“They’re in on it,” Maraga said.
“What?” Marasi said, spinning. “All of them?”
Maraga dug in a cabinet and came out with a piece of paper. She handed it to Marasi, who showed it to Wax. A letter from Vennis Hasting, talking about the creation of a bomb of incredible power. It was dated almost a year ago, and implicated many of the names on the wall.
Marasi frowned. That… that seemed impossible. This many people in theirown governmentknew? Could the Set have its fingers wrapped that tightly around the Basin? She looked at Wax.
“I know some of these people,” he said. “Vennis is a rat, of course—but Lady Yomen is a good friend. As close a senator as I trust. This doesn’t add up, Marasi.Noneof this adds up.”
“Maybe that’s why the Senate is so confident,” she said, “that they can bully the Outer Cities.”
“I know these people,” Wax said. “They wouldn’t keep a secret like this; theycouldn’t.Everything they’ve done so far has been about posturing forpower. The Supremacy Bill, the tariffs, the ‘hard line’ they’re taking with the South… If Vennis knew about a bomb, he’dbe advocating for strategic tests to prove how powerful it is.”
“They could all be in the Set,” Marasi said softly.
His expression darkened. He took the letter, staring at it, and she knew what he was thinking: if the Set’s tendrils ran this deep—even into the hearts of his friends among the senators…
“No,” he said. “There’s something very strange here, Marasi. If my sister had all of these people following her dictates, she wouldalreadyrule the Basin. We’re missing a big piece of this.”
Moonlight walked up to them, nodding toward another of the plates. “You’re talking about a bomb? Well, it seems they have one—look at this.”
Marasi and Wax walked over, finding another plate with a list of underground disturbances. It was labeled with the words “Underground weapon tests, tracked using seismograph.”
“They’ve developed an underground base beneath the city,” Maraga said. “It’s where they hide. Lord Mayor Entrone is involved, is probably even one of their leaders. Some of the caverns seem to be weapons testing locations, but others are bunkers they’re preparing for some reason and using as a headquarters.”
“They stopped the tests recently,” Moonlight said. “Wonder why?”
“Well…” Maraga said. “They know it works. I mean, they’re well past their go date.”
“Go date?” Marasi asked, feeling cold.
“Stolen internal memos,” Maraga said, pointing to a plate. “Don’t know how he got them. Listing target dates for project completion. The weapon was supposed to be detonated two weeks ago.” Maraga slumped back down onto the steps. “They killed him the day before that. I thought for sure the end would come soon after…
“I…” She buried her head in her hands. “I know I should have published this. I’m a coward. In the end, I’m acoward.I’ve been hunkered up here, waiting for the ash to fall, haven’t I? Rusts. I was convinced no one would listen… Convinced it was too late…”
“What is done, or not done, is past,” Wax said, firm. “We have the information now. And there’s still time to stop this.”
“Wax,” Marasi hissed, taking his arm. “They have a bomb, and are planning—as far as we can determine—to detonate it in Elendel. They would have done it already, if they could figure out how to get it into the city.”
Maraga nodded. “Their self-propelled weapon—the rocket, they call it—is having difficulties. Fuel might be the problem. It’s what Tobal was working on for them before he realized what they were planning…” She stood up and steeled herself. “I need to show you one more thing.” She hurried to some boxes and dug through them as Moonlight unabashedly took rubbings of the plates.
Maraga dug out an evanotype photo. “The crowning jewel,” she said softly. “My best piece of evidence. The above-the-fold photo for the story I’ll never actually write…”
Marasi took it, frowning at Wax, who joined her. It depicted an ashen landscape. In color.
Marasi gasped softly, looking at the stark orange sky, the floating ash, the remnants of a ruined city in the distance. That looked… kind of like Elendel, though the ash was heaped so high, obscuring all but the tops of the smoldering, broken buildings and jagged destroyed walls.
“How…” Marasi said. “How can you have apictureof the end of the world?”
“They didn’t have evanotypes in the Survivor’s day,” Wax said, looking closely. “The colors are remarkable. Did someone take an old photo and paint onto it?”
“I don’t know,” Maraga said. “But it seems like a picture of… of what isgoingto happen. After he found this, Tobal started to get really scared. He barely stayed during our last visits. I think he mostly just huddled in his rooms until they got him. Like… like I’ve been doing.”
The basement fell silent, even Wayne sensing the mood and covering up any snickering at his funny pictures. Marasi felt a mounting horror at the sight of that picture. She’dheard Wax talk about a bomb, knew what the enemy was trying to build. Laying it out in stark depiction, however, changed it from abstract to concrete.
This was what they wanted to do. Wipe out everything she loved. Leave rubble and ash in its place. These were bigger stakes by far than any investigation she’dever done. And the implications of it left her disquieted on a profound level.
She turned around, looking at the plates reflecting the calm electric light. Something ancient. Something new. Just like the picture Wax handed back to her.