Андреа Хёст - The Pyramids of London

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In a world where lightning sustained the Roman Empire, and Egypt’s vampiric god-kings spread their influence through medicine and good weather, tiny Prytennia’s fortunes are rising with the ships that have made her undisputed ruler of the air.
But the peace of recent decades is under threat. Rome’s automaton-driven wealth is waning along with the New Republic’s supply of power crystals, while Sweden uses fear of Rome to add to her Protectorates. And Prytennia is under attack from the wind itself. Relentless daily blasts destroy crops, buildings, and lives, and neither the weather vampires nor Prytennia’s Trifold Goddess have been able to find a way to stop them.
With events so grand scouring the horizon, the deaths of Eiliff and Aedric Tenning raise little interest. The official verdict is accident: two careless automaton makers, killed by their own construct.
The Tenning children and Aedric’s sister, Arianne, know this cannot be true. Nothing will stop their search for what really happened.
Not even if, to follow the first clue, Aunt Arianne must sell herself to a vampire

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“And where do you stand on union?” she asked.

“My ideal would be for one of Alba’s own gods to Answer,” he said. “But I’m resigned to it not happening. We barely know their names, after so many centuries of the Duodecim, the Cour d’Lune, the Aesir and the Green Aesir. There is so little of the true Alba remaining: our days are Swedish, our months Roman and our years Egyptian.”

“So are Prytennia’s,” Rian pointed out.

“But you at least have Sulis. For all the gods whose conquerors have trampled Alba’s fields, not one could establish territorial allegiance. We thought it a triumph once, proof that we had our own Otherworld, that there was a place where Albans truly belonged. Now all I want is certainty.”

“And you think Sweden will bring that?”

“They managed it with Greenland, and Highfall. It’s one of the biggest advantages of the Protectorates—the Swedes are able to systematically bring about territorial allegiance with the Aesir through the simple choice of the people, and so I’m willing to encourage Alba to make that choice. Anything to end this eternal disadvantage to Alban souls, this uphill struggle to gain an Otherworld, or face unlife. To which point, I’m happy enough for a united Albion if you—or anyone—should happen to find the Dragon of the North, since Sulis and Arawn’s territory is tied together. But enough of the Union—I’m sure you’ve had your fill of the subject. What did you think of Folly’s collection of follies?”

“I liked it. But I’m afraid the children have ruled Tangleways out on account of animals and exercise. It’s such an unusual array of classes—I would never have thought of teaching animal care in an academically-focused school.”

Lyle laughed. “Folly met some precocious brat who didn’t know where milk came from. That’s what started him off on the whole thing. It’s unfortunate: his heart’s in the right place, and he’s found some excellent teachers, but it’s looking like the whole thing will flop badly.”

“And then Lynsey will be back in Gustav’s path?”

“Well, she’ll be disappointed.” His face grew solemn. “And is already dismayed, having learned who it is your family have recently lost. She looked up to Eiliff Tenning, and feels responsible for suggesting her for Folly’s commission.”

“How did Lynsey know Eiliff?” Rian asked, pleased not to have had to raise the subject herself.

“Through the Mini-T Scholars program—which actively recruits at Alban universities, and causes no end of tension in doing so. Fortunately Folly knows Lynsey well enough to be certain she hasn’t gone around babbling about his secret projects to all and sundry.”

“Did she tell you?”

“Well, yes.” He grimaced. “At least, she mentioned that she’d been able to send a plum commission Eiliff Tenning’s way. But I didn’t know the details, and certainly haven’t mentioned it to anyone. Even so, Lynsey’s second-guessing herself, convinced she somehow caused this, so I’ve strongly hinted to Evelyn that he should go tour Folly’s latest extravagance. That’s sure to take her mind off blaming herself.”

“Because?”

“Oh, Lyn’s been in love with Evie since the first time I dragged her down to Sheerside. I pretend not to know. He certainly has never realised—thinks of her as my pig-tailed little sister. It would be unfair to tell him, don’t you feel?”

“But you’re telling me?”

Lyle’s expression turned mischievous. “What’s a little light sabotage between friends?” he asked, then leaned back as a server approached with a steaming platter.

Because she wouldn’t indulge in an affair with Evelyn if she thought it would hurt Lynsey? Rian decided to take this leap of logic as a compliment, and settled back to enjoy a good meal with an accomplished flirt. The food was an eclectic mix—beginning with a Stomrurian grain dish, then a meat-and-potatoes staple, with a sorbet for afters—but it was all nicely done, though the wine a little heavy for her tastes. She didn’t push particularly hard for information relating to Eiliff, and only learned that Lynsey would provide a little mathematical tutoring at Tangleways, along with swordcraft.

“Let me find you a taxicab,” Lyle said, as they emerged back on the street.

“No need—that omnibus runs right into Lamhythe. Thank you again Lyle.”

She kissed him lightly on the cheek—for they were cheekbones worthy of such a salute—and trotted to catch a passing omnibus. It was a new double-decker model, and yet steam-powered, and as she climbed up to the open top level to enjoy the evening breeze, she reflected on her involvement in matters that might solve the shortage of fulgite, and change how buses were made.

And then she thought about catching an omnibus, even though she could afford a taxicab easily. Habit dies hard. Still, the view was better, especially now that shadows held no mysteries for her.

And what now for her ponderously slow investigation? It had only taken most of summer, but at last the question of Lynsey was solved. Yet the answer brought her so little. Two weak suspects in Folly Fennington and his Matthiel. She was fairly certain Fennington had held back something about the third piece of unusual fulgite he’d retained—possibly an investigation into whether it had been artificially created—but her unreliable new sense had found a distinct lack of murderous guilt in any of the four who admitted to knowing about Eiliff’s commission. If not them, then perhaps an eavesdropper?

The one thing she had gained, as tactfully as she could manage, was the name of the less-than-reputable person who had sold and then tried to buy back several pieces of unusual fulgite. She’d taken a certain pleasure in adding that to the brief report she’d sent on to the palace, and hoped very much that it was something that Makepeace had not already learned, when he’d questioned Folly Fennington before she had the chance.

Undecided on her next step, Rian allowed her thoughts to drift to flirtation. She did not mind that the pursuit had openly become part of Evelyn and Lyle’s playful rivalry. No-one was pretending they had fallen in love. But was Lyle right in thinking that long-standing feelings on Lynsey’s part would make Rian less inclined to trifle there? And what would it be like to bed anyone when contact would inconsistently tell her exactly what they were feeling? Exciting, or awkward?

A greater complication were her ‘niblings’, and whether the idea of aunts with lovers would put further strain on them. Particularly with Eleri, who would be raw to all instances of romance.

There was unmissable irony in an aunt and niece meeting the Queen’s two daughters and having entirely opposite reactions to overwhelming attraction. Eleri saw Celestine and was convinced she had found the one person she would ever want to marry. Rian’s pulse might quicken whenever she let herself think of Aerinndís Gwyn Lynn, but Rian also knew that she had a type—incisive, highly competent, and with a hint not so much of disdain as of being supremely hard to impress. This combination invariably hooked her deeply, and she had learned to recognise when she was being pulled off balance, and avoid the cause.

That was not a response she had considered wise to suggest to Eleri, and she hoped she’d chosen the correct attitude: to not quite dismiss the possibility that the girl might find some future with Princess Celestine, and to do what little she could to support plans for courtship. It seemed unhappy timing, though, for such a goal-oriented creature as Eleri to face another challenge that could not be reliably solved by a precisely-drawn schematic and a stint in the workshop.

Leaving the bus for the short walk back to Forest House, Rian set aside travails of the heart and tried to decide her next step. If the thieves suspected she had the last piece of artificial fulgite, could she use that to bait them? Or should she attempt again to communicate with the ‘haunt’ that seemed to drive the converted mannequin’s movements? She’d chosen, at least, not to mention its existence to Lord Fennington, even though it appeared he was the true owner of both fulgite and finely-crafted commission.

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