Excerpt:
Crouched atop the walls of the palace grounds, Zachary Sicario watched
as the lanterns below flickered into life. His keen eyes tracked the path of
the young servant as she scurried through the manicured gardens, passing from
one lamp to the next with hardly a pause for breath. Bit by bit, the night was
pressed back by the shimmering lights, until the palace formed a bubble of
luminescence against the oppressive gloom of Leith under nightfall.
“Palace” might be overstating things a little, Zachary thought to
himself as the servant retired, her task complete for the evening.
In typical aristocratic fashion, the noble owners had done their best
to replica the grandeur of the royal palace back in Londinium. But Zach had
visited those grounds himself on a number of occasions, albeit in a less than
official capacity. He knew a cheap knockoff when he saw one.
The fountains might fill these gardens with the same joyful whispers as
in Londinium, but he could see where the paint had begun to flake from the
“marble” statues that adorned their waters. Neither did he see the same
careless displays of wealth typical of the capital. No golden inlays around the
windows and doors, no bejeweled eyes on the sculptures for passing thieves to
filch. Even the gardens lacked the same carefully manicured touch as those
found at the royal palace.
But then, that wasn’t so surprising. Zach had tried his hand at
gardening since retiring; he knew well the difficulty of finding good help this
far north. The dark spots infecting several of the rosebushes should have been
trimmed days ago.
Breathing in the sweet scent of the flowers, Zach stifled a sigh. He’d
enjoyed the quiet of his garden, the homely feel of the cottage in the
highlands, far from Leith and its dark underbelly. He had thought this world
far behind him. But alas, fate had other plans.
“Mansion” is probably more appropriate, Zach thought at last, returning
to the task at hand.
In addition to the palpable absence of real wealth, the grounds of the
mansion lacked one other key feature. Security. Zach had spent the past few
days staking out the noble’s property. There were just two guards patrolling
the outer gardens—and on this cold winter night, both had already retreated to
the burning hearth in the guard house. Tonight would be like stealing gold
from, well, a noble.
Still, years had passed since Zach’s last job, and he lingered a while
longer in the shadows, watching for something he might have missed. Even with
these rich aristocratic sorts, one had to take care.
Especially with these sorts, he reminded himself. Not even Zach’s
reputation would survive being caught by the likes of Roy Whitfield.
Truth be told, he’d been surprised to find the man’s name on his list,
given so many of the others were less than exemplary citizens. But then, the
aristocracy always had considered themselves above the rules. It made sense
that at least one of their kind would be interested in the Anomaly.
Three months had passed since the storm had wreaked havoc throughout
the island kingdom of Riogachd. Most of the fishing fleet had been lost, either
destroyed at sea or sunk in harbours across the nation, inundated by the waves
that had swept the coast. Not even those citizens further inland had been safe,
as storm surges broke through seawalls and rivers flooded lowland villages.
The storm of the century, people had called it. Yet even as the
battered communities of Riogachd struggled to rebuild, the King’s Royal Navy
had been deployed not to the clean-up, but to a blockade deep in the Northern
Sea. It hadn’t been long before the rumours began to circulate.
Whispers had spread about strange lights and disappearing ships, though
of course the King’s Council refused to even acknowledge the Anomaly.
Which, of course, meant half the populace was convinced the Council
were covering up a secret treasure to be had out in the Northern Sea. No one
could quite decide on the nature of that treasure—some claimed it must be a
sucken galley carrying gold from the bank of Londinium, others that the
princess’s ship had gone missing on the raging seas.
As the days turned to weeks, the rumours had grown in size, and now
people spoke of portals to another world, of islands of gold risen from the depths,
of magic and sorcery, of the power to fulfil a man’s greatest desires.
The last had really caught Zach’s attention.
Eventually, some had tried to slip past the naval blockade. Amateurs
for the most part, those with access to a skiff or steamer that had survived
the storm. Some had been caught and after a public trial, hanged. The rest had
never been seen again.
Now three months had passed, and the amateurs had long since given up
trying to uncover the secrets of the Anomaly.
It was time for the professionals to give it a try.
On the wall of the mansion, Zach drew in a calming breath. A cloud
drifted across the half-moon, darkening the sky but doing little to dim the
lanternlight in the grounds below. But it finally stirred Zachary into action.
He made one last check of the knives hidden on his person. Maybe they weren’t
as effective as one of the modern revolvers carried by the upper echelons of
society, but they were useful in a pinch. And quiet.
Finally satisfied he was ready, Zach stepped from the wall and dropped
to the ground with a soft thump. He crossed the lawns quickly, slipping from
shadow to shadow, keeping as far from the lanterns as he could. Only once did
he stop, when a sudden sound came from overhead. A flash of white feathers was
all he glimpsed of the owl as it dove; a moment later it rose on languid wings,
the dark body of a rat clutched in its talons.
Frozen in the shadow of a plum tree, Zachary held his breath, waiting
to see whether the creature had drawn the attention of the guards. Seconds
slipped by and he found his mind drifting back to those first whispers of the
Anomaly. He’d always had a nose for a good mystery, and he’d needed the
distraction, something to divert his mind from his…other problems.
Even in retirement, Zachary was more resourceful than most of those
clinging to the underbelly of Leith. It hadn’t been hard to find a soldier from
the royal navy. Most of those in the blockade around the Anomaly spent their
off-duty days in Leith. It had been even easier to convince the man to join him
at the local tavern. Several rounds of mead later, he’d had the truth straight
from the horse’s mouth.
It wasn’t just strange lights and fog that had appeared out in the
Northern Sea. An island had apparently risen from the depths, though not of
gold. Even so, its appearance had caused much consternation amongst those back
in Londinium, for it spoke of great power, one outside the Council’s control.
But when the armada had tried to investigate further, a great mist had
risen around the island, and those ships that had drifted too close had been
swallowed up, vanishing without a trace.
The soldier had seen the lights himself, great flashes of white and
green and blue in the darkness, but his ship had thankfully escaped unscathed
by whatever phenomenon surrounded the place.
The entire island was a mystery wrapped in impossibility.
Just the sort of false hope a dying man could cling to
with his last days.