“She’ll kill you.”
“I died a long time ago. I have the might of RKC at my disposal—my own Craft, that of the Board, and beyond them the millions who live in this city. She has weakened us, but we remain strong.”
“The last time someone used the Serpents as a weapon, they broke this continent in half.”
“In the God Wars, I tore space and time asunder. I made a crack in the world.” The King in Red walked toward the pyramid’s edge. Air rippled as he moved. His power pressed against the skin of reality. “We shall see which of us is the more fearsome.”
Caleb caught Kopil’s sleeve. He did not turn or seem to notice. “If you fight her, no matter who wins, the city will lose. I know you’re angry. But this isn’t the way.”
“Do you have an alternative?”
Sacrifice, Temoc said.
“I do.”
The shell shattered into mathematical shards. Each spinning splinter reflected the broken, burning city. An eclipse chill blew through the cracks, ruffling Caleb’s hair and Teo’s shirt. Kopil’s robes flared like wings.
Balam felt rather than heard the shell break, as if every joint in his body had popped at once. He pressed on, pounding through the pain, eyes blind to all but their path—until Sam, behind him, shouted: “Stop!”
He looked back, looked up, looked everywhere at once, and saw a spinning blue curve, three hundred feet on a side, slice through the pyramid ahead as if hundreds of years of stone and steel had never existed. The blue boiled away in an instant, but falling, it scooped out a ten-story section of pyramid, and the floors above strained, creaked, collapsed in a rain of steel and spark and tortured metal.
Sam grabbed his arm again, and pulled, and following her he fled back toward the fire.
Mal laughed when the Canter’s Shell shattered, and the Serpents laughed with her. She understood Allesandre’s madness now. Sanity was the gap between perception and desire, and that gap had closed. The Serpents’ power belonged to her: millennia of sacrifice congealed into will and flame. What could she imagine that she could not create? What could she hate that she could not destroy?
Atop the pyramid stood a figure in red.
She remembered the taste of Kopil’s teeth, when they exchanged the traitor’s kiss.
How to break him? Slowly or swiftly? A simple rush of plasma, or dismemberment—or should she split his body atom from atom?
As she pondered, a weight struck her from behind.
“Give me souls. All the souls you can spare.”
“In exchange for what?”
“For nothing. I need you to give them freely. No strings attached, no contract, no consideration.”
“The Craft doesn’t work that way. I can’t give you something without taking.”
“Look.” He removed his jacket and rolled up his sleeves. The scars on his arms glowed. “This is how I helped Teo. I don’t have any Craft of my own, but I can use others’ power, and pay the price myself. The old priests bore the gods’ power with these scars, worked miracles with them. My father still does. Maybe I can do the same: give the Serpents power without taking anything in return.”
“You’ll kill yourself.”
“Maybe.”
“I’m no god.”
“And I’m no priest. But we’re the closest we have.”
Mal spun, searching for her adversary, but the skies seemed empty. Again she heard leathery wingbeats, and claws tore into her back; she responded with a wild jet of fire. A colorless blur crossed the corner of her eye. She spun after it, but saw nothing.
She summoned a whirlwind that swept several hundred pounds of sand from a nearby construction site into the air around her.
A shape flew through the dust: a Couatl, with a woman crouched on its back, medium height, with broad shoulders and thick arms and a Warden’s smooth visage.
Mal recognized her, in the instant before the woman’s cloak adjusted to the dust in the air and she disappeared again.
“Hello, Four.”
The lights in Kopil’s eye sockets dimmed. “So, how is this done? I’ve never had a priest before.”
“Give me your blessing, and your power. I’ll take it from there.”
The King in Red raised one skeletal hand, and placed his palm on Caleb’s forehead. The bones of his fingers shook.
Caleb dissolved in light.
Mal sent waves of lava in all directions, roped the sky with lightning; Four and her Couatl rode the waves, and circled to safety. The Serpents struck, but their fanged mouths closed on air.
Four pressed her assault with spear and talon and arrow, with discus and net of despair. The attacks did not wound Mal, but they broke her focus.
Mal swept the sky above her with fire, and heard the Couatl turn sharply and beat away toward the ocean. Not dead, but wounded at least. She returned her gaze to the pyramid. A fountain of light danced on its summit.
She did not notice the whistle of air overhead, but she did notice when a pair of hands closed around her neck.
Balam and Sam ran around the burning corpse of a fallen Couatl, down the few remaining ribbons of intact road. The broken Canter’s Shell had scored trenches several hundred feet deep into Sansilva and the pyramid parking lot. They searched for a path through the maze. Steel fell around them, and glass and molten wires and chips of stone.
Sam skidded to a halt: the asphalt ahead had buckled up in the shell-shard’s wake. What had seemed a straight road was actually the lip of a deep trench.
Behind them towered the Serpents.
“We can go back,” Balam shouted.
Sam didn’t hear him. She had turned to the pyramid’s peak.
Souls flooded Caleb, a wash of experience and broken memory: a lover’s kiss ringside in the swell of victory, a dockhand’s sweat after a hard night on the pier, the glint of a butcher’s knife in motion, and the shine in a glass of whiskey as a bartender drew off a shot.
Playing poker he had felt other souls collapse into his own, a few at a time. He could not count how many joined him in those few seconds’ rush. Lives swelled him and burst his skin.
The world fluoresced and vibrated. Dresediel Lex was a tapestry of life, debt, ownership, dedication, faith, investment. Multicolored light knotted around the fluttering shadow of Kopil’s spirit. Teo’s shadow was larger, her bonds fewer: to her gallery, to her apartment, to Sam.
To him.
“Caleb,” she said, and he wondered what she saw when she looked at him.
“I’m here.” Beneath his voice he heard other voices: the chorus that now comprised him.
She stepped forward, hugged him fiercely, and said: “Go all in.”
“That’s the plan.”
She let go. “And come back.”
He turned from her, to Kopil, to the Serpents, and stepped off the pyramid’s edge into empty air.
“We have to get out of here.” Balam grabbed for her shoulder, but she shook her head, and pointed to the sky.
“Watch.”
Mal struck Four with diamond-tipped fingers, but the Warden squeezed harder. Her silver mask pressed smooth and slick against Mal’s ear. “Can’t stab you,” Four said through her teeth. “Can’t cut you. But you can still die.”
She twisted Mal’s neck, which did not break. The Serpents’ power coursed through her. She was their vessel, or they were hers; her bones were metal and her nerves flame. But Mal had not yet lost the habit of breathing. When Four squeezed her windpipe, she gasped for air, and found none.