Everything had a metallic feel to it, like burnished steel, enhanced by the skeletons of buildings rising up, their girders exposed. The finished buildings had metal roofs or siding—not always polished, and often with a patina. The overall effect gave the great variety of building shapes a cohesive theme.
She was impressed. Even half-finished, this was a city with a plan. The design screamed of industry, forward thinking, and accomplishment. They passed numerous billboards proclaiming the virtues of self-reliance and sovereignty. You didn’t have to read far between the lines to see the tone those were setting. Independence from Elendel.
“You ever notice,” her driver said, “how kids always draw houses the same way?”
Marasi frowned, glancing at her. The woman’s voice was on the deeper side, but Marasi couldn’t make out much about her. Marasi had chosen her truck at random, picking one that had boxes in the back, not constables—hoping that would help her sleep.
“I can’t say that I’ve noticed,” Marasi said.
“It’s strange,” the driver continued. “You can imagine the shape, of course. Square box. Triangular roof. Door right in the center. Two windows. Often a chimney, even though fewer and fewer homes have thosethese days. What houseactuallylooks like that? Almost none. So why do kids draw them?”
“I guess it’s easy,” Marasi said.
“Perhaps,” her driver said. “Or maybe they’re not drawing a house. They’re drawing someone else’spictureof a house. What they’ve seen others make. An icon. A symbol.”
Marasi narrowed her eyes. “That’s an interesting observation, Constable… what was your name?”
“I go by Moonlight,” the woman said. “We like code names. It’s one of our things.”
“I… have never heard that word before.”
“You wouldn’t have, since you have no moon here.” The woman leaned back and stretched out her arm on the top of the steering wheel, causing her sleeve to inch back and reveal a red tattoo on her forearm, above the wrist. The same symbol that had been on the card left for her.
Slowly, cautiously, Marasi reached for the pistol in the holster under her arm.
“You won’t need that,” the woman said, her eyes still on the road. They’dbeen forced to slow considerably now that they were approaching the center of the city. Who would have guessed that an Outer City would have so much traffic?
“Where’s the constable who should have been driving this truck?” Marasi asked. “What did you do to her?”
“Nothing,” the woman said. “She’s fine. But I find it amusing that’s the first thing you ask. I mean, I understand—but maybe get your priorities straight, Marasi.”
Marasi kept her fingers lightly on the grip of the handgun, but didn’t draw it. “Was it you in the cavern? The person wearing a white mask?”
“It was black,” the woman said, passing that little test. “Yes. That was me.”
“And… are you human?”
“One hundred percent,” the woman said. “I’m not a local though.” She pulled off her cap, revealing straight black hair in a ponytail and uncommon features. A shape to the eyes Marasi had never seen, prominent cheekbones.
“Are you from the Southern Continent?” Marasi asked.
“No.” Moonlight nodded to the city outside. “I’ve always hated Bilming. I should like the thought they put into design, yet the underlying messagedisturbs me. They’re trying hard to make each building individual, but the way it comes together is too deliberate. It makes the artistry feel hollow.”
“And why do you think that is?”
“Because of Trell’s influence, obviously.”
Marasi leaned forward. “Tell me.Please.”
Moonlight glanced at her for the first time. Such self-assured eyes, with a cocked half smile on her lips. This was a woman who had put herself at the very center of a group of constables and didn’t seem the slightest bit worried.
“So hungry,” Moonlight said. “We don’t always share answers with outsiders, Marasi.”
“I could have you arrested and interrogated.”
“On what charges?”
“Interfering with constable business.”