Goliath

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by Scott Westerfeld


  Beside her, Alek kept a wary eye on the imperial eagle.

  “Do you suppose it has two brains?”

  “Of course it does,” Deryn said. “What use is a head without a brain?”

  Bovril chuckled at this, as if it knew that Deryn had almost made a joke about Clankers in this regard. Alek had been in a touchy mood all morning, so she hadn’t.

  “What if they have a disagreement about which way to fly?”

  Deryn laughed. “They settle it with a fight, I suppose, same as anyone. But I doubt they argue that much. A bird’s attic is mostly optic nerve—more eyesight than brainpower.”

  know how horrid it looks.”

  A squawk came from beneath one of the hoods, and Bovril imitated the sound.

  Deryn frowned. “If two-headed beasties are so horrible, how come you had one painted on your Stormwalker?”

  “That was the Hapsburg crest. The symbol of my family.”

  “What’s it symbolic of? Squeamishness?”

  Alek rolled his eyes, then launched into a lecture. “The two-headed eagle was first used by the Byzantines, to show that their empire ruled both east and west. But when a modern royal house uses the symbol, one of the heads symbolizes earthly power, the other divine right.”

  “Divine right?”

  “The principle that a king’s power is bestowed by God.”

  Deryn let out a snort. “Let me guess who came up with that one. Was it a king, maybe?”

  “It’s a bit old-fashioned, I suppose,” Alek said, but Deryn wondered if he believed it anyway. His attic was full of all kinds of old yackum, and he was always talking about how providence had guided him since he’d left home. How it was his destiny to stop this war.

  As far as she could tell, the war was too big for any one person to stop, prince or commoner, and fate didn’t care a squick about what anybody was meant to do. It was Deryn’s destiny to be a girl, after all, stuffed into skirts and stuck with squalling brats somewhere. But she’d avoided that fate well enough, with a little help from her tailoring.

  Of course, there were other fates she hadn’t escaped, like falling for a daft prince in a way that filled her head with unsoldierly nonsense. Like being his best friend, his ally, while a steady, hopeless longing pulled at her heart.

  It was just lucky that Alek was too wrapped up in his own troubles, and the troubles of the whole barking world, to notice. Of course, hiding her feelings was made a bit easier by the fact that he didn’t know she was a girl. No one aboard did except Count Volger, who, despite being a bumrag, at least had a knack for keeping secrets.

  They arrived at the hatch to the rookery, and Deryn reached for the pressure lock. But with only one free hand, the mechanism was a fiddle in the darkness.

  “Give us some light, your divine princeliness?”

  “Certainly, Mr. Sharp,” Alek said, pulling out his command whistle. He gave it a studious look, then played the tune.

  The glowworms behind the airship’s skin began to flicker, and a soft green light suffused the corridor. Then Bovril joined in with the whistle, its voice as shimmery as a box of silver bells. The light grew sharp and bright.

  “Good job, beastie,” Deryn said. “We’ll make a middy of you yet.”

  Alek sighed. “Which is mo than you can say for me.”

  Deryn ignored his moping and opened the rookery door. As the ruckus of squawks and shrieks spilled out, the imperial clutched her arm tighter, its talons sharp even through the leather of the falconer’s glove.

  She led Alek along the raised walkway, looking for an empty space below. There were nine cages altogether, three underneath her and three on either side, each twice as tall as a man. The smaller raptors and messengers were a blur of fluttering wings, while the strafing hawks sat regally on their perches, ignoring the lesser birds around them.

  “God’s wounds!” Alek said from behind her. “It’s a madhouse in here.”

  “Madhouse,” Bovril said, and leapt from Alek’s shoulder to the handrail.

  Deryn shook her head. Alek and his men often found the airship too messy for their liking. Life was a tumultuous and muddled thing, compared with the tidy clockwork of Clanker contraptions. The ecosystem of the Leviathan, with its hundred interlocking species, was far more complex than any lifeless machine, and thus a bit less orderly. But that was what kept the world interesting, Deryn reckoned; reality had no gears, and you never knew what surprises would come spinning out of its chaos.

  “SECRETS IN THE ROOKERY.”

  She’d certainly never expected to help lead a Clanker revolution one day, or be kissed by a girl, or fall for a prince. But that had all happened in the last month, and the war was just getting started.

  Deryn spotted the cage that the rook tenders had emptied, and pulled the loading chute into place above it. It wouldn’t do to put the imperial in with other birds—not while it was hungry.

  In one swift motion she snatched the hoods off and pushed the beastie into the chute. It fluttered down into the cage, spinning in the air like a windblown leaf for a moment. Then it came to rest on the largest perch.

  From there the imperial eyed its fellow creatures through the bars, shifting from foot to foot unhappily. Deryn wondered what sort of cage it lived in back at the czar’s palace. Probably one with gleaming bars, with fat mice served up on silver platters, and no smell of other birds’ clart thickening the air.

  “Dylan,” Alek said. “While we have a moment alone . . .”

  She turned to face him. He was standing close, his green eyes glinting in the darkness. It was always hardest meeting Alek’s gaze when he was dead serious like this, but she managed.

  “I’m sorry about bringing up your father earlier,” he said. “I know how that still haunts you.”

  Deryn sighed, wondering if she should simply tell him not to worry. But it had been a bit tricky, what with Newkirk mentioning her uncle. It might be safer to tell Alek the truth—at least, as much of it as she possibly could.

  “No need to apologize,” she s#8220;But there’s something you should know. That night I told you about my da’s accident, I didn’t quite explain everything.”

  “How do you mean?”

  “Well, Artemis Sharp really was my da, just like I said.” Deryn took a slow breath. “But everyone in the Air Service thinks he was my uncle.”

  She could see from Alek’s expression that it made no sense at all, and without her even trying, lies began to spin from her tongue.

  “When I signed up, my older brother Jaspert was already in the Service. So we couldn’t say we were brothers.”

  That was blether, of course. The real reason was that Jaspert had already told his crewmates about his only sibling, a younger sister. A brother popping out of thin air might have been a squick confusing.

  “We pretended to be cousins. You see?”

  Alek frowned. “Brothers don’t serve together in your military?”

  “Not when their father’s dead. You see, we’re his only children. And so if we both . . .” She shrugged, hoping he’d believe it.

  “Ah, to keep the family name alive. Very sensible. And that’s why your mother didn’t want you signing up?”

  Deryn nodded glumly, wondering how her lies always got so barking complicated. “I didn’t mean to mix you up in a deception. But that night I thought you were leaving the ship for good. So I told you the truth, instead of what I tell everyone else.”

  “The truth,” Bovril repeated. “Mr. Sharp.”

  Alek reached up and touched his jacket pocket. Deryn knew that was where he kept his letter from the pope, the one that could make him emperor one day. “Don’t worry, Dylan. I’ll keep all your secrets, as you’ve kept mine.”

  Deryn groaned. She hated it when Alek said that. Because he couldn’t keep all her secrets, could he? He didn’t know the biggest of them.

  All of sudden she didn’t want to lie anymore. Not this much, anyway.

  “Wait,” she said. “I just t
old you a load of yackum. Brothers can serve together. It’s something else.”

  “Yackum,” Bovril repeated. Alek just stood there, concern on his face.

  “But I can’t tell you the real reason,” Deryn said.

  “Why not?”

  “Because . . .” she was a commoner, and he was a prince. Because he’d run a mile if he knew. “You’d think less of me.”

  He stared at Deryn a moment, then reached out and took her shoulder. “You’re the best soldier I’ve ever met, Dylan. The boy I’d have wanted to be, if I hadn’t wound up such a useless prince. I could never think badly of you.”

  She groaned, turning away and wishing an alert would sound, an attack of zeppelins or a lightning storm. Anything to extract her from this conversation.

  “Listen,” Alek said, dropping his hand. “Even if your family has some deep, dark secret, who am I to judge? My granduncle conspired with the men who killed my parents, for heaven’s sake!”

  Deryn had no idea what to say to that. Alek had got it all wrong, of course. It wasn’t some musty family secret; it was hers alone. He would always get it all wrong, until she told him the truth.

  And that, she could never do.

  “Please, Alek. I can’t. And . . . I’ve got a fencing lesson.”

  Alek smiled, the perfect picture of a patient friend. “Anytime you want to tell me, Dylan. Until then, I won’t ask again.”

  She nodded silently, and walked ahead of him the whole way back.

  “Rather late with my breakfast, aren’t you?”

  “Sorry about that, your countship,” Deryn said, plunking the tray down on Count Volger’s desk. A splash of coffee sloshed out of the pot and onto the toast. “But here it is.”

  The wildcount raised an eyebrow.

  “And your newspapers as well,” she said, pulling them from beneath her arm. “Dr. Barlow saved them especially for you. Though I don’t know why she bothers.”

  Volger took the papers, then picked up the soggy piece of toast and shook it. “You seem to be in rather a lively mood this morning, Mr. Sharp.”

  “Aye, well, I’ve been busy.” Deryn frowned at the man. It was lying to Alek that had put her in a huff, of course, but she felt like blaming Count Volger. “I won’t have time for a fencing lesson.”

  “Pity. You’re coming along so well,” he said. “For a girl.”

  Deryn scowled at the man. Guards were no longer posted outside the Clankers’ staterooms, but someone passing in the corridor might have heard. She crossed to shut the cabin door, then turned back to the wildcount.

  He was the only person on the airship who knew what she really was, and he generally took care not to mention it aloud.

  “What do you want?” she said quietly.

  He didn’t look up at her, but instead fussed with his breakfast as if this were a friendly chat. “I’ve noticed the crew seems to be preparing for something.”

  “Aye, we got a message this morning. From the czar.”

  Volger looked up. “The czar? Are we changing course?”

  “That’s a military secret, I’m afraid. No one knows except the officers.” Deryn frowned. “And the lady boffin, I suppose. Alek asked her, but she wouldn’t say.”

  The wildcount scraped butter onto his half soggy toast, giving this a think.

  During the month Deryn had been hiding in Istanbul, the wildcount and Dr. Barlow had entered into some sort of alliance. Dr. Barlow made sure he was kept up with news about the war, and Volger gave her his opinions on Clanker politics and strategy. But Deryn doubted the lady boffin would answer this question for him. Newspapers and rumors were one thing, sealed orders quite another.

  “Perhaps you could find out for me.”

  “No, I couldn’t,” Deryn said. “It’s a military secret.”

  Volger poured coffee. “And yet secrets can be so difficult to keep sometimes. Don’t you think?”

  Deryn felt a cold dizziness rising up inside, as it always did when Count Volger threatened her. There was something unthinkable about everyone finding out what she was. She wouldn’t be an airman anymore, and Alek would never speak to her again.

  But this morning she was not in the mood for blackmail.

  “I can’t help you, Count. Only the senior officers know.”

  “But I’m sure a girl as resourceful as you, so obviously adept at subterfuge, could find out. One secret unraveled to keep another safe?”

  The fear burned cold now in Deryn’s belly, and she almost gave in. But then something Alek had said popped into her head.

  “You can’t let Alek find out about me.”

  “And why not?” Volger asked, pouring himself tea.

  “He and I were just in the rookery together, and I almost told him. That happens sometimes.”

  “I’m sure it does. But you didn’t tell him, did you?” Volger tutted. “Because you know how he would react. However fond you two are of each other, you are a commoner.”

  “Aye, I know that. But I’m also a soldier, a barking good one.” She took a step closer, trying to keep any quaver out of her voice. “I’m the very soldier Alek might have been, if he hadn’t been raised by a pack of fancy-boots like you. I’ve got the life he missed by being an archduke’s son.”

  Volger frowned, not understanding yet, but it was all coming clear in Deryn’s mind.

  “I’m the boy Alek wants to be, more than anything. And you want to tell him that I’m really a girl? On top of losing his parents and his home, how do you think he’ll take that news, your countship?”

  The man stared at her for another moment, then went back to stirring his tea. “It might be rather . . . unsettling for him.”

  “Aye, it might. Enjoy your breakfast, Count.”

  Deryn found herself smiling as she turned and left the room.

  As the great jaw of the cargo door opened, a freezing whirlwind spilled inside and leapt about the cargo bay, setting the leather straps of Deryn’s flight suit snapping and fluttering. She pulled on her goggles and leaned out, peering at the terrain rushing past below.

  The ground was patched with snow and dotted with pine trees. The Leviathan had passed over the Siberian city of Omsk that morning, not pausing to resupply, still veering northward toward some secret destination. But Deryn hadn’t found time to wonder where they were heading; in the thirty hours since the imperial eagle had arrived, she’d been busy training for this cargo snatch-up.

  “Where’s the bear?” Newkirk asked. He leaned out past her, dangling from his safety line over thin air.

  “Ahead of us, saving its strength.” Deryn pulled her gloves tighter, then tested her weight against the heavy cable on the cargo winch. It was as thick as her wrist—rated to lift a two-ton pallet of supplies. The riggers had been fiddling with the apparatus all day, but this was its first real test. This particular maneuver wasn’t even in the Manual of Aeronautics.

  “Don’t like bears,” Newkirk muttered. “Some beasties are too barking huge.”

  Deryn gestured at the grappling hook at the end of the cable, as big as a ballroom chandelier. “Then you’d best make sure not to stick that up the beastie’s nose by accident. It might take exception.”

  Through the lenses of his goggles, Newkirk’s eyes went wide.

  Deryn gave him a punch on the shoulder, envying him for his station at the business end of the cable. It wasn’t fair that Newkirk had been gaining airmanship skills while she and Alek had been plotting rebellion in Istanbul.

  “Thanks for making me even more nervous, Mr. Sharp!”

  “I thought you’d done this before.”

  “We did a few snatch-ups in Greece. But those were just mailbags, not heavy cargo. And from horse-drawn carriages instead of off the back of a barking great bear!”

  “That does sound a bit different,” Deryn said.

  “Same principle, lads, and it’ll work the same way,” came Mr. Rigby from behind them. His eyes were on his pocket watch, but his ears never missed a thin
g, even in the howling Siberian wind. “Your wings, Mr. Sharp.”

  “Aye, sir. Like a good guardian angel.” Deryn hoisted the gliding wings onto her shoulders. She would be carrying Newkirk, using the wings to guide him over the fighting bear.

  Mr. Rigby signaled to the winch men. “Good luck, lads.”

  “Thank you, sir!” the two middies said together.

  The winch began to turn, and the grappling hook slid down toward the open cargo bay door. Newkirk took hold of it and clipped himself onto a smaller cable, which would k htheir combined weight as they flew.

  Deryn let her gliding wings spread out. As she stepped toward the cargo door, the wind grew stronger and colder. Even through amber goggles the sunlight made her squint. She grasped the harness straps that connected her to Newkirk.

  “Ready?” she shouted.

  He nodded, and together they stepped off into roaring emptiness. . . .

  The freezing airstream yanked Deryn sternward, and the world spun around once, sky and earth gyrating wildly. But then her gliding wings caught the air, stabilized by the dangling Newkirk, like a kite held steady by its string.

  The Leviathan was beginning its descent. Its shadow grew below them, rippling in a furious black surge across the ground. Newkirk still grasped the grappling hook, his arms wrapped around the cable against the onrush of air.

  Deryn flexed her gliding wings. They were the same kind she’d worn a dozen times on Huxley descents, but free-ballooning was nothing compared to being dragged behind an airship at top speed. The wings strained to pull her to starboard, and Newkirk followed, swinging slowly across the blur of terrain below. When Deryn centered her course again, she and Newkirk swung back and forth beneath the airship, like a giant pendulum coming to rest.

  The fragile wings were barely strong enough to steer the weight of two middies. The Leviathan’s pilots would have to put them dead on target, leaving only the fine adjustments for Deryn.

 

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