Amelia arrived at Colonel Pell’s country home still baffled as to how she would
write about the event. She preferred this confusion to the anxiety of
remembering her conversation with Alexander. The gala would offer any number of
newsworthy tidbits. Nothing on earth would help her answer her friend’s
request.
Mr. McGoffery had generously paid
for rental of a quality steamcar for her to drive to and from the ball, but she
had no spare money to pay for valet parking. She parked the car a good distance
from the growing line of valet parked automobiles and walked the rest of the
way. Acutely aware of the baffled and critical expressions of those who watched
her emerge from the shadows into the blazing electric and torch light
surrounding the mansion, she hesitated, readjusted the awkward and rather
unsightly leather reporter’s cuff on her forearm, then arranged her face and
body to suggest nonchalance and headed toward the grand stairs and wide-open
front doors of the mansion.
A two-seat Ticker clockwork car
zoomed around the circle to the front steps, a red silk scarf billowing from
the driver’s neck. Amelia wasn’t surprised to find Gavin Graves behind the
goggles and inwardly panicked, wondering how she could prevent him from taking
the liberty of submitting his own account of the event to McGoffery. It wouldn’t
surprise her if her editor had decided to make a competition of it.
Gavin slid out of the Ticker and let
the waiting valet man whizz away to park. He gazed at the mansion with open
admiration before trotting up with stairs two at a time.
Deciding that waiting for Gavin
to discover her on scene for himself might only cause more trouble, Amelia moved
to intercept him on the steps. He appeared to have assembled attire that she
could only describe as Junkman Formal. His pristine black brocade waistcoat
hung with a plethora of oddly battered gadgets. He adjusted his customary
goggles on his forehead with his customary swagger as Amelia approached.
“Ah, Miss Stodge! Delighted that
you could make it!” Gavin said, offering a neat bow and his arm.
“Making a donation on behalf of
the newspaper?” Amelia asked, slipping her hand over his elbow with casual
insouciance. Lights glinted off the reporter cuff’s miniature typewriter keys.
“My father’s factory, actually,”
he replied, glancing at the cuff for a moment. “Don’t worry, I won’t steal your
event. Not a spot of ink on my person, and I don’t intend to require much
memory tonight. I see McGoffery gave you the clunker model. The new ones are
more streamlined and the roll of paper adjusts automatically. My father’s
considering apportioning some of the newspaper’s budget to purchase a few of
them.”
Amelia admitted that the cuff
was, indeed, clunky. But if she hadn’t worn it she would have felt, if not
underdressed, then certainly underaccessorized. Almost everyone she saw, women
as well as men, sported some kind of gadget. As she and Gavin joined the crowd
in the expansive foyer, Amelia noticed that the gentleman in front of them
appeared to have encased his entire right shoulder, upper arm, and elbow with a
gleaming brass and leather contraption. Bands surrounded his forearm and wrist,
each of his fingers attached by metal arms to a series of tiny pumps on the
back of his hand and side of his wrist. Every time he moved the arm, various pressure
releases hissed and tiny pistons clicked.
“General Beauregard Pillington,”
Gavin whispered to Amelia, leaning close so he wouldn’t be overheard. “His arm
was paralyzed by a bullet in the civil war. Leading from the front, right? The
Regent wanted to award him a medal, but he refused. ‘What good is a medal if I
can’t shake a man’s hand?’ Colonel Pell arranged to have one of the Argonaut
sponsor companies design and fabricate this apparatus for him. He has been a
solid contributor to the Argonauts ever since.”
Not wanting to admit her
ignorance – she had no idea who the Argonauts were – Amelia appeared duly
impressed. General Pillington reached out to shake a man’s hand and the
apparatus clicked and hissed.
“Of course, he can’t wear it all
the time,” Gavin continued sotto voce. “It’s blasted heavy.”
I can sympathize, Amelia thought, her shoulder already beginning to ache from the weight of the cuff on her arm.
Colonel Pell, his stunning wife,
and Mister Merriday greeted Gavin and Amelia as they approached.
“Gavin!” Colonel Pell said, “How
good of you to join us. Will you be writing the article? I couldn’t imagine a
better man to do so.”
If I were, I couldn’t enjoy a
portion of this evening’s festivities,” Gavin answered. “The editor has chosen
to bestow that honor on the lovely Miss Stodge. You might have read some of her
articles in the social activities page.”
The Colonel turned his glittering
smile to Amelia and took her offered hand with a warm welcome.
Mrs. Pell looked over Amelia’s
shoulder with a vague nod, then leaning toward Merriday suggested that Gavin
could be persuaded should the article fail to meet their standards.
Amelia held her tongue and turned
her smile to Mister Merriday, the beneficiary of the evening’s festivities. He
was older than she expected, with shots of grey in dark hair and lines about
his hazel eyes in a tanned and rugged face. Precisely, she thought, the type of
countenance one expected in an adventurer. He shot an expression of weary
contempt at Mrs. Pell before welcoming Amelia apologetically. A loud pop and
cheer arose behind him, and he turned, revealing the crimson satin lining of
his knee-length coat. He turned back to her with an amused shake of his head
before turning to the next person in line.
“Remember McGoffery’s rule,”
Gavin said as they entered the ballroom, “as long as you wear the cuff, behave
as one representing the Metropol. No wine and dancing for you tonight, I’m
afraid.” He chuckled.
Sighing, Amelia looked about.
Musicians playing waltzes already inspired couples to swing and swirl about the
floor. She noticed, however, that the attendees dressed more like Gavin than
herself. Glinting brass and leather goggles adorned hat, forehead, coiffure,
and neck. Men in general were in shirtsleeves and waistcoats, trousers and
boots, clothing more attuned to the deck of a dirigible than a ballroom. Some
women, too, decided to forego traditional attire to dress as their male
counterparts – even to the point of wearing jauntily offset beaver hats
elaborately adorned with goggles and feathers. And while the waist-cinching
decorative overcorset, worn over a chemise or even a man’s shirt, had become
much more widely fashionable, the corsets worn by the women in attendance were
made mostly of leather, with an assortment of buckles and dangling attachments
like glittering filigree binoculars or petite brass and leather spyglasses and
an odd assortment of watches.
Before this evening, Amelia’s
interaction with the self-named Adventuring class - aside from Gavin Graves - had
been limited to the occasional moment or two in a Kettery elevator. These were
the people whose fortunes either sprang from or directly fueled the scientific
and cultural advancement of the territory. They were factory owners, tradesmen,
inventors, the kinds of people that Amelia’s parents had snidely referred to as
Nouveaux, always with a subtle
expression of distaste.
Amelia felt supremely out of
place.
“You’re in my world now, Miss Stodge,”
Gavin murmured to her, gesturing with a glass of wine.
“I wouldn’t be surprised
if some of these fine people resented you as much as your people resent them.”
“I’m not here as a representative
of my people, as you call them,”
Amelia said, angry because he was probably right. Though by no means
aristocracy, her family orbited the higher circles of society. She had heard
many comments and criticisms of the Adventurer class, especially since so many
of the younger generation increasingly associated with it. Amelia’s father
blamed the University and its liberal perspectives toward labor.
Mrs. Brinkley, Alexander’s mother
and a socialite herself, criticized the lack of refinement and restraint shown
by those of the Adventurer class regarding the use of wealth. She considered
the rather flamboyant lack of concern for proper social structure intolerable.
“They are merely showing off,” she said one evening during a dinner. “I met a man
just the other day who was raised here, but who returned from a travel
sabbatical to the East incredibly brown and wearing a turban! I didn’t recognize him, of course, at first. I thought he
was a servant brought back from parts unknown, and I told him to fetch his
mistress. It wasn’t until I noticed that he had light eyes that it occurred to
me that he was, in fact, Mister Louis Grant! He played his part well, however,
and made a pretty obeisance before going to find his mother. ‘And kindly remove
the wrappings, my dear,’ I called after him, ‘you look like a coolie.’”
Amelia had had to inquire
discreetly later as to the exact nature of a coolie. After learning, she had spent a few fitful months avoiding
the sun at all costs to prevent getting tanned.
The worst insult she had ever
heard involved being foreign.
A few men tonight wore turbans,
Amelia noticed. “Do you see Mr. Louis Grant?” she asked Mr. Graves.
He smiled, somewhat
mischievously. “I expect he will be in the green room already, if he is here.”
“Ah,” she replied.
Mr. Graves chuckled softly. “You
should just admit that you’re confused, Miss Stodge. It would save us both a
great deal of time.”
“I don’t see how your time is affected
in any way, Mr. Graves,” she shot back. “I assure you I don’t require your
assistance.”
“Of course not,” he said with a
smile, bowing somewhat flamboyantly before merging into the crowd.
Right,
she thought to herself. I’ve been to many
a ball in my lifetime. How difficult can this be, really? She had mastered
the requirements of polite and civilized society as well as refined deportment
well before her debut. Surely the Adventurers couldn’t be so far removed as to
disregard even these necessities.
Glancing around, she spotted an
arrangement of dance cards on a nearby table. She picked one up to give her
hands something to do instead of worrying at the folds of her skirt, a nervous
habit her mother had scolded her for since childhood. She wandered the perimeter
of the hall for two dances, unnerved by her unfamiliar surroundings, anxious and
slightly offended that she hadn’t been approached for a dance. She began
wishing she had in fact attended with Mr. Graves, if only to dispel the
appearance of loneliness. Looking around, however, Amelia couldn’t find her
only acquaintance.
More disturbing than her
partnerless status, however, Amelia found that the general conversation tended
to surround topics of which she was completely ignorant. Though educated by a governess
who had held secretly liberal views about the education of women – Miss Cole
preferred history to needlework – Amelia couldn’t follow these current
conversations, let alone contribute to them like many other female guests did.
She had consigned herself to
another solitary turn about the room when a young woman bumped into her,
causing her to lurch sideways against a man who glared at her through his
telescoping monocle.
“Oh! I’m so, so sorry!” the young
woman said, eyes wide. She couldn’t have been older than fifteen. “Bit
preoccupied I’m afraid.”
“Nothing damaged,” Amelia said,
fluttering her hands around her coiffure in case it had fallen askew. She righted
the ungainly cuff, which had shifted with the movement, then tightened the
buckles to hold it in place.
“You’re the newspaper reporter?” the young woman asked with evident
disbelief and disappointment. “You don’t look the part, except the cuff, but
everyone has a gadget. I thought I saw Gavin – Mr. Graves. I was certain he
would be writing it up.”
“I believe Mr. Graves is here on
behalf of his father’s factory,” Amelia supplied, glancing around. “But I
haven’t seen him in some time.”
The woman shrugged. Then, as a
hesitant afterthought, she offered a gloveless hand in greeting. “Casity
Darrowell.”
Startled, Amelia looked at Miss
Darrowell’s hand for a moment before recollecting herself and returning the
greeting in what she hoped was a civil manner. If this had happened in more
familiar circumstances, Amelia mused, she would have been right to ignore the
introduction and refuse the acquaintance. But she represented the newspaper,
and couldn’t afford to offend anyone. And, as her mother had remarked once,
established rules didn’t apply to the Nouveaux.
If Amelia’s manner seemed colder,
Miss Darrowell didn’t appear to recognize it. “Ah!” she said, then swept a
glass of champagne off a passing tray, draining half of it in a matter of
moments. The girl’s hands were slightly grimy as well. Amelia caught herself
staring and looked away, but not before her new acquaintance saw her disbelief
and blushed, either from the drink or from shame. Perhaps both.
“I hate these things, parties” Miss
Darrowell said, fiddling with her glass. “Too many people. Strangers, most of
them. And I never feel like I’m doing the right thing.”
“It’s a wonder you attend, then,”
Amelia replied absently as she searched for a polite escape. In her ambulations
she had seen a crowd gathered around a display of what seemed to be artifacts,
presumably from Mr. Merriday’s journeys. The crowd now appeared to have
dispersed, and Amelia decided it was an opportune escape.
She began to excuse herself, but
Miss Darrowell must have seen the display as well and encouraged her to see it
up close. “I’ve already seen them all dozens of times,” she said. “But it would
be good in the article, right?” Flashing an impish grin, Miss Darrowell took
Amelia’s hand and guided her toward the display, her brown curly braid
swinging.
Amelia found her unfamiliarity
with Merriday’s history more than troublesome, and his display of artifacts
provided little help. A collection of masks, pottery, scrolls, and items Amelia
couldn’t readily identify covered shelves and several tables. A large map of
the world centered the exhibit, with large pins topped by red flags.
“The pins show where he’s been,”
Miss Darrowell explained. “And each of his expeditions are coded by color. Most
of them started at the Argonaut Society’s headquarters.” She pointed at a
particularly large pin a few territories east. Strings of different colors
sprouted from the pin in all directions. Many strings of the same color
connected pins across the world, even one to the Northern Pole. There were
easily three dozen pins along six colors of string.
“He was personally involved in
all of these excursions?” Amelia asked, incredulous.
Miss Darrowell nodded. “He’s
always looking for a new adventure. He thought of the Amazon trip while he was
looking for passage to Constantinople.” She tapped her forehead. “Always
thinking ahead.”
“What does he do?” Amelia asked.
“Oh, LOADS,” Miss Darrowell said. “What hasn’t he done? He climbed a
mountain in the Himalayas, though not the biggest mountain. He’s been on two
African safaris. Was nearly trampled to death by a hippopotamus on the first
one so he had to go back. Accompanied an archeologist in Egypt and helped
discover a tomb. Did you know the Egyptians didn’t think the brain served a
purpose, so they didn’t preserve it?”
“I did not,” Amelia said. A few
of the guests around the display cast amused glances at Miss Darrowell, who
appeared utterly oblivious to the attention.
“Let’s see,” she mused, glancing
at the map for inspiration. “Oh, of course, he has been to the East Indies and
visited the temples there, but that didn’t get much attention. He traveled
with a tribe of Bedouins for a year. And then for a while he fought in the war,
but he doesn’t talk about that, and he refuses to include anything from that
time in the exhibit, even though those stories were the most popular series of
his career so far.”
“So he’s a journalist as well?”
“Oh no, he doesn’t write his own
stories. He has a historiographer. Well, had
a historiographer. Sir Bradford died a few months ago.”
“I’m sorry to hear it,” Amelia
said, and was surprised to find that she meant it. Clearly a great admirer of
Mister Merriday, Miss Darrowell appeared to feel deeply for the welfare of all
involved with him and his exploits. She wondered what the man must be like to
garner that kind of affection from a stranger.
“The Society should need a
replacement for Sir Erasimus Bradford,” a familiar voice slurred from behind,
“and I believe I know who they should choose.”
“Gavin!” Miss Darrowell cried.
Then, recollecting herself, “I mean, Mister Graves.” She attempted a rather awkward,
deliberate curtsey and beamed at him.
“Well done, Miss Darrowell,”
Gavin said, hiding a grin behind a look of appraisal. “But might I suggest a graceful
nod rather than a curtsey when wearing trousers?”
She blushed – quite prettily
Amelia noticed with a sting – and at a loss for what to do with her hands, thrust
them in her pockets. “Are you going to be the new historiographer, then?”
Gavin stepped closer. “I hadn’t
given it much thought before this moment, but perhaps. If the Metropol can spare
me.” He looked meaningfully at Amelia with glazed eyes. He reeked of licorice.
Amelia flared. “We should be
quite able to function in your absence, I assure you.”
“I believe you capable of anything,
Miss Stodge.”
She glared through a polite
smile. “Mister Graves is all encouragement.”
“Might I encourage you, then, to
join me in a dance?” He offered his hand with a slight bow.
Amelia indicated the writer’s
cuff. “I’m afraid I must decline, as you so graciously reminded me earlier.
Perhaps Miss Darrowell would join you?”
Gavin’s squirm in the face of
Miss Darrowell’s elation was enough, though short-lived, compensation. His
attention quickly shifted to an older gentleman who seemed to have materialized
beside Miss Darrowell, and his face hardened into a mask of what Amelia could
describe only as pure disdain. She wondered what kind of person would inspire
such an instant hatred.
“Mordrake,” Gavin said.
He was a small man, short of stature,
small of frame, leaning heavily on a carved ivory cane. He looked at Gavin over
half-moon reading glasses. His attire was uninteresting, devoid of any of the
gadgetry and paraphernalia so popular with the other guests. The only thing
that stood out was a gold pin on the lapel, what looked like a ram’s head. His
expression shared nothing but placid curiosity.
“I was concerned to hear about
the unfortunate explosion in your father’s factory,” Modrake said with a tone
of regret.
Gavin’s chest heaved and he struggled
to hold his countenance as those nearby glanced at him as they spoke in close
whispers. “I assure you, Mister Mordrake, the explosion of which you speak is
not as destructive as you would desire.”
“Desire, Mister Graves? I
wouldn’t desire anything of the sort. My business quite relies upon the success
of your father’s factory.”
Gavin’s jaw and hands clenched.
“Thank you for your concern, sir, but we are fine.”
“Please tell you father that I am
available should he require any assistance.”
Gavin exploded, landing a punch
to Mordrake’s jaw before anyone could stop him. Mordrake fell backward,
dropping his cane and grasping at whatever he could to arrest his fall, which
happened to be Amelia’s arm. Already unsteady on her destabilizing heels,
Amelia fell to the floor. The mechanism of the cuff struck the wood and
shattered in dozens of pieces that skittered across the floor.
Gavin stood over Mordrake and
gripped his lapel, his other fist prepared for a second assault, face purple in
rage, eyes wild. “We need none of your assistance.”
In a moment, Merriday grasped
Gavin’s arm. Unprepared and wild with fury, Gavin rounded blindly, hitting
Merriday across the jaw, sending him reeling away. Realizing what he had done,
Gavin blanched, eyes wide. A few of the nearby gentlemen grabbed him while he
was still and he didn’t attempt to struggle. Others assisted Merriday,
Mordrake, and herself to their feet.
Mouth set in a grim line and
rubbing his jaw, Merriday glared at Gavin. “Bring him with me.” Gavin’s captors
launched him forward behind Merriday.
Amelia picked up Mordrake’s cane,
which had rolled next to her and handed it to the diminutive gentleman, who
was wiping blood from his mouth. She noticed that the head of the cane was made
of a large ball of glittering lapis. A few bystanders had gathered and returned
the pieces of the quill cuff. Amelia put the smaller pieces in her bag and held
the larger mechanism in her hand.
“I apologize for getting you
involved, my dear,” Mordrake said. “I will, of course, see to replacing your
cuff.”
“No, I assure you. Mister Graves
will pay for it. You did nothing to incite his anger, so you shouldn’t feel
obliged to make amends for his acts.”
“His pride may be his undoing,”
Mordrake said with a worried shake of the head. “And the destruction of
everything his father has worked so hard to build.”
“Why did he attack you?” Amelia
asked.
Mordrake leaned on his cane and
sighed. “That Graves pride, I’m afraid. Neither of them wants to accept
assistance, nor admit that they might require it. I’m sure you’ve witnessed
what I speak of.”
Amelia resisted the urge to roll
her eyes. “Indeed, I have.”
“And he becomes more intractable
when inebriated, I’m afraid. He seems to have been visiting the Green Room.” He
glanced toward the nearby door, which had been opening and closing with some
regularity. Billows of smoke and laughter emanated from the room. Mordrake must
have seen Amelia’s expression of confusion, though she tried to hide it. “The
room designated for the consumption of absinthe,” he explained. “A repulsive
concoction that robs the mind of sense. But it seems to be a favorite of the
younger set, and Pell likes to cater to all of his guests when possible. Even
if it isn’t necessarily advisable.” He bowed slightly and offered his white
gloved hand. “As our mutual acquaintance seems to be unable at the moment, I
will do away with convention. Bertram Mordrake, at your service, Miss.”
Amelia rested her hand gently on
his and bowed, something usually reserved for gentlemen of consequence and
prestige. “Amelia Stodge, of Electo Park.”
Mordrake smiled knowingly. “I
thought I recognized a refinement of quality. Many here do not share our common
understanding. I was raised very near Electo Park, in Augustus Street.”
“Were you?” Amelia asked,
somewhat relieved.
“Indeed.” He indicated a set of
chairs away from the dance floor, which had whirled back to life. “Alas, when I purchased my first business
venture, I was forced to remove to the trade district. I find I greatly prefer
the simplicity. Not as much social manipulation. I’m sure you understand.”
“I’m afraid I do,” Amelia
replied.
“Mister Gavin Graves aspires to
our level of consequence, but I’m afraid he is made of inferior material. He
behaves with the mannerisms of a gentleman of quality when in society. His
father’s influence can hardly require less. But you and I understand that the
confines of society have their benefits. We understand the necessity of decorum,
of a sterling reputation, that the society of quality instills. Not all of the
tradesmen understand this necessity, and their reputations suffer for it.”
“Surely Mister Graves wouldn’t
engage in anything unseemly. He has such influence!”
“Influence, as many of us know,
my dear, does not require virtue. Indeed, those lacking virtue may require more influence in order to survive.”
“Nonsense.” Amelia pretended to
dismiss the accusation with a wave and a smile. She could believe Gavin Graves
guilty of rampant arrogance and a temper when drunk, but certainly he
understood the limits of propriety. He couldn’t involve himself in anything
sordid. Still, a man willing to publicly assault one so obviously his physical
inferior for so slight a provocation might be capable of many things.
They sat in silence for a while,
observing the swirl of dancers. When she looked down at the cuff's mechanism in her hand, she found her gloves smeared with ink and grease. Anger
soon claimed her better
nature and she excused herself to search for Gavin. Though she doubted his capacity for the reprehensible, she believed him
capable of manipulating the opportunity of a moment to secure an interview with
the famed explorer worthy of yet another front page. As she neared the hallway
where Merriday had disappeared with Gavin, she heard men's laughter behind a closed
door and lost no time imagining her coworker gathering material for his unsolicited article. She rapped quickly on the door and didn’t wait for word to enter.
“You have destroyed my cuff,
Mister Graves, and I insist that you arrange for its repair.”
Gavin Graves lay unconscious on a
divan, a tumbler of some golden substance on the floor beside him. The men who
had escorted him out of the ballroom sat with Merriday, who was in the process
of mimicking some rather large and intimidating creature.
Merriday dropped his arms and
chuckled. “He should be coherent in about an hour. You can make your case
then.”
“Indeed,” she muttered, unable to
mask her embarrassment. “I apologize. I will leave you to your…charades.”
Flustered and no doubt flushing unprettily – wouldn’t her mother be proud – she
turned to leave.
“Miss Stodge? The reporter from
the Metropol, correct?” Merriday asked.
Amelia nodded, recollecting
herself. “I’m afraid my recording device has been damaged beyond immediate repair,
however.”
“That is unfortunate,” he said.
“I am relying on the success of your article, Miss Stodge, for the continuation
of my exploits. Would you be available for an interview? After hours holding
the receiving line, I’m in no hurry to return to the party. Barton will procure
some paper and a pen for you.”
Muscular under his well-tailored
suit, Barton hardly looked the part of a serving man, but he nodded and quietly
departed on Merriday’s errand.
“Thank you,” Amelia said. A
muffled groan came from the divan, where Gavin still slept. “What happened to
him?”
“A sobriety tonic.
He’ll sleep for about an hour, and when he wakes, he should be
clear-headed. I can do nothing for the head ache he will suffer, but he should
be more tractable.”
“If one could ever describe him
as ‘tractable,’” Amelia said, placing the cuff's mechanism on a table and cringing inwardly at her ruined gloves. “Mister Mordrake seems to be uninjured, however.
I assume you would prefer this incident not appear in my article? Though it
would coordinate well with your general reputation, from what I hear.”
Merriday chuckled again, a warm
sound Amelia found enjoyable. He spread his hand in front of him like a banner.
“True to Form, Franklin Thomas Merriday
Disperses Brawl at Gala In His Honor. One can imagine. The spectators
should provide a great source of knowledge, regardless.”
Barton returned with paper, pen,
and ink well. Amelia settled herself at the writing desk, searching her mind
for appropriate questions. She again cursed her lack of preparation and saw to
little details like placement of ink well and tidiness of paper to buy
time. But when all was arranged, she still had no idea what she should ask.
“Well, then,” she said, surveying
her surroundings. “Where shall we begin?”
“Would you like a full life
history, or a survey of my expeditions?” he asked. “I will admit my childhood
is rather dull, so perhaps let’s skip to the exciting bits.”
“Exciting bits,” Amelia said as
she wrote the words.
What followed, Amelia acertained,
was a nearly verbatim recitation of his interview script. An unremarkable
childhood in a northern territory, discovery by the Argonaut Society by sheer
coincidence when he helped prevent the armed robbery of a carriage on which an Argonaut traveled. Various wild and glorious adventures in all parts of
the globe. Celebrations of his escapades. A brief, rather spare mention of his participation in the Great Civil War. Meeting celebrated individuals in every country,
territory, and city. And a few moments imploring the general public to
contribute to the continuation of his exploration by purchasing his books or
donating to the Argonaut Society Exploration Fund, which ensures that
individuals even in the furthest territories receive information about the
great and glorious world they live in.
“Do you have any other
questions?” he asked at the end.
Amelia’s hand had gone past cramping,
and her handwriting devolved into illegible scratches and fragmented phrases as
she tried to keep up. But she did have one question.
“Are there any expeditions you
would like to return to, or any locations you would like to visit that you
might not have had a chance for?”
He thought for a moment, and
Amelia welcomed the opportunity to massage her aching fingers.
“There are a few new adventures I
should like to undertake, that are on the docket, so to speak. This expedition
to the southern continent to explore the jungles and the temples has been a
dream for many years. I should also like to spend some time with the migratory
tribes of our northern territories. And perhaps some time in a less physically
demanding environment. All of my adventures have required a great deal of
physical endurance and skill. They have challenged my stamina as well as my
wits. Those stories inspire the imagination, encourage people to support the
cause so they can live through me. But as I’ve grown older, I find I appreciate
the intellectual endeavors more. Perhaps that is because I am less physically
resilient. Adventures take their toll on the body. I should like to join a
meditative community, maybe in Tibet. When I climbed the Himalayas, I was
fascinated by the Tibetan culture and the isolated mountain monasteries. I
wanted to return just for a while, as a sidenote, to join the monastery as a
guest for a while and learn how to meditate, to quiet the restless mind for a
while. My mind is restless, you see
Miss Stodge. I’m sure Miss Darrowell mentioned that. It never sleeps. And more
often of late, I can’t sleep, either. Endless nights with a restless mind
filled with memories like mine…they prey on the spirit, and the only way to
quiet them is to keep moving. Keep busy. Make plans, find new adventures, keep
the heart pumping so it remembers not to fail. Maybe in those mountains I can
find a way to quiet the thoughts.”
Amelia had stopped writing.
Merriday stared at the ceiling and appeared for the first time old and fragile.
His voice had lost the warmth, had taken on a hollow, husk-like quality, as though he had fed on these hopes for too long and with little return.
“Why can you not return if you
want it so?”
Even his chuckle sounded dead.
“Meditation and self-discovery sell rather poorly.”
“Then the Argonauts are only
interested in money?” Somehow, this discovery failed to surprise her.
“Exploring the world requires
funding, my dear,” he replied. “Don’t let’s be naïve.”
He looked at his interviewer
directly for the first time since the interview began. “Off the record?”
Amelia nodded and set the pen
aside.
“The Argonaut Society has done
considerable good. Technology invented by Argonauts and produced by Argonaut
sponsors helped win the war. An Argonaut, Kettery, designed and funded the sky
trolley system here. We have brought medicine to regions ravaged by disease,
mediated international conflicts, even killed for a common good. None of this
could be organized without considerable financial support. Our industrial investors
require various modes of compensation. Publicity, for instance. None of them
are what one might call philanthropists. So, if the Argonauts want to continue
their good work, they must look to the less magnanimous details of funding. A
monastery in Tibet provides little monetary incentive, and the public in general
cares little for introspective pursuits.” He shrugged. “QED, they send us where
the money is.”
“Fund raising galas, for
instance?” Amelia asked, though another question nagged just under the surface.
She couldn’t fix words to it, couldn’t even determine its source, so she set it
aside.
“And a glorious gala it is,”
Gavin muttered from the divan.
“Indeed,” sighed Merriday, composing his face
once more for the public.
***
In a gulp, Gavin finished his
tonic.
“Are you certain you’re ready to
be seen again?” Amelia asked.
After pinching his forehead
between his fingers and shutting his eyes tight for a moment, Gavin nodded. “The
Argo departs at first light, and I intend to be here to watch it.”
“Perhaps you should have
considered that end before you began drinking.”
“I hardly need advice from you,
Miss Stodge,” he grumbled. Still uneasy on his feet, he leaned toward Amelia rather more than propriety allowed, causing both to lose balance for a moment.
“I thought his tonic was supposed
to remove the effects of the alcohol,” she said, surreptitiously pushing him
back on his feet before anyone formed an unfavorable impression. She realized, however, that she needn’t have worried. Several of the guests in their vicinity were similarly incapacitated.
“The alcohol, yes,” Gavin said,
“however, the contents of this evening’s refreshments are not restricted to
alcohol alone.”
Amelia considered the clouds of
smoke and vapor billowing from what Miss Darrowell had called the Green Room.
“What else, then?”
“That, my dear, is anyone’s
guess.” His reserve evaporated into giggles.
***
The sun’s first sliver of light rose from the horizon behind the crimson
balloon of the Argo.
True to his word, Gavin had
stayed to see the departure. Whatever he had ingested had finally worn off, but
Amelia had made a point to keep an eye on him. Word of Gavin’s assault on
Mister Mordrake had spread, as had the rumor of the Graves’ manufactory
explosion. Amelia noticed Gavin engaged in any number of somber discussions in an attempt, she assumed, to control the damage of the untimely announcement. Mordrake
had disappeared not long after the altercation, a fact Gavin had found
preeminently convenient. The gentleman’s departure, however, had followed a
rather sizable donation to the Argonaut Society and a number of pointed comments
about certain individuals indulging a bit too much at the hosts’
expense, “perhaps,” Mordrake had suggested, “to dull the sting of misfortune.”
At an announcement, the guests
convened in front of the enormous staging area behind the manor where the Argo stood ready to
depart. Every inch of the gleaming wood and brass hull had been polished to
reflect the flickering gas lights and glaring spotlights surrounding it. Trays bearing glasses of champagne circulated the crowd while Colonel Pell gave a short address about the
glories of exploration. Merriday himself, arrayed in his trademark faux-naval
uniform, thanked the guests and sponsors for their generous donations, praised
them for believing so fervently in the future of science, exploration, and a
more just world. A toast, a cheer, then, amidst riot of fanfare and applause, Merriday stood in the
open cabin doorway waving as the Argo lifted into the pearl grey sky.
Gavin and Amelia stayed to watch
until the dirigible’s crimson balloon disappeared over the sea. They sat on the
steps leading to the lawn, a nearly empty bottle of champagne between them.
Over the course of the evening, they had spent, in total, three hours in each
other's presence actively conversing - a miracle Amelia credited to the effects of fatigue and wine.
Amelia’s curiosity finally got
the better of her. “How did you get involved in all of this?” She gestured with
her champagne glass at the general pageantry and splendor.
“A business transaction,” he
replied with a chuckle. “My father needed someone to build a mechanism for the
factory. His inquiries led him to the Colonel, who, after recommending a firm
to fulfill my father’s mechanical needs, convinced him to attend that year’s
fundraiser. Naturally, he brought me along. I had read of Merriday’s exploits
for years as a boy, you see, and rather idolized him.
“We had attempted to find a
foothold in Society – your Society –
and received blatant refusals. Our family is in trade, no matter how successful that trade might be, and
therefore unacceptable to your refined drawing room sensibilities. Those
involved in the Argonauts have no such scruples, and welcomed us.”
Amelia remembered quite clearly
the disdain with which her parents and their associates discussed the invasion
of tradesmen into gentle Society. Rough, uncultured, the Nouveaux purportedly
flaunted their wealth through grotesque displays and openly supported programs
designed to ruin the lives of established Society families. They purchased land
abutting country estates, filling the peaceful countryside with racket and
filth. Granted, according to her university housemates, the manufactories
provide employment, but with deplorable wages and unforgiving if not deadly
working conditions. How could anyone with conscience look favorably on the men
and women whose luxury depended on such cruelty?
“Tradesmen are not entirely the
worthy and morally upright martyrs you claim they are. For all of Society’s
many faults, at least we do not condone murder.”
Gavin’s face hardened. “The
Society darling spouts university drivel! Do your parents know you’re a
revolutionary? Do you spend your evenings at the foot of some professor or
another? Do you convince your friends that they taste blood in their sugar?”
“Did people die in yesterday’s
explosion?” she spat.
He glared, then sighed. “Yes.”
“And will your father endure any
punishment for his part in their deaths?” She acknowledged that she was only
repeating the sentiments Kurt and his associates expressed, but it felt good to
pin Gavin Graves to the wall, so to speak, even for a moment.
“Not personally, no. But neither
would your father should one of your staff die by accident. I would suspect not
even if intentionally. Am I right?”
Amelia stared at her champagne
glass and felt her self-righteousness crumble. “You are.”
“Then you have no moral high
ground from which to despise me.”
“Neither, then, do you. Perhaps
in the future, we should restrict our discussions to topics of mutual import.”
His crack of sardonic laughter
stung. “Indeed! And since we have nothing in common aside from our shared
occupation, we will have little, if anything, to discuss.” He raised his glass
in a mock toast, then took his leave.
The crowd had nearly disappeared through the
mansion to their waiting carriages and steamcars and Colonel Pell’s staff had already begun clearing away the debris. Miss Darrowell assisted in dismantling the
artifact display. Without the throng of guests, the ballroom felt cavernous, a
sensation only amplified in Amelia's by the hollow echo of her footsteps.
It appeared she and Gavin were
the last guests to leave, and so could hardly pretend not to see each other as
they made their goodbyes to the Colonel.
“I trust you have enough material
for your article, Miss Stodge?” inquired the Colonel. “I will forward the official photograph of
the lift-off to the newspaper office. And I understand that your writer’s cuff
was damaged during the course of the evening? I shall see to that as well, per
Merriday’s instruction.” He guided Amelia and Gavin toward the door with an arm
and a well-suppressed yawn.
Years of attending Season activities that
lasted well past dawn had prepared Amelia for the task of maintaining poise and
grace despite a rather blurry conscious. She hardly expected Gavin to fare
worse considering his reputation, but her co-worker appeared positively done
in, despite his mid-soiree nap. She wondered if he could be trusted behind the
wheel in such a state and once they both had said their made their leave of their
host, she offered to give him a ride home, which he patently refused.
“I require no assistance, Miss
Stodge. I am capable of making my own way home. See to your article. I’m sure
McGoffery wants it for this evening’s run.” He stormed off.
***
Rather than returning to the boarding house, Amelia drove to the Metropol
office. The relative quiet of the house in the early morning would only lull
her to sleep, unlike the constant rush and ruckus of the newspaper office. She
also wanted to explain how the cuff was destroyed before Colonel Pell arranged to pay for it.
McGoffery’s office was dark.
Amelia found her usual machine
and clacked out what appropriate memories she had before they faded. Without her writer’s
cuff, she didn’t have details about dress and attendance that her usual
audience craved. The only information she remembered distinctly was from her
impromptu interview with Merriday himself, and, of course, Gavin’s tuffle with
Mister Mordrake. She could hardly write about The Metropol’s ingénue punching
an elderly man, even if word of the event would spread quickly anyway through
the dozens of eye witnesses.
Notes finished, she replaced her
page and stared at the blank space. Even with the event behind her, she still
felt consummately unequal to reporting on it. She knew none of the accepted terminology, none of the illustrious names.
A shouted greeting snagged her
attention, and she turned to find McGoffery carrying with a bundle. She winced,
hoping it wasn’t the writer’s cuff. Still, best to address the issue
immediately rather than wait for him to approach her. Leaving her notes and the
mocking blank page, she squared her mind and knocked on her editor’s office
doorjamb.
McGoffery’s many-armed lens
apparatus was pushed up on his forehead, and he glared at Amelia with two
normal-sized eyes that still managed to wring her gut.
“Good morning, sir,” Amelia said
in her most awake and energetic voice. McGoffery put his bundle on the desk
with a clunk and a clatter that made her wince again with recognition.
“Thought you would be home
sleeping off your evening,” he said.
“Not until the job is done,” she
replied a bit too brightly. “I’m afraid we had a little mishap with the cuff last night.”
“That what this is?” he jutted
his chin at the bundle.
“One of the guests was in a state
and knocked me down. I had hoped to speak with you about it before the carcass
arrived, but it appears I was too early. The Colonel said he would see about
replacing it. A stroke of luck, though; I was able to interview Merriday. Shall
I write that up as well?”
He glanced up at her from his
desktop of papers. For a moment, he looked impressed. “Was this interview
before or after you destroyed the cuff?” he grumbled.
Amelia flared. “Ask Mister Graves
about the cuff if you must. But it was because of the cuff that I secured the
interview.”
After a moment of consideration,
he waved her remark away and pulled his lens apparatus over his eyes. “Article
first.”
The page in her machine had been empty, she was certain, when she left to speak to McGoffery, but someone had typed a single sentence in her brief absence.
Write about it as a novice because you are one. G
She ripped the page from the machine and crumpled it in her fists.