“That’s how you found my camp,” Dusk said, stepping toward her.
“Yes.” She rubbed her thumb across the machine’s surface. “We aren’t supposed to have this. It was the possession of an emissary sent to work with us. He choked while eating a few months back. They can die, it appears, even of mundane causes. That… changed how I view them.
“His kind have asked after his machines, and we will have to return them soon. But this one tells us what they are after: the Aviar. The Ones Above are always fascinated with them. I think they want to find a way to trade for the birds, a way their laws will allow. They hint that we might not be safe, that not everyone Above follows their laws.”
“But why did the Aviar react like they did, just now?” Dusk said, turning back to the window. “Why did…” Why did I see what I saw? What I’m still seeing, to an extent? His corpse was there, wherever he looked. Slumped by a tree outside, in the corner of the room, hanging out of the trapdoor in the roof. Sloppy. He should have closed that.
Sak had pulled into his hair like she did when a predator was near.
“There… is a second machine,” Vathi said.
“Where?” he demanded.
“On our ship.”
The direction the Aviar had looked.
“The second machine is much larger,” Vathi said. “This one in my hand has limited range. The larger one can create an enormous map, one of an entire island, then write out a paper with a copy of that map. That map will include a dot marking every Aviar.”
“And?”
“And we were going to engage the machine tonight,” she said. “It takes hours to prepare—like an oven, growing hot—before it’s ready. The schedule was to turn it on tonight just after sunset so we could use it in the morning.”
“The others,” Dusk demanded, “they’d use it without you?”
She grimaced. “Happily. Captain Eusto probably did a dance when I didn’t return from scouting. He’s been worried I would take control of this expedition. But the machine isn’t harmful; it merely locates Aviar.”
“Did it do that before?” he demanded, waving toward the night. “When you last used it, did it draw the attention of all the Aviar? Discomfort them?”
“Well, no,” she said. “But the moment of discomfort has passed, hasn’t it? I’m sure it’s nothing.”
Nothing. Sak quivered on his shoulder. Dusk saw death all around him. The moment they had engaged that machine, the corpses had piled up. If they used it again, the results would be horrible. Dusk knew it. He could feel it.
“We’re going to stop them,” he said.
“What?” Vathi asked. “Tonight?”
“Yes,” Dusk said, walking to a small hidden cabinet in the wall. He pulled it open and began to pick through the supplies inside. A second lantern. Extra oil.
“That’s insane,” Vathi said. “Nobody travels the islands at night.”
“I’ve done it once before. With my uncle.”
His uncle had died on that trip.
“You can’t be serious, Dusk. The nightmaws are out. I’ve heard them.”
“Nightmaws track minds,” Dusk said, stuffing supplies into his pack. “They are almost completely deaf, and close to blind. If we move quickly and cut across the center of the island, we can be to your camp by morning. We can stop them from using the machine again.”
“But why would we want to?”
He shouldered the pack. “Because if we don’t, it will destroy the island.”
She frowned at him, cocking her head. “You can’t know that. Why do you think you know that?”
“Your Aviar will have to remain here, with that wound,” he said, ignoring the question. “She would not be able to fly away if something happened to us.” The same argument could be made for Sak, but he would not be without the bird. “I will return her to you after we have stopped the machine. Come.” He walked to the floor hatch and pulled it open.
Vathi rose, but pressed back against the wall. “I’m staying here.”
“The people of your company won’t believe me,” he said. “You will have to tell them to stop. You are coming.”
Vathi licked her lips in what seemed to be a nervous habit. She glanced to the sides, looking for escape, then back at him. Right then, Dusk noticed his corpse hanging from the pegs in the tree beneath him. He jumped.
“What was that?” she demanded.
“Nothing.”
“You keep glancing to the sides,” Vathi said. “What do you think you see, Dusk?”
“We’re going. Now.”
“You’ve been alone on the island for a long time,” she said, obviously trying to make her voice soothing. “You’re upset about our arrival. You aren’t thinking clearly. I understand.”
Dusk drew in a deep breath. “Sak, show her.”
The bird launched from his shoulder, flapping across the room, landing on Vathi. She turned to the bird, frowning.
Then she gasped, falling to her knees. Vathi huddled back against the wall, eyes darting from side to side, mouth working but no words coming out. Dusk left her to it for a short time, then raised his arm. Sak returned to him on black wings, dropping a single dark feather to the floor. She settled in again on his shoulder. That much flying was difficult for her.
“What was that?” Vathi demanded.
“Come,” Dusk said, taking his pack and climbing down out of the room.
Vathi scrambled to the open hatch. “No. Tell me. What was that?”
“You saw your corpse.”
“All about me. Everywhere I looked.”
“Sak grants that talent.”
“There is no such talent.”
Dusk looked up at her, halfway down the pegs. “You have seen your death. That is what will happen if your friends use their machine. Death. All of us. The Aviar, everyone living here. I do not know why, but I know that it will come.”
“You’ve discovered a new Aviar,” Vathi said. “How… When… ?”
“Hand me the lantern,” Dusk said.
Looking numb, she obeyed, handing it down. He put it into his teeth and descended the pegs to the ground. Then he raised the lantern high, looking down the slope.
The inky jungle at night. Like the depths of the ocean.
He shivered, then whistled. Kokerlii fluttered down from above, landing on his other shoulder. He would hide their minds, and with that, they had a chance. It would still not be easy. The things of the jungle relied upon mind sense, but many could still hunt by scent or other senses.
Vathi scrambled down the pegs behind him, her pack over her shoulder, the strange tube peeking out. “You have two Aviar,” she said. “You use them both at once?”
“My uncle had three.”
“How is that even possible?”
“They like trappers.” So many questions. Could she not think about what the answers might be before asking?
“We’re actually going to do this,” she said, whispering, as if to herself. “The jungle at night. I should stay. I should refuse…”
“You’ve seen your death if you do.”
“I’ve seen what you claim is my death. A new Aviar… It has been centuries.” Though her voice still sounded reluctant, she walked after him as he strode down the slope and passed his traps, entering the jungle again.
His corpse sat at the base of a tree. That made him immediately look for what could kill him here, but Sak’s senses seemed to be off. The island’s impending death was so overpowering, it seemed to be smothering smaller dangers. He might not be able to rely upon her visions until the machine was destroyed.