II

AT THE LAKE, AND LATER


1

here had been a moment, back in the Auction House, when Suzanna had thought her life was at an end. She’d been helping Apolline down the stairs when the walls had creaked, and it seemed the house had come down around their ears. Even now, as she stood watching the lake, she was not certain how they’d escaped alive. Presumably the menstruum had intervened on her behalf, though she had not consciously willed it to do so. There was much she had to learn about the power she’d inherited. Not least, how much it belonged to her and how much she to it. When she found Apolline, whom she’d lost in the furore, she would find out all the woman knew.

In the meantime, she had the islands, their backs crowned with cypress trees, to wonder about, and the lisp of the waves on the stones to soothe her.

‘We should go.’

Jerichau broke her reverie as softly as he could, touching the back of her neck with his hand. She had left him at the house that stood along the shore, talking with friends he’d not seen in a human life-time. They had reminiscences to exchange, in which she had no place, and which, she sensed, the others had no desire to share. Criminal talk, she’d uncharitably concluded as she left them to it. Jerichau was a thief, after all.

‘Why did we come here?’ she asked him.

‘I was born here. I know every one of these stones by name.’ His hand still rested on her shoulder. ‘Or at least I did. It seemed a good place to show you –’

She looked away from the lake towards him. His brow was furrowed; ‘But we can’t stay,’ he said.

‘Why not?’

‘They’ll want to see you at Capra’s House.’

‘Me?’

‘You unmade the Weave.’

‘I had no choice,’ she said. ‘Cal was going to be killed.’

The furrow deepened.

‘Forget Cal,’ he said, his tone toughening. ‘Mooney’s a Cuckoo. You’re not.’

‘Yes I am,’ she insisted. ‘Or least that’s what I feel I am, and that’s the important thing …’

His hand dropped from her shoulder. He was suddenly sullen.

‘Are you coming or not?’ he said.

‘Of course I’m coming.’

He sighed.

‘It wasn’t meant to be this way,’ he said, his voice recapturing some of its former gentility.

She wasn’t sure what he was speaking of: the unweaving, his reunion with the lake, or the exchange between them. Perhaps a little of each.

‘Maybe it was a mistake to unmake the Weave,’ she said, somewhat defensively, ‘but it wasn’t just me. It was the menstruum.’

He raised his eyebrows.

‘It’s your power,’ he said, not without rancour. ‘Control it.’

She gave him a frosty look. ‘How far is Capra’s House?’

‘Nothing’s far in the Fugue,’ he replied. The Scourge destroyed most of our territories. Only these few remain.’

‘Are there more in the Kingdom?’

‘A few maybe. But all we really care for is here. That’s why we have to hide it again, before morning.’

Morning. She’d almost forgotten that the sun would soon be rising and, with it. Humankind. The thought of her fellow Cuckoos – with their taste for zoos, freak-shows and carnivals – invading this territory did not much amuse her.

‘You’re right,’ she said. ‘We have to be quick,’ and together they went up from the lake towards Capra’s House.

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