The Wonder Engine continues and concludes the story begun in Clockwork Boys. To recap: Three misfits have been offered reprieves from their respective criminal sentences (two death, one life in prison) if they can find a way to stop the Clocktaurs, semi-mechanical, semi-magical contraptions that are slowly but surely conquering the lands surrounding the misfits’ home city on a campaign clearly aimed at the city itself. The army’s regular forces have slowed the Clocktaurs some but by no means halted their drive. Previous missions to Anuket City, the source of the marauders, have failed or simply disappeared. It’s desperate measures all around.
As I wrote previously, Slate is a convicted forger with a death sentence hanging over her head; she also has the mild magical knack of smelling rosemary when danger is near. Brenner is her ex, an accomplished assassin and jack-of-all-crimes with a death sentence of his own. Caliban is a paladin who killed nearly a dozen people while he was possessed by a demon. The possession modified his guilt, in the eyes of the local law, and so he was not hanged but tossed into the dungeon forever. To keep them on task, all three were given magic tattoos that can cause them pain if they begin to stray from their mission, and kill them if they abandon it entirely. In Clockwork Boys, the three gained the assistance of a young scholar, the Learned Edmund, whose abstruse knowledge may be helpful in unraveling the mysteries of the Clocktaurs. More pragmatically, his order also had sent a senior scholar to Anuket City, and his correspondence contained hints about the Clocktaurs, but he, too, seems to have disappeared. If they can find him, maybe he knows how they work and how to stop them. Finally, the group gained a gnole named Grimehug.
Gnoles, in this world, are intelligent bipedal beings with badger-like features. They can speak human languages (humans cannot get far in gnole languages because communications often involve things like the position of a gnole’s whiskers or the angle of their ears) and have partly integrated themselves into human societies, often taking on menial jobs such as street cleaning or removing dead bodies. Like underclasses everywhere, they are often overlooked and underestimated. Gnole society is complex and caste-based; they are not immune to overlooking and underestimating either.









