"There's another reason," I said, "why I doubt the disease is too virulent. If rivals of the Ring of Knives started an epidemic, the Sparks would declare total war. One hundred percent annihilation of those responsible for the plague-the killers, whoever hired them, all known associates, all associates of the associates, the seamstress who hemmed their trousers, and the boy who delivered their coal. The Spark Lords are ruthless, and when they call themselves Protectors of Humanity they mean it. Whatever criminal clan killed poor Rosalind, I can't imagine they're crazy enough to antagonize the Sparks over a sixteen-year-old girl."
Annah lifted her head, large brown eyes looking up at me. "You underestimate the craziness of criminals." She spoke in a low voice. "There are people who think they're so clever they can get away with anything, even if it's outwitting the Sparks… and others who don't care if they get caught, as long as they first have the pleasure of causing pain… and even a few who believe revenge is more important than life itself-an absolute necessity, a religious imperative, taking vengeance no matter the consequences to friends and family."
I wanted to ask how she knew such things-quiet intense Annah-but I couldn't think how to phrase the question. She even waited for me to speak… but when I didn't, she just got out of her chair. "I'm going to wash my hands. I didn't touch anything, but I'm going to wash."
She held out her hand to me. In retrospect, it was an odd thing to do if she thought she might have deadly microbes on her fingers; but at the time, her gesture seemed perfectly natural. I took the offered hand and we went into her small bathroom together.
We washed for a long time. Without saying a word. Perhaps we weren't soaping off germs, but death itself. The smell of it. The cruelty. The sight of a dead sixteen-year-old lying bare, cold, and cooling because she happened to have the wrong mother.
We washed and washed and washed. The more lye, the better.
4: TOBACCO SKYROAD
Annah checked her other girls. While she went from room to room making sleepy teenagers open their mouths and say, "Ahh!", I stuffed towels into the crack under Rosalind's door. However much I believed no microbes would ooze out, it was foolish to take chances. Eventually we'd have to incinerate Rosalind's entire room, preferably with the Caryatid supervising the flames… but that had to wait. If this was an OldTech bioweapon, we couldn't destroy the evidence until the Spark Lords had examined it.
We didn't want to upset the Sparks; they were a greater hazard to one's health than any disease. Besides, I truly didn't think the clotted-cream deposits in Rosalind's throat were overly contagious. Otherwise, I wouldn't have let Annah make the rounds of girls on her floor-I'd have locked us both into quarantine.
But I believed Annah and I were clean… thanks in part to the Caryatid's sort of a prophecy kind of thing. I was doomed to go questing-ergo, no illness would keep me home. In fact, the quest would almost certainly be a result of Rosalind's death; the only question was how that would come about.
I looked down the hall in Annah's direction. She was talking now to a seventeen-year-old named Fatima Nouri-a distant cousin of mine, though we'd never met before Fatima came to Feliss. (The Nouris controlled most of the power and money in Ka'aba province on the east side of the Red Sea, while my own family dominated Sheba on the west. Every generation, a diplomatic marriage was arranged between a Nouri and a Dhubhai as a gesture of goodwill… and as a way to plant spies in each other's camps.) I pushed the towels a little farther under Rosalind's door, then walked down to talk with my cousin.
Annah said nothing as I approached. Fatima grinned broadly, looking back and forth between Annah and me as if she was sure we were lovers-why else would we be together in the middle of the night? I could tell young Fatima was mentally composing a letter home: "Ooo, Cousin Philemon has a
"Fatima," I said, "could you run an errand for me?"
"Now?" Her grin faltered. "Right now?"
"Right now. I'd like you to go into Simka and bring back the Steel Caryatid. Do you know where she lives?"
Fatima nodded. Her grin had returned in full-apparently she was tickled by the thought of sallying forth in the dead of night.
"Are you sure it's safe?" Annah asked. "A girl alone at this hour…"
"I'll take my sword," Fatima said. She turned back to me. "Can I take my sword?"
"As long as you don't stab the town watchmen. You'll recognize them; they're the ones asleep in the gutters."