
Winter's Orphans
Elaine Corvidae
NovelBooks, 10/2002
ISBN:191696964
Chapter One
It began the day the girl was dragged into the machinery.
Her shrieks took a moment to pierce through the clattering din of gears,
the clanging song of shuttles. Mina lifted her head slowly, her fatigued mind
taking time to register the new sound, to wonder what it might be. Then with a
terrified oath, she grabbed the clutch to stop her looms, saw at least one
shuttle snarl the cotton threads into a hopeless spiders weaving before
she had even turned away.
The victim was on her knees, her arm between two massive drums turned by
heavy belts. Blood from the crushed limb slicked the drums as they rumbled on,
grinding her bones and seeking to drag more of her into their hungry maw. She
was a new girl, perhaps not yet cautious enough around the machines, perhaps
just unlucky enough to have a sleeve flutter where it shouldnt.
The overseer, Jacob, grabbed ineffectually at the drums and the belts
driving them, only to have the skin stripped instantly from his palms. The
belts hooked onto the huge drive shaft, which was turned by the gigantic water
wheel that powered the mill.
And there was no way to stop the wheel.
The girls shrieks turned into a high, keening wail that sounded
like nothing human. Other girls were screaming now, for the horror of it, or
because they knew that the same thing could happen to them all too easily. The
male mule spinners ran past, going to Jacobs aid, as if the combined
strength of all their muscles might somehow cease the wheels turning.
Minas body shook, a sick feeling pooling in her gut. She wanted to
turn away from the sight of the girl being devoured by the machines, from her
horribly slow and agonizing death. She wanted the screams to go away, the blood
to vanish, the smell of fear to dissipate. She wanted it to stop.
Agony constricted around Minas throat like a noose. Her legs went
out from under her, and she crumpled to the hard wooden floor. Pain spiked
through her neck, into her spine, down to her belly, and for a single instant
of terror she thought that she had somehow gotten tangled in the machines
herself.
The belt connecting the drums to the drive shaft snapped.
Then Abby was there, bending over her, long curly hair hanging into her
face. Hands the color of fine chocolate touched Mina worriedly. "Mina!
Whats wrong? Are you all right?"
The pain eased, receding to an angry burn encircling her throat. Mina
nodded, sat up, and tried her voice. It scraped coming out. "Im fine. I
just...got light-headed."
"Who wouldnt, seeing that?" Abby whispered, and fear crept into
her rich voice. She turned to stare at the broken drive belt, pulling
Minas gaze involuntarily behind her. "The belt snapped
did you see
it? It was a miracle. God must have been watching over us today."
Mina stood up carefully, forcing shaky legs to hold her. Jacob and the
other men were carrying the injured girl out, and Mina caught a glimpse of the
red ruin of her arm. God wasnt watching any of us today,
she thought grimly. With a hurt like that, the girl would never work again. If
she survived, she would find herself in debtors prison for being unable
to fulfill her Contract of Indenture.
Mina made her way back to the narrow aisle formed by the four looms she
operated. The threads on two had become hopelessly snarled and would have to be
untangled and knotted back together. The pieces they were in, by which Mina was
paid, were probably ruined. The other girls went back to their own looms, even
though it looked like there would be no more work today. They were already ten
hours into the shift, and it wasnt likely that the belt would be fixed
before the factory bells tolled.
Once the girls had passed by and left her in relative solitude, Mina
slowly reached up to touch her throat. The iron collar around her neck had left
a narrow band of burn-tender skin beneath.
Shed wanted the screams to stop. Shed focused on the drive
belt. And something had gone out of her, like a bird flying free from her
mouth
and the belt had snapped.
Mina closed her eyes and drove her fingernails into her palms in a
futile attempt at denial. "Not again," she whispered. "God, not again."
* * * Duncans hands jerked sharply when the wave hit
him, sending his bow flying across the violin strings and into the street. For
an instant, his head spun and rang, as if the world was a kettle filled with
water, and a giant had just struck the side. The smell of dark water, of earth,
of the cold caverns beneath the ground, filled his nostrils like wine. He
inhaled instinctively, holding the memory of it as its reality faded.
One or two passers-by glanced at him curiously; others averted their
faces, perhaps fearing that he was having some sort of embarrassing fit. They
had not heard the sound, of course, had not smelled that elusive scent which
whispered of power more heady than the finest brandy. They only saw a crippled
old street musician thrashing about at things no one else could perceive, as if
perhaps his mind had started to go the way of his wasted legs.
Stupid, he berated himself. How many times had he warned his
students against reacting to things that could be sensed by no one fully human?
How often had he schooled them in keeping their expressions neutral before
others, no matter what assaulted their faeling senses? Odd behavior was the
quickest way to get noticed, and to get noticed was to court disaster. One
wrong word spoken to the wrong ear would ensure that no one ever saw them
again.
It had been shock that momentarily robbed him of his self-control. A
burst of unwarded power...that wasnt the sort of thing one anticipated.
Generally speaking, faelings who forgot to ward their spells died quickly,
hunted down by the Seelie Court before they had the chance to make the mistake
a second time.
It must be a child, who does not know any better, he thought
uneasily.
But it hadnt smelled or felt like the work of a child.
A young man paused and bent to pick up Duncans fallen bow.
"Thank you, kind sir," Duncan
said distractedly.
The man smiled, tipped his hat, and dropped a small coin into the tin
cup sitting within easy reach of the wheelchair. Although Duncan normally
remained on his corner throughout the day, half-performing and half-begging, he
began to pack his violin and bow back into their case. He had to find out who
had been the source of the power hed felt.
For if he didnt, they would be dead before the next day dawned.
* * *
It seemed odd to walk across the courtyard to the factory gate without
the bells tolling behind her. The sun was still high in the sky, its merciless
glare beating into Minas tired eyes. Her swollen feet dragged, and all
her bones felt as though they had been taken apart and put back together wrong.
She wanted nothing more than to go back to the one-room apartment she called
home, lay down on the straw mattress, and never stand up again.
Abby caught up to her at the gate. The girls pooled inside the counting
room that guarded the only exit, waiting on shrew-faced Mr. Parsim to scuttle
out from behind his desk and grudgingly unlock the heavy door. Their eyes were
tired, sunken hollows in pale faces. In a way, they all looked alike, with
their long hair tied up in buns, their skirts gone gray from a thousand
washings, their dull iron collars. A few of the children bounced from one foot
to the other, eager to be out early even though it meant less money for either
their indenture or their families.
"Did you see how it happened?" Mina asked quietly as the gate swung
back.
Abby shook her head. "No. Julia did, though. The girls sleeve got
caught somehow."
Mina nodded absently. That was why she had abandoned the fluttering
skirts of the other women and adopted the more practical trousers, suspenders,
and shirts of the men. Her hair she kept cut severely short, giving the
machines one less thing to grab. So far, the only accident shed had in
sixteen years at the mill had come when a shuttle thrown from the loom struck
her in the face, leaving a crescent-shaped scar over her left cheekbone.
So far. Confidence never paid.
Mina fished a rumpled cigarette out of her pocket and lit it. No open
flames were allowed inside the mill, because of the cotton dust that choked the
air. She tried to make up for it by chain-smoking her way through her few
precious hours of freedom.
"Um, were you coming back to the apartment just yet?" Abby asked
nervously.
Mina sighed, knowing what was about to follow. "Camilia coming over?"
"Yes." Three years and Abby still couldnt keep a note of happiness
out of her voice. "Do you mind?"
Yes, I mind. I mind very much. Camilias the daughter of the man
who owns the biggest gun-making factory in Niune. She can damn well afford to
pay for a hotel room if shes horny. Hell, she could pay off Abbys
Contract and set her up in the nicest apartment in the city if she wanted
to.
"No, I dont mind."
Abby broke into a sunny smile. "Thanks. I really appreciate it. We both
do." She hesitated, looking down at her hands. The left one was missing the
last two fingers. "I only have two years left on my contract, you know."
There was nothing to be said to that. Abby was too smart to truly
believe that would change things in any substantial way. In two years, Camilia
would probably have married some rich young factory-owners son and
started popping out a bunch of factory-owning babies. It would be harder for
her to escape down into the tenements for a bit of quick sex. The chance that
Abby would ever even see her again after that was remote at best.
Maybe Abby thought that once the collar was off, Camilia would somehow
start viewing her as more of an equal. Maybe she thought Camilia would fall in
love with her.
But Mina knew that love was just a pretty word for lust that people had
invented so they wouldnt feel guilty about using others. It was too bad
Abby wasnt a whore. At least then shed get something for her
troubles besides a broken heart.
Abby flitted away, dreaming of the evening to come. Mina sighed and
turned her steps down towards the Blackrush. She briefly toyed with the idea of
eating something, but that would cut into her money for cigarettes and alcohol,
the only two things in the world she gave a damn about except for Abby. To hell
with it--shed have breakfast tomorrow.
She wove through the pedestrians until she reached the riverfront. The
turbid water looked leaden under the cloudy sky. It sloshed rhythmically
against bridges, piers, and boats, like the body of some huge, restless animal.
A broken wagon wheel floated by, accompanied by the usual flotsam of
waterlogged paper, fishing line, and sewage. Thin children searched the gray
mud of the banks. Mina wondered what they could possibly be looking for.
The Blackrush was rank and foul with refuse, but she loved it
nonetheless. The movement of its dark, peat-laden water was as compelling as
the heartbeat of a lover. She liked to stand on the bank and smell the weeds
that grew along the edge and watch the gulls that rose and dipped above. It
would be foolish to actually enter the polluted waters, but sometimes she
thought about it anyway; imagined the cold water closing over her head. If she
dove down to the bottom, what secrets would she find there?
None. The waters too murky to see anything, fool.
Mina turned reluctantly away from the water and made her way along
Fishwife Lane. Newspaper boys stood on street corners, crying out the
headlines: "New Treaty with Grynnith! Queen Rhiannon to Hold Greatest Triumph
Celebration Ever! Partially-Eaten Corpse Pulled from the Blackrush!"
No shit, she thought sardonically. Fish and crabs would do that
to a body that stayed in the water longer than a day. I suppose it
wouldnt sound so dramatic if they pointed that out, though.
Her cigarette was nearly burning her lips, so she put it out and got
another. She had to stand with her back to the rank wind off the Blackrush to
keep the match from blowing out. People moved all around her, people who had
families and friends and real lives that included something more than grinding
twelve-hour shifts at the mill. She drifted through them like a shadow broken
loose from its moorings. Herds of pigs grown sleek and fat from the garbage of
the streets jogged past, snorting amongst themselves, their little eyes wild
and smart. Mina envied them.
She turned onto Blackstrap Alley, passed the bars and wild taverns that
catered to the men who worked the wharves. A few sailors loitering in the
doorways gave her hard looks. They probably thought that they were eyeing up a
pretty boy. No one bothered her, though, for which she was grateful. Shed
never found herself in a situation down here that she couldnt handle, but
even so, it often seemed like it was only a matter of time.
She stopped outside the familiar splintered door and wide glass windows
of one of the bars. The drinks served within were advertised in paint on the
inside of the window: racehorses, moral suasions, smashers, and phlegm-cutters.
The pub on the other side of the door was a quiet place that didnt
attract the rowdier sorts. Broken-looking men drank in the corners, their eyes
fixed on their mugs. A few women were scattered among them, but most
didnt look to be soliciting. The clientele here were seldom boisterous or
rich enough to provide for a good whore.
Mina passed them by and slid onto a seat at the dark bar. The man behind
the counter was as familiar to her by now as her own face, but she had never
spoken to him beyond the demands of ordering and paying. "Apple-jack," she said
automatically, and he started to fill a dirty glass. She fished in her pocket
for the very last scraps of her pay.
The alcohol burned the inside of her throat but eased some of the ache
on the outside. It was a good thing that the collar couldnt be removed.
Otherwise, Abby would want to know what had happened.
And Mina didnt have an explanation.
She stared into the depths of her drink, wondering bleakly if it could
bring even momentary forgetfulness. A part of her had spent the last eight
years on edge, she acknowledged bitterly, just waiting for another impossible
occurrence. It had been a long time since William died, but she remembered the
feeling; as if her entire body breathed had out, or as if shed pushed
with some invisible muscle that shed never used before. There had been
that identical instant of euphoria, of complete and utter freedom, before the
burn of the iron collar had dragged her back to earth.
Only the ending had been different: the broken railing, the screams, and
Williams shattered body on the floor below. Everyone had thought his
death was just an accident--after all, he had been seen to stumble without
anyone else touching him. The railing must have been weak, a flaw in the wood,
impossible otherwise that he had fallen hard enough to go through it.
Impossible that an unseen blow had shoved him through it.
She closed her eyes and took a deep, steadying breath. There was still
the chance that Williams death had been an accident and that blind
luck had saved the girl today. Maybe Im cracking up. I just
thought I killed William because his death made me guilty over what I
was feeling towards him.
But her main reaction to his death had been horror, not guilt.
Horror...and the nervous fear that it might happen again.
But it didnt, not for eight years. So why now?
There was no way to answer that. She didnt even know what she was
doing, so how could she speculate on how it might work? Hell, she wasnt
entirely sure that this sort of thing didnt happen to other
people. Maybe not commonly, or else she would have heard of it, but on
occasion. Not for the first time, she wished that shed had a little more
education. Shed gone to school for eight years, three months each
year--law required that much out of the mill--but that had been only enough to
show her how little she really knew. Someone university-educated might be able
to tell her what had happened. But that sort of person wouldnt be caught
dead talking with a factory slave like Mina Cole.
And even if she did know someone to ask, who was to say that what she
had done wasnt evil? Shed killed a man, after all.
Yes, but I saved the girl today. That has to count for something.
She let out a long sigh and tossed down the rest of her drink. For all
she knew, it would be another eight years before anything else odd happened to
her. It might be never.
She stood up and made her way out of the bar. This late in the month,
she didnt have enough money to do any serious drinking, so she would have
to find some other form of entertainment tonight. Maybe a long walk along the
Blackrush.
The endless summer day was finally coming to a close, the heat-shimmer
dying off the roadway. A hansom cab clattered by, curtains drawn. A dog barked
somewhere nearby. The smells of rotting fish, rank riverweed, and stale vomit
blew past on the breeze.
Mina walked aimlessly until the sun was a bloated red orb half-slipped
below the horizon. The air lost some of its suffocating heat, and breath came
easier as shadows descended. Lamplighters made their way down the street, and
Mina felt a touch of scorn for those who tried to defy the night with pallid
gaslight.
The faint click of nails on stone caught her attention. She slowed,
glancing about warily. Her wandering feet had taken her back towards the
tenements that housed many of Hobb Mills indentured workers. She had
lived there since leaving the orphanage at sixteen, long enough to know to step
cautiously after nightfall.
The sound came again, became more regular, the click-click-click
of a dog making its way along the street. Mina paused, suddenly uneasy. The
echo off the sagging walls must have deceived her ears, for it sounded as
though the beast was only a few feet behind her, despite the fact that there
was no living creature in sight.
A mound of moldy kitchen garbage suddenly moved on its own, as if
something unseen had brushed against it. The clear print of a huge paw appeared
in the slimy ruin of some unidentifiable vegetable.
For an instant, Mina stood frozen, staring at the print in shock. Then,
as the sound of unseen claws on the cobbles drew closer, she turned and fled.
* * *
Duncan was not a man given to swearing, but by now a number of creative
expletives were running through his mind. His arms ached with weariness. It had
been a long time since he had stirred this far from home, and he had allowed
himself to lose some of his former stamina. Of course, he could admit that he
was tired and ask Bryan to push the wheelchair for a while.
Poor, crippled, invalid Duncan cannot even get across town by
himself. I think not.
Bryan paused in the shadows, comfortably away from the nearest gaslight.
His dark skin blended with the night. "I dont know," he said, his
handsome face creased with a frustrated frown. "I thought wed have caught
up with him by now. Do you think hes hiding from us?"
"No." Duncan took a deep breath, tasting and smelling for power. It
pulled at him, like the pull of the earth on a homing pigeons brain, like
the suck and drag of a deep riptide. Fainter now, almost lost beneath the
smells of the city, but still there.
"Hes near," Duncan said quietly, the taste of power on his tongue
like musk and wine. "I can feel the call of his blood. He isnt using any
wards to keep me from tracking him, so I doubt he knows that were here.
He may not know anything about his power at all." Duncan shook his head and
forced his aching arms to propel his chair forward. The smell of the Blackrush
came to him, and his heart lifted. "Hes near, Bryan. He--"
The sudden yelp of a dog in pain broke the night. Duncan froze, the
wheelchair trundling forward on its own momentum, until it fetched up against
an uneven paving stone. Bryans eyes widened, and he shifted his grip on
the heavy staff he carried everywhere with him.
"A Hound," Duncan hissed. "Straight ahead, down by the water!"
Then Bryan was running, long legs moving with unthinking fleetness.
Duncan wheeled after him, letting the slope of the street carry him recklessly
fast. The crumbling tenements flanking the street ended suddenly, opening out
onto a slender bridge that gracefully leapt the river.
Something moved among the pylons at the waters edge.
A young man stood beneath the arch of the bridge, wildly swinging a
broken piece of driftwood. Through Duncans right eye, it appeared that
the youth was striking at nothing. But through his left, he saw the pure glow
of the Hounds white coat, the blazing fire of its blue eyes.
Bryan came in from behind, slamming his staff full force onto the
Hounds back. The Hound bayed in surprise and pain, its hind legs going
out from under it. Another swing of the staff caught the side of its head,
staving in the skull so that its golden blood spurted out in a hot jet. Bryan
jumped back to avoid getting any on him.
Silence descended. The youth dropped the broken plank he had used in
self-defense and stared blankly at the now-visible corpse of the Hound. There
was a ragged tear in the left sleeve of his shirt, and blood trickled unheeded
down his wrist and fingers to drip in the weeds.
Duncan skidded to a stop as close to the bank as he could go without
tipping the wheelchair over. Startled by the movement, the youth looked up, and
Duncan realized his mistake. The unknown faeling was a woman. Malnutrition had
robbed her of height and had flattened out any feminine curves. Her pale blonde
hair looked as if she had cut it herself with dull shears, in the dark, and was
so short that it stuck out in every conceivable direction. Against her hair and
the pallor of the skin, her black eyebrows and earth-brown eyes looked
startling.
There was something odd about the arrangement of her features, in the
pointy chin and slightly upswept brows. Something fox-like, perhaps, that no
one would be able to name unless they already knew what they were looking at.
The fae blood was strong in her, to leave its inhuman stamp so clearly.
Then she moved, and he saw the faint gleam of light off the iron collar
around her throat.
Shes a factory slave. His stomach turned over
queasily--to have iron pressed
against your skin like that, day after day, the power strangling inside of
you...God in heaven, it would be a wonder if she was still sane.
"W-who are you?" she demanded, glancing frantically from them to the
corpse of the Hound. "What is that thing?"
Duncan sighed. Explanations were always the hardest part. "We call them
Hounds."
"How did you know it was there? How could you see it? Why did it
attack me?" She stopped and glanced at Bryan, who was busy shoving the
Hounds carcass into the Blackrush. The water would obliterate it quickly.
"Who the hell are you?"
Duncan smiled thinly. "My name is Duncan RiDahn. My friend is Bryan
Shopper. There will be plenty of time for explanations later, but for now your
wound should be tended to."
Her eyes narrowed in unexpected suspicion. "Are you some kind of
doctor?"
"The old man is some kind of just about everything," Bryan opined as he
climbed back up the bank to the road. There were weeds in his hair, and he
stank of slime. "He knows what hes doing."
She shook her head, taking a step away from them. "I cant pay
you."
"I dont want your money," Duncan said patiently. "If youll
come back to my home, where I have my things, Ill be able to treat you."
A sudden sneer transformed her mouth. "I dont think so. Im
not going anywhere with two men who say they want to doctor me and dont
want any money for it."
Duncan blinked, shocked. Suspicion over sexual motives was not the
normal reaction that a man in a wheelchair got from women.
Bryan burst out into gales of laughter. "The old man, luring women back
to his house for--" He dissolved into chuckles, shaking his head in
incredulity.
"Thats quite enough, Bryan," Duncan snapped, mortified.
The girl quickly stepped back. Her dark eyes kept them both in her field
of vision, not willing to lose sight of either. "Im not stupid," she said
softly. And then she turned and ran.
"Hey, wait!" Bryan shouted, startled. "Hey, we saved your life!"
"Let her go." Duncan listened to the sound of the wind, struggling to
sort her footsteps from the lap of the water. If she made any noise, it was
lost to him.
"But she needs our help!"
"I know." Duncan remembered the distrust in her look. Of men in
particular, he wondered, or of everyone? "But she cant take
it. Not yet, at any rate. Go down the bank and see if you can find any of her
blood on the reeds where she stood off the Hound."
"Why?"
"Well be able to use it to locate her. And it will tell us when we
need to do so. A Hound has never bitten you, Bryan, but one has bitten
me, and I remember its effects well enough. At best, the venom will make her
very ill. If the bite was deep enough, it might kill her."
* * *
Rhiannon tapped the arm of her chair impatiently. It was late; for once,
no sounds of servants chattering, or guards marching, or dignitaries stabbing
one another in the back disturbed the tranquility of the palace. A sole human
guard stood on the other side of the double doors leading to her private
receiving room, unaware that his queen and the man who was supposedly her son
needed no such protection.
She sighed and leaned back. For a moment, she considered dropping the
glamour that made her appear the aging-but-still-regal stepsister whom she had
killed so many years ago. But there was always the chance that the guard would
enter for some unexpected reason, and she would hate to have to explain the
mans disappearance.
Roderick stood arrogantly before her, golden curls falling delicately
over his shoulders. He, too, wore glamour, although its purpose was more to
conceal the alien features that came from blood more fae than human. He gave
her a seductive smile that had once seemed appealing, but now irritated her.
Perhaps he thought that he could distract her from the matter of his
failure.
"Let me make certain that I
understand you aright," she said, giving him a cold smile that made his own
grin fade like the sun before night. "The Hound sent to dispatch the faeling
has not returned. Am I to understand that this person is still in my city,
then?"
Roderick shook his head sharply. "No. Not at all."
"You think that the Hound killed him, then?"
"Of course. Otherwise, we would have felt him again, wouldnt we?"
Rhiannon rose to her full height and glared down at him from her dais.
"Dont pretend to be stupid, Roderick. If the Hound did not kill him, then
who killed the Hound? There arent any unseelie faelings left in
Dere!"
"We dont know that."
"I do." She sat back down, chewed delicately on a nail. "Or would you
rather have me believe that the Knights and Hounds--which, I believe, are under
your control--have somehow failed in their only task?"
He sulked. She had found his pouts becoming when she first assumed the
throne. Of course, he had been five then, not forty. "Of course not," he
muttered.
She settled back into her raised chair, folding her long-nailed hands
over her stomach. "They had better not. Find me the faeling, Roderick. And do
so quickly, before I lose patience."
Used with permission from Elaine Corvidae. Copyright © 2001 Elaine Corvidae. All rights reserved.
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