t do that. I need to see what happens.” He repeated it, firmly: “I need to see what happens and I need to… ”

“Whatever, dude,” Tony said, and stood up, only just managing to refrain from offering him a hand. He stood as well, and stayed leaning against the wall.

“No, I mean it – this can’t be right,” Steffan said. “The others maybe, but
Cuba
, no, he was harmless. The Saint I knew would never… ”

Over by the step, Hinewai’s head whipped around to face them, eyes intent. Ariki made no reaction. Perhaps he hadn’t heard? Tony was glad.

She frowned at the scholarboy, all the same. She’d had suspicions since his first reaction, but that confirmed them. “You know him.”

Others were congregating now – more patupaiarehe, with eyes as black as night or green as trees or brown as earth or white all the way through, dim shapes through the mist. Steffan glanced around. Tony could imagine what he was thinking; Ariki had twisted with his head, so perhaps he thought atua were more dangerous than they truly were. Perhaps he feared for his friend, which she supposed was understandable, but…

“No, it’s nothing,” he said, and he sat down again like his legs had been cut out from under him, hunching up small. “Never mind.”

Tony looked at the pillars where there was no sign, any more, of any of those who had died. So many dead, and here Steff sat refusing to take a side. Part of her wished she had that luxury, and grief made her unforgiving. “Do you still think you can just watch?” she said sharply. “Do you think that’ll cut it now? You met people, and now they’re dead, and you’re just going to
watch
.”

Steffan looked away.

Tony wanted to console him – that had been needlessly harsh – but it was probably better to just leave him alone. She went to sit by her friends on the step. More patupaiarehe were here now, and other atua she didn’t recognise – what had to be cityfae, too, creatures incorporating concrete and steel and glass, and Tony greeted them one and all.

“What now?” they asked her, all of them all in a chorus, even the patupaiarehe gathered there to fight. They looked to her instead of Ariki, stood there in the ruins of their sacred place and looked to her. “What now?”

“We wait,” she told them, because what else could she say? What else could they do? “We wait.”

Saint stood in front of the mirror, and tilted his head back to better admire the dark bruises around his neck. “
Fuck
this hurts!” he said cheerily.

There was a similar ring of bruises around his wrist, along with myriad other bruises and scrapes that he couldn’t even remember getting, all over him. He was an utter mess. Burned and choked and half-drowned, and it was all of it his fault. He remembered, unwillingly, the utter pain of that moment. Steff deserting him and then Noah deserting him and yeah that had stung but it had all been building up to that one moment, hadn’t it; kicking his legs uselessly to try and stay above water, choking and gasping as waves splashed his face…

Staring up at the gaping maw of the most monstrous thing he’d ever encountered, as it spoke in Tony’s voice. The realisation,
they’re people, they’re people, these monsters are people
. And what did that make him? He’d looked at Tony, after that, and seen her, the whole of her, layers; monster and guardian and sweet little girl and brave woman and all of it mixed together, and if he’d just
looked
, looked deeper, asked more questions or just stopped one fucking time to think about what he was doing instead of just – just blindly
murdering

Stupid to try to stay above water, when he’d already sunk so deep.

“Bruised and battered self,” he said loudly, loud enough to drown out his thoughts, “meet your new best friends: arnica and Savlon! We all three of us are about to get very initima –
ow
. Owww. Ow.” He scowled at his bruises, which, even when smeared liberally with antiseptic or whatever this stuff was, still throbbed like the blazes. “Why did I ever think this was a good idea! Ha!”

He laughed, jovially.

He happened to meet his own eyes in the mirror.

He slammed his fist into the mirror, hard, with fire boiling around his fingers. His arm fell to his side. Shards tinkled to the ground.

Saint buried his face in his bloodied hands. “Fine,” he mumbled. “I’m fine. I’m fine. Lovably fearless –”

At that he clenched his fists so tight it hurt. He lowered his hands again. Stood there breathing for a while, trying to get calm, but he felt restless, he felt empty, he wanted to pace and prowl and fight, he wanted to curl up and sleep and never wake up again.

He went back into the lounge of the wretched fucking flat, instead, because at least there was room to pace there.

I’m not going to torture you
, she’d said,
though you deserve it
, and yeah, he did, deserved anything bad they could do to him and then more besides, but he couldn’t exactly stop, could he? Everything was broken and burned away and he had nothing left.
You deserve it
, and maybe he always had. Should never have said yes to Noah. Should never have done any damn thing. Everything he tried to do just
crumbled
, and what if he had been wrong all along? On the way back to his apartment he’d passed a greasy pile of ashes, all that was left of his flatmate, impossible to ignore. Saint remembered the smell of charring meat.

The maero, at least, had been evil. Of that, he was sure… he was… he thought he was sure? But that still left the rest, all of them – the ponaturi, who he’d burned till the skin sloughed off their bones. And the weird little bird things and the leafy ones and all the rest, so many, so damn many. The Hikurangi had had
people

He held his hand over his mouth until the urge to retch subsided. Then he went up to the roof. Stood at its edge for a while, looking out over the city.

“Catch me,” he said, and he swayed forward, but he arrested the motion before he could complete it. Just… stood there, for a bit, with the wind on his face. Considering it.

In the end all he did was go inside again, because he was far too much of a coward to do what he ought to do, apparently. Figured. May as well go on with the reckless slaughtering, then, and a part of him wanted to. Wasn’t it better to go out in flames than to just be extinguished? Snuffed out, just like that, and no one would mourn him. At least this way people would remember his name, even just to spit on it.

It was so hard to think.

Maybe if he provoked Tony enough she’d kill him out of kindness, though he’d probably have to burn the whole city down, first. The whole world.

May as well
, Saint thought, and he wasn’t sure if he felt like laughing or crying.

Because there wasn’t anyone there to catch him, not any more. What the hell was the point of any damn thing, without that?

Steffan sat with his head resting against his knees, and listened as a mob of supernatural beings chanted for his best friend’s blood.

There was a crowd of them. Most were patupaiarehe, he figured, gorgeous and angular and half-fading into the mists like they belonged there. There were other creatures that had that same feeling of being not-quite-right, of not fitting in this world – things with leaves for hair or bulging snail-shell eyes or teeth and fingernails like the spines of a sea urchin. Things that had adapted. But he spotted some cityfae in the crowd as well, a jagged creature all elbows and spines that made him think of a broken umbrella, a weathered lady with hair as red as brick and pigeons in her wake, and others, more than he could see and far more than he could name.

And they were restless, and Tony didn’t seem to be very in control of them.

“What
now
, taniwha?” one snarled at her, taller than most, with tangled gold-white hair.

“We wait,” Tony said again. She seemed almost at a loss, and from over in his corner Steffan fought the mad urge to laugh. He’d been waiting all this time, learning, and what was the point of all this learning if he didn’t
use
it for anything, if he didn’t
help

The gold-haired one put its head to one side, nostrils flaring. “We have waited all these years,” it told Tony. “The taste of it grows stale in our mouths.” There was a chorus of agreements, in English and in Māori and in a lilting tongue that struck Steffan as vaguely Celtic. He scrabbled for a notebook. The patupaiarehe did remind him a lot of the Irish sidhe; that was interesting, that could bear further study –

“Your studies won’t do you much good once you’re dead,” came Ariki’s smooth voice in his ear, and the notebook fell to the ground. Then Ariki was hauling him to his feet, his elbow around Steffan’s neck in a chokehold, pulling him up but not yet applying overmuch pressure.

Ariki cleared his throat. “Friends,” he called. Steffan flinched away; he was pressed right up against Ariki, so it was loud, and Ariki’s arm under his chin smelled nauseatingly sweet, putrid. “Might I make a suggestion?”

The bickering died down – the other patupaiarehe seemed to follow Ariki’s orders, more or less.

“An actual helpful suggestion?” Tony said as she turned towards him, looking glad. “From
you
? Finally!”

Then her eyes fell on Steffan. Steff had been rather hoping for outrage, but she looked more disappointed than anything else, and she didn’t dive forward to save him or anything. For a moment he was sure that she was just going to him die, but that didn’t seem like her, so he made himself relax, hang limp and passive.

“This man,” Ariki said, and tightened his hold. Breathing became difficult. What was it with atua and choking him? “He has ties to Māui’s pawn – he said as much. Perhaps we can torture him and he’d be loud enough to draw Māui to us, and we can fall on him and take him unawares! At dawn, as it should be. Look how the mists draw close, as an omen for our success!”

Steffan should never have said that.
Idiot, idiot
, he thought, and he closed his eyes. Ariki’s hold had loosened again, but it was hard to think with the threat of his arm still there, pressing. Harder still to think when the people gave a ragged cheer at Ariki’s words.
No, no, please no, there’s still so much I don’t know
.

“Saint’ll show up here
anyway
,” he heard Tony say. She sounded closer. Good, that was – good. “He has to know that this is where we’d gather. No one’s getting tortured.”

“Someone will have to be,” one of the patupaiarehe said, also close. Steffan opened his eyes. It was Tony’s friend, the terrifying one, her eyes solid black and her face thoughtful. Tony was standing beside her, her eyes fixed on Steffan, one of the patupaiarehe’s hands lengthening into claws. “As Ariki was mauled. There must be balance to these things.”

Steffan felt like a slab of meat, dangling there for the gathered crowd to inspect, all inhuman eyes and – he’d felt safe around most of the atua, sort of, but the way they were looking at him now was terrifying. Very like a piece of meat: perhaps none of them actually had anything
against
him personally, but that didn’t mean they wouldn’t enjoy tearing him apart.

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