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Authors: Ben Peek

BOOK: Leviathan's Blood
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Zaifyr was led to the Southern Gate of Yeflam by Aelyn. With each step, he could feel the vastness of his sister’s power, a sensation akin to the long, clear sky turning its gaze on him.
It enveloped him, as it always had, and smothered the powers of the other immortal men and women who moved to take control of the Mireean refugees.

On the bridge, the crowd watched him and Aelyn approach. A carriage without horses waited before the gate and, as the two came closer, small twists of wind began to form around the empty shafts.
Within moments, they had taken on the shape of two horses and their pale wind-born bodies had filled the leather harnesses of the carriage.

Behind him, Zaifyr heard a shout, a voice issuing a command, but he did not turn to see who spoke, did not turn to see what was happening to the Mireean people.

He stepped into the carriage and his sister, who followed, closed the door.

2.

The Yeflam Guard led the Mireeans to Wila with their weapons drawn. The refugees were unarmed.

For a moment, Ayae resisted moving as the bodies of men and women pressed against her. The order had been given by one of the Keepers, a man with blue dye in his hair, but she had barely
registered him, or any of the others.

She had been against the idea of going to Wila from the moment she heard it mentioned in the small tents where Muriel Wagan held her meetings. It had instantly reminded her of Sooia, of the camp
she had been brought up in before she came to Mireea. If she closed her eyes, she could see rough wooden walls, small dirty huts, and fear. Fear on faces. Fear in movements. Fear of every sound
that came from beyond the large gate that they lived behind.

One of the blue-armoured guards of Yeflam pressed a mailed hand into her back, but Ayae did not move. The guard pushed at her and then jerked his hand back as if he had been burnt. He met her
gaze but, as he did, another hand touched her shoulder, and Caeli said, ‘Come on, come on.’ The tall blonde guard of Muriel Wagan repeated the words as she pushed Ayae’s shoulder,
urging her back into the press of men and women who were being led across the bridge. The churning coast of Leviathan’s Blood gave way to Yeflam’s first city, Neela, but she saw little
of the city before she was pushed down the stone ramp to Wila.

‘You happy?’ Ayae asked, once she was on the island.

‘You didn’t start a fight, did you?’ Caeli rubbed at the palm of her hand, the hand that had held Ayae. ‘This is no more than a prison.’

‘But without cells.’ Ayae followed the other woman’s gaze around the island. ‘Without walls.’

Wila was a flat piece of barren land made from dirt and sand. Ahead, Ayae could see the farmlands of Yeflam across Leviathan’s Blood and, beyond them, the Mountains of Ger.

If she turned, however, Yeflam itself came into view. It stretched along the horizon, marked by huge arching bridges linking a series of circular platforms. The platforms were so large that they
were like slabs of earth that a giant had lifted from the ocean’s floor before resting them on a series of huge stone pillars. The thick columns were made from blocks of stone and dived into
the black water, where they sank deep into the ocean’s floor. Around them, islands similar to Wila lay beneath the length of the artificial country, dotting the length of the ocean from
horizon to horizon.

It was not a new sight to Ayae. She and her oldest friend, Faise, had driven an ox-drawn cart from Mireea to the cities to buy supplies for the witch Olcea more than once. In those trips,
however, the two women had never gone near the stone ramps that ran down to Yeflam’s empty islands. Instead, they had travelled into Neela, along its wide streets and past its factories and
storage yards.

Depending on which side of Leviathan’s Blood you approached Yeflam, Neela was either the first of the nation’s twenty-three cities, or the last. It was a Traders’ Union city,
and you could find presses that were friendly to men and women of wealth and position and critical of people who had held power in Yeflam for a thousand years. There were another five cities that
the Traders’ Union claimed as its own, the biggest of these being Burata, which connected to the eastern docks. In that city, you could buy anything, and it was there that Ayae and Faise had
ridden to buy the supplies Olcea had wanted. In one of the free papers that were available in Burata, Ayae first read full-page articles using the term ‘cursed’ – the first time
she had heard the word outside Mireea.

The word had followed her for the last three weeks as well. After they had left the ghost-filled streets of Mireea behind, people had begun whispering it. At first, Ayae had been able to ignore
it, but it had only become worse. The whispers began when she made her way into Lady Wagan’s tents and did not stop when she left: they continued when she queued for her rations and it was
common whenever she and Zaifyr were seen together. The word was not always used with animosity. At times it was spoken with a neutrality – ‘The cursed is over there in the chains’
– and at times with a grudging respect – ‘They both stood for us’ – but more often than not, it was said with anger. By the second week, she had been spat at, she had
been blamed for the loss of Mireea – either because she had not done enough, or because she had done too much – and she had heard others tell Zaifyr that he was responsible for the
ghosts he had shown them in Mireea and that he kept the dead in their purgatory because he took his power from their pain.

‘How can you listen to it?’ she asked, one night. ‘How do you not get angry at them?’

‘I don’t know them.’ He sat on a piece of grass away from where the Mireeans had made a cold camp, the moon and stars the only light around him. It caught on the charms of
copper and silver that had been woven through his auburn hair and around his wrists. He held one of those, one made from bronze, in his white hand. ‘But,’ he said, ‘if I had just
seen what happened to my friends and family when they died, I would probably blame the man who showed me as well.’

‘You understand them?’

His eyes, green in the daylight but simply dark and depthless in the night, focused on her. ‘It is an easy enough thing to do.’

Ayae made a face in disagreement.

‘Then they shout at you,’ she said. ‘It’s pointless to blame you for what has happened. Why don’t they realize that?’

‘Give them time.’

She looked away from him.

‘You have time,’ he said mildly. ‘You will outlive every one of these people by thousands of years. You may outlive them by forever.’

She had dismissed his words because she could not fully understand such a life. She could not imagine standing beside Caeli as the blonde in Caeli’s hair gave way to silver, while her own
remained dark. She could not imagine Caeli’s skin wrinkling while hers remained smooth. She simply could not imagine herself held in time like a painting. Yet she could see in Zaifyr that he
could imagine such things – in fact, did not need to imagine them. She could see the length of his life in the way he held himself in conversation with others, in the distance he kept from
those who were not like him. She could see it in the way he talked of the world and its future.

‘Well,’ Caeli said beside her now. ‘We’d better start getting these tents put up.’

3.

The horses made from wind pulled the carriage through the streets of Neela, towards the huge stone bridge that led to Mesi, and from there, into Ghaam, where three bridges
allowed Yeflam to unfold as if it were a dissected giant, its organs and veins open for all to traverse on.

‘I felt Ger die.’ Aelyn spoke as if she knew that his thoughts were about dead giants. They were the first words that she had spoken since the carriage door shut. She had sat
opposite him, watching him intently, without anger. ‘It was a light touch, but I felt it nonetheless.’

‘There was little of him left when I arrived,’ Zaifyr said. ‘He didn’t have that burning hatred that the others have.’

‘It changed shortly after we had begun to build Yeflam. One day, it simply felt as if he had turned his gaze away.’

‘Like he was waiting for something?’ Beneath them, the carriage shuddered as its wheels left the ground. ‘Or someone?’

‘He was not waiting for anything. He was just—’

‘Maybe he was waiting for the child in Leera,’ Zaifyr interrupted. ‘Maybe he knew that long before we did.’

‘He was dying, Qian.’ She used his name, his old name, the name he had given himself a long time ago. ‘He had come to the end of time. What we felt was a dying god coming upon
death. Nothing more.’

Zaifyr did not reply. It was not that he disagreed – or that he strongly agreed, for to argue one or the other opened the concept of an awareness more intricate than he had thought the
gods now had – but he was not sure how to respond to her. Before, she would have been angry at him simply for interrupting her. She would not have sat there and held his gaze until he had
finished speaking, as she had just done. But it had been decades since he had last seen her and perhaps, in that time, she had changed. He had believed that Aelyn stored a lingering anger at him, a
fury that had driven her to try to kill him. Since his release from the tower where his siblings had imprisoned him, he had not wanted to fuel it and had tried to show her a small respect by
ensuring that he had no real presence in her new world. Now that he was in Yeflam, he expected her anger. He knew that what he was doing to her now was anything but respectful. In truth, he could
only have been more disrespectful to her if he had arrived with a pack mule and Fo and Bau’s bodies strapped to its back. He deserved her hostility. He knew that, yet . . . yet here he was,
sitting opposite his sister, unable to draw a spark of irritation from her by deed or word.

The carriage begin to bank and, outside the shaking window, the clear sky revealed more of the Floating Cities of Yeflam.

The cities did not float, of course, but at night, once the afternoon’s sun had sunk, the stone pillars that held the cities aloft blended into the black water and its shadows. Seen from a
distance then, Yeflam did indeed look as if it floated.

He had seen it first a dozen years ago from the deck of a ship. The stone docks had stretched across the black ocean like giant petrified fingers, their shape lit by the towers on the islands
both before and after. At the top of each tower, massive cauldrons of fire consumed hideous amounts of oil to cast a light across the lanes that the ships used when approaching Yeflam. But it had
been the length of the country behind the towers and docks that had caught his attention. There, millions of lamps ran along the bridges and into the cities and, for a moment, Yeflam looked like a
giant funeral procession.

Zaifyr had not seen its like before, but he knew, even as the ship drew up to the docks, that Yeflam had not been designed by Aelyn. He knew of only one being who could design such a city and
that was his brother, Eidan. The realization had not surprised him. He knew that Eidan and Aelyn would have stood together after Asila. The two would not have been divided from each other, as the
others had been. Yet, before Zaifyr had come to Mireea, Jae’le had told him that Eidan was not in Yeflam. He had left years ago, his brother said, and whatever calming influence he had had
over Aelyn was long gone. It was one of the reasons, he said, that Zaifyr should not linger in the city.

‘Where are you taking me?’ Zaifyr asked, turning from the window.

‘Nale.’ Behind Aelyn the sky stretched in a long empty brightness. ‘I have a home there.’

‘No cell, then?’

‘There is a cell for you in the Broken Mountains.’

‘No.’ He smiled faintly. ‘I’ll not go back there. You know that.’

She looked away, turning to the window where Yeflam lay below. There, Nale had come into view. It was easily three times the size of any other settlement in Yeflam and sat at the artificial
country’s centre, a massive city dominated by huge buildings, with none larger than the Enclave, the white tower where the Keepers of the Divine worked. Yet, as the wind-made horses began
their descent, Zaifyr could not see the tower. Instead, he saw a series of sprawling estates, each of them kept behind high stone walls and steel gates. It was before a large, yellow-stone building
defined by two towers that the horses landed, bringing the carriage to a halt.

Her home
. Aelyn’s home.

Yet she did not live there. That was clear from the moment she opened the door and led him inside. Dust coated the long half-filled shelves and still tables and chairs that lay beyond the
doorway. The air was musty and dry and tainted by the smell of blood and salt from Leviathan’s Blood. In Maewe – in the kingdom his sister once ruled – Aelyn had built a house
identical to this, but the inside of it had flowed with air, with life, and with her. This house, Zaifyr thought as he followed her, was but a keepsake of the life she had left behind. It was like
the churches he had found in rural communities after the War of the Gods. Each had been made as a place of worship while the gods had been alive, but rather than being a building that men and women
and children could enter, the houses had existed as homes for the gods. Inside were items that the communities had associated with the god – books, idols, weapons – and each building
had been sealed so that no one could enter. Reportedly, when the gods had been alive, the houses had been pristine inside, but by the time Zaifyr saw them, the remaining ones had been broken open
like eggs, their insides scooped out for the sustenance they provided. They looked like Aelyn’s house, a monument of a time long gone.

‘Before you went to Mireea, Jae’le came to see me.’ Aelyn stood in front of a wine rack, her fingers running along the old bottles. ‘Not in person, of course. Just in one
of his little birds. He told me that you would pass by. He said that he had asked you to come to this part of the world. He said that he was not interested in Yeflam. He was interested only in the
war the Leerans had begun. I had already sent Fo and Bau by then, but he promised me that you would be no threat. He said that you had not talked to the dead since he released you.’ She
pulled a bottle from the middle of the rack, grasping it by the throat. ‘Do you plan to keep those manacles on while we drink? Or will you lift a glass with them?’

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