The fire inside Telsin died. The power that had for so many months warmed her was leeching away. Her skin began to turn grey.
No!she thought.No! The bomb cannot be stopped. If they interfere, they will destroy themselves and the city.Potentially both cities. Rusts.
We… shall see…
Telsin gasped and fell to her knees, trying to reassure herself. It was just Wax. He’dbeen an annoyance since childhood, but he’dneveractuallyinterrupted anything she’dset in motion. Honestly, he probably hadn’t even reached the ship. A jump like that was nearly impossible, and his aim wasn’tthatgood.
Was it?
***
Wax downed a vial of metals from his belt, replenishing his steel. That jump had been incredible, with Wayne on his back, a flash of rushing wind and power reminiscent of holding the Bands of Mourning. He had barely made it to the ship after slowing their final approach withAllomancy—eventually landing them near some portholes a few feet below the open deck. He expected to get an earful for making Wayne climb the rest of the way.
A sailor reached for her gun, and Wax for his own. But before either of them could draw, Wayne flung a handful of bullets into the air and Pushed them to streak through the air, dropping the woman.
“Ruuusts,” Wayne said. “Is that what it’s always been like for you? That was so easy!” Wayne eyed him. “Gotta be honest, almost ruins your reputation, mate. If people knew how easy bein’ a Coinshot was, they’dall stop talkin’ about how great you are.”
Wax shook his head, pointing Vindication at the second sailor—the trembling one holding up the lantern. Wayne had of course insisted on a spike for himself. Ruin. Wax hoped what they’ddone hadn’t beentooblasphemous.
No,Harmony’s voice said in his head,not blasphemous, Waxillium. More… a sense of industrious recycling.
“Good to know,” Wax muttered.
I cannot see where the bomb is,Harmony told him.I can see only what you do. I didn’t know the ship was the delivery mechanism—but I am afraid the device will have redundancies and dead man’s switches. Take care. We cannot afford to detonate it by accident. I fear that even at this range, it would be deadly to many innocent people.
Strange. He’dcome all the way around to finding God’s voice in his head comforting again.
Wayne seized the fellow with the lantern by the arm, holding tight and staring him in the eyes—though the man didn’t seem to need any further intimidation.
“The bomb,” Wax said. “Where is it?”
“The… the payload?” the man stuttered, then pointed to a nearby door. “In the munitions hold. A-all the way down. Follow the red lines painted on… on the walls.”
Wax shared a glance with Wayne, then nodded.
“You can’t go inside!” the man said. “The weapon is fragile and might explode, so only the experts are allowed to touch it! You’ll blow up the entire ship!”
“Then mate,” Wayne said with a drawl, “I suggest you find a way to not be on the ship anymore. Real fast.”
Wayne let go. The nervous fellow glanced from Wax to Wayne, then—with a sense of panic—threw himself off the ship into the churning waters below, taking his lantern with him and leaving the two of them in darkness.
“Damn,” Wayne said. “I meant for him to find a lifeboat or somethin’.”
“The people on this ship are going to be zealots,” Wax said. “Considering they’re on a suicide mission.” Shouts from farther along the deck, including other lanterns being unshuttered, indicated that someone had noticed what was happening.
With increasing urgency, Wax led the way to the metal door the man had indicated. A Push slammed it open, revealing a stairwell to the decks below. He surprised several sailors coming up, armed with rifles. They didn’t get a chance to fire before Wax dropped them. He then soared to the landing. This entire ship was metal—steps included. It made for some easy—
Wayne crashed down beside him, thanks to a maladroit Steelpush. He scrambled back to his feet.
“That part’s harder than it looks,” Wayne admitted. “You sure you got my spike in the right spot, mate?”
“I studied the Lord Mistborn’s book thoroughly over the years, Wayne,” he said. “If I’dplaced the spike wrong, you’dbe in an extreme amount of pain.”
Wayne grunted, then grabbed one of the rifles from the fallen sailors. He nodded to Wax, and—despite calling for the sailors to surrender—they had to shoot a few on their way down. Following the red lines, they reached a small hold labeledMUNITIONS DUMP.
Someone really ought to explain,Wax thought, unlocking the door and slipping the key into his pocket,that leaving a guard outside with the key is a terrible practice.He stepped over the body of the guard and joined Wayne inside the room.
It was square, perhaps thirty feet across, and had three very large barrel contraptions—covered in wires, maybe five feet tall—near the center, spaced about five feet from one another. There was another device on the far wall, also rigged with wires—these leading to the three barrels. There were no obvious timers, control panels, or anything of the sort. It was, frankly, baffling.