“I destroyed that,” Bijou said, as the corpse of a woman once named Wove paused beside Kaulas and lifted her veil from her moth-pale hair. “I destroyed that.”
“I certainly let you think so,” Kaulas said. He turned his face away as if he were shutting a door. “Brazen, won’t you come meet your mother, my son?”
He moved, of course. How could he not? She was beautiful as the day she died, her face waxen, expressionless under the powder that loaned it a semblance of the glow of life. She stared at Bijou through clouded eyes, lashes half-lowered, and Brazen first took two steps back and then, as if unwilling, one forward.
And then another.
His jaw worked. His voice creaked as he never would have permitted one of his constructs to creak. “Let her go,” he said. “You may own everything else in Messaline, old man. But don’t think you’re going to own me that way.”
Kaulas rubbed left fingers against his palm as if assessing a handful of soil. When he looked up from the gesture, he smiled a little, self-deprecating. “Come here and I’ll let her go.”
“Don’t do it,” Bijou said. She cracked the ferrule of her cane against the stones and Brazen’s head finally turned, though she wasn’t sure his eyes focused on her. His expression was terrible with yearning and rage.
“Brazen,” Bijou said, and prayed not to the gods but to Wove that Wove, on behalf of her son, would forgive her. “She’s just bait. She’s just one of his dead things. That’s not her, she doesn’t know what he’s done to her.”
Brazen smiled. “You told me the truth already, Bijou.” When he had spoken, he did not turn away, but kept his eyes on her face. Bijou reached to clutch his sleeve. As if she were nothing, he moved one more step towards Kaulas, using the arm she was not clutching to gesture his kapikulu back.
“Wove,” Brazen said. He still did not take his eyes off Bijou. “What was it that you named me, before I took the name Brazen?”
Bijou heard the fibers of his sleeve snap under her fingernails. She felt a held breath still in him, and looked up to see Wove turn her head to stare at Kaulas, waiting his command.
“Brazen,” Bijou said, “he is only trying to own you.”
“I know what I’m doing,” Brazen whispered. Bijou shook her head. How could he?
“Answer your son, my dear,” Kaulas said.
Her voice might have been huskier than when she was alive, or—just as easily—it could be Bijou’s recollection that was at fault. It was, however, still fluid and musical. The difference was that the Wove Bijou remembered was not grateful to receive orders.
“I named you Harun,” she said. “I only told your name to Bijou.”
“You’re her,” Brazen said, and shook Bijou’s hand from his arm as he started forward.
Bijou knew the set of his shoulders. No argument would call him back now, from whatever he was planning.
So she pulled the hammer from her sash and hurled it full in Kaulas’ face.
He ducked aside. He must have been expecting it—oh, they knew each other well, the woman whose name meant Jewel and the man whose name meant Ashes—and her hammer sailed past him to vanish among the dead. But all she needed was the moment’s break in his concentration.
Lucy surged forward to catch Brazen up and drag him back behind the line. He kicked, but it lifted him by the elbows and swung him clear, his striped caftan swirling about his ankles. Bijou feared that he would set his constructs on her Artifices, or that the kapikulu would hack at Lucy, who Bijou could not allow to defend herself. But Brazen yelled them back between curses—“We cannot fight amongst ourselves!”—then turned his wrath on Bijou.
“Damn you,” he yelled. “Did you think me ensorceled?”
Kaulas lifted up one gloved hand and sent his dead things forward.
It was a matter of instants for the faceoff to become a skirmish and for Brazen’s invective to become protectiveness. He grabbed Bijou’s elbow as the bone and jewel creatures hurled themselves forward, flanked by the jackals and Brazen’s hissing constructs and the whirling kapikulu like a storm of skirted coats and swords. The kapikulu shrieked like a rising wind and the artifices rang with bells and clattered like marionettes or whistled and clanked and hissed with steam, but the dead and the jackals made no sound at all.
The street flowed with rot and blood, with machine oil and scalding water. Bijou kept her head down, stumping backwards on her cane, letting Hawti come before her as a shield. She lost track of the others—here, Catherine’s ragged wings; there, Ambrosius clotted with gelled blood—and now Brazen seemed done with fighting Lucy. The gorilla looked at Bijou for instruction.
“Put him down,” Bijou said, and when that was finished she motioned Lucy into the fray, though she winced to do it. She heard the clash of metal and bone. Somewhere out there, the dead were armed. And somewhere out there, her Artifices were wounded.
She leaned on Brazen’s arm, gasping, and let him drag her into an eddy behind the combat. Before them, Hawti rattled its trunk and waded forward, laying about itself with tusks and feet. Bijou saw it totter, saw it rock and tumble sideways as the dead pulled it down. She saw limbs and gore hurled as it thrashed, rending the rotting enemy even as they levered up cobbles with which to smash its bones.
“Emeraude,” Bijou said, realizing the child had slipped forward into the fight. “Emeraude!”
Now it was Brazen’s turn to pull her aside. Something big rattled past them, brass and iron, thick fluid leaking from every joint. She kicked him sharply in the shins; he lifted her up on tiptoe and pushed her back against the wall. “Bijou, dammit—”
“The child,” she said, and he turned to search over his shoulder.
“I don’t—”
Kaulas’ voice boomed out of the fight like a cavalry trumpet. “Bijou, call off your dogs or your little rat dies!”
She would never know how she broke free of Brazen. Panic strength, and it didn’t matter that he was protecting her. She left rags of cloth clenched in his fingers as she staggered past him, plunging into the thick of the fight, shouting already. “Let it go, Kaulas, or I swear I’ll shoe it in your guts.”
There’s a knife at the cub’s neck, sharp enough to freeze it in place instinctively. It knows if it twists, the blade will cut it. It knows if it fights, the enemy will slash its throat.
And so it hangs in his grip and pretends to be helpless, and waits for its moment.
Not too far off, the father crouches over the mother’s body, and the mother does not move. The cub feels that like a bee sting inside it whenever it lets its eyes roll that way, but the bee sting hurts and distracts it, so instead it pins its gaze on the face of the enemy. It’s a man, just an old man with a raven skeleton on its shoulder, and it’s not even looking at the cub, or the father, or anything. It looks past the father, at something the cub can’t turn its head far enough to see.
But the cub can hear it. Spitting like a caged lioness, lurching across uneven stones as if its weary feet never slowed it, the old creature charges into view. It checks the length of a short leap from the enemy and pauses there, still as stone.
It snarls and the enemy makes some noise back that should sound like pleading but isn’t, it’s gloating. The other creature, the loud one with the garish colors, appears behind the old creature and grabs its black sleeve. The old creature makes a soft brief noise, though, and the loud one puffs up like it took a big breath and then lets go again as it deflates.