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Wind Reapers
Wind Reapers
Wind Reapers
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Wind Reapers

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Charlotte Blackburn—hero, hunted, the unwitting symbol of a dark rebellion—she thwarted the deadly intent of the treacherous Order of the Sword and Scroll, but at a shattering cost. Now, she fights to survive among a tribe of fierce Wind Reapers who troll the wasteland aboard massive metal walkers. But a new storm is brewing and Charlotte is once again the linchpin in a deadly plan.Sebastian Riley has one goal: Help the citizens of his floating Outer City to survive the Ashen Croup, a terrible affliction that drowns victims in their own lungs. But help comes in the form of the infamous Lady Blackburn, a woman wanted for treason who is determined to run headlong into destruction to prevent a coming war—even if it means reaching out to those who want her dead.Pursued by the shadowy Order and hunted by the furious Reaper clan, Riley and Charlotte brave the monstrous hordes of decaying Tremblers and the terrors of the Wasteland to stop the bloodshed and secure a mysterious calculating engine—a device that can bring about the destruction of an entire nation.With brutal forces gathering against the unsuspecting citizens inside the Tesla domes, a vicious scientist intent on capturing Charlotte for his experiments and the whole of the country in deadly peril, one of them must make a sacrifice too terrible to comprehend.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateFeb 9, 2018
ISBN9781611169430
Wind Reapers

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    Wind Reapers - Raquel Byrnes

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    Wind Reapers

    Blackburn Chronicles #2

    Raquel Byrnes

    This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales, is entirely coincidental.

    Wind Reapers

    COPYRIGHT 2017 by Raquel Byrnes

    All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the author or Pelican Ventures, LLC except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.

    eBook editions are licensed for your personal enjoyment only. eBooks may not be re-sold, copied or given to other people. If you would like to share an eBook edition, please purchase an additional copy for each person you share it with.

    Contact Information: titleadmin@pelicanbookgroup.com

    All scripture quotations, unless otherwise indicated, are taken from the Holy Bible, New International Version(R), NIV(R), Copyright 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica, Inc.™ Used by permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved worldwide. www.zondervan.com

    Cover Art by Nicola Martinez

    Watershed Books, a division of Pelican Ventures, LLC

    www.pelicanbookgroup.com PO Box 1738 *Aztec, NM * 87410

    Watershed Books praise and splash logo is a trademark of Pelican Ventures, LLC

    Publishing History

    First Watershed Edition, 2018

    Paperback Edition ISBN 978-1-61116-944-7

    Electronic Edition ISBN 978-1-61116-943-0

    Published in the United States of America

    Don’t miss the other books in the

    Blackburn Chronicles

    Available Now

    The Tremblers

    Coming Soon

    Chasm Walkers

    Dedication

    Quid Me Confortat, Destruit ~ What Strengthens Me, Destroys Me.

    What People are Saying

    Ms. Byrnes creates a spellbinding read that draws readers into the center of everything, keeping them frozen until the final conclusion.

    ~Coffee Time Romance (on Whispers on Shadow Bay)

    Prologue

    VirHio City-State, Bendenhurst Abbey - May 1886

    Charred support posts jutted from the earth like reaching fingers of a skeletal hand, smoke wafting from the ruined wood as it smoldered. Two men walked amongst the rubble of the once great building. Viceroy Arecibo stepped delicately over a toppled river rock fence, allowing time for his young novice, Marcellus, to carefully lift the train of his robe away from the soot. Melted shards from the stained-glass windows littered the street and cast a myriad of colors along the blackened walls as meager sun shafted through the Telsa Dome’s energy grid.

    This is the second place of veneration in as many months. Marcellus spat, his voice cracking. He ran his palm along the metal pole of a misshapen incandescent lamp. The fire, so intense, had buckled the metal streetlight away like a shrinking flower. Dark brows furrowed under a newly shaven pate still in pale contrast to the dark of the young man’s face. What does she want?

    Arecibo let his gaze fall on the knot of men near the south wall. Clad in the tunics of the abbey, they tended to their wounded and fallen brothers. Untrained in battle, they cast worried glances his direction.

    She wants him back, the viceroy muttered. His hand went to the sword at his side, battered knuckles turned white atop the hilt. His thumb rubbed along the nearly smoothed crest of a crossed sword and scroll, and he shook his head. At any cost, apparently.

    They stopped at a wall littered with metal shards.

    Arecibo gripped one of the blacked shapes, twisting it from the plaster. He held it up to the light of the sky, his lips going taught and white.

    Conscription medallions, Marcellus said, shaking his head. Sharpened and used as flying weapons back at our own people. It is an atrocity.

    It is a message. Arecibo slipped one into the pocket hidden within the folds of his robe. A cry against the call to serve The Order.

    Dozens of men lost, our stronghold in the New York City-State destroyed, and now this… Marcellus looked out across the scorched earth. Why do we not simply—

    Viceroy Arecibo cut him off with a gesture. Listen.

    Low horn blasts sounded over the cityscape and a dark bulbous shape lumbered along the sky in their direction.

    The Union Security Force will be here soon. Marcellus swallowed hard, the fine mist of perspiration on his lip smeared with ash. They followed the smoke.

    Burn the documents.

    But what of Blackburn’s Daughter? We must do something. This cannot continue.

    A gust blew across the ground bringing with it a single shred of The Order’s crimson herald. Arecibo’s hand shot out, catching the material as it fluttered past. It will not.

    What can The Order do? She is mad.

    She is also mortal. Arecibo closed his eyes against the acrid wind that swept along the asphalt. More and more the poisonous gasses of the wasteland made their way through the failing protective grid as each day passed. And not the only thing to fear out there.

    1

    Charlotte Blackburn

    They launched from the deck like dark creatures soaring from the fiery depths of our broken world. Men with membrane wings affixed to their outlander fatigues shot whip-fast from the catapult mounted on the Wind Reaper’s platform. They tore across the thermal winds, banking and riding the heated waves of air high above the immense sails of the lumbering metal structure. Eight two-story-tall legs bent and beat the sand like giant spider appendages as the massive metal vessel clattered along the dune. A terrifying sight the first time I’d laid eyes on it, the superstructure of a Wind Reaper outpost was massive. At least a block long with four levels, it housed as many as three thousand men, women, and children. Yet in the time I’d spent living here, I strove to explore every rusted rivet and squeaking hatch.

    I sat against the warm metal siding of the lookout tower watching through the pitted glass. Razed by constant sand storms, the window afforded a blurred view of the sentinel passes. After months aboard the haphazardly welded vessel, the constant clattering now only registered as background noise.

    It had been so long since I’d been at a ball with a gown and a proper gentleman asking me to dance. To me, the timeline seemed skewed. Distorted by the months I’d slept, lost in oblivion only to wake aboard this welded warren so far removed from who and what I had been. The metal chain bracelet in my hand felt heavy, and I pooled the links in my palm. I had not seen Ashton for months. Snippets of rumor in the mess hall or on the flight deck gave no consolation. The Order of the Sword and Scroll hunted him for defecting. The Peaceful Union wanted his head for fighting with Defiance. I just wanted him safe. So far, no one was getting what they wanted.

    On the deck below the lookout tower, a group of men and young boys fought with the howling wind in their attempt to secure wooden casks into rope netting for storage. Another cluster of men scraped the metal joints of our loading cranes free of gritty ash. Young boys stood beside fathers learning the art of capturing the thermal winds in the Wind Reaper’s vast sails. They swayed with the lurching of the metal vessel as if they’d been born to the sea of sand. I guessed that some of the younger ones had been aboard this behemoth their entire lives.

    Created by the military just after the quakes to troll the rubble for survivors, the vessels proved too time consuming to finish in the panic and chaos in the aftermath of the disaster. Abandoned in the wastelands, the clans that formed the Reapers, men and women from southern estates and bayous that no longer existed, made these iron walkers their fortresses.

    A small child stood just outside the circle of fathers and sons. Kasava, a young boy whose father died in a recent raid, held a rope hook in one of his small hands. Though his face shield hid his expression, the inward roll of his shoulders brought an ache to my throat.

    He’d lost his father. I knew that pain. The deep hollow that crushes the breath from you. My gaze went to the blue of my fingertips; the signs of infection. The faint color rode up my palm fading as it reached my wrist. These hands had killed my father. I shook with the memory of his crazed gnashing as the Trembling Sickness clenched every muscle in his body even as it broke his bones. A terrible disease that now crawled in my own veins. Yet, I’d had years with my father before that terrible day.

    Kasava was nine at most. Minutes passed and no one noticed him. No one asked him to join in the work or even looked up to acknowledge his existence. He took a step back from the group, then another, the hook toppling from his little hand.

    I pulled my gloves and gas mask on and pushed through the lookout tower’s door. A foul, hot wind whipped at my hair and skirt, the sand scraping at the exposed skin of my wrists and neck. Descending the ladder, I hopped down next to Kasava. You dropped this. Plucking the rope hook from the deck, I handed it to him. Do you think you could help me with something?

    Me? Grinding metal nearly drowned out his small voice. He turned to the group of men and boys, and then back at me. Behind the glass of his face mask, his eyes were large and moist. You want my help?

    Yes. I nodded to some crates arranged in a haphazard grouping near a support post. They were the weapons the Reapers designed and traded for food and supplies. Of the eight total Wind Reaper vessels, this clan’s vessel did the most trade. Those are too large for just one person to move on their own.

    He held up his hook. I−I can tug and you can push?

    My plan exactly.

    Together we jostled and shoved the crates into a more presentable formation. Though only outside the protection of the Wind Reaper’s metal siding for a short time, the heat of the wasteland quake seams and lava on the sands below left me exhausted. I thanked Kasava, accepting his small arms around my waist as he gave me a quick hug before running to a nearby hatch. He disappeared inside.

    Out of the corner of my eye I caught movement inside the observation compartment at the far end of the Wind Reaper’s long platform. A man stood at the window peering out at the flying sentinels. Perfectly parted hair and thoughtful tugging of his mustache told me who it was. I smiled to myself.

    Nikola Tesla, the man who saved my life, who kept my dark secret, pivoted on the mechanical braces enabling him to stand on paralyzed legs. He started talking the moment I pushed through the thick metal door.

    The more you reveal yourself to these people, the more you invite danger, Charlotte.

    They were ignoring him. I lifted the gas mask from my head and blew into its sweaty interior. All Kasava wishes is to be a part of what he misses. He is grieving. He is lost.

    Tesla turned his piercing gaze on me, and I avoided whatever he was about to say by tapping the window.

    Ajala seems to be ordering more reconnaissance sweeps lately. The downed aero ships and pirate vessels here are picked dry of any metal or supplies. Only one smelting station was working today. At least eight men went out over the hour.

    He regarded me silently for a few moments, before answering. Not all returned. They lost another one this morning, Tesla’s tired voice pulled my gaze. He was watching a banking sentinel waver in the wind like a ragged kite. Poor man somehow wandered over an active seam. He dragged on his moustache, shaking his head. The gasses ignited and he went in a cloud of fire. No warning. Nothing left.

    They have short careers, I muttered, adjusting the large shawl wrapped around my upper torso in an attempt to hide the minute trembling of my long muscles. Doesn’t seem to be a lack of volunteers, however.

    Not with the rations they get for doing it. Tesla poked around in the toolbox at his feet, and grabbed a wrench. The metal frame encasing each of his withered legs creaked with his tinkering. Ah, this sticky, how you say…?

    Goop?

    Not goop. He gritted his teeth, pulling on the wires that fed power to the mechanized legs. Venom?

    Poisonous gas mixed with the constantly drifting ash created a residue that clogged gas mask valves, metal works, everything. Toxic and harsh on the skin, I had to agree with the scientist’s assessment. It was indeed the venom of the earth. I’d been told, in my former life inside the protection of the Tesla Dome’s grid, that the wasteland was a no-man’s land where hideous creatures crawled out of the quake chasms and devoured anything they came across. As it turned out, our own fractured landscape posed the greatest threat.

    The Great Calamity had set off chains of underground faults, breaking our world apart like a stone through glass. In the decade that followed, we huddled under Tesla’s electric grid domes that sheltered the capitals of our thirteen city-states. But even those were faltering. The relentless need for coal to power the steam work engines carved out even more of our unstable earth, and we were running out.

    Almost night. I peered out at the sun stained crimson through the blanket of ash, its lower half pocked with black clouds. Magma bubbled in a pool just off the port side, the lava spurt into the night, burning bright, before cooling and hissing to the ground. They should call them in.

    The Wind Reaper lurched, one of the appendages sinking into a dip in the dune. The metal door wrenched open flooding the cabin with eye searing gas.

    Tesla toppled from his seat, and I moved, catching him as his wrench skidded across the floor and out the door. It slipped under the cable railing and off into oblivion. He sighed next to me, his face sweaty, dark gaze moist as he coughed against the onslaught of the toxic air. I pulled the shawl over my mouth and nose and fought the slant of the room yanking the door shut.

    They must adjust the sails, Tesla croaked, gathering his tools. The buffeting wind that drives this beast is too unstable. We will topple if we do not take care.

    I shuddered at the thought of the nearly three thousand souls aboard this vessel spilling out onto the burning sands. Let’s get inside. You’ve lost your wrench and can do no more.

    We pushed through the rear hatch and into the dark corridor leading to the berthing rooms. Bed frames welded and stacked four-high crowded compartment after compartment. I slung Tesla’s arm across my shoulder, helping him navigate the swaying floor with his whirring leg braces.

    Children played in the hallways, running into rooms and upsetting their mothers. Men cleaned weapons and tried to win rations with cards. Too many bodies in too small a space made it easy for no one to notice me.

    The filters are failing, Tesla said and nodded into a room. Red ash piled up against the threshold and splayed across the small table within. It hung in the air and stuck to the damp linens the women hung from the ceilings to catch it. The fine ash clung to the rough walls and formed a film over lanterns and glasses. Do you see? He nodded to a sick room where at least a dozen people, mostly children, huddled and coughed and sweated through a new sickness. There are more every day. The red blight clogs their lungs. I tell Ajala this.

    It’s not the filters. I smoothed the powdery ash between my fingers and thumb. There’s more of it lately. The storms are worse…longer.

    Something must be done.

    That was the agreement. I reminded Tesla of his deal with Ajala, the leader of this Reaper clan. Your brain for my life.

    Yes, well, a moment of weakness, I imagine. Tesla winked at me, and I flashed on the younger man he used to be. The one barely able to shave who made my father’s mechanical leg. The one who’d saved our crumbling world with his protective domes before the Peaceful Union turned on him.

    You put yourself at great risk for me. I don’t know how to thank—

    "Sestrica, Tesla cut across me, his dark eyes holding mine. A man without enemies is worthless."

    Men wrapped in flowing swaths of fabric, women with their hair and faces covered, walked by us the opposite direction.

    I pulled my head shawl down to my brows and looked away as they pushed passed us, hiding the strange black streaks that marred the pale blue of my eyes. A sure sign of the Trembling Sickness, the striking symptom would give me away. The flickering candles in mismatched sconces lining the walls were not bright, but better to not take chances.

    A cluster of men stood in rappelling gear near the exit to the outside platform. They tested the harness buckles on their chests, wary of falling beneath the trampling feet of the Wind Reaper.

    Another night run, Tesla hissed. We must be near the city-state pipe works.

    Or they need to grease the gears in the legs. I pretended to cough, covering my face with my shawl as we passed the men.

    Your compassion will be your downfall. He stopped us in our tracks, leaning in. Someone will see you up close and they will panic. Ajala believes I treat you for your burns in the cavern. She does not suspect your true condition. Do not let your actions invite closer scrutiny.

    I pulled him with me, not answering. Faded posters, the edges gone dark with dirt, hung skewed on the corridor walls, bringing me up short. They displayed symbols of the rebel group, Defiance, and the outlaw, Blackburn’s Daughter, hastily painted and distributed by street vendors.

    My likeness stared out at me with piercing blue eyes, long black hair flared out, as the girl in the picture brandished a gun at an unseen foe. I took in the flowing skirt, leather bodice, and goggles atop her head and nearly laughed. Their version of me was fierce, unafraid, almost heroic. I ground my teeth, moving past.

    More propaganda posters stuck up hastily in a moment of fervor now listed on one nail. Someone had drawn a noose around my neck with coal. A bull’s eye adorned my forehead on another poster torn in half. Revered and reviled. My alter ego elicited strong emotions.

    Sentiments aboard this ship I was eager to avoid facing. The longer I remained anonymous, the safer for both myself and Tesla. Not just because of who Blackburn’s Daughter was to the Reapers, but because of the affliction coursing through my body; the dreaded Trembling Sickness.

    I flashed on the terrible scene a week ago when a family had been discovered harboring a child stricken with the infection. Happening by, I stood in the hallway, my breath caught in my throat as Ajala’s guards broke through the door and dragged the child from underneath the bed. Her mother and father cried, pulling on her little legs as the guards yanked her down the corridor.

    The girl snarled and snapped, her jaw slamming shut over and over as she shook. Full bodied tremors wracked her small frame as she wailed with deep agony. Skin blue as if she’d been pulled from a frozen lake, eyes gone completely black, the child was monstrous and the thought of that being my end sent a wave of panic through me. They hauled her out to the deck and hurled her over the side. Her tortured shriek as she toppled into a lava pit still haunted my dreams.

    You moaned. Tesla muttered. You will give yourself away.

    What? I hadn’t noticed I was doing it again. The involuntary sounds my condition evoked. I clenched my fists against a tremor. They could not see. They could not know.

    Something is happening, Tesla gripped my shoulder. Listen.

    A warble of voices echoed down the corridors from above. Thumping boots and the clatter of metal.

    What is it? My voice caught in my throat as a muffled blast rocketed along the outside wall. I flinched and turned to Tesla, his wide eyes confirmed my fears. We’re being attacked.

    It is but another skirmish. He clasped my arm.

    The Wind Reaper lurched, the walls groaning with the stress.

    The hallway dissolved into melee. Children, men, and women ran and shoved as they fought to get to their rooms or to their weapons.

    I dragged Tesla with me, as we tried to make it to his workshop. Another blast threw us to the floor and we skidded against the wall with a sickening tilt of the Wind Reaper. I looked up, trying to get my bearings, and froze.

    The far end of the corridor stood in darkness, the candles long burned down. I nearly didn’t’ see him, he was so still. A solitary figure against the wall. Something in the stature or the tilt of his head sent my heart beating fiercely. I blinked, my breath coming in hitches. It could not be. He could not be here.

    Tesla’s pained voice broke my gaze and when I looked back, the figure was gone. I scrambled over, helping him to his feet. I kicked and cajoled the metal braces, manipulating his steps, as we made our way to the workshop threshold. Once inside, I helped Tesla to his seat and stood panting, my arms wrapped around myself, shaking.

    Men armed with rifles and revolvers, and the weapons of their own design, streaked past the door to the platform. The war chant they shouted as they ran to meet the battle filled the dark halls. Another volley of explosions rammed against the outer hull sending shockwaves reverberating through the room and toppling Telsa’s equipment.

    An invading horde of wasteland pirates attacked, threatening the lives of everyone aboard, yet only one thing seized my mind. It was Ashton.

    2

    The gas mask skidded across the table, clattering to the floor as I reached for it. Tesla’s workshop clanged and clicked as every manner of device and mechanical contraption rattled with the cannon bursts outside. I steadied myself against the worktable, thankful it was bolted to the floor. I doubt all that fire power is from a mere band of wasteland wanderers. Finding the air canister, I screwed it to the gas mask hose and pulled the backpack assembly over my shoulders.

    Not your battle, Tesla argued. You are but my assistant to them. They do not expect this of you.

    I live here. Eat here. I turned to him, perplexed. What would you have me do? Is my life any more precious than all the others on this vessel?

    Charlotte, I cannot let you go out there. It is too dangerous. You are untrained. He reached for my arm once more, holding me at the table.

    Kasava ran past the open door dragging a rifle behind him. I turned to Tesla and his gaze snapped from the doorway to me. He let go.

    Where is the gun? When he didn’t answer I turned to him, my chest tight with frustration. Nikola!

    In the red bin. He folded his arms, his gaze hard. There is more to this, Charlotte.

    I doubt it. The bin held the revolver I’d found on the Wind Reaper and four bullets. I held them up. This is all we have left?

    Tesla nodded. They are for a dire time—

    A concussive blast rocked the metal frame of the workshop and I flinched, my knees going weak.

    Screams and hoarse shouting filled the dark hallways.

    "This is a dire time." I fumbled with the four rounds with shaking fingers unsure if it was the fear or the Trembling Sickness. At this point I supposed it did not matter which.

    Shock and fear, Tesla argued. They exacerbate your symptoms. Trembling, groaning, the ice cold temperature of your skin; all of these are now recognized as signs of the sickness, Charlotte. The blue hue of your temples and hands is tantamount to a brand of death on your chest to them. Surely you will be found out.

    I have sufficient doubt already, Nikola, my voice cracked. I have no need of more.

    Tesla’s lips pressed into a thin line.

    I ran for the door.

    Keep your wits about you, he shouted after me.

    I scrambled down the hallway struggling to see in the dark. Forms moved ahead of me; the outline of an ax and the flare of a skirt. The door to the flight deck opened and a triangle of wan light slit the floor. Aiming for it, I was almost there when a fiery explosion blasted a man backwards into the hallway in front of me. I screamed, the noise like a visceral growl. He didn’t move, and I caught sight of his ruined face and chest before the doorway slammed shut again. I stood there, panting, my body slick with sweat. I pulled back the hammer on the revolver. Perhaps I could make a stand here. Stop the enemy from entering. What good could I possibly do out there after all, with only four bullets and a trembling heart?

    Someone pushed past me, kicking the door ajar, and I beheld with horror the furor upon the flight deck. An enormous aero craft loomed overhead, the slick black of its balloon glistening with the firelight of the Wind Reaper’s blazing sails. It was a vast wooden ship, one that most likely sailed the seas before The Great Calamity. It hovered almost two stories above our heads.

    Reaper men ran across the platform firing weapons as they went at the floating behemoth. Conflagration grenades rained down from the ship, igniting everything. Our rigging ropes whipped with the stress of the mounting storm winds. Another ball of flame soared towards us from the dark vessel and crashed into our lookout tower, shattering the windows. I ducked as glass flared out from the explosion. The face of my gas mask fogged with my gasping breaths.

    Two men locked in a knot of elbows and fists toppled to the deck next to me. A sky marauder, his dark armor clanging against a support post, grabbed the Reaper man by the throat and tossed him over the railing to the abyss below.

    I screamed and he whipped to face me, brandishing his curved sword. Unbearable cold seared through my veins, the Trembling Sickness taking over my body as I shook with a torrent of sudden ferocity. Stop, I shouted, raising the gun.

    Beyond him, near the catapult, Kasava struggled with his rifle, his distinctive gas mask bearing rivets I’d given him from Tesla’s workshop.

    The marauder sneered and raised his sword.

    I shot him, leapt over his body, and ran. Get down. I waved my arms to get Kasava’s attention and pointed frantically to the sky.

    Overhead, the great aero ship rammed our mast. I stared, riveted at the wooden mermaid on its prow. Cracked and faded, it seemed to smile in the flickering shadows of the flames below it. The word, Infuriata, was carved just under her massive figure.

    Kasava, watch out!

    Gunfire erupted next to me, and I dove for the deck. I peered around a pile of crates and spied the sentinels struggling with the damaged catapult.

    Kasava knelt with his crossbow rifle near the base of the contraption. He fought with the bent bolt darts, his small mouth pulled into a grimace.

    A low growl tore from my lips and I balled my fist, willing myself to keep control even as the hunger gnawed at my chest. The fire. The blazing heat of it tugged at my core. An image tore through my mind, black eyes, roving and full of rage. I jerked, startled. A frigid wave rolled over me, quaking me entirely. Forcing the torrent down, I gritted my teeth and raced to him as more marauders dropped from the sky.

    They slid down ropes and onto the deck or the backs of terrified Reapers. Some leapt to the support beams with grappling hooks, ensnaring our vessel. A bear of a man, scarred and cackling crazily, landed next to Kasava, his ax already swinging in a terrible arc.

    I fired, missed, and fired again, toppling the attacker. Go, I screamed, my voice muffled with the gas mask. Kasava, hide!

    He looked up, confused, and then his little chin jutted up and he shook his head. The catapult, he shouted through the glass faceplate. They must launch.

    Let’s go, boy, a sentinel shouted as he ran from the outfitting shack near the railing, still buckling the wings to his chest. He scrambled aboard the device, twisted a lever to deploy the wings, and gave a thumbs up.

    Kasava yanked down on the long brass lever, whipping the man forward and out into the sky.

    Two more sentinels ran towards us.

    Kasava dropped his crossbow and cranked the catapult arm backwards with the rotating handle. The large brass gears on the side clicked into

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