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Matthew Munson

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Beschreibung

“It’s been a hell of a first day.”


Jon May has been the Governor of Elysium for a few hours, and he’s already facing a belligerent Chief of Security, an ex-Operations Manager imprisoned for killing the previous Governor, and an amorphous energy mass that has its own agenda.


So now Jon has to decide who to trust; his Security Chief will barely talk to him, and his only allies are people who, according to the Republic, are dangerous criminals.


With less than 48 hours to delve into the shadows surrounding Elysium’s recent but tumultuous past, May is about to uncover more about this job than he bargained for.

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Seitenzahl: 384

Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2017

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Elysium’s Shadow

Elysium Chronicles: Book One

Matthew Munson

Published by Inspired Quill: September 2017

First Edition

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental. The publisher has no control over, and is not responsible for, any third party websites or their contents.

Elysium’s Shadow © 2017 by Matthew Munson

Contact the author through his website: www.matthewmunson.co.uk

Editors: Sara-Jayne Slack & Rebecca Hall

Cover Design: Venetia Jackson: vf-jackson.com

All Rights Reserved.

No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form by any means electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the copyright owner.

Paperback ISBN: 978-1-908600-63-9

eBook ISBN: 978-1-908600-64-6

Inspired Quill Publishing, UK

Business Reg. No. 7592847

www.inspired-quill.com

Praise for Matthew Munson

Fall From Grace is fantastic and unbelievably exciting. I love the way Matthew turns the history of the angels on its head, and the characters are so real I was almost in tears near the end. Simply fantastic.

– JR Walker, actor and author

Great story, good characters. A really refreshing take on the Judeo-Christian mythology which has been done to death recently. But Fall from Grace has plenty of surprises up its sleeve. As a debut novel, this is a great piece of work.

– Craig Hallam, author of Greaveburn

The storyline is written to keep you on your toes and engaged; I was unable to put this book down. The writing style is easy to read, yet there is a deep plot that keeps you wanting to know more. Worth every penny.

– Oregon Rain, Top Amazon reviewer

Dedication

Dedicating a book I care for so much to any one person is tough, so I shan’t; this book, the first in a new series, is dedicated to seven people in particular.

Diana, Lynda, Kirk, Chelby, Lynda, Barbara and Helen.

Each of you know why.

Table of Contents

Cover

Title Page

Copyright Page

Praise for Matthew Munson

Dedication

6.30pm, 9th April, ICY 418: Island Two, Elysium

4.30pm, 16th April 418: RSS Merciless on final approach to Elysium orbit

5.30pm, 16th April 418: Island One, Elysium

5.00am, 17th April 418: Island One, Elysium

Interlude: Four Years Ago, RSS Ulysses

5.10am, 17th April 418: Island One, Elysium

10.00am, 17th April 418: Island Two, Elysium

12.30pm, 17th April 418: Island One, Elysium

2.00pm, 17th April 418: Island Two, Elysium

2.30pm, 17th April 418: Island Two over to Island One, Elysium

4.30pm, 17th April 418: Island One, Elysium

5.30pm, 17th April 418: Earth

2.30pm, 17th April 418: Island One, Elysium

7.30pm, 17th April 418: Island One, Elysium

4.30am, 18th April 418: Island Two, Elysium

5.15am, 18th April 418: Island One, Elysium

5.30am, 18th April 418: Pangaea, Elysium

5.45am, 18th April 418: Island One, Elysium

5.50am, 18th April 418: Island Two, Elysium

7am, 18th April 418: Island One, Elysium

11.15am, 18th April 418: Pangaea, Elysium

Interlude: Two Years Ago, RSS Ulysses

1.00pm, 18th April 418: Pangaea, Elysium (Present Day)

4pm, 18th April 418: Island One, Elysium

Acknowledgements

About the Author

More From This Author

6.30pm, 9th April, ICY 418

Island Two, Elysium

Julie Martin breathed in, deeply, and savoured the moment. Blain had taken obvious pleasure in putting her in the smallest, most cramped cell his security compound possessed. He hadn’t admitted to the gesture being intentional, of course – he’d not said a word to her since her arrest – but she’d had to endure his smug features gleefully watching her as necessary preparations were made to drag her from Island One over to Island Two. Her new home.

These two islands had been Julie’s world for the past two years, but didn’t form the whole of the Earth-sized planet called Elysium; it was a beautiful world, with a single vast continent they had nicknamed Pangaea dominating a full third of the planet’s surface, and an innumerable series of smaller islands – a paltry two of which were colonised by humanity. None of the staff or prisoners ever left the safety of their two islands without heavily-armed guards, and only then to try and find anything that could be considered valuable on nearby islands. Elysium looked beautiful, but it was savage, and bristling with predators. Pangaea remained resolutely off-limits to the small band of human residents, and lasers kept the airborne predators far enough away for limited peace of mind.

Her mind was still reeling from all that had happened in just the last few hours, as she stepped down from the shuttle onto the warm dock. Now that she was seeing her new home through different eyes, those of a prisoner, she appreciated how secure it really was. Prisoners didn’t even get the run of the entire island, despite the endless seas acting as a far more effective barrier than the wall in front of her ever could. The enormity of what she had done only now hit her.

I’ll never see my best friend again.

Her lapse had taken everything away; her reputation, her job, her calling and her life. She had stood by and allowed the suppression field – an invisible field capable of pushing down elemental power – to be activated, reducing her abilities to the point of non-existence. Losing them hurt almost as much as losing her friend. In some ways, it hurt more. She would never admit that guilty secret to anyone, but her power had been with her since puberty had arrived thirty years ago, and she couldn’t remember being anything else.

As the guards communicated with their fellows up in the guard tower, Julie savoured the momentary delay and looked around. While Island Two’s dock was half the size of Island One’s equivalent, it was nevertheless perfectly serviceable. All of the goods, equipment and personnel that were delivered to Elysium went first to Island One for processing and onward travel.

Prisoners were the one exception. They came directly here to the prison island, ensuring Island One was forever unsullied by their presence. Julie, of course, was the exception to that exception; the only member of staff, probably in the history of prison worlds, to move from the comfort and security of her staff quarters to the stark and severe world that the prisoners inhabited.

Elysium had been her home ever since the prison had first opened two years previous, and she’d hoped to stay here for a while longer – she was a rare breed; a graduate of the Merlin Institute, working for the Republic as part of a half-hearted programme to try and improve relations between the two sides – but had intended to move on eventually. Not now.

Out of her peripheral vision, she saw men step either side of her. She tensed; the security guards who had accompanied her on the flight were two of Blain’s favourites. They were thuggish, only mildly intelligent and no lovers of the power they called magic. She could understand that; not many non-Institute people were. They didn’t understand it – of course they didn’t, otherwise why would they call it magic? That was for sleight-of-hand card tricks, far beneath the subtle art of elemental control she and her fellow Merlins performed; and the Institute called their power just that. But “elemental control” wasn’t very catchy, and the term magic had stuck amongst the general population. The ability to manipulate the elements was a rare art; only a small number of people born with the power. Any human child could be born with the right sequence of activated genes, but scientists still – even after so much research – didn’t know the exact sequence, so those born with elemental powers were entirely at the lap of the … Julie hesitated. She wouldn’t use the word “gods”.

Perhaps “fate” is a better choice of word.

She sighed; pedantry was the least of her worries right now. Human beings often feared what they did not understand, and when an evolutionary quirk had burst those powers out into point five percent of the population, hundreds of years before, the people with those powers had been often treated abysmally.

Sadly, things were still difficult between the Institute and the Republic more widely; humanity didn’t understand the Institute, and the Institute members struggled to remember what it was like to live without power. A gulf of misunderstanding had split open between them over the years, and proved more difficult as time went on, as each side relied heavily on the other; the Republic needed the Institute for a more creative defence against some of their more unusual enemies, and the Institute needed the Emperors and Empresses to give them political cover to continue with their research and development without interference.

Things had gotten worse under Guinevere’s leadership, of course, but no-one was surprised – she made her distrust of the Institute well-known. She had declared, back when she was heir to the Golden Throne, that she would keep the Institute at arm’s length when she was in power, and she had apparently been true to her word; she and the Chief Warlock had barely spoken. Or that’s what Julie had heard anyway. That did nothing except increase the tension between the two sides; T’was ever thus, Julie thought wearily.

Blain’s choice of guards, therefore, had made her wonder if the chief of security might have hoped for something to happen to her in the transit time between islands. The guards – Walters and Smith, if she remembered correctly – had been incredibly well-behaved. They had watched her carefully and both had kept their right hands on their nightsticks. The suppression field had done its job well, but the guards obviously still believed that she had some kind of latent power being kept in reserve, to turn them (perhaps) into a frog or a small vase. Of course, she’d certainly thought about it. They would have deserved it.

I even know what to do with the excess matter. But I don’t want to get into more trouble – and it’s moot anyway with the bloody suppression field engaged. How very prescient of Mr Blain to have had one installed; I knew he didn’t trust me.

Each guard grabbed one of her arms, making it clear to her that it was time to move. She bristled at their touch.

I won’t be escorted there like some common criminal, she thought stubbornly. That’s one thing I’m not. None of the inhabitants here are; I never believed that, even when I was on Island One. I never agreed with imprisoning people purely on the basis of their dissent from the accepted norms, especially when the dissent was peaceful and the norms are so violent.

She flushed, realising how loose she’d become with her thinking in such short a period of time. She had come into the Prisons Directorate to see what she could learn from people living in the system. She just hadn’t expected to be amongst them quite so intimately.

But they’re all intelligent, resourceful people. I’m no better; they fought against a corrupt system before they were caught, and I respect them. She managed to suppress a guilty smile. I actually quite like their radical approach.

She pulled her arms away from their firm grips and glared at each of them in turn; they both tensed, and Smith’s hand twitched back towards his nightstick. He seemed to be fighting an urge to pull it out and use it anyway, just for the hell of it.

Walters, for his part, seemed unsure now that Julie had resisted their touch. Walters’ indecision spread to Smith, and both men hesitated. They weren’t to know that Julie was quite willing to move on; she had made her point. They clearly wanted direction, and she saw two sets of eyes glance back towards the shuttle to seek it.

Julie refused to look. She wouldn’t give Blain the satisfaction. He hadn’t yet deigned to leave the comfort of the shuttle, and she wondered if he even would; he was clearly driving home the point that he was important enough to keep any prisoner waiting – even an ex-colleague. Commander Robert Blain hardly ever left the safe confines of Island One; he had staff to sort out the actual prisoners, leaving him to deal with whatever he chose. Julie had never been entirely sure, in the two years they had worked together, what he actually did. He hadn’t spent a lot of time in his office or his quarters, but whenever questioned, Blain would merely say that he had enough to keep him busy.

He only got away with it because he and Noble were friends.

Governor Noble. His face floated in her mind’s eye again, and through the feeling of vague sickness, a heavy cloak of sorrow and guilt threatened to smother her.

Another movement brought her back to the present moment; Blain had finally decided to leave the shuttle. She looked – she couldn’t help but look – and scowled as she saw the insufferable pleasure on his face. His eyes flickered over Walters and Smith for a moment, and then his gaze settled on Julie. He stepped down to the dockside and walked the few steps towards her, making sure his face was turned so that she could see him.

“Are you going to try something?” he asked. “Go on, Julie. I dare you. Try something. Let us defend ourselves.” He clicked his fingers, like he had only this moment remembered something. “Oh, that’s right,” he went on, “you can’t, can you? I’ve taken your powers away. You’re just like the rest of us now. I’ve cured you of your … instability. How does it feel to be properly human for the first time since you hit puberty?”

“Boring,” she replied in what she knew came across as a flat monotone. “Bland. Limited. I’m sure I don’t need to go on. How do you live in a limited world?”

Blain’s face tightened; he clearly hadn’t expected to get a response, not least one that was quite so snappy. He was used to having his authority unchecked; Noble had certainly always been willing to allow that. Julie, however, had never given him an easy ride. Noble had tolerated their disputes because he recognised Julie’s elemental powers and was afraid of Blain. Julie also suspected that Noble enjoyed watching them argue.

“I wouldn’t be so confident right now,” he retorted. “Look around you, Julie. Don’t forget where you are.” Blain’s face settled back into the usual smirk, and Julie instantly bridled. He was enjoying himself. The swap programme between the Institute and the Republic was meant to encourage understanding, but Blain hadn’t shown anything but bigotry.

Noble was meant to have been his friend! she thought angrily. But our governor was just a pawn in whatever game our beloved Security Chief was playing. He even convinced the governor to make him Deputy over me. I’ll never forgive Noble for trusting me so little.

“I wouldn’t ever forget where I am now, nor why I’m here,” she replied. “I want to remember everything.”

Blain nodded, apparently satisfied, but Julie wasn’t finished. Her face set hard into a scowl. “I want to remember what Alexis Noble did to his wife. I want to remember the look of terror on Catherine’s face as he shot her – his own wife – in the chest with a phase pistol.”

“He was defending himself!” Blain barked. “Catherine had systematically lied to her husband since their wedding day. Since before their wedding day, in fact. She hid who she was from your own Hunters. They bring in every person with the activated magical – or elemental, if you insist – gene into the Institute, because that’s the law, and you people need to be controlled and regulated. But Catherine lied and kept her abilities tightly locked away, and you helped her. She put Alexis’ career at risk!”

“She was scared and lonely!” Julie retorted. “And don’t you dare lecture me about being on the run from the Elemental Hunters, Blain. You know full well that I used to be one. I detected Catherine’s latent power as soon as I met her, but she wasn’t doing any harm. I was training her to control them.”

A vein throbbed in Blain’s forehead, and his cheeks had flushed red at the ferocity behind Julie’s words.

“It’s Acting Governor Blain to you,” he snarled. “Director Wood has named me temporary ruler of this world, and it’ll only be a matter of time before he makes the appointment permanent.”

“Ruler?” Julie sneered. “You do think highly of yourself, don’t you? You’re still nothing more than a jumped-up, tin-pot dictator. You won’t last five minutes as Governor before Wood sees your true colours and sacks you.”

She couldn’t bear his supercilious, condescending attitude. However, the two guards, as she saw out of her peripheral vision, had tensed. Walters’ hand moved towards the phase pistol in the belt around his waist, but he was watching Blain carefully before making a more overt move.

Blain chuckled, the sound cold and humourless.

“You’ve clearly given this a lot of thought,” he replied, “but your analysis is completely wrong. After all, you killed Governor Noble in cold blood. He was defending Elysium from an unlicensed, potentially dangerous magician. As an ex-Magic Hunter, you must recognise that?”

“I am a graduate of the Merlin Institute. I can control the elements, and so could Catherine. What I did was not in cold blood. Noble killed his wife – my friend – for no other reason than he was ashamed of her. She wasn’t a threat to anyone; he could see that her powers were so weak they’d barely register on the Institute’s scale. Alexis Noble hated practitioners because they were different; he might not have known what Catherine was, but his bigotry made her ashamed of who she was, and I tried to make her see the world differently. When her husband killed her for the crime of being different, then I had to act.”

“You used magic to kill him.”

“It’s not magic, and you know it!” Julie drew in another breath, more ragged this time, and tried to calm herself; Blain was looking for any excuse to do her harm. “It’s science; magic is just the word non-Merlin members used when we first discovered what our minds could do. Catherine and I were exploring the capacity of the human brain, not mysticism, and I resent the implication that there was anything improper in that.”

“Killing people in any culture is wrong,” Blain barked. “I know for a fact it’s taboo in yours to kill using your powers.”

Julie swallowed hard as shame washed over her; she had killed someone. That knowledge would stay with her forever, and hearing Blain tell her what she already knew made it more real somehow.

“We can defend ourselves when needed,” she said. “That’s what I did this morning. I defended myself against an aggressor after I couldn’t protect my friend.”

“I imagine that the Merlin Institute would challenge your interpretation of that.”

“Then the Merlin Institute is wrong.” Julie pressed her lips together, but there was nothing she could do about it now; her words were out, and she had expressed the sentiment that she had been thinking for most of the day. Blain’s eyebrows rose as far as they could possibly go up his forehead.

“I would imagine that the Chief Warlock would be very interested to know what you’ve just said. It might put a completely different spin on your career so far.” He smiled. “What am I saying?” he went on. “‘So far’? I certainly didn’t mean to indicate that your career has a future. We both know that you’re finished.”

Their argument, held on the dock of Island Two against a bright, glowing sun and clear blue sky, with the high walls of the prison compound rising up to show her the future, had a strange sense of unreality about it. Julie shook her head and turned away.

“Take me there,” she said, nodding towards the compound. “Let’s get this over with.”

If Blain said anything else, she didn’t hear. The guards allowed her to walk without constraint, up the track towards the prison compound where her new life would begin.

She stepped inside the outer gates – twelve feet tall, steel-reinforced and impregnable – and turned to face them. All three were staring at her, and Julie knew exactly why. They were waiting for her to do something. They didn’t trust the mage, even with the suppression field active.

But I’ve already made my mistake, she thought. I can’t make any more. I’m going to die here; I’m never going to know freedom again, and all because I killed a murderer.

4.30pm, 16th April 418

RSS Merciless on final approach to Elysium orbit

Space was cold and hard; an unforgiving place that career travellers treated with a combination of respect and fear. Jon May – Governor Jon May, as he had to keep reminding himself – had observed, with a sense of relief, the Praetorian Guard treating it with exactly the right level of respect and fear throughout the last six days. Despite himself, he liked their attitude towards the savage abrasiveness of space. They were continually grateful for the relative comfort of their ship and the simple pleasures on board: light, heat and food were the main things they were interested in, and everything else, including politics, was secondary.

Despite all that, however, Jon still felt uneasy. He was going stir crazy after just six days, although felt grateful that he didn’t get claustrophobic; living in such close quarters with four hundred men and women made him uncomfortable – there wasn’t anywhere to spread out. He preferred grass beneath his feet and blue sky above his head, not the rumbling of deck plates and the vacuum of space just beyond the next bulkhead.

The conference room that had been assigned for him to use as an office was silent. The large windows enabled him to stare out into the infinite, inky blackness of space, and he was grateful that there was less of it now that their destination planet loomed into view. He’d first seen it a few hours ago, when the Merciless had dropped out of faster-than-light speed to its more-navigable sub-light engines. Now, it commanded his attention. His new home.

A trip like this, to the Outmarches buffer zone, would have taken a full week just a couple of years ago, but now a ship like the Merciless – one of the newest warships in the Praetorian Guard’s space fleet – could shave a full day off the trip and get him to Elysium that much quicker, thanks to the improvements in FTL engine design.

And I don’t want to leave Blain in control of this world longer than absolutely necessary, he thought. From the rumours I’ve heard about him, even six days is too much. He’s going to resent me for taking the governorship off him, but that’s tough.

But the approach time gave him the opportunity to study Elysium from far above. It was a stunningly beautiful planet that the comms logs, sent back over the two years of the prison’s existence, couldn’t do justice. He knew that there was a lot of danger on the world – the savagery of its predators, which seemed to be most of the creatures down there, was already legendary. It made the perfect place for a prison world; if a prisoner escaped the high walls of Island Two, where would they go? The oceans were as dangerous as the land, and even shuttles had to follow a particular flight path to avoid the scattering field interfering with its systems.

Although that’s one of the mysteries I plan on understanding, May thought. If McIntyre’s right, then someone seeded the planet with a high-energy scattering field that disrupts everything except visual sensors. I want to know who did that, and why.

It was all damn peculiar, that was for sure, and May was determined to get to the bottom of it.

The swoosh of the doors leading out into the corridor interrupted his thoughts. Usually, he’d be irritated by the interruption, but right now he was glad of it. He’d spent too much time lost in his own thoughts recently; leaving Earth behind had created a strange blend of emotions. His new assignment had come about abruptly, and he was only now adjusting to his new life.

Turning, he saw two familiar faces and one not so familiar. The captain of the Merciless had assigned the Governor two security guards. For the most part, they hadn’t been needed, but they had been able to do the occasional job for him, like now. May had been looking forward to talking with Steven Doy since he’d first come on board.

“Mr Doy, come in,” he said, and motioned to one of the seats on the opposite side of the long conference table. “Thank you, gentlemen. Could you wait outside?”

One of the guards – Watson – scowled. “Sir,” he said, “our orders from the captain regarding allowing prisoners out of their cells –”

“… are being superseded by mine,” May interjected. His tone went steely; he would not be argued with. “This is a prison matter. My authority outranks the captain’s on this. Please wait outside.”

Watson and the other guard, Phillips, exchanged a glance, but they both reluctantly nodded, shot a warning glare at Doy and marched smartly out of the conference room.

Doy watched the guards leave and waited for the doors to close before turning back to May. “That was very brave of you.”

“Why?” May retorted. “Because you’re a wizard?”

Doy shook his head. “I’m not a wizard.”

May frowned. He was comfortable being corrected wherever he was wrong, but he’d studied Doy’s file at length before their meeting. That one fact – Doy’s status as a failed student of the Merlin Academy – had stood out immediately.

“Well, you’re certainly not a mage,” he noted. “You have to study for a long time to get promoted to that rank. I do know a few things about the Institute.”

“Not enough, clearly,” Doy said. His tone indicated that he clearly hadn’t meant what he’d said as a challenge. “I’m not a wizard because I failed my final exams. I’m not licensed by the Institute, so technically I’m not allowed to channel any power. And you know what the Institute does to non-licensed Merlins. If you don’t take the medication they give you – which makes you want to kill yourself, by all accounts, as it suppresses all elemental abilities and most of your personality as well – they’ll kill you outright anyway.”

“So, why was I brave sending the guards out of the room?”

“Because what’s stopping me from jumping across this table and attacking you right now? Who’s to say I’m not a complete madman?”

“Are you a complete madman?”

Doy hesitated for a moment, then laughed; a deep, throaty sound that seemed completely genuine. “Would I admit it even if I was?”

May relaxed, and judging by the slump in the other man’s shoulders, some of his tension had dissipated. He was in his late thirties, and looked older by at least a decade or more, rather than the actual three years. More than anything, he looked tired; his greying hair was thin, and deep worry lines were burned into his forehead. Given the fact he’d finally been caught after almost two decades on the run, it wasn’t surprising that he was exhausted. He was slim, had piercing green eyes and radiated intelligence. He also looked very uncomfortable in his orange jumpsuit.

May motioned to the chair opposite. Doy looked surprised, but managed to school his face back into careful neutrality, and sat down. His back remained ramrod straight.

“Actually,” Doy went on as he settled down, “I’m surprised you chose to talk to me.”

“Why?” May asked.

“Do you even have to ask? I’m a prisoner, and you’re the newly-minted governor of the world I’m going to be spending the rest of my life on.”

“Oh, you’d be surprised, Mr Doy. You know I’ve seen your file?”

Doy chuckled; it was completely devoid of humour this time, as was the smile that drew across his face.

“I’d be surprised if you hadn’t,” he replied. “You know why I was arrested, then?”

May heard the bitterness in the failed wizard’s question. If I were in his place, would I react any differently?

“You fled from the scene of a crime and spent the next twenty years in hiding,” he said, and had to ignore Doy’s flinch. “Your sentence reflects your crime and your years in hiding – and, before you ask, I can’t do anything to change your sentence. I’d be lying to you if I said I could, and I suspect you’d see right through me.”

Doy seemed surprised by the governor’s forthright manner. “I’ve accepted that I’m going to be here for a very long time,” he said slowly, clearly thinking about every word, trying to avoid any signs of a trap. “I wouldn’t ask you to do anything about it.”

May drummed his fingers on the conference table. He had done the same thing in Wood’s office. His meeting with the Director of Prisons and Clara McIntyre had been comparatively short and to the point, but he had left with purpose and reason. All that was a week ago and several hundred light-years away; Jon only had his own judgement now, and he judged Doy to be honest, intelligent and open-minded. Ironic, given the charges against the wizard.

“I’m afraid you’re right,” Jon replied. “You will be here for a long time.”

If Doy was upset by that, he hid it well, except for a momentary bobbing of his Adam’s apple. He shifted on his chair, then licked his lips.

“Governor,” he said after a moment’s pause, “may I ask you a question?”

“Please do.”

“Down in the holding cells of this magnificent yet terrifying warship, there are twelve prisoners – eleven rebels and a failed elemental practitioner – yet I’m the one you’ve called up here to this room. Are we just here for a chat?”

May was impressed; the governor would have been happy talking around the subject for another few minutes, but Doy wanted to drive things forward; he wanted to know the facts, and that was promising.

“Why do you think, Mr Doy?”

Doy shrugged. “If I asked the gods, would they be able to tell me either?” he asked. The merest flicker of a smile reappeared on his face. “The other eleven prisoners were all rounded up last week, on Empress Guinevere’s first day sitting on the Golden Throne. They were dispatched here that same evening because, I assume, she found them to be more of a threat than her father did.” He grimaced. “Although I wonder what real danger they are: free-thinkers, liberals, and scientists are only threats when their areas of speciality are tightly controlled.”

Doy’s voice tailed off and he pressed his lips together until they were barely visible in a thin, pale line. His gaze swept down at the table.

“Don’t stop now, Mr Doy,” May said. “You’re just getting to the good bit.”

Slowly, Doy raised his eyes and looked slyly at the governor.

“I suppose you’re going to tell me that you’re a member of the resistance now, are you?” he said quietly. “What are they called? The Sicarii?”

“Yeah, that’s them,” May replied, “but I’ve got too many hidden depths without plunging to one which risks my life if Guinevere ever found out.”

Doy looked disappointed; perhaps he’d been hoping for that nugget of news to give him some intrigue, but now he had nothing.

“So why me?” he demanded. “If you’re not interested in recruiting me to the Sicarii, why are we talking? I’m nobody.”

“Oh, I don’t know,” May replied. “Everyone’s somebody. I’ve seen your file, remember?”

Doy frowned. “What do you mean?”

“After three years of study at the Institute, you were taking your final exams.”

“So?”

“The normal Practitioner course is four years. You shaved a year off your studies.”

Doy shrugged. For a moment, he looked something akin to a sullen teenager embarrassed by a parent over his accomplishments.

“It didn’t do me any good, did it?” he snapped. “I was young and cocky. I made mistakes in the practical portion of my exam and killed twelve people. The Institute would have locked me up for life if I hadn’t run for it.”

“And you’ve been making amends for it ever since.”

The failed wizard looked surprised. “What makes you say that?”

“You’ve got a look about you,” May said. “That, and I read the reports. That’s why it’s taken me so long to invite you here to my … office, such as it is. I wanted to feel like I understood you – as much as I could – before I talked to you. You see, you straddle two worlds. The elemental world you’ve come from, and the non-magical … err, non-elemental world, where you’ve been hiding ever since. You understand both, at least to a degree, and that’s a valuable trait. Humanity forgets that practitioners are born to human families just as often as practitioner ones; the gene that controls your powers appears randomly. You’re humans with an added something, but the Institute keeps you separate and aloof, like you’re somehow … alien, and in return, the rest of humanity fears you. Practitioners live in citadels and special communes; it’s rare to see one of you living amongst the rest of humanity, so when someone with the gene does live alongside humans, it gives them a unique perspective on both sides of the divide.”

Doy rolled his eyes. “That’s because the Republic and the Institute refuse to trust each other, and haven’t done for centuries. We could collaborate, but instead we bicker and argue like children constantly searching for the upper hand.”

May nodded; he was impressed with Doy’s candour. The failed wizard was incisive and apparently unafraid in speaking his mind, despite May being an official representative of the Empress.

Perhaps because he hasn’t got anywhere else to go or any further to fall.

“That’s been a tradition for so long,” May noted, “that I seriously doubt it will vanish any time soon. To be honest, I get the impression that leaders on both sides almost enjoy the divisions. It gives them something to complain about, as well as an official scapegoat whenever something goes wrong. But let me reassure you, not everyone thinks the same – not all of us non-Merlins mistrust you. There are lots of people who are intrigued by Merlins; we want to get to know you better.”

Doy looked at him steadily, with a curious expression.

“Why don’t you mistrust Merlins?” he asked bluntly.

“Because my cousin’s one,” May said calmly, and grinned as he saw Doy’s eyes widen. He sat up straight in his seat. “He’s forty four or forty five now, I think – he’s at least ten years older than me, that much I know. We don’t get to see him much; he’s off doing his own thing for the Institute working on … whatever he’s assigned to do.”

“How did your family react when he hit puberty?”

May shrugged, “I don’t remember it at the time,” he said. “I was just a tiny kid when it happened. There was some … consternation, I think, from my uncle, but he got over it. Now we’re proud of having a Merlin in the family; he knows so much, and he’s just another person. He’s the same as me, just with different active genes. I’m proud of him. So I don’t think any differently towards Merlins; you can’t, really, when you share DNA.”

“I wish more people thought like you,” Doy said. “There wouldn’t be so much misunderstanding that way.”

May made a face, but didn’t say anything; there wasn’t anything he could say to that.

“How do you feel,” he went on, “about being in a Republic prison as opposed to a Merlin one? Shouldn’t you have been given that courtesy, at least?”

Doy shrugged. He seemed to relax a fraction as he thought about that, and leaned back in his chair. “In an ideal world,” he confessed, “but …” His voice tailed off, and he stared into the middle distance for a moment as he thought about his answer. Finally he sighed. “But I wouldn’t have fit in there anyway. Merlin prisons are few and far between – we prefer other forms of punishment that you couldn’t begin to imagine. In any case, our new Chief Warlock, who’s only been in post for about three months and seems to be terrified of Empress Guinevere, caved under pressure from the Republic’s illustrious and completely fair-minded leader –” here, Doy’s face twisted into an ironic smile before he continued, “– who demanded that I be placed in a prison under her control, as a symbol that no-one is above the law when it comes to killing non-Merlins. Like I’m some completely separate species. Elysium was the compromise.”

“Sounds like just the leader you want defending your interests.”

“The Warlock and the Empress are suitably matched, I think. She demands, and he gives in. A meeting of minds.”

May smiled, although the action was tinged with sorrow; Doy’s voice revealed his despair. The governor couldn’t say anything to make the failed wizard feel better.

“You said a moment ago,” he went on, “that you’re going to be on Elysium for a very long time. Probably even the rest of your life.”

“So?”

“So why not do something productive with your time? Why not continue to make amends for what you did?”

Doy’s eyes narrowed. May saw his confusion – and curiosity – in the twitch of his eye and the hunch of his shoulders.

May leaned forward, keeping eye contact. “I need a friend on Island Two,” he said. “I need someone to be my eyes and ears over there. I need—”

Doy tensed again. “A spy?” he retorted. “You want me to spy for you?”

“I was going to use the word ‘liaison,’ but fine – ‘spy’ works just as well. Listen, you’re a unique breed; a failed wizard who’s lived amongst humans as an adult. You’ve experienced humanity in a way most practitioners don’t after they hit puberty. Your fellow prisoners will either ignore you, treat you as their best friend or, more likely, tap-dance around you until they think they’ve worked you out, then treat you as just another prisoner. I want to know everything that’s happening over there, and I think you’re very well-placed to get the news.”

“Why do you care about a prisoner’s grapevine?” Doy asked. “It’s probably nothing that you can’t get from other sources.”

“Oh, I don’t know about that,” May replied. “Information is information, and it’s worth hearing twice rather than not at all. I want to hear opinions on everything from the food to the staff.”

Doy’s eyebrows lifted up. “The staff?” he asked. “Is that what this is all about? You’re trying to find something out about … what, the cooking?”

“Spot on,” May replied placidly. “We think the chef’s poisoning everyone. Don’t eat the dumplings, whatever you do.”

“You’re not going to tell me, are you?”

“Not yet. Maybe soon, but I’m not ready to confide everything I know – especially when you haven’t given me an answer.”

“Why are you interested in what prisoners have got to say? By all accounts, we’re all free-thinkers on Elysium. Why should you care?”

“Because someone’s got to.”

Slowly, Doy nodded. “What do you want me to do?”

“Just … listen and ask questions,” May replied. “Find out everything you can for me, and try not to stand out too much.”

“Well, that shouldn’t be difficult for the only person with elemental powers on Elysium.”

May blinked, caught off-guard, and a frown immediately crossed Doy’s face; he’d clearly picked up on the governor’s hesitation.

“What?” he asked.

“You’ve heard of the Exchange Programme, I presume?”

“The … Yeah, I’ve heard about it. There aren’t many practitioners who actually sign up, from what I remember. It was always considered a fairly pointless exercise. I never thought people would come around to the idea of us just because they worked with one. And most of the Merlins I know were worried about the reactions they might get from the humans they ended up working with. The mistrust amongst some –” he made sure to emphasise the point “– meant that it wasn’t going to get very far. Why did you ask about it? Is there a Merlin seconded to the prison staff?”

“Up until a week ago, yes,” May replied. “Now, however, she’s a prisoner. She killed my predecessor.”

Doy’s jaw fell. “She killed a human?”

May sighed. “It’s a rather long story that I don’t fully understand, but I know the facts as recorded on the charge sheet. The Merlin’s name is Julie Martin.”

Doy visibly paled. “Julie Martin?” he repeated. “Are you sure?”

“Perfectly.”

Doy’s eyes flicked to the padd on the table, then back again to May’s face.

“Then you’ll understand why I’m reluctant to meet her,” Doy went on. “She presumably knows everything that—”

“She knows nothing,” May interrupted. “Your addition to the prisoner manifest happened on the same day as her arrest. She never saw the charge sheet.” His smile didn’t reach his eyes; it felt as tired, suddenly, as the rest of him. “You’re in the clear … if you choose not to tell her anything.”

Doy swallowed and stared off into the middle distance for a moment, and May continued by asking a question; “Did you ever actually meet her?”

“No,” Doy said, and shook his head firmly. “No, we never met. Her reputation precedes her, though. She’s one reason that I ran. I was scared of her reaction.” He hesitated, licked his lips, and cleared his throat. “Are …” He cleared his throat again. “Are you sure she doesn’t know my history?”

“As sure as I can be,” May replied in what he hoped was a reassuring manner. “She won’t hear it from me, either.”

Doy swallowed and nodded. “Thank you,” he said. “Although I’m not quite sure why I’ve earned that.”

“Because we’ve got to start trusting people somewhere along the line. If you choose to tell her the truth, that’s entirely down to you. In any case, a suppression field is in effect. Commander Blain, the security chief, deployed it to control her power.” He bit his bottom lip. “By all accounts, she’s one of the most powerful Mages in existence. She was certainly an effective Operations Manager for Elysium. Now she’s one of you.”

May didn’t need to be a telepath to read Doy’s emotions now; as the Governor had acknowledged Julie’s power, Doy’s hands were bunched so tightly that his knuckles were almost pure white. May was intrigued. He had imagined that the suppression field would have given him some comfort. Julie’s reputation clearly meant a great deal.

As he opened his mouth to say something else, the doors to the conference room swished open to admit Watson. He didn’t seem particularly keen to be there; his eyes kept darting from one place to another, then looked almost disappointed that nothing was untoward. His eyes finally fixed on Doy, almost willing him to do something wrong. But Doy remained still, with his gaze now fixed on the table in front of him.

“Sir,” Watson said reluctantly, moving his eyes up to the Governor, “the captain says we’ll be in orbit in fifteen minutes. The prisoners are being moved to the shuttles now. We’re ready for you in the shuttle bay.”

May nodded distractedly. “Very well,” he said. “Escort the prisoner there now. I’ll join you in ten minutes. Thank you, Mr Doy.”

Doy nodded. “Thank you, Governor.”

They made eye contact again, and a moment of understanding passed between them. But then Watson pulled his nightstick from his belt and wielded it, almost lazily, in front of Doy. Taking the hint, Doy rose, turned and left with his head higher than when he entered.

May was left alone in the conference room; giving him a moment to reflect on the conversation in the welcome silence. He took a deep breath, and then smiled as he thought about leaving this ship behind; the air may have been breathable, but the atmosphere on any human-class planet would be far superior. He was looking forward to having grass beneath his feet again.

He turned and looked out of the window. Elysium was getting ever closer, and butterflies of excitement fluttered in his stomach; he was going to make a difference, he was sure of it. There was a mystery to solve, and no-one was going to get in his way.

5.30pm, 16th April 418

Island One, Elysium

Robert Blain’s current solitude gave him the opportunity to savour the trappings of the Governor’s office one last time. For the last week, he had enjoyed the change of scenery from the space – half the size and not as comfortable – that he occupied as security chief, and he resented being forced out.

Located on the 11th floor of Island One’s Tower, from where all the prison planet’s operations were coordinated, the Governor’s office – his