by C. B. Ash
“A monkey?” Moira asked, leaning closer to get a better look at the rubbings.
“There was a monkey?” Arcady asked, just as confused.
“Not according to the manifest,” the captain replied. Anthony glanced over to Krumer, “Are you sure there isn’t more?”
The first mate stopped rubbing, dropping the pencil back into the tin cup. Pulling aside the butcher paper, he picked up the cylinder and lightly brushed his fingers over it, peering closely. He shook his head. “Not that I can see, Captain. That’s all she carved. Looks hastily done, too.”
“Well, there were pirates running underfoot,” Moira said, looking up at Krumer.
“True,” Krumer replied.
Hunter lifted the butcher paper to examine the rubbing again. “Arcady, you’ve been studying some of Mr. Tonks’ charts. Where are these coordinates? Am I correct in thinking they are a close distance from here?”
The clockwork dragonfly fluttered up, then flew over to hover next to the captain, for a better look at the butcher paper. He tilted his head to the left, considering the numbers, his eyes glowing a soft amber. “The coordinates are indeed in the North Sea, Captain. At my calculations, it is one hundred fifty-eight miles from Aberdeen’s coastline. The charts I have seen mark this as ‘Point Signal’?”
“Port Signal?” Krumer echoed, setting the scarred cylinder down next to its partner. “I’ve heard the name, but Spirits take me, I can’t remember where.”
“Indeed,” Hunter said, “last I heard of Port Signal was ten years ago, though the context escapes me as well.”
Moira looked uncomfortable, glancing down at the discarded, broken mainspring. “Oh, there.”
Hunter looked at the blacksmith curiously, “Anything you’d care to share, Miss Wycliffe?”
At the captain’s more formal use of her last name, Moira grinned nervously, fiddling with the part in front of her. “I know a Port Signal. Ya see, it’s a opti-telegraphic signal relay station, flying over the deep part of the North Sea, all out on its own. Smugglers, naval ships, merchants, and pirates of all sorts tend to stop by. After awhile, one of the stationmasters, he set up a kind of ‘Market Square’ in the down-below of the station. All on the hush, ya know. Lots a’ deals and smugglin’ of all kinds. Been there, oh, once or twice in the past.” The young woman blushed slightly, “nothing regular or anything.”
“That’s still well within the patrol routes,” Anthony replied, “surely the Navy would’ve found this little smuggler’s den by now.”
“That I don’t know about, but the North Sea’s big enough ta hide more’n a few things, Cap’n,” Moira said with a shrug, “you said it yourself.”
Hunter sighed, “Yes, so I did. Well, it’s as good a place to start as any.”
Moira put down the spring she had twisted into an unrecognizable shape. “Oh, Cap’n, ya can’t just march in there like ya normally would most places.”
“I beg your pardon. I ‘march’?” Hunter asked in surprise.
“Closer to brisk walk coupled with a determined air,” Krumer quipped as an aside to the captain. Hunter gave the first mate a pained look.
Moira waved her hands, “anyway, that’s not the point. The point I’m reachin’ for is that unless they know ya, or have someone that can speak for ya, there’s no way yer ever going to know about what’s really going on there. They’ll not let you just run around Market Square just cause ya want to.”
The captain nodded, “And if Black Jack’s there, I doubt he’d speak in our favor.” He sighed, “we need to get word to the Navy first. Before we head there and start asking any questions.”
A muffled commotion from outside the room rippled across the noise of the engines. Suddenly, the door to the engine room flew open. The ship’s pilot, Tonks Wilkerson, dressed in a faded red shirt, black vest and dark cotton trousers burst into the room, panting hard from running. In one hand was a brown piece of paper with a message on it.
“Cap’n!” Tonks blurted out, “incoming message, general broadcast.” He thrust the paper out for the captain.
Hunter read over the message, his face darkening into a concerned frown. Noticing the confused looks, he cleared his throat and read aloud, “It says: ‘All ships in the North Sea area, be advised to be on watch for the schooner, Brass Griffin. Be warned, she is armed and wanted in questioning for piratical actions against the passenger ship, Fair Winds, lost with all passengers and hands. Any sightings are to be reported to the HMS Intrepid at first opportunity.’ ”
“We had nothing to do with that! We attempted to lend aid,” Krumer growled.
“Yeah, but if they think we killed all those people, are they gonna listen?” Moira replied sourly. “More like they’ll be ready for a fight.”
“I can reply quite accurately the events of our attempt,” the clockwork dragonfly replied, with just a touch of pride.
“Quite, true. Once you did, you’d be claimed as evidence and locked away, since your kind are not seen as ‘people’ yet by many,” Hunter replied. “There are risks I’ll take with my crew, that isn’t one of them.”
“Orders, Cap’n?” Tonks asked sharply.
Captain Hunter read over the message again, a slow smile appearing on his face. “Set a course for the coordinates Arcady is about to give you, Mr. Tonks. We make for Port Signal, top speed.”
“Cap’n?” Moira asked, concerned, “we’re goin’? That was a general message, they’ll likely get it there, too.”
Captain Hunter handed the message back to the pilot. “That’s what I’m counting on.”
“Captain?” Krumer asked, concerned by the implication.
“If they’ve gotten that message, and there’s no reason they would not,” Hunter explained, “they’ll be expecting pirates. Which may grant us some measure of acceptance at Port Signal. Therefore – for the time being – we’ll be pirates.”
Chapter 5
Later that day, the sun had moved high overhead, watching the scattered parade of clouds marching beneath it. Skipping across a low-lying white and gray knot of vapor, the Brass Griffin raced forward. Her narrow prow cut a neat furrow through the cloud tops while the faint sound of sailcloth rustling in the breeze and the steady throb of her propellers carried in the crisp air.
Ahead, suspended by four enormous gas bags – each one easily larger than the Griffin herself, was the relay station of Port Signal. In the clear daylight, the station’s steel frame and its brass and aluminum buildings shone brightly. The relay station was not dissimilar to others of its kind.
Suspended three miles above the dark waters of the North Sea, it floated among the clouds like a metal and wooden island in the sky. The rigid frame gas bags that held the station aloft was connected to a wide platform hundreds of yards wide via a web-like series of cables. Air beneath the station was constantly churned by the cluster of steam-powered propellers under the middle of the structure. This stabilized the station, helping to maintain its relative position.
Atop the platform and surrounding the central hub that housed the station’s massive steam engines stood buildings of all shapes and sizes. Awash with color, some were adorned with canvas awnings, others with small banners fluttering in the light breeze. All of them were built with stout wood and metal plates that gleamed in the sunlight.
Usually the plates were an aluminum or steel to ward off the effects of bad weather. Above these, a forest of skeletal towers littered the metal rooftops, culminating in one massive antenna that rose from a central point. All were positioned to listen for, capture, and re-transmit opti-telegraphic signals sent from other ships or relay stations.
Sea birds, mostly gray-white seagulls and crimson-feathered firehawks, swooped and circled noisily overhead, darting over buildings and between the massive rigging for the station. Like wooden fringe, long piers extended out from the edge of the station’s main platform, serving as docking slips for visiting ships. Even at the half-mile distance of the Brass Griffin, it was plain t
o see a steady hum of activity from both visitors and regular inhabitants of this flying city.
Dr. Thorias Llwellyn scaled the short wooden ladder to the quarterdeck. Dressed in his usual white shirt, trim blue waistcoat and trousers, he looked more suited to an afternoon walk in Hyde Park than for walking aboard an airship.
With a nod to the helmsman manning the wheel, the elven doctor crossed to the railing where Captain Hunter stood. Hunter was still dressed as he was before, with arms clasped behind his back, watching a pair of airships in the distance. They were cutters flying the French flag, on their final slow approach to Port Signal.
“As I understand it, we’ve now taken up piracy as hobby.” Thorias quipped. “You do realize there are safer activities, such as growing orchids, for example? Usually, it results in fewer stitches.”
The captain chuckled at the doctor’s dry wit. “I’ve my reasons, Thorias. Has anyone told you just what was on the cylinders?”
“Yes, Moria told me,” the doctor replied solemnly. “What I would like to know is: do you believe it really was John Clark?”
“I heard his voice myself,” Hunter said. “It was unmistakable.”
“Bloody hell,” Thorias replied with an exasperated sigh. “So, given you taking to piracy is about as likely as a bovine serving in the House of Commons, what is your real intent around this occupational dalliance?”
Hunter glanced at his old friend with a faint smirk, “Rather straightforward, actually. There were no bodies in the water – otherwise we would have seen the longskiffs – and only a bare handful aboard the Fair Winds. That leads one to assume Clark took both passengers and crew with him. Angela’s cleverly done message, directs us here to Port Signal. I say it’s a safe gamble that Clark came here with his cargo of unwilling guests.”
The doctor considered that a moment, “Logical, but no one would be able to keep a cargo hold full of kidnapped people a secret. Someone would notice. What people notice, inevitably one talks about.”
Hunter nodded, then looked out at Port Signal again. Slowly, while he watched, a British cutter slid out of port. On leaving the station behind, her sails billowed out as they caught the wind, pulling the vessel away from the station. Sunlight shone warm along the canvas stretched across the rigid frame of her gas bag, highlighting the blue, red and white of the Union Jack flying in the breeze.
The captain frowned, then called over his shoulder, “Mr. Baker! Back a third. Let’s allow that cutter to be on their way before we get too close.”
“Already got it, Cap’n,” The young man at the wheel replied, tapping out a sequence on a small set of lettered keys on a stand attached to the ship’s wheel.
Hunter glanced at Thorias and shrugged, “Normally, I would agree. However, according to Moira, Port Signal has a more ‘interesting’ side. Keeping a cargo hold of kidnap victims sealed against their will might not be out of bounds – once we make the right acquaintance in low places, that is.”
The doctor crossed his arms. “I see. So we make port, piracy claim and all, but what then?”
Hunter returned to watching the ships drifting around the station. While he watched, the two French ships from a moment before slowly made their way into docking slips, far ahead. The captain unclasped his hands, rubbing the palm of his clockwork artificial left hand to ease a phantom ache.
“A gamble,” Anthony admitted, “a very risky gamble. If Clark is intent on seeking our deaths, he’ll know in short order we’ve arrived and make a nuisance of himself. So, it makes sense someone distracts him, while the others quietly search for the innocents he’s abducted.”
“Of course, why didn’t I see it?” Dr. Llwellyn replied as realization dawned. “You’re using yourself as bait again. Anthony, we don’t know he won’t shoot you on sight, and me as well, for that matter.”
“Yes, he just might,” the captain admitted. “That’s why I plan on going to find him first. To try and talk some reason. I don’t fully expect it to work, but while I entertain him, you and Tonks can turn this station upside down for those people … quietly of course.”
“Surely, you’ll not be alone?” Dr. Llwellyn asked, concerned.
“Of course not alone,” the captain scoffed, “I’ve not taken leave of all my senses. I’ll have some of the crew along, and I’ll keep to the more public venues.”
“Brash and risky,” Thorias said shaking his head slowly, as he watched the British cutter turn away from Port Signal and vanish among the clouds, “I see your logic, though … along with one glaring flaw. We’ll surely be seen leaving the ship, even if you leave first.”
“Quite,” Hunter replied. “However, Tonks has found his way out of more problematic spots, as have you.” The captain called over his shoulder, “Mr. Baker, ahead a third, and have someone send a telegraph to the station, let them know we’re requesting an open slip.”
“Aye, Cap’n,” Mr. Baker replied from the ship’s wheel, tapping at the nearby telegraph keys.
Dr. Llwellyn smiled, “True. I’ll speak with Tonks. With you leaving first, we might could use that to some small advantage.” The doctor hesitated, “Anthony, if I may … you’re being rather forthcoming with your plans. Something worries you.”
Anthony did not reply, but stood silently for a moment, then sighed. “There’s something larger at play here, old man. I don’t want to worry anyone needlessly, but Clark is playing at something more than revenge.”
“Taking a ship simply to use as bait is extreme for anyone,” the doctor said after a moment’s consideration. “And the message from the Intrepid was rather timely also … if they were so close to know we tried to lend assistance, why weren’t they at the wreck when we were?”
“Precisely,” Hunter replied with a serious glance over to Thorias. “Something foul is at play, which is why I’m so candid over this. Stay alert while casting about for our kidnap victims. We we may catch a hint as to what is really afoot.”
Thorias said nothing, but was lost to his own thoughts and planning while the Brass Griffin’s bow turned, beginning her final approach towards Port Signal.
Chapter 6
A good hour later, under Tonks Wilkerson’s skilled hand, the Griffin drifted casually alongside a black wooden pier. While the ship slowed to a snail’s crawl, stout ropes were tossed from the schooner to waiting dock-hands. Quickly, the mooring lines were tied to the nearby large steel cleat horns, securing the Brass Griffin against drifting.
The long, weathered gangplank was pulled out from storage and slowly lowered down until one end rested against the wooden planks of the pier. In short order, both ends were tied off, making it secure to use.
Moira was immediately down the gangplank with the first batch of crew. Once on the dock, she stopped, looking around, caught up in her thoughts and memories. The pier was crowded with the usual eclectic collection of stray items: coils of rope, stacks of large crates – each easily three feet on a side – precariously sitting near the edge of the pier, awaiting their owner.
Past the pier and its crates were the brightly colored, striped awnings and banners that hung outside the nearby shops. The shops themselves – intended for patrons from incoming ships, its passengers and crew – comprised only a portion of the buildings that made up the outer edge of the station’s boardwalk. Buildings not obviously marked with a shingle or a sign were often storehouses, either for rent or for the inhabitants of the station itself.
Between the buildings along the boardwalk, through narrow alleyways thick with rapidly cooling gusts of steam, and on the wider main avenues, people of all kinds hurried along their way. Men, orcs, elves and even scaled charybdians made their home here among the chilly winds above the North Sea. Sounds of voices from many different cultures mingled, and everywhere the faint smell of methane mingled with the scent of livestock, stale fish, and wet wood left in the sun to dry.
A broad-shouldered deck hand in a dark woolen coat, loose white shirt and brown cotton pants nodded a wordless greet
ing to Moira as he sidestepped past her carrying a stack of wooden planks. He was a charybdian, given his yellow eyes, delicate scale pattern, and shoulder-length snake-like tendrils that passed for their ‘hair’.
“Pardon,” Moira said, stepping to one side, next to a stack of crates. Suddenly, a sharp squawk of irritation brought her eye to eye with a glaring Iceland gull.
“An’ what’s yer problem?” Moira asked tartly of the bird. The bird just snapped its bill once, then extended its wings as if to stretch. The blacksmith snorted derisively and resumed looking around.
“Something awry, Miss Wycliffe?” Captain Hunter asked, a few paces behind her.
Moira smiled, glancing around her again, “not a thing. Just been awhile, Cap’n.” Then, as if she noticed something, she squinted at the scenery with a frown, as if trying to remember.
The captain looked around the activity on the docks, trying to spot what Moira felt was out of place. Finally, he gave up, tugging at his coat against the chill wind blowing crosswise along the pier. He then walked over to join her with Krumer.
“Whatever it is, I’m certain it’ll come to you,” Anthony replied.
Moira finally shrugged, ”I think they’ve added a buildin’ or two, I guess.” She said with a quick glance to the captain, “don’ matter. Once we check in with the dock master, I can be showin’ ya the way to down-below. Really not all that hard to find, once ya know the way.”
“Well, by all means, lead on,” Krumer said with a smirk.
The young woman turned on her heel, deftly walking around a pair of sailors carrying a large crate, with Anthony and Krumer Whitehorse in tow. Nearby, two wool-clad dock hands worked diligently, unloading crates and boxes into ordered stacks. Far to their right, a group of shipwrights hammered methodically at repairs to another ship. Hunter’s eyes drifted along tirelessly, searching the knots of people as they walked along.