inside, then swung in himself.
Wayne popped a peanut into his mouth. “How’d it go?”
“Eh,” Wax said. He had lost his dinner jacket somewhere, and blood—hopefully not his own—covered one arm of his shirt. His cravat drooped, half tied.
“We figured out where Suit and his people are likely holed up,” Wayne said as Marasi ran over to check on her sister, who looked flustered, but alive and such.
“You’re kidding,” Wax said.
“Nope,” Wayne said, then grinned and popped a peanut. “What’d you find?”
“Clues about Marasi’s cube,” Wax said, pulling off his cravat. “And something about a building project, and a potential army. Suit’s timetable seems to be more advanced than I’d thought.”
“Cheery,” Wayne said. “So…”
Wax sighed, then pulled out his billfold and tossed a note at Wayne. “You win.”
“You had a bet?” Marasi demanded.
“Friendly wager,” Wayne said, making the note disappear. “Can I bring these peanuts when we go?”
“Go?” Marasi said, standing up.
Wayne thumbed toward Wax, who had pulled out his travel bag. “We’re leaving. Marasi, Steris, I’d suggest packing lightly. You have about fifteen minutes.”
“I’m already packed,” Steris said, standing up.
“I—” Marasi looked from him to her, seeming baffled. “What did you do at that party?”
“Hopefully,” Wax said, “not start a war. But I can’t say for certain.”
Marasi groaned. “You let him do this,” she accused Steris.
Steris blushed. Wayne always found that expression odd from her, seeing as how she had the emotions of a rock and all.
What followed was an energetic bout of motion as Wax and Marasi both ran to pack things. Wayne sidled up to Steris and popped a peanut in his mouth. “You got that preparin’-your-bags-early thing from me, didn’t you?”
“I … Well, yes, actually.”
“What will you trade me for it, then?” Wayne said. “Gotta have a good trade when you take stuff.”
“I’ll think about it,” Steris said.
Fifteen minutes later, the four of them piled into a carriage driven by MeLaan in her male body. A bedraggled Aunt Gin stood on the doorstep of her hotel watching them. She held a wad of cash in her hand—a wad that included the money Wayne had won off Wax. He’d left it as a tip on account of him putting his boots up on the furniture.
A furiously loud set of bells sounded in the distance, and it drew closer. “Is that the constables?” Aunt Gin asked, sounding horrified.
“Afraid so,” Wax said, pulling the door closed.
The carriage lurched into motion, and Steris leaned out the window, waving farewell to the poor innkeeper.
“Framed for murder!” Steris called to her. “It’s on page seventeen of the list I gave you! Try not to let them harass our servants too much when they arrive!”
* * *
A few hours later, Wax stepped up to a cliff in the darkness and let the mists enfold him.
He missed darkness. It was never dark in the city, not as it had been in the Roughs. Electric lights were only exacerbating the issue. Everything glowing, casting away the darkness—and with it, stillness. Silence. Solitude.
A man found himself when he was alone. You only had one person to chat with, one person to blame. He fished in his mistcoat pocket and was surprised to find a cigar. He thought he was out of these, good stout Tingmars brought down from Weathering.
He cut this one with his belt knife, then lit it with a match. He savored it, drawing in the smoke, holding it, then puffing it out to churn in the mists. A little bit of him to mix with Harmony. May He choke on it.
At his side, he turned a little metal spike over in his fingers. The earring VenDell had sent.
It was nearly identical to the one he’d used to kill Lessie.
Eventually, footsteps on pine needles signaled someone approaching. He pulled on his cigar, giving a warm glow to the mists and revealing MeLaan’s face. Her feminine one. She’d finished changing, and was doing up the buttons on her shirt as she joined him.
“You going to get some sleep?” she asked softly.
“Maybe.”
“Last I checked,” she said, “humans still need it. Once in a while.”
Wax pulled on his cigar, then blew out into the mists again.
“Suit wants you to go back to Elendel, I figure,” MeLaan said. “He’s trying to set it up so that you’ll have no choice, so far as you see it.”
“We’re in a bad spot, MeLaan,” Wax said. “The emissary that Aradel sends to a political rally ends up murdering the host? If the outer cities weren’t tense before, they will be now. At