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Steamlust

Page 17

by Kristina Wright


  Eliza stroked him, running her curled hand along the length of his cock, a breathless smile painting her lips as he gasped and strained in harmony with her movements. She lowered her mouth to him, peering up at him from under her lashes, waiting. He captured a handful of her hair, twisting it against her neck, not quite pushing where he wanted her, but urging her on, nonetheless. She relented, letting the warmth of her mouth enclose him.

  “God,” Justin murmured, voice rough. “That’s so good.”

  “Justin,” she cried, urging him on top of her, “love me.”

  He shuddered at her words, kneeling between her legs, then covered her body with his own, his cock seeking her warm depths, his arms curling under her back, pulling her up to meet him. Hesitantly, as if afraid of hurting her, he thrust into her with slow strokes, clenching his jaw as he struggled for control. She was slick, her muscles still trembling from her climax, the voluptuous shudder that gripped him urging him forward and faster. He took her mouth with his, tongue echoing each rapid thrust, pulling the breath out of her and taking it into himself.

  Eliza gasped, her hips rising to meet his strokes, hands clenching his shoulders. Gleaming sweat broke out along his skin as he panted for breath, thrusting into her, losing his sense of self in the wonder of it. Eliza stirred under him, her legs wrapping around his hips, pulling him into her. Justin surrendered to his need, gave one final, hard stroke, holding her tightly, until he released, nearly screaming her name.

  With an effort, Justin rolled off her. Instantly, Eliza cuddled up to his side, twining one hand with his, draping his arm over her hip. “A golden moment,” she said.

  “I concur.”

  Eliza reached over the side of the bed for her shift and suddenly gasped.

  “What?” Justin lifted her hair and planted a kiss between her shoulder blades.

  “The auspiciometer.” She was breathless with shock. “It fell. When we were… It’s broken.”

  “I’m so sorry, Eliza,” Justin said. “I know how much it meant to you. Maybe we can repair it?”

  Eliza rolled over onto her side to face him. She curled into the heat of his body. “It is all right. Maybe I don’t need it anymore.”

  LIBERATED

  Mary Borsellino

  As often happens, there was already a customer waiting outside the wide double doors of the workshop when we arrived in the morning. It was a man, maybe twenty-five or thirty years old, with sandy hair and leather flying gloves that had clearly seen considerable wear in their life.

  He pulled off one of the leather gloves before holding out the revealed hand to shake one of my own. I left my own, much daintier glove—plum lambskin, that day, with pewter buttons at the wrists—on as I took his hand and shook. Most people whom I greet in this way assume I must be haughty, a grubby little cog-spinner (a particularly ridiculous insult often aimed at mechanics and metal-crafters) with delusions of grandeur. But truly, I’m nothing of the sort. I love my work, I love my workshop, and I love the girls who study there. It’s just that I don’t like my skin to touch the skin of others.

  I was originally designed to work for a seamstress, and so my fingertips have fine, hair-trigger senses. One brush of a hand against mine and I know that person’s body fat ratio, her general health levels, standard posture, likely activity levels. All this information can make a gown hang just that tiny bit more perfectly on its owner, move a vital fraction more elegantly. Applied correctly, the physics of fabric and flesh can look like talent and art.

  Although the fact that I am an automaton is not exactly a secret, I don’t advertise it either. Keeping my hands concealed, as well as protecting me from a deluge of information about each person I meet, hides the small screws and joins visible at the hinge of each knuckle. The tinted eyeglasses I wear serve the same purpose for the matte nickel color of my irises. My long dark hair hides the keyhole at the nape of my neck.

  “Sam Tucker,” the young man introduced himself as we shook hands.

  “Kara Knight,” I replied, gesturing that he should follow the girls and me inside the workshop. “What’s the problem, Mr. Tucker?”

  “Call me Sam, please. My word, this place is beautiful!”

  I smiled at his exclamation. I’m always pleased when people properly appreciate the workshop. Most of the roof is made of panes of clean, clear glass, to let in the largest amount of light possible. I don’t want any of the girls to destroy their eyesight by working in dim conditions.

  The glass roof also gives anyone inside the workshop an excellent view of the traffic overhead, sky-ships and balloons and dirigibles made of oilskin sailcloth in emerald greens and ruby reds and sapphire blues: a jewel-box among the clouds.

  The workbenches are lined up in three long rows, topped with high-quality green felt, against which even the smallest cogs and springs are clearly visible.

  The girls began setting up for the day, laying out their tools and magnifying monocles. They each had their own project to work on—broken pocket watches, warped telescopes, things like that. Stephanie, who had the most experience of the current bunch, was trying to repair one of the small clockwork woodpeckers that had recently become the rage for sending and receiving telegraph messages. A household cat had pounced on the poor thing, ruining most of its little brass feathers. Repairing the damage without upsetting the internal mechanism would be difficult work, but the reputation of the Knight Workshop is well deserved.

  “Marvelous,” Sam said in wonderment, still gazing at his surroundings. Stephanie caught my eye and smirked suggestively. I ignored her. If the girls had their way, every sky-sailor and trader of diamond chips and aristocrat with a broken clockwork bird who came through the workshop’s doors would end up between my legs. I need sexual congress often, but not that often. The modifications that the Liberationists made after stealing me from the tailor’s didn’t turn me into a nymphomaniac.

  “What can we help you with?” I asked.

  “Oh!” Sam fumbled with the pouch on his hip, remembering the reason for his visit. “My compass. The casing’s been damaged and I can’t get a sky-worthy certificate for trading in this province without it. The inspector said you were the best person to see.”

  “Hmm,” I answered noncommittally, certain that whatever grudging recommendation the inspector had given me, the word person had not been uttered. Automatons, even apparently self-owned ones (I don’t pass around the fact that I am stolen goods) are not well liked by most public servants. We need very little regulating; it makes them redundant. Nobody appreciates the new technology that renders him obsolete.

  I took the broken compass in my gloved hands, turning it over a few times to gauge a full sense of the damage. There was nothing too severe required; the apparent ruination was largely cosmetic and the job was well within the skills of any of the girls.

  “Annabella, can you come look at this?” I asked, beckoning her to come join us. Annabella was one of the newest additions to the workshop team, a skinny little strawberry blonde with the hard, scrappy look they almost always have to them when they first arrive.

  I handed her the compass, taking a moment to appreciate the difference between her hand and mine. Annabella’s was the hand of a quintessential cog-spinner: shiny pink burns on the fingertips from the touch of hot brass and soldering pens, ragged nails, delicate movement. Girls with her skin tone usually have a dusting of cinnamon freckles all up the blue milk of their forearms, but not Annabella. My guess was that she’d spent her early days down in the deep tunnels of a diamond mine somewhere, far removed from the sun and its kisses.

  “Think you can handle that?” I asked her, moving my gloved hand away from her living, hard-knocked one.

  She made a soft scoffing sound in the back of her throat. “Easy. But I was supposed to go to the market today. I need a new click for the mainspring ratchet assembly on the Pearson-Smythe automatic alarm.”

  “I’ll go get that. You do this,” I offered.

  “But you s
hould stay here and get to know our new customer better,” Stephanie put in with another of her wicked smirks. Impertinent child. If she wasn’t astonishingly talented at reassembling difficult mechanisms I’d have found her suitable employment outside the workshop long ago.

  “I’ll come along,” Sam spoke up. “Make sure you get a good price on parts. I’m something of a dab hand at bargaining at this point—can’t stay aloft without a fortune unless you learn to haggle.”

  “All right,” I agreed with a nod. A couple of girls in the back row laughed quietly together. I ignored them.

  “You—and please don’t be offended by this, because I don’t mean it to be so—you’re an automaton, aren’t you?”

  “Why would I be offended?” I asked, genuinely puzzled. “Something is true or it’s untrue; your suspicions can make no difference either way.”

  “Now I’m sure of it,” Sam said, looking amused at my brusque response. “And you could be offended because of how clearly you want to pass as human. I doubt I’d have been able to spot the difference except that when I was a boy one of my tutors was an automaton. I notice the tells.”

  “Was he Liberated?”

  “Pardon?”

  “Your tutor. Was he still standard issue, or had the Liberators got to him?”

  “Oh.” Sam shook his head. “No. The town where I grew up was quite isolated. I doubt any of the Liberation Front has ever set foot there. My tutor’s settings were standard through and through. He was excellent at his work. Taught me geography. Made me want to go out and see the world.”

  We walked together without speaking for a few minutes, through the throngs of market shoppers, the uneven beat of hundreds of footsteps in arrhythmic counterpoint to one another.

  “Sometimes I miss it terribly,” I admitted. “Being standard-settings. Things are so straightforward and simple. You’re built for a task, and you do that task. No doubts, no difficult decisions. Just…clarity.”

  I sighed. “And then the Liberators looted the couturiers where I worked, took us, and…well, they said they gave us souls. Maybe that’s true. I never had a sense of myself as…as a person, I suppose. Not the way I did after I was Liberated.”

  “What exactly do they change?”

  “I’m matter-of-fact about most things, but there are some experiences, some secrets of myself, that I do prefer to keep private.”

  “Oh, I didn’t mean to—”

  “Let me finish, please. There are many aspects of what happened that I won’t talk about, but I can tell you some of it. I was given the ability to make plans for myself and to decide preferences beyond what was most logical for my station.” I smoothed my hands over my skirt, not looking at Sam as I spoke. “Perhaps the most obvious change to an outside observer would be the fact that the Liberator’s changes leave automatons with a rather powerful sex drive. They say it’s to give us more agency in our choice of lovers, but really that’s only true for those who were created for pleasure and companion tasks in the first place. For models like me it’s just one more new complication to worry about.”

  Sam didn’t have a chance to respond immediately, because as I finished speaking we arrived at the section of the market that offered a huge variety of scavenged and spare parts for mechanisms such as the ones the girls at the workshop were busied with.

  He proved to be an extremely adept negotiator, bargaining prices with such an aptitude that I felt it only fair to compliment him on it as we began our walk back to the workshop, the new purchases stowed in a calico bag at my hip.

  “With a silver tongue like that, you should have been a politician,” I teased. Sam laughed.

  “I don’t like the current state of the world nearly well enough to want to go into politics. I can effect far more damage and change as a quasi-legal smuggler, I think.”

  I had to smile at that. “You’re probably right, yes.”

  “To return to earlier topics for a moment,” Sam said. “I’m going to be in the city for quite some time—if I can get approved for a permit, that is, though I have every confidence in your girls—and it would suit me very well to have a regular lover I respected and liked talking to. Do you think that would—?”

  “It would suit me very well, too,” I told him, with another smile. He was pleasant, with just a hint of the rogue about him, and I found his conversation pleasing. Of course he’d be welcome in my bed. I may be a robot, but I’m not stupid.

  He grinned. “Good. Very good. How long until your, um, increased sex drive next needs—”

  “Tonight, if you aren’t busy. Meet me at the workshop after nightfall,” I told him. I wasn’t in dire need yet, and wouldn’t be for another day or so, but there was no logical reason to delay coupling with a willing partner.

  “It’s a date.” Sam grinned. Our conversation paused for several more minutes after that, as we pushed and darted our way through the shove of the crowd. The city is sometimes so full of life it scarcely seems able to contain it.

  “How did you come to have the workshop?” Sam asked when we were next able to converse easily, the crowds thinning as we reached the outskirts of the market. “Why was that the ambition that took root after your Liberation?”

  “Have you heard the saying about the watch in the desert?”

  “I think so,” Sam told me with a nod. “That’s the one about how, if you found a watch in the desert, you’d assume there’s a watchmaker. That it didn’t just appear there. That you can say the same about the world, that there must have been someone who created it; it didn’t just appear.”

  “Yes, that’s it,” I confirmed. “The religious aspect of the metaphor is irrelevant to me, because I know without question where I come from and who created me. But I’m sure you can see why the idea of the world as a watch would appeal to a cog-spinner. Especially as the world is in need of so much repair—who better to mend it?”

  “The girls,” Sam said, clearly understanding. “I wondered, but now it makes sense. Teaching them a trade is your way of fixing the watch.”

  I nodded, and that was going to be all the answer I offered. He seemed to comprehend the situation well enough for it to be sufficient. But after a few seconds I began to speak anyway. There are few subjects I feel strong passions about, but my girls are foremost among my cares.

  “In the earlier days, when I first started, they came from coal mines. Now, thanks to new technology, it’s diamond mines. The health of the children who work down in the earth doesn’t decline as rapidly mining diamonds as it did mining coal, but their lives are still short and unhappy ones.

  “Poorhouses and orphanages are constantly overcrowded and underfunded. It’s not that the overseers and matrons are particularly cruel, it’s simply that selling some of their wards to the mining companies is a solution to both of their chronic problems at once.

  “The lives and futures of children are just a commodity to be bought and traded, as if the meat of their flesh was no more precious than the cogs and springs of an un-Liberated automaton.

  “I couldn’t stand it, seeing a world so broken. A watch in need of so much repair. So now I run the workshop, to teach them the ways of fixing broken things.”

  It was close to nine in the evening when Sam returned to the workshop, and the sky above the translucent ceiling was deep blue, starlit and scattered with late traffic.

  “Makes you grateful for diamond-based steam engines, doesn’t it?” I remarked. “No coal smog to obscure the heavens.”

  “It’s miraculous,” Sam said, and I thought he was talking about the view until he kept speaking. “How on earth does it survive hailstorms, or snow?”

  “It’s far stronger than it looks,” I told him.

  He was looking at me when he answered, in a thoughtful voice, “Yes, I believe you’re right.”

  I resisted the urge to roll my eyes at his awkward attempt at sentiment. He meant well, after all. “You seem to appreciate innovative engineering feats.”

  “I’m
here, aren’t I?” Sam answered with a cocky smile.

  “Just so long as you don’t try to couple with my roof when we’re done,” I countered, deadpan. “I don’t mind if you gaze at it adoringly while I ride you, though.”

  Sam blinked in surprise. “Here?”

  I shrugged. “It’s the only place that’s mine.”

  “But where do you go at night?”

  I shrugged. “Sometimes I stay here. There’s always more work to do. Sometimes I walk—this city is so full of beauty and strangeness and wild dreams. Iridescent little aluminum dragonflies that hum songs from the radio so passersby hear them and want to buy them on phonograph. Flashbulb fireworks in the sky to help the sailors see the tower-tops without sun.

  “Sometimes I go to see the seamstress. The one who…my owner, before. She had good insurance. After the robbery she was able to buy new automatons. I visit her, and I visit them. I help with the sewing sometimes. They remind me of…a long time ago.”

  “Visiting Mama and the little sisters back home. You’re more like us humans than even the Liberators think.”

  “Help me with this?” I began undoing the buttons down the front of my dress, tiny pearl nubs beginning at the high collar of my dark bodice and leading down to the nipped waist. The long skirt was embroidered with constellations of the zodiac in bronze and cherry-red thread against the crisp black of the linen. It was a modern, frivolous design. I’d commissioned it at the girls’ insistence—if my workshop crew had their way, I’d be a fashion plate who spent every waking moment looking for her next lover.

  They’d all be delighted, if they knew Sam’s deft, tanned fingers were working each of the silly buttons on the silly dress open one by one. Too bad for the girls that I’ve never been the kind to gossip.

  All that kept Sam’s skin and mine from touching as he carefully opened the front of my dress was the whisper-thin muslin of my slip and the long dusty-rose velvet ribbon around my neck, with my key threaded on it.

 

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