filth that held them up.
The women calling to one another from across the canal were leaning from opposite windows, just as Iâd imagined, but theywerenât hanging laundry and they certainly werenât trading gossipâat least, not anymore; now they were trading insults and issuing threats. One waved a broken bottle and laughed drunkenly while the other shouted epithets I could barely understand (âYore nuffink but a stinkinâ dollymop âood lay wiâ the devil âimself for a farthing!â)âwhich was ironic, if I took her meaning correctly, because she was herself stripped to the waist and didnât seem to mind who noticed. Both stopped to whistle down at Sharon as we passed, but he ignored them.
Eager to wipe that image from my head, I managed to replace it with something even worse: ahead of us was a gang of kids swinging their feet from a rickety footbridge that spanned the canal. They were dangling a dog above the water by a rope tied around its hind legs, dipping the poor creature underwater and cackling when its desperate barks turned to bubbles. I resisted an urge to kick the tarp away and scream at them. At least Addison couldnât see; if he had, no amount of reasoning wouldâve stopped him from going after them with teeth bared, blowing our cover.
âI see what youâre up to,â Sharon muttered at me. âIf you want to have a look around just wait, weâll be through the worst of it in a tick.â
âAre you peeking?â Emma whispered, poking me.
âMaybe,â I said, still doing it.
The boatman shushed us. Drawing his pole from the water, he uncapped the handle to expose a short blade, then held it out to sever the boysâ rope as we drifted by. The dog splashed into the water and paddled gratefully away, and howling with rage, the boys began to improvise projectiles to throw at us. Sharon pushed on, ignoring them as he had the ladies until a flying apple core missed his head by inches. Then he sighed, turned, and calmly pulled back the hood of his cloakâjust enough so that the boys could see him, but I couldnât.
Whatever they saw mustâve scared them half to death, becauseall ran screaming from the bridge, one so fast he tripped and fell into the fetid water. Chuckling to himself, Sharon readjusted his hood before facing forward again.
âWhatâs happened?â Emma said, alarmed. âWhat was that?â
âA Devilâs Acre welcome,â replied Sharon. âNow, if you care to see where we are, you may uncover your faces a bit, and Iâll attempt to give you your gold coinâs worth of tour-guiding with the time we have left.â
We pulled the edge of the tarp down to our chins, and both Emma and Addison gaspedâEmma, I think, at the sight, and Addison, judging from his wrinkled his nose, at the smell. It was unreal, like a stew of raw sewage simmering all around us.
âYou get used to it,â Sharon said, reading my puckered face.
Emma gripped my hand and moaned, âOh, itâs
awful
 â¦â
And it was. Now that I could see it with both eyes, the place looked even more hellish. The foundations of every house were decomposing into mush. Crazy wooden footbridges, some no wider than a board, crisscrossed the canal like a catâs cradle, and its stinking banks were heaped with trash and crawling with spectral forms at work sifting through it. The only colors were shades of black, yellow, and green, the flag of filth and decay, but black most of all. Black stained every surface, smeared every face, and striped the air in columns that rose from chimneys all around usâand, more ominously, from the smokestacks of factories in the distance, which announced themselves on the minute with industrial booms, deep and primal like war drums, so powerful they shook every window yet unbroken.
âThis, friends, is Devilâs Acre,â Sharon began, his
John Skipp, Craig Spector
James Hanley
Olivia Ryan
W.R. Benton
Tamora Pierce
D. M. Angel
George G. Gilman
Carolyn Haywood
Nancy Werlin
Judi Fennell