The Ask and the Answer
take up stayshuns standing on top of the monastery wall, already getting to
    69
    work unrolling coils of barbed wire along its edge.
    "Ten men with rifles and us against all these Spackle," I say, under my breath but all over my Noise.
    "Ah, we'll be okay," Davy says. He raises his pistol at the Spackle nearest him, maybe a female, holding a Spackle baby. She turns the baby away so her body's protecting it. "They ain't got no fight in 'em anyway."
    I see the face of the Spackle protecting her baby.
    It's defeated, I think. They all are. And they know it.
    i know how they feel.
    "Hey, pigpiss, check it out," Davy says. He raises his arms in the air, getting all the Spackle eyes on him. "People of New Prentisstown!" he shouts, waving his arms about. "I read to you yer dooooooom?"
    And he just laughs and laughs and laughs.
    Davy decides to oversee the Spackle clearing the fields of scrub but that's only cuz that means I'm the one who'll have to shovel out the fodder from the storehouse for all of 'em to eat and then fill troughs for 'em to drink from.
    But it's farmwork. I'm used to it. All the chores Ben and Cillian set me to doing every day. All the chores I used to complain about.
    I wipe my eyes and get on with it.
    The Spackle keep their distance from me as best they can while I work. Which, I gotta say, is okay by me. Cuz I find I can't really look 'em in the eyes. I keep my head down and carry on shoveling. Davy says his pa told him the Spackle worked as servants
    70
    or cooks but one of the Mayor's first orders was for everyone to keep 'em locked away in their homes till the army picked 'em up last night while I slept.
    "People had 'em living in their back gardens," Davy says, watching me shovel as the morning turns to afternoon, eating what's sposed to be lunch for both of us. "Can you believe that? Like they're effing members of the family."
    "Maybe they were," I say.
    "Well they ain't no more," Davy says, rising and taking out his pistol. He grins at me. "Back to work."
    I empty most of the storehouse of fodder but it still don't look like nearly enough. Plus, three of the five water pumps ain't working and by sunset, I've only managed to fix one.
    "Time to go," Davy says.
    "I ain't done," I say.
    "Fine," he says, walking toward the gate. "Stay here on yer own then."
    I look back at the Spackle. Now that the work day's thru, they've pushed themselves as far away from the soldiers and the front gates as possible.
    As far away from me and Davy as possible, too.
    I look back and forth twixt them and Davy leaving. They ain't got enough food. They ain't got enough water. There ain't no place to go to the toilet and no shelter of any kind at all.
    I hold out my empty hands toward 'em but that don't do no kind of explaining that'll make anything okay. They just stare at me as I drop my hands and follow Davy out the gate.
    71
    "So much for being a man of courage, eh, pigpiss?" Davy-says, untying his horse, which he calls Deadfall but which only seems to answer to Acorn.
    I ignore him cuz I'm thinking bout the Spackle. How I'll treat them well. I will. I'll see that they get enough water and food and I'll do everything I can to protect 'em.
    I will.
    I promise that to myself. Cuz that's what she'd want.
    "Oh, I'll tell you what she really wants," Davy sneers. And we fight again.
    New bedding's been put in the tower when I get back, a mattress and a sheet spread out on one side for me and another on the other side for Mayor Ledger, already sitting on his, Noise jangling, eating a bowl of stew. The bad smell's gone, too.
    "Yes," says Mayor Ledger. "And guess who had to clean it up?"
    It turns out he's been put to work as a rubbish man.
    "Honest labor," he says to me, shrugging, but there are other sounds in his grayish Noise that make me think he don't believe it's very honest at all. "Symbolic, I suppose. I go from the top of the heap to the bottom. It'd be poetic if it weren't so obvious."
    There's stew for me by my bed, too,

Similar Books

Witness to a Trial

John Grisham

Woman Bewitched

Tianna Xander

Mort

Terry Pratchett

The MacKinnon's Bride

Tanya Anne Crosby

Bad Boy Valentine

Sylvia Pierce

A Man Betrayed

J. V. Jones