Stories by Elizabeth Bear Part 107
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A further six pa.s.sengers had boarded at Calais. Two were Sebastien and his companion, Jack Priest, who presented every appearance of being a young man of excellent family. In truth, his breeding was no better than Sebastien's. Butalso like Sebastien's.h.i.+s education was unparalleled, and a work in constant progress. He was seventeen years old and looked fifteen, with delicate bones and tousled fair hair like a girl's.
Three and four were Michiel and Steven van Dijk, Dutch businessmen travelling only as far as New Amsterdam, where even under English colonial rule there was still a thriving Dutch community. Michiel was the elder, fortyish, round-cheeked under graying, wavy fair hair, and plump without seeming heavyas light on his feet as if he was filled with the same hydrogen that bore up the dirigible. Stevenp.r.o.nounced stay-vanwas taller and younger and also plump, his dark hair cropped short, his cheeks usually flushed and his eyes glittering with good cheer. He kept a green miniature parrot in his cabin, or occasionally on his shoulder, and Jack was instantly enamored of them both.
And the final twothe ones who seemed determined to avoid all of the Colonials, both the British colonials and the Frenchwomenwere a couple in their twenties. Hollis and Beatrice Leatherby were Londoners moving house to take advantage of a political appointment in the Pennsylvania colony, where an ambitious young man could advance faster than in Albion. She was darkly lovely while he was a freckled redhead: a striking pair.
Sebastien learned those things easily enough. Observation was a long-honed habit, though he intended merely a minor distraction for the hours until he could decently be seen to retire. The journey overland had not been easy and Jack had been delayed, only joining him in Calais that afternoon. Sebastien could not afford to be seen in good light until they had had a few minutes alone.
And so, from his solitary post at the dark end of the promenade, away from the too-revealing electric lights, Sebastien observed the other pa.s.sengers and watched Jack.
Jack held court forward along the promenade, his admirers a potential source of amus.e.m.e.nt or inconvenience. He was drinking champagne rather than liquor, but his laughter told Sebastien enough about his conversation with Steven van Dijk and the Leatherbys to swamp that raft of faint rea.s.surance in a sea of potential tribulations. He would flirt. And right now he was flirting with Mrs. Leatherby, immediately under her husband's oblivious eyeand sparing a little charm for van Dijk, as well.
Sebastien cupped his gla.s.s before his face, and pretended to taste the cognac. The sharp, drowning scent was good. It blunted his hunger, which threatened to grow overwhelming, and the snifter gave him something to occupy hands that wanted to tremble with desire.
The social dance was not distracting him tonight. He could feel it in the cut-gla.s.s edge on his senses, the heaviness of limbs that would transform into mercurial quickness when he required it. Too much more and his restraint would fail. He'd waited too long.
Discipline was always a matter of degree to such as Sebastien, and it had required a certain subterfuge and sleight of hand to free himself of old friends and allies. That alone had consumed days. His court would be displeased when they came to understand that he had abandoned them. He would be missed, and their protests would have carried the day if he had paused to listen; Sebastien de Ulloa was notoriously too soft-hearted. But he could not remain in Europe. It held no savor for him now, and boredom and sorrow were ever more dangerous adversaries than any merely human agency.
There was some risk in travelling in secret, in shedding his court. He should have left Jack, too... but Jack would almost certainly leave him, soon enough (as his proteges always did) and he couldn't travel without an entourage. The rail journey from Helsinki to Calais alone had taxed his strength and ingenuity. But he had needed to be free of Europe, so full of secrets and history, and all of Evie's friends.
He closed his eyes. His restraint would hold through this endless, tiresome evening, and then he would have what he needed. Jack would take care of him. And once he came to the Colonieswell. If he could not make a new beginning in America, then he would find an end.
He opened his eyes again, watching Jack tease and flirt and please himself. Meanwhile, someone was slipping up on him, and Sebastien was meant not to notice. The warm scent of her skin carried over the cognac, though, even if he hadn't observed her movements or heard the scuff of her shoes on the deck. Still, he pretended oblivion, because it amused him to.
It was Mrs. Smith, the blonde American novelist, and he feigned startlement when she touched his arm.
"So intent," she said. "What is it that you see, I wonder?"
Sebastien tipped his untasted gla.s.s at Hollis Leatherby. "More than he does, in any case."
She bore a red wine cupped in her hand, the stem falling between her fingers, as if she meant to warm the contents with her palm the same way Sebastien could not manage to warm his cognac. She smiled, her gla.s.ses lifting as the bridge of her nose crinkled. "Are you certain?"
"My dear lady," Sebastien said, "I am certain of nothing. But I will speculate. And my first speculation concerns a charming American, yes? And her agenda in approaching a sullen stranger at a remarkably boring c.o.c.ktail party."
"You're a striking man. A mysterious Continental stranger. With a certain notoriety. That's supposed to be enough, isn't it?"
Sebastien shook his head, amused. It had been some time, admittedly, but when last he'd consulted a looking gla.s.s, he had been of slightly better than average height (for a modern man) and somewhat swarthy complexionconvenient, as it concealed his frequent pallorwith dark hair, thin lips, and a hooked nose. He had no reason to believe much had changed since then. Pa.s.sable, certainly; his court had never complained of his ugliness. But striking was quite plainly in the eye of the beholder.
"At least you didn't call me handsome," he replied. "Jack would never let me hear the end of it. But come, nowdon't we both prefer honesty, Mrs. Smith?"
She sipped, then swirled the fluid in her gla.s.s to release the aromas, and considered him. "Will you treat a lady novelist to a demonstration of your storied powers?"
Ah. Well, that neatly explained why she had sought his darkened, solitary corner. He was material.
And Jack had noticed that Sebastien had company. He caught Sebastien's eye over Beatrice Leatherby's head, offering a little smile that whispered you'll pay later, then turned back to Steven van Dijk and the five-inch-long gra.s.s-green bird who perched on Steven's forefinger, eyeing Jack as if his nose might be some sort of undiscovered delicacy.
Well, Sebastien would cheerfully abet anyone's quest for a continuing education, especially a smart young woman's. He reminded himself to breathe and said, "On whom shall I inform? And are you in the mood for gossip, dear lady, or for parlor games?"
"At all costs, gossip."
He turned from her quirk of smile and cast his eye over the other pa.s.sengers. During Sebastien's brief distraction, the CaptainKonrad Hoakhad extricated himself from conversation with Oczkar Korvin and Michiel van Dijk and joined Jack's group, pretending a fascination with the parrot to cover a fascination with Beatrice Leatherby. Curiously, Hollis Leatherby seemed far more cognizant of the Captain's flirtation than of Jack'sor perhaps there was simply more of concern in a grown man's attentions to one's wife than those of a fresh-faced lad, no matter how pretty.
In any case, a frown tugged the corners of Leatherby's mouth as he excused himself, added his wife's empty gla.s.s to his own, and made his way down the promenade stairs toward the rolling bar in the dining room. He brushed past Mme. Pontchartrain stiffly, flinching from her effusive greeting while handing over both gla.s.ses.
Perhaps Mrs. Leatherby was the jealous one. She certainly glowered sharply enough when she took note of the conversation, though Sebastien did not think Mme. Pontchartrain was the sort of woman who would drive most wives to jealous rages.
Meanwhile, Mr. Leatherby waited as the bartender, a strapping fair-haired Hun of the sort epidemic among the Hans Glucker's crew, mixed martinis and added olives and onions. But Leatherby too couldn't resist a glance over his shoulder while he waited, or a wince when his wife dimpled prettily at the captain.
So Leatherby was also jealous. But not the type to cause a scene.
And any fool could see it, so it would hardly serve to impress an intelligent woman. And Sebastien did feel the urge to impress her, though he mocked himself for it. Haven't you left all this behind, Sebastien? Haven't you sworn it off, the flirtations and seductions? A clean start, wasn't it?
Ridiculous, of course. He was what he was, and had been far longer than this enjoyable young woman had been alive.
And there was Jack. So not a clean start, exactly. But Sebastien could no more leave Jack behind than his grief and his memories. And like those memories, Jack was perfectly capable of chasing him all the way to New Amsterdam.
It was the hazard in taking apprentices.
"Well?" Mrs. Smith said, s.h.i.+fting close enough that he could feel her warmth on his arm. "I'm still waiting to be amazed."
He wanted to impress her, but he had hidden in his dark corner for a reason; he was in no mood to perform for anyone. Perhaps he could distract her. "Your impoverished Frenchwoman," he said, with a smile. "Do you suppose she plans to marry American money?"
He didn't need to point. On their left was the outward-slanting wall of isingla.s.s that showed the sea below and the fading lights of the French coast. On their right was the dining room and the bar, from which Leatherby was emerging with his offering to his wife. Meanwhile, Mme. Pontchartrain, perhaps one or two sherries over her limit, was engaged in a conversation with Zhang Xiaoming that involved a good deal of handwaving and laughter on both sides. She was, however, keeping one drooping eye on the same thing that had drawn Sebastien's attention: Mlle. LeClere, who perched on the bench of the airs.h.i.+p's ultra-light aluminum piano alongside Virgil Allen, playing the low notes while he played the high, and together producing a somewhat abused version of "The Lights o' London."
"She'll be disappointed," Mrs. Smith said. "Virgil's a second son."
"I'm surprised the girl's guardian permits it either way," Sebastien said. "Has she spent the entire trip at the bar?"
"She does tipple a little," Mrs. Smith admitted. "Though one doesn't like to judge. After my Benjamin died" Her voice trailed off, and she sipped her wine. "Well, one copes as one can. And short of turning to necromancy or mediums, alcohol has its mercies."
Her lingering sorrow was contagious, awakening his own. Sebastien wished, for a moment, that he could risk the cognac in his gla.s.s. "And Mlle. LeClere?"
"Ah," Mrs. Smith said. "A beautiful, guileless, impoverished heiress. And all the men of good estate flock 'round...."
"My dear," Sebastien answered gallantly, "I prefer a woman who knows her own mind."
"Well, there's enough of those on this tub." The wine made her sparkle. Or perhaps the wine was an excuse to shed a little reserve; one could never be too sure. "You won't go lonely."
"Madame," he said, sincerely, "if only it were so."
Some time later, Mrs. Smith excused herself to visit the ladies' washroom, leaving Sebastien to his own devices. Eventually, someone was bound to notice that he'd been standing in the same corner, swirling the same cognac in his gla.s.s for hours. Hunger wouldn't make him wobbly or vague, but it would make him sharp-set, unnerving. And he did not care to leave his fellow pa.s.sengers... unnerved. Attention now could lead to suspicion later.
Sebastien picked his way down the steps toward the bar, to relieve himself of his undesired burden. He would collect Jack (who had descended to the dining room) make his excuses to the captain, and retire.
The steward took Sebastien's full gla.s.s with a smile and slipped it under the bar. Sebastien winked at him; he found he could generally rely on the international conspiracy of bartenders for discretion. Especially as Sebastien was always well-behaved.
He turned away.
It was Jack leaning against the piano now, while Oczkar Korvin tried his hand at a little Bach. The result was generally superior to the English parlor tunes, not in the least because no-one attempted to sing. Korvin's hands were long and gaunt, k.n.o.bby-fingered, and his hair fell over his eyes as he leaned forward, arms akimbo over the keyboard. He glanced up as Sebastien came over and settled in beside Jack. "Don Sebastien."
The effort to speak did not appear to affect his concentration. "Korvin ur," Sebastien answered, giving the other man's name the Hungarian honorific before continuing in the same language, "A pleasure to make your acquaintance. How did you come to be travelling with so many lovely women?"
Korvin laughed and let his hands fall silent on the keys as he answered in English, perhaps noticing Jack's furrowed browa patent fraud, as Jack spoke Hungarian like a native. "I noticed the notorious Mrs. Smith had cornered you. Beware of that one. She'll have your secrets out of you like a pocket handkerchief."
"Indeed?" Sebastien folded his arms and settled his weight on his heels. "You met her in Kyiv?"
"Moscow. With the other ladies, and Mr. Allen, ten days ago. The airs.h.i.+p's route took us across most of the Baltic states. The Hans Glucker is not what you would call a" He snapped his fingers as the English word eluded him.
"Express," Jack supplied.
"Thank you." The shared smile made Sebastien's neck hairs p.r.i.c.kle. "Moscow," Sebastien prompted, more from curiosity than towards a purpose. Pretending he did not see Jack's smile, he said, "I am preternaturally nosy."
"That is why they call you the detective, I presume," Korvin said, with reasonably good humor. "Have you noticed the Leatherbys? I would not have expected them to be any more acquainted with either of the Colonial partiesAmerican or americainthan I was, but I would say that they have a quite developed aversion to Madame Pontchartrain. Although" his fingers lifted from the keys to adjust his cravat "they get on well enough to our Dutch friends."
"So not just English standoffishness, then?"
Jack stirred and cleared his throat before Korvin could answer. "Madame Pontchartrain," Jack said. "How good of you to join us."
She was carrying water now, not sherry, and walking quite steadily, though with a certain degree of care. She paused a few feet away and smiled. "I beg your pardon, gentlemen," she said, in French. "I had come to see if I could prevail upon you for a little more music."
Korvin lifted his fingers from his lap and stretched them. "For the right t.i.the," he said, "I might even sing. Master Jack, would you see if the bartender has a bottle of cognac back there?"
"Indeed he does," Sebastien said, nodding permission to Jack. "Good evening, Madame"
She rolled her shoulders over a corset that gave her the general appearance of the prow of a battles.h.i.+p, and curled one loose strand of her uptwisted hair around her finger in a gesture that would have been coquettish, were she young. "And good evening to you, Don Sebastien. I've spent a good deal of time in Spain, and you are the first of your family I've met. Might I inquire where you are from?"
He laughed and turned it aside, hiding his discomfort. "New Amsterdam, as of today. I am emigrating."
"Along with your... pupil?"
"My ward," he said. He lifted his chin to watch Jack's negotiations with the steward, the jerk of his thumb over his shoulder as he said, no doubt, the drink is for Mr. Korvin.
"A likely lad." Her voice purred a little, just this side of insinuating, and Sebastien drew himself up.
"Very likely," he answered, and made himself scarce. It was late enough to permit a dignified escape. If Jack wanted to stay up and flirt with the ladiesand not just the ladies, apparentlyhe could perfectly well follow when he was ready. Sebastien would survive until he got there.
As it happened, he didn't have to survive long. Jack arrived no more than ten minutes later, brus.h.i.+ng aside with one hand the curtain that covered the doorway. He peered through and slipped inside, pausing just within. "You should have said something."
Sebastien was sitting on the lower bunk, a gothic novel open upon his knees. He paused with one page delicately uplifted between his fingers, and looked up. "I hadn't the wit left to divert Mme. Pontchartrain's determined questioning. Fortunately, I had the wit to realize it, so I pled a cognac headache and fled. You seemed to enjoy yourself this evening."
His voice went sharper than he'd intended, but Jack just smiled and turned to be certain the curtain was closed. "Put out the light, Sebastien."
Sebastien stood and pulled the shade down. There were no windows in the cabin, but an electric porthole lightof all the futuristic contrivancesprovided illumination. It was operated by excess power from the Hans Glucker's six motors and easily darkened by a shade should the occupants desire. Electrical switches could cause a spark, considered undesirable in a hydrogen-filled vehicle. The dim rooms suited Sebastien very well. Much better than any sailing vessel might have.
The cabin seemed even closer with the lights out. Sebastien could see exceptionally well in the dark, but he closed his eyes to feel Jack moving. Sebastien heard him unb.u.t.toning his collar, untucking his s.h.i.+rt, hanging his jacket in the dark, and sliding his braces down. He kicked his shoes off, and Sebastien heard his s.h.i.+rt and trousers fall, as well. "Jack?"
"Come here."
Sebastien went to him, catfooted. He folded his arms around Jack and pressed his mouth to warm, uptilted lips. He breathed Jack's scent; released from his clothes, it hung about him like the drapery on a Grecian statue. Jack's fingers pressed Sebastien's cheeks and he clucked, not liking what he found. "Don't wait that long again."
"I was alone."
Jack's hands slid across Sebastien's face and knotted in his hair, pus.h.i.+ng him to his knees, pressing Sebastien's cold face against his skin. Jack leaned against the bedframe. "Well," he said, "for Christ's sake, don't wait now."
Early the next morning, when the Hans Glucker was well away over the Atlantic, Madame Pontchartrain was discovered missing from her cabin and, in fact, the entirety of the dirigible. Mademoiselle LeClere, sleeping in the top bunk, claimed to have heard nothing in the night.
Chapter II.
Sebastien could no more travel unescorted than could a respectable woman, although in his case the difficulty was of well-being rather than social standing. They retired separately; Jack slept in the bottom bunk, closer to the curtained doorway. Sebastien did not sleep, but lay listening to the Hans Glucker's deep silences, the creak and strain of her superstructure, the muted breathing of the nearest pa.s.sengers. Both men would have preferred a room with a dooreven a door of spruce splints and doped clothbut there was no such luxury to be had aboard the dirigible.
So when someone pounded with a nervous fist against the aluminum doorframe beside the curtain, the wall rattled against the bunk, waking Jack with a start. Sebastien was already sitting upright in the filtered gloom when his companion rolled out of bed. "Coming," Jack called.
Sebastien slipped from the top bunk and withdrew into the room's most shadowed corner, shrugging his dressing-gown over his nights.h.i.+rt. Jack checked that he was halfway presentable before flicking the curtain aside.
"Detective! You are needed! Madame Pontchartrain is gone!" A crewman's voice, by the coa.r.s.e German accent. Jack glanced over his own shoulder at Sebastien. "A mystery," Sebastien said, with an impatient turn of his hand. "How quaint."
Jack turned back to the crewman and let the curtain fall wide while Sebastien stepped forward to stand at his shoulder. Jack's German was better than the crewman's English, so he spoke in that language. "You wish to speak to the detective?"
"The captain does," the crewman said, his cap clutched to his breast. His eyes flicked around the dark cabin, taking in the blacked-out light, the two rumpled beds. He swallowed.
"Excellent." Sebastien drew his dressing gown closed across his chest, as if he felt a chill. "I'll meet him in the salon in half an hour."
He reached over Jack's shoulder and flipped the curtain shut in the surprised crewman's face. Jack waited until he heard footsteps and stepped back, pressing his shoulder to Sebastien's arm. "No holiday for you," he said.
Sebastien, turning away, paused to tousle Jack's hair. "Pull your trousers on, there's a good lad, and go and check the salon for me, would you?"
"Already done," Jack said, crouching by his trunk. "Use the center stair. I looked last night. It's away from any windows."
Sebastien flipped his valet case open and searched compartments for his cufflinks. "And get yourself some breakfast," he said without raising his chin. "You're pale."
The cabins, lounge, and dining room were on the main deck, in the belly of the seven-hundred-foot-long airs.h.i.+p. The promenades lined that same deck, their isingla.s.s windows angled down, following the curve of the dirigible's body, and showed the pa.s.sing earth and sea below; direct sunlight would not be a problem except at sunset and dawn.
There was a second promenade one flight up, and the lower deck, while mostly crew quarters, also contained the galley, the washrooms, the smoking roomwith its asbestos ceiling and tin floorand the salon.
Which was empty but for Mrs. Smith when they entered. Barely twenty minutes had elapsed; Sebastien could be ready very quickly when he chose.
The salon was a pleasant room, windowless and in the center of the lower deck as a courtesy to pa.s.sengers of delicate disposition who might find the Hans Glucker's alt.i.tude or motion unsettling, and thus it was very well suited to Sebastien's needs. The steady drone of the zeppelin's motors was a constant accompaniment as he collected a china cup of tea from the small banquet laid along one wall, then chose a leather wing-backed chair beside the door. Meanwhile, Jack piled jam on scones to suit an adolescent's appet.i.te.
Mrs. Smith was already seated on the divan, applying a silver fork to the pastry on her canary-yellow Meissen cake plate. She had acknowledged Sebastien earlier. Now, he touched the teacup to his lips before he set it, and its saucer, on the side table. "Mrs. Smith," he said. "You seem very calm."
Her eyebrows rose over the frame of her spectacles. "I'm screaming inside," she said, and laid the fork down beside her plate. "But that's no reason not to eat."
"Did you hear anything last night?"
Stories by Elizabeth Bear Part 107
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Stories by Elizabeth Bear Part 107 summary
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