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“There you go,” Sabatino said, “insulting the Nuccis again. That disgusting creature is dear Grandfather, the other madman in the clan …”

38

For a moment, Finn simply stared. He tried to think of something to say. Nothing seemed proper, nothing seemed to fit.

“And he just, ah, runs around loose, I assume.”

“He's not supposed to, but he does. Would you like to try and stop something like that?”

“It seems to me, no offense, but it's awfully hard to keep you fellows penned for long. The Nuccis are good at getting loose.”

Sabatino made a face. “Sometimes we are. I thought I had Father locked up, but he's clearly out howling as well. I expect Squeen William had a hand in that. Master Finn-would you be kind enough to tell me if I still have arms and legs? I can't feel a thing.”

“They're still there,” Finn assured him, and realized his own limbs were growing numb as well.

“What's your-grandfather plan to do with us? Do you know? Has this ever happened before? Rooks and Books, what'll he do if he catches Letitia? If he tries to harm her, by damn, he'll answer to me!”

Sabatino's look said he thought this was clearly absurd.

“There's no way to tell what he'll do. He's never tried to finish us off before, but I wouldn't count on that.”

Sabatino paused. “This is family, and none of your concern, Finn, but I suppose you're a part of this calamity now. My father didn't build that infernal machine. Grandfather did. It drove him mad, of course, but not before he passed his obsession along to his son. I grew up with this aberration, but learned quite early to stay away from the thing. I'm not insane, in spite of what you think. I'm a bit off-center, granted, but nothing like those two, you have to see that.”

Finn wasn't certain this was true.

“Your father and the, uh — your grandfather, they're in this together, then?”

“Of course not. They loathe each other. I doubt Grandfather knows who we are. Whoever fed him last-that's all the poor devil knows. That's how his mind works, whatever bit that's left.”

Oh, Letitia, I'm sorry I got you into this … I'll find you, love, wherever you are … and Julia, I'll make you right, if I have to start all over again …

“The Prophecy Machine. There's nothing to it, then. It's just a-a machine.”

Sabatino yawned. “What do you think, Mr. Inventor? You saw the holy gibberish the thing spits out.”

“I saw a lot down there, and gibberish doesn't explain it all.”

“Think what you like, I'm sure I don't care.”

“This is monstrous,” Finn said, “he has to let us go. He has no right to treat us this way.”

Clearly, Sabatino didn't care to talk. He was huddled in the darkest part of the room. By scooting his shoulders about, Finn could see further past the gloom. What he'd taken for stains and damage of the years was clearly something else. There were squares and bits of metal, scraps of every kind. Hundreds of them placed in some fearsome array, some strange disorder that only a madman could see. Copper coated green, sheets of dull tin, iron turned a rusty red. Scrap, Finn supposed, salvaged from the machine. And he knew, suddenly, why they were there. They blocked out the power, made this hideaway a refuge from the thing down below …

Sabatino's features curled into a sly and cunning smile. “You see it, do you? The old man's mad, all right, but he knows how to get a night's sleep.”

“You're not telling me everything, Sabatino. There's a great deal more, I'm certain of that. I don't think you can truly help yourself. I doubt you could make it through one complete sentence without a lie. It might be full of truth, but you'd find a hole, an empty spot to tuck in a sham somewhere.”

“I'm greatly offended, sir, crushed, as it were. Your opinion is so important to me. Do you mind if I nap?”

“That night when the Foxers came to call. Your grandfather was on the loose then. Squeen took him off somewhere. Does the Vampie know about this place, then?”

Sabatino forced a nasty laugh. “Of course not, don't be a fool. I didn't know about it till he brought me here. I used to play between the walls when I was a child. The radiations from the cellar hadn't yet filtered up here. Squeen got the old man out of the hall before he could kill someone.”

“A Foxer, you mean. That's what he was after.” Finn didn't need to ask. He knew from Sabatino's expression it was true.

“This quarrel goes back a long way, does it not? Back to your grandfather's time? What started it, Sabatino? Why do the Foxers want the Nuccis dead?”

Sabatino turned away as if he found Finn a crashing bore. “I haven't the foggiest idea. I doubt those idiot creatures know any more than I do. That was too long ago.”

“I don't believe that.”

“Well, the devil with you, then. I couldn't care, Finn.”

“Is it the Prophecy Machine? What do the Foxers have to do with that?”

Sabatino turned back to Finn and glared. “We discussed this, I believe. It isn't a machine that does anything. It's a toy for fools, is what it is.”

“It does something,” Finn said. “It grows all by itself, and it apparently drives people mad.”

“Well, that should be enough, don't you think? What more could you ask? If we really must pass the time together, Finn, I'd rather spend it doing something else. Like getting out of here, before Grandfather comes back. You don't happen to have a blade handy, do you? The old man took mine away.”

Finn had to laugh. “No, I don't have a blade. Would I be lying here talking to you?”

“No, I don't suppose you would.” Sabatino lifted his head, a great and painful effort, wrapped as tightly as he was.

“Left, not too far from your head. It's hard to tell in this feeble excuse for light, but I think there's a scrap of metal over there.”

“Why didn't you bring this up until now?”

“I didn't see the thing until now, damn you. Do you want to argue, or get out of here?”

“I'm bound the same as you. Everything's gone numb, I can't feel my toes.”

“You're closer than I am. It has to be you.”

“I told you-”

“Think about the pretty Newlie, Finn. That should warm you up. It would certainly do it for me.”

Finn refused to be annoyed. There was no use wanting to batter someone if you were both paralyzed.

He was sure he couldn't make it. He could feel everything from his head to his waist, but that didn't seem to help. One needed hands and feet. Limbs separated Man from the lower forms of life. No wonder larva never did a thing.

“Undulate,” Sabatino suggested. “Sort of scoot, you know? Push and then pull, push and then-”

“Shut up,” Finn said. “I can undulate without your help.” And he did exactly that. Pushed with his shoulders, then pulled, raising his belly off the ground, dragging his useless limbs behind. How long could one cut off circulation without ill effect? The word gangrene came to mind.

“A bit more, Finn.”

“Just be quiet. I'm over here and you're not.”

“Well, do excuse me.”

“I'm not even sure what you saw is metal at all. The closer I get, the worse this corner smells.”

“I'm sure it's metal, Finn.”

“It damn well better be. It better not be what I think it might be.”

Sabatino chuckled to himself. “Wouldn't that be a cruel jest? A fine tale to spin at TAVERN some time.”

“If you were there to tell it, you mean.”

“Do get on with it, Finn.”

Finn muttered to himself, cursing every Nucci from the present to the past.

Fits and Mitts, what a frightening thought … dozens, generations of Nuccis I've never heard about …!

“I've got it,” Finn said. “I'm happy to admit that you're right. It's a scrap of iron as broad as my hand. Rusty, but it still has an edge. There's some other pieces here, copper and some tin. But this should do quite well.”