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The Sunken

Page 28

by S. C. Green


  She gasped, a horrible, wet, gurgling sound that welled up from inside her. As she went down, her eyes met his, and the hiss of her final breath passed through the air, carrying with it the trace of her words: Thank you.

  Now he ran.

  Up the slope and into the forest, shot falling uselessly in the snow behind him. If they shouted after him, he could not hear them over the roar of the wind and the pounding of his heart in his ears. His chest burning, he reached the crest of the slope and leaned against a tree, resting for a moment. He watched the lamps below — little daubs of light like fireflies dancing as Jacques’ men carried Julianne’s body back to the monastery.

  As they carried her far away from him.

  Tears stung in his eyes. He had done what she asked — what her eyes had burnt into him. She would not have allowed herself or the baby — if there even was a baby – to suffer in Jacques’ hands any longer. She would have killed herself anyway — plunging that knife into her own belly, sacrificing herself in a great ocean of agony, condemning herself according to Morphean law to an eternity of torment.

  Now she was free, and so was he, though how he could go on living, knowing the price of his freedom, he didn’t yet know.

  He ran. Like a coward, he ran on into the darkness.

  ***

  The Council didn’t want to take any chances with Isambard, so they locked him in a cell below Stephenson’s church while the broad gauge test track was constructed. Of course, they made the Stokers do it, for no extra pay, on top of their regular duties. But the men toiled happily, clearing the ground and laying the wide track alongside Stephenson’s line, which ran from one side of the Engine Ward to the other.

  “Do you think Brunel’s lad will really beat Stephenson?” William Stone asked Aaron as he held the rails in place for William to hammer the nails through.

  “His calculations are sound enough,” Aaron replied. “But he told me he’s never brought it up to speed before. We — that is, he — doesn’t know how fast it truly runs.”

  Aaron was allowed to visit Isambard down in his cell, but he had to wait in line while Stoker after Stoker dropped in, each bearing gifts — blankets and food and drink to make Isambard comfortable. He accepted them all gratefully, and stayed chatting and laughing ’till his guards got annoyed and threw in the next visitor. Finally, Aaron was allowed to enter.

  “We’ll complete the track within the week—”

  Isambard sighed. “You’re upset.”

  Aaron gulped. “If Stephenson’s locomotive is faster—”

  “For the last time, it won’t be faster. And besides, I’ve kept my promise,” Isambard said. “I’ve told no one of your involvement. You have nothing to fear.”

  “You are my friend. I fear for you.”

  “Your fear is unnecessary. I have done the calculations. There’s no way Stephenson will win.” Isambard sighed again. “I shall like very much to get out of here. I’m frightfully bored. I’ve asked that you accompany me on the footplate.”

  Aaron tried to mask his dismay, but his conversation with Isambard took on a stilted feel, as though they were both going through the motions. Staring at his friend through the bars as he paced his cell in excitement only made Aaron keenly aware of how different they were — of how their very natures divided them.

  The Festival of Steam was over, but most of the engineers and their men remained behind, anxious to see what this magnificent engine, built by a boy and seemingly too squat and ugly to be much use, could really do. Stephenson’s newest engine — the Rocket — was rushed down to the city from Manchester, with the Messiah himself as the conductor. An entire regiment of Navvies marched after him, eager to see their master beat the Stokers once and for all. If Isambard’s theory was proven to be false, his punishment would be swift and severe. The promise of a hanging clung to the air, and no one liked to miss a good hanging.

  On the day of the trials, a throng of people crowded the streets of Engine Ward. The Council members — draped in all their religious and scholarly robes — gave morning lectures in the great cathedrals, most railing against this upstart engineer, but some showing support for healthy competition. Never had so many come to the Ward to hear the engineers speak or see the result of a public experiment. The city erected a grandstand along one edge of the track near the start/finish line for the engineers, Council members, and other privileged citizens, while the Stokers jostled with the ordinary folk for a view behind a heavy iron fence. Constables patrolled the length of the track, ready with batons in case the crowd got out of hand. Coaches and omnibuses blocked the streets all the way back to the gates — their passengers were forced to exit and walk the rest of the way.

  King George III sat on a platform festooned with flowers overlooking the track. He beamed with happiness as he waved at his subjects. As a symbol of his patronage, the workers usually threw bolts and nails at his feet, but the police, worried about injuries and the integrity of the track, were walking up and down with sacks to collect these offerings (which they would no doubt sell later for scrap). Already, four sacks were stacked up against the platform, brimming with loot.

  Brunel and Aaron waited together on the edge of the track, while Joseph Banks and two men from the Royal Society checked over both engines for any mechanical tinkerings that might give one locomotive an unfair advantage. Brunel sought out fellow Stokers in the crowd and waved to them, while Aaron hopped nervously from foot to foot.

  Only a few feet away, Stephenson waited, surrounded by a crew of Navvies in shiny green overalls. The Messiah had squeezed his wide frame into a frock coat of the latest fashion, the buttons straining under the pressure, and puffed on a cigarette as he exchanged pleasantries with other Council members. He barely even glanced at Isambard’s engine, though its broad frame dwarfed his precious Rocket.

  As the church bells punctuated the day with fearsome gongs, signalling the start of the trials, Isambard helped Aaron up onto the footplate of their squat engine. He waved to the King, and the King nodded in return. Despite the unease settling in his gut, Aaron beamed too, and waved at Quartz. It was a proud day to be a Stoker.

  The King gave the signal, and Stephenson stepped on board the Rocket, while the Navvies yelled and stamped their feet. The ground vibrated with their adoration, and Aaron felt his gloom sink deeper. How can Isambard possibly defeat all this?

  Stephenson’s fireman stoked the boiler, and soon puffs of steam rose from the engine and floated across the sky like clouds. The timekeeper held up his pocket watch, and at the King’s signal, Joseph Banks waved the flag, and the Rocket lurched away.

  To Aaron’s eyes she seemed impossibly fast, much faster than he’d ever seen a locomotive travel when Stephenson used to run them in Engine Ward. She leapt along the track, disappearing from view, save the tip of her smokestack belching black clouds over the cheering populace.

  The roar of the crowd grew to such a height he couldn’t hear the Rocket returning. Instead, he saw her great black face bearing down on them, careening toward the finish line with Stephenson waving his hat in triumph. They screeched to a halt, belched one final cloud of black steam over the wailing crowd, and the time keeper announced their result: “Seventeen minutes and thirty-one seconds!”

  A calculating man from the Metic Sect stood by, furiously scribbling sums on his paper. Within a few minutes he announced Stephenson’s average speed at 28mph. Aaron gulped.

  Stephenson didn’t even acknowledge Isambard as he strolled alongside their carriage toward his place of honour on the bleachers. Isambard didn’t seem bothered by the snub — he turned to Aaron, grinning from ear to ear.

  “Whatever happens,” he said, “you have my sincere and greatest thanks.”

  “As long as I keep my head, you can keep your thanks.”

  “Just remember, keep the distribution even.” he said, handing Aaron the shovel. “Don’t forget the corners of the firebox, and don’t give her everything ’till she’s warmed up a bit. We do
n’t want to drop the fire before we’ve even begun.”

  Together, they stoked the boiler — watching the puffs of smoke trotting across the sky — and checked the pressure. Aaron knelt down and took his place in front of the firebox. Easing off the brake and taking hold of the regulator, Isambard tipped his hat to signal he was ready. Banks waved the flag; Isambard pulled the whistle and leaned on the regulator. The train juddered forward, launching itself down the track.

  Immediately, they had a problem. Water squirted from one of the hoses, soaking the deck and causing the pressure to drop dramatically. Struggling to find purchase on the slippery deck, Aaron pushed shovel after shovel of coke into the firebox, spreading it out to keep the fire even. His field of vision narrowed, becoming only his shovel and the tiny door of the firebox, and his shoulders heaved with the effort. Sparks flew back at him as he tossed in another shovelful, checked the pressure gauge, and dug for more coke.

  Soaked in water and smeared with soot, Isambard threw back his head and laughed gleefully as he let out the regulator even further, and the whole world fell away into a blur of wind and coke and steam. Aaron’s fear evaporated, replaced by exhilaration.

  Come on, we can do it!

  The locomotive thundered across the broader track. His knees wobbled in different directions as they clattered down the straight, accelerating as she dove into the corner. They poured on speed, the rivets and panels rattling with the building pressure. Suddenly, Isambard let off the regulator and slammed on the brakes. They shuddered to a stop, a mere foot before they ran out of track.

  “Quick, more coke.” Isambard threw her in reverse, released the brake, and let out the regulator, pulling it further and further ’till the whole locomotive shook from the speed.

  Now the pressure gauge shot up. Aaron added more water, watching her drop to normal, then quickly shoot up again. The deck shook so violently he had to hold on to the boiler mount with one hand to keep from being thrown. From the corner of his eye he saw the Engine Ward hurtle past, a blur of grey and black. “More!” Isambard yelled over the din. “Faster!”

  His teeth chattering, Aaron crouched low, steadying himself against the boiler mount as he flung in another shovel of coke. The pressure gauge shot up again, then down. Two rivets popped from the boiler, sailing across the deck.

  “Isambard,” Aaron screamed. “We’re going to drop the fire!”

  In response, Isambard hauled on the regulator as hard as it would go, rocketing the locomotive through the final straight. More rivets popped off as they shot past the bleachers, the boiler belching black smoke from every outlet and the pressure gauge dangerously close to exploding.

  Finally, Brunel pulled on the brakes. Aaron dived onto the deck and covered his head just as all three gauges exploded. The engine juddered to a stop, black steam choking the air. The air gushed through the firebox, sucking the fire out through the chimney and depositing it on the side of the track. Firefighters rushed in with buckets to fight the blaze.

  Aaron could only just make out Isambard’s features through the steam and smoke. He was grinning from ear to ear. His eyes stinging, Aaron fumbled for his friend’s hand, grabbed it and squeezed tight.

  “Whatever happens now,” Isambard said, “I can say I ran my engine through the Ward.”

  “You won’t say nothing if you’re dead,” Aaron heaved, wiping sweat from his brow.

  Suddenly, they were surrounded. Rough hands dragged them from the cab and hoisted them in the air. Stokers, a great crowd of them, singing and yelling and carrying them away on their shoulders. In the madness, Aaron lost sight of Isambard. All around him, people were yelling, and reporters fired a barrage of questions at him, their voices blending together in the din. “What happened?” he yelled between coughs, but no one answered him.

  His ears ringing and his eyes full of smoke, Aaron searched the crowd for a familiar face. Someone reached up and tore him from the Stokers’ grasp, setting his wobbling legs down on solid ground. “Nine minutes twenty-three!” Quartz jabbed at his watch. “You pulled her through in nine minutes twenty-three seconds!”

  “What?”

  “We did it!” Brunel cried, throwing his arms around Aaron. “We beat Stephenson’s time by nearly half!”

  More Stokers broke over the barrier, and they whipped Isambard away again, hoisting him up on their shoulders and carrying him into the steamy haze ’till Aaron lost sight of him. He heard the King speak, but the words were lost in the roar of the crowd. Quartz stood beside him, and William Stone, but even they were swept up in the madness, talking about the great church they would build for the first ever Stoker engineer.

  Aaron slumped against the engine, his hands on his temples, trying to make sense of it. His childhood friend was now the head of a religion.

  ***

  James Holman’s Memoirs — Unpublished

  The letter I received — from the one and same Nicholas Thorne, whom I’d last seen on board the Cleopatra as they pulled me to shore for treatment — contained no apologies for his lack of communication, or platitudes or inquiries after my health. Any other gentleman might think this rude, but Nicholas was too dear a friend for me to bother with formalities.

  I had just returned to Travers College following my medical studies, and I was desperate for any distraction from my monotonous lifestyle. I longed still to travel, but my dreams seemed impossible, stifled by the constraints of the very institution that had saved me from poverty. The envelope — bearing no return address and what the maid described as “a most peculiar postmark” — did ignite in me such a terrific hope for adventure that I immediately leapt from my chair, the flaring pains in my legs completely forgotten, and paced the length of the room.

  I could smell the road on the letter as soon as I slit open the envelope. That damp, sulphurous scent of rain and dirt and soot clung to the paper, telling me a story more evocative than words. Another smell — familiar, but indiscernible — reached my nostrils, and I knew this to be a letter from someone I knew — one of my friends in a far-flung place. I called in a maid to read to me. If I could not have adventures of my own, I would hear tales of someone else’s.

  “It’s written on fine paper, and there’s a watermark along the right side — it looks like some sort of flying machine,” said the maid, pulling out the letter. She knew well how to describe every detail to me. “Shall I read it for you, Mr. Holman?”

  “If you please, Rose, and I trust you to keep its contents entirely confidential.”

  The letter I destroyed as soon as I had committed it to memory, for he was right to be cautious of such evidence against him, but as my journals are kept secure in the locked deposit box in my private rooms, I felt it safe enough to record a copy of it here.

  Dear James

  You may have some idea what has become of me since we parted in Portsmouth. If you had followed the papers you’d know the Cleopatra stayed for a year on patrol in English waters before setting out on duties in the Mediterranean. After being in an engagement, she put in at Gibraltar for repairs and her crew was decommissioned. You may have even read of a young lieutenant who killed his superior officer in a brawl and evaded the authorities by escaping into Spain.

  I had intended to buy passage home to England and begin life anew as a student of architecture, but I had not counted on Napoleon making a particularly spectacular decision. Blockading England basically drew a line in the sand — with Industrian England on one side, and Christian Europe on the other. There was not one ship that could take me where I so dearly wanted to go, and French hostility toward Industrians forced me into hiding.

  I’ve been in the mountains for nearly three years, studying architecture with some of the foremost European masters, but circumstances permitted that I return to England with haste, and I hope to find work there under a new name. I will not burden you with the details of my illicit journey, lest this letter fall into the wrong hands. Suffice to say that at the time of writing, I am in the Nort
h, and it does my heart well to once more walk on English soil.

  I arrive in London on Tuesday, and would greatly desire to meet you for dinner, at 6pm at the Butchers Hall Beef House. You must come alone, and tell no one who you are seeing.

  You cannot write to me in return, but I shall wait for you on the appointed day.

  Yours

  Nicholas Rose

  PART III: THE METAL MESSIAH

  1830

  “You want to what?”

  “Find a coach to take me to London. Tonight, if that’s possible.”

  The barkeeper shook his head. “Ain’t no coaches travelling that road for three more days. I will give ye another drink, though.”

  She took it, the strong taste burning her throat. She swallowed, struggling to hold back tears. “It’s of the utmost urgency that I get to London as soon as possible.”

  “Listen, girlie,” the barkeeper said, leaning over the counter, “my job is to serve up the poison, not to organise transport for every pretty stranger who wanders through those doors. I’ll tell you what — every week a blind gentleman comes down from the castle, Thursdays at 4pm, has a drink right over there” he said, pointing to a stool at the end of the bar, “and takes a private taxicab into the city. Tomorrow is your lucky day. If you wait around ’till then, you may be able to persuade him to give you a lift.”

  Mr. Holman? Brigitte knew the blind man, for she sometimes cleaned the Naval Knights’ residence at Travers College. She’d noticed him immediately, as he was younger than the other Naval Knights by some years and moved about with such an affable ease it was difficult at first to discern his blindness. She’d never spoken to him, and hoped he’d be kindly disposed to her.

  For all his gruff talk, the barkeeper took pity on her, and offered her a room for half price. She took it, not knowing what else to do, but she could not sleep. Every time she closed her eyes she saw visions of the Sunken, snarling and snapping, or the woman in the King’s chamber, blood running from the gashes in her legs, or Maxwell’s sagging, weary face as he showed her his wound.

 

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