The Difference Engine by William Gibson & Bruce Sterling

” ‘At Santiago love is kind, And we’ll forget those left behind — So kiss us long, and kiss us well, Polly and Meg and Kate and Nell — ‘ ”

“C’mon, you lads!” he urged cheerily, with a boozy wave of his arm. Tom and Brian, direly puzzled, chimed in the chorus, faltering and belated.

” ‘Farewell, farewell, you jolly young girls, We’re off to Rio Bay!'”

“Next verse!” Mallory crowed.

” ‘At Vera Cruz the days are fine, Farewell to Jane and Caroline . . .’ ”

“Ahoy!” came a brusque shout from the top of the wall. Mallory glanced up, in feigned surprise, to see foreshortened bodies. Half-a-dozen marauders were looming over them, rifles slung over their backs. The speaker crouched at the top of the pilings, his head and face swathed in kerchiefs of knotted silk paisley. He held a gleaming, long-barreled pistol, with seeming carelessness, across his knee. His trousers, of white duck, looked immaculate. “Ahoy the shore!” Mallory shouted, craning his neck. He flung his arms wide in jovial greeting, and almost toppled backward. “How might we be o’ service to you flash gentlemen?” “Here’s a conundrum!” the leader announced, in the elaborate tone of a man casting pearls of wit before swine. “Just how very lushed, how utterly well-pissed indeed, can four London pigeons be?” He raised his voice. “Can’t you smell that dreadful stench down there?” “Surely!” Mallory said. “But we want to see the India Docks!” “Why?” The word was cold. Mallory laughed harshly. “Because it’s full of things we want, ain’t it? Stands to reason, don’t it?” “Things like clean linen?” said one of the other men. There was laughter, mixed with grunts and coughing. Mallory laughed too, and slapped his naked chest. “Why not! Can you lads help us? Throw us down a rope or the like!” The leader’s eyes narrowed between his paisley wraps, and he tightened his grip on the pistol-butt. “You’re no sailor! A jack-tar never says ‘rope.’ Rather, he always says line’!” “What’s it to you, what I am?” Mallory shouted, scowling up at the man. “Throw us a rope! Or a ladder! Or a bleeding balloon! Or else go to hell!” “Jolly right!” Tom chimed in, his voice shaking. “Who needs you lot, anyway!” The leader turned, his men vanishing with him. “Hurry up!” Mallory bellowed, as a parting shot. “You can’t keep all that fancy swag to yourselves, you know!” Brian shook his head. “Jesus, Ned,” he whispered. “This is a damn tight pinch!” “We’ll pass as looters,” Mallory said quietly. “We’ll pose as drunken rascals, primed for any kind of mischief! We’ll join their ranks, and make our way to Swing!” “What if they ask us questions, Ned?” “Act stupid.” “Halloo!” came a shrill voice from above. “What’s that?” Mallory cried roughly, looking up. It was a masked and scrawny boy of fifteen years or so, balanced atop the pilings with a rifle in his hands. “Lord Byron’s dead!” the boy yelled. Mallory was dumbstruck. Tom shrilled out in the silence. “Who says he is?” “It’s true! Old bastard’s kicked the bucket, he’s dead as mutton!” The boy laughed in giddy delight, and capered along the edge of the pilings with his rifle waggling over his head. He vanished with a leap. Mallory found his voice. “Surely not.” “No,” Fraser agreed. “Not likely, anyway.” “Wishful thinking on the part of these anarchists,” Fraser suggested. There was a long, empty silence. “Of course,” Mallory said, tugging his beard, “if the Great Orator truly is dead, then that means . . .” Words failed him in a foundering rush of confusion, but the others watched Mallory for guidance, silent and expectant. “Well . . .,” Mallory said, “the death of Byron would mark the end of an age of greatness!” “It needn’t mean much at all,” Fraser objected, his voice under firm control. “There are many men of great talent in the Party. Charles Babbage yet lives! Lord Colgate, Lord Brunel . . . the Prince Consort for instance. Prince Albert is a sound and thoughtful man.” “Lord Byron can’t be dead!” Brian burst out. “We’re standing in stinking mud, believing a stinking lie!” “Quiet!” Mallory commanded. “We’ll simply have to suspend any judgment on this matter until we have firm evidence!” “Ned’s right,” nodded Tom. “The Prime Minister would have wanted it that way! That’s the scientific method. That was what Lord Byron always taught us . . . ” A thick, tarred rope, its end knotted in a fat noose, came snaking down the wall. The anarchist lieutenant — the dainty man with the paisley kerchiefs — posed one bent leg atop the wall, with his elbow on his knee and his chin in his hand. “Put your arse in that, my friend,” he suggested, “and we’ll hoist you up in a trice!” “I thank you kindly!” Mallory said. He waved with cheery confidence and stepped into the noose. When the tug came, he braced his mud-caked shoes against the slick and nasty timbers, and stamped his way up, and over the top. The leader tossed the emptied noose back down, with a kid-gloved hand. “Welcome, sir, to the august company of the vanguard of mankind. Permit me, under the circumstances, to introduce myself. I am the Marquess of Hastings.” The self-styled Marquess bowed slightly, then struck a pose, chin cocked, one gloved fist poised on his hip. Mallory saw that the fellow was in earnest. The title of Marquess was a relic from the years before the Rads, yet here was a young pretender of some sort, a living fossil, alive and in command of this vipers’ crew! Mallory could scarcely have been more startled to see a young plesiosaur lift its snaky head from the depths of the stinking Thames. “Lads,” drawled the young Marquess, “pour some of that Cologne over our pungent friend! If he does anything stupid, you know what to do.” “Shoot him?” someone blurted, idiotically. The Marquess winced elaborately — an actor’s gesture indicating a breach of taste. A boy in a stolen copper’s helmet and a ripped silk shirt slopped chill Cologne from a cut-glass bottle over Mallory’s bare neck and back. Brian rose next, at the end of the rope. “Those are soldier’s trousers, under that muck,” the Marquess observed. “Absent without leave, comrade?” Brian shrugged mutely. “Enjoying your little holiday in London?” Brian nodded like a fool. “Give this filthy personage new trousers,” the Marquess commanded. He looked about his little troupe of six, who were once again lowering the line with the clumsy enthusiasm of a May Day tug-o’-war. “Comrade Shillibeer! You’re about this man’s size — give him your trousers.” “Aw, but Comrade Markiss –” “To each according to his needs. Comrade Shillibeer! Doff the garment at once.” Shillibeer climbed clumsily out of his trousers and proffered them up. He wore no undergarments, and he tugged nervously at his shirt-tails with one hand. “For heaven’s sake,” the Marquess said quizzically, “must I tell you sheepish dullards every little thing?” He pointed sharply to Mallory. “You! Take Shillibeer’s place and haul that line. You, soldier — no longer the oppressor’s minion, but a man entirely free! — put on Shillibeer’s trousers. Comrade Shillibeer, quit that wriggling. You have nothing of which to be ashamed. You may go at once to the general depot for fresh garments.” “Thank you, sir!” ” ‘Comrade,’ ” the Marquess corrected. “Get something nice, Shillibeer. And bring more Cologne.” Tom came up next. Mallory helping with the heaving. The bandits were badly hampered by their clattering, poorly slung rifles. These were general-issue Victoria carbines, heavy single-shot relics now consigned to native troops in the Colonies. The rioters were rendered yet more clumsy by fearsome kitchen-knives and home-made truncheons, stuffed at random into their looted finery. They wore gaudy scarves, sweaty silks, Army bandoliers, and more resembled Turkish bashi-bazouks than any kind of Briton. Two of them were scarcely more than boys, while another pair were thick-set, lumpish, thievish rascals, sodden with drink. The last, to Mallory’s continued surprise, was a slender, silent Negro, in the quiet dress of a gentleman’s valet. The Marquess of Hastings examined Tom. “What is your name?” “Tom, sir.” The Marquess pointed. “What’s his name?” “Ned.” “And him?” “Brian,” Tom said. “I think . . .” “And what, pray, is the name of that grim-looking cove below, looking so awfully much like a copper?” Tom hesitated. “Don’t you know?” “He never gave us any proper name,” Mallory broke in. “We just call him the Reverend.” The Marquess glared at Mallory. “We only met the Reverend today, sir,” Tom apologized glibly. “We ain’t what you’d call bosom pals.” “Suppose we leave him down there, then,” the Marquess suggested. “Haul him up,” Mallory countered. “He’s clever.” “Oh? And what of you, Comrade Ned? You’re not half so stupid as you pretend, it seems. And you’re not very drunk.” “Then give me a drink,” Mallory said boldly. “And I could do with one of them carbines too, if you’re divvying loot.” The Marquess took note of Mallory’s pistol, then cocked his masked head and winked, as if they were sharing a joke. “All things in time, my eager friend,” he said. He waved his neat gloved hand. “Very well. Haul him.” Fraser rose within the noose. “So, ‘Reverend,’ ” said the Marquess, “what, pray, might be your denomination?” Fraser shook the rope loose and stepped out. “What do you think, guv’nor? I’m a bleedin’ Quaker!” There was evil laughter. Fraser, pretending a loutish pleasure at the others’ fun, shook his gingham-masked head. “No,” he rasped, “no Quaker I, for I’m a Panty-sucker!” The laughter stopped short. “Panty-sucker,” Fraser insisted, “one o’ them yellow-back Yankee ranters –” The Marquess broke in with chill precision. “A Pantisocrat, do you mean? That is to say, a lay preacher of the Susquehanna Phalanstery?” Fraser stared dumbly at the Marquess. “I refer to the Utopian doctrines of Professor Coleridge and Reverend Wordsworth,” the Marquess persisted, with gentle menace. “Right,” Fraser grunted, “one o’ them.” “That seems to be a copper’s sling and pistol that you carry, my pacifistic Pantisocrat friend.” “Got it from a copper, didn’t I?” He paused. “A dead’un!” There was laughter again, broken with coughs and grunts. The boy standing next to Mallory elbowed one of the older louts. “This Stink’s turning me head, Henry! Can’t we hook it?” “Ask the Marquess,” Henry said. “You ask ‘im,” the boy wheedled, “he always makes such fun o’ me . . . ” “Harken, now!” said the Marquess. “Jupiter and I shall escort the new recruits to the general depot. The rest of you shall continue shore patrol.” The remaining four groaned in dissent. “Don’t deviate,” the Marquess chided, “you know that all the comrades get a turn at river-duty, same as you.” The Marquess, followed closely by the Negro, Jupiter, led the way along the embankment. It astonished Mallory that the fellow would turn his back on four armed strangers, an act of either arrant foolishness or sublimely careless bravery. Mallory traded silent glances, full of meaning, with Tom, Brian, and Fraser. All four still bore their weapons, the anarchists having not even troubled to confiscate them. It would be the work of moments to shoot their guide in the back, and perhaps the Negro too, though the black was unarmed. A vile business, though, striking from behind, though perhaps a necessity of war. But the others were shifting itchily as they walked, and Mallory realized that they looked to him to do the deed. This venture had become his, now, and even Fraser had bet his life on the fortunes of Edward Mallory. Mallory edged forward, matching his stride with that of the Marquess of Hastings. “What’s in this depot of yours, Your Lordship? A deal of fine loot, I should hope.” “A deal of fine hope, my looting friend! But never you mind that. Tell me this. Comrade Ned — what would you do with loot, if you had it?” “I suppose that might depend on what it was,” Mallory ventured. “You’d carry it back to your rat-warren,” the Marquess surmised, “and sell it for a fraction of its worth to a fencing-Jew, and spend the lot of that on drink, to wake, in a day or two, in a filthy station-house, with a copper’s foot on your neck.” Mallory stroked his chin. “What would you do with it, then?” “Put it to use, of course! We shall use it in the cause of those who gave it value. By that, I mean the common-folk of London, the masses, the oppressed, the sweated labor, those who produce all the riches of this city.” “That’s a queer sort of talk,” Mallory said. “The revolution does not loot, Comrade Ned. We sequester, we commandeer, we liberate! You and your friends were drawn here by a few imported gewgaws. You think to carry off what your hands can clutch in a few moments. Are you men, or magpies? Why settle for a pocketful of dirty shillings? You could own London, the modern Babylon herself! You could own futurity!” ” ‘Futurity,’ eh?” said Mallory, glancing back at Fraser. Above his gingham mask the policeman’s eyes showed unmitigated loathing. Mallory shrugged. “How much tin will a quart of ‘futurity’ fetch, Yer Lordship?” “I’ll thank you not to call me that,” the Marquess said sharply. “You address a veteran of popular revolution, a people’s soldier who takes pride in the simple title of ‘comrade.’ ” “Begging your pardon, I’m sure.” “You’re not a fool, Ned. You can’t mistake me for a Rad Lord. I’m no bourgeois meritocrat! I am a revolutionary, and a mortal enemy by blood and conviction of the Byron tyranny and all its works!” Mallory coughed harshly, cleared his throat. “All right then,” he said in a new and sharper voice. “What’s all this talk about? Seizing London — you can’t be serious! That hasn’t been done since William the Conqueror.” “Read your history, friend!” the Marquess retorted. “Wat Tyler did it. Cromwell did it. Byron himself did it!” He laughed. “The People Risen have seized New York City! The working-people rule Manhattan as we walk and speak here! They have liquidated the rich. They have burned Trinity! They have seized the means of information and production. If mere Yankees can do that, then the people of England, far more advanced along the course of historical development, can do it with even greater ease.” It was clear to Mallory that the man — the lad, rather, for beneath that mask and swagger he was very young — believed this evil madness with a whole heart. “But the Government,” Mallory protested, “will send in the Army.” “Kill their officer-class, and the Army rank-and-file will rise with us,” the Marquess said coolly. “Look at your soldier-friend Brian there. He seems happy enough in our company! Aren’t you, Comrade Brian?” Brian nodded mutely, waving a filth-smeared hand. “You don’t yet grasp the genius of our Captain’s strategy,” the Marquess said. “We stand in the heart of the British capital, the one area on Earth that Britain’s imperial elite are unwilling to devastate in the pursuit of their evil hegemony. The Rad Lords will not shell and burn their own precious London to quell what they falsely think a period of passing unrest. But!” He raised one gloved forefinger. “When we mount the barricades throughout this city, then they will have to struggle hand-to-hand with an aroused working-class, men nerved to the marrow with the first true freedom they have ever known!” The Marquess stopped a moment, wheezing for breath at the foetid air. “Most of the oppressor-class,” he continued, coughing, “have already fled London, to escape the Stink! When they attempt to return, the risen masses will meet them with fire and steel! We will fight them from the roof-tops, from doorways, alleyways, sewers, and rookeries!” He paused to dab his nose with a snotty kerchief from his sleeve. “We will sequester every sinew of organized oppression. The newspapers, the telegraph lines and pneumatic tube-ways, the palaces and barracks and bureaux! We will put them all to the great cause of liberation!” Mallory waited, but it seemed that the young fanatic had at last run out of steam. “And you want us to help you, eh? Join this people’s army of yours?” “Of course!” “What’s in it for us, then?” “Everything,” the Marquess said. “Forever.” There were handsome ships moored inside the West India Docks, tangled rigging and steamer-stacks. The water within the Docks, a byway from the sewage-flow of the Thames, did not seem quite so foul to Mallory, until he saw, floating amid thin wads of slime, the bodies of dead men. Murdered sailors, the skeleton crews that shipping-lines left to guard their ships in harbor. The corpses floated like driftwood, a sight to chill the marrow. Mallory counted fifteen bodies, possibly sixteen, as he followed the Marquess along the gantry-shrouded wooden dockway. Perhaps, he theorized, most of the crews had been killed elsewhere, or else recruited to swell the ranks of Swing’s piracy. Not all sailors were loyal to order and authority. The Ballester-Molina pistol was a cold weight against Mallory’s gut. The Marquess and his black led them blithely on. They passed a deserted ship where an ugly vapor, steam or smoke, curled up ominously from the hatches below-decks. A quartet of anarchist guards, their carbines propped in a crude stack, played cards atop a barricade of bales of looted calico. Other guards, drunken, whiskered wretches in bad plug-hats and worse trousers, armed derelicts, slept in toppled barrows and loading-sledges, amid a swelling debris of barrels, baskets, hawser-coils and loading-ramps, heaps of black coal for the silenced steam-derricks. From the warehouses across the water, to the south, came a ragged volley of distant popping gunshots. The Marquess showed no interest, did not break stride, did not even look. “You overpowered all these ships?” Mallory inquired. “You must have a deal of men. Comrade Marquess!” “More by the hour,” the Marquess assured him. “Our men are combing Limehouse, rousing every working family. Do you know the term ‘exponential growth, ‘ Comrade Ned?” “Why, no,” Mallory lied. “Mathematical clacking-term,” the Marquess lectured absently. “Very interesting field. Engine-clacking, no end of use in the scientific study of socialism . . . ” He seemed distracted now, nervous. “Another day of Stink like this and we’ll have more men than the London police-force! You’re not the first coves I’ve recruited, you know! I’m quite an old hand at it, by now. Why, I wager even my man Jupiter could do it!” He slapped the shoulder of the Negro’s livery-coat. The Negro showed no reaction. Mallory wondered if he were deaf-and-dumb. He wore no breathing-mask. Perhaps he did not need one. The Marquess led them to the greatest among a series of warehouses. Even among the stellar names of commerce: Whitby’s, Evan-Hare, Aaron’s, Madras & Pondicherry Co., this was a very palace of mercantile modernity. Its vast loading-doors had risen on a clever system of jointed counterweights, revealing an interior of steel-frame construction, with translucent plate-glass vaulting a roof that stretched wide and long as a soccer-green. Below this roof grew a maze of steel braces, a fret-work of ratchets and wheeled tracking, where Engine-driven pulley-cans could run along like spiders. Somewhere pistons chugged, with the familiar popping racket of an Engine printing-press. But the press was hidden somewhere behind a maze of booty to stupefy a Borgia. Merchandise lay in heaps, haystacks, mountains: brocades, lounge-chairs, carriage-wheels, epergnes and chandeliers, tureens, mattresses, iron lawn-dogs and Parian birdbaths, billiard-tables and liquor-cabinets, bedsteads and stair-newels, rolled rugs and marble mantelpieces . . . ” ‘Struth!” Tom cried. “How did you do all this?” “We’ve been here for days now,” the Marquess said. He tugged the kerchief from his face, revealing a pale visage of almost girlish beauty, with a downy blond mustache. “There are goods in plenty, still, in the other godowns, and you shall all have a chance for a turn at the sledge and barrow. It’s grand fun. And it’s yours, for it belongs to all of us, equally!” “All of us?” Mallory said. “Of course. All the comrades.” Mallory pointed at the Negro. “What about him?” “What, my man Jupiter?” The Marquess blinked. “Jupiter belongs to all of us too, of course! He’s not my servant alone, but the servant of the common good.” The Marquess mopped his dripping nose on a kerchief. “Follow me.” The heaping of booty had made a monster rat’s-nest of the warehouse’s scientific storage-plan. Following the Marquess, they picked their way across shoals of broken crystal, puddles of cooking-oil, a crunchy alleyway littered with peanut-hulls. “Odd,” the Marquess muttered, “when last I was here, the comrades were all about the place . . . ” The heaps of goods dwindled toward the rear of the warehouse. They passed the whacking printing-press, hidden from sight in a cul-de-sac of towering bundles of news-print. Someone threw a bundle of wet printing-bills over the barricade, almost striking the Marquess, who hopped deftly over it. Mallory became aware of a distant voice, high-pitched and shrill. At the very rear of the warehouse, a large section of floor-space had been made into an impromptu lecture-hall. A chalkboard, a table piled with glassware, and a lectern, all sat unsteadily on a stage of close-packed soap-crates. Mismatched sets of cheap dining-chairs, in pressed oak and maple veneer, served as seating for a silent audience of perhaps three score. “So here they are,” said the Marquess, with an odd quaver in his voice. “You’re in luck! Dr. Barton is favoring us with an exposition. Seat yourselves at once, comrades. You will, I assure you, find this well worth your attention!” To his vast surprise, Mallory found himself and his companions forced to join the audience, in the final row of chairs. The Negro remained standing, hands clasped behind his back, at the rear of the hall. Mallory, seated next to the Marquess, rubbed his smarting eyes in disbelief. “This speaker of yours is wearing a dress!” “Hush,” the Marquess whispered urgently. The female lecturer, brandishing a chalk-tipped ebony pointer, was hectoring the seated crowd in a voice of shrill but closely measured fanaticism. The strange acoustics of the makeshift hall warped her words as if she were speaking through a drumhead. Some kind of queer temperance lecture it seemed, for she was decrying “the poison alcohol” and its threat to the “revolutionary spirit of the working-class.” She had flasks, great glass-stoppered carboys, full of liquor on her table. They were labeled with the skull-and-crossbones, amid a truck of distillation-flasks, red rubber-tubing, wire cages, and laboratory gas-rings. Tom, at Mallory’s right, tapped Mallory’s arm and whispered in a voice of near-terror, “Ned! Ned! Is that Lady Ada?” “My God, boy,” Mallory hissed, the hair prickling in fear all across his arms and neck, “what makes you think that? Of course it isn’t she!” Tom looked relieved, puzzled, vaguely offended. “Who is it, then?” The lecturing female turned to the chalkboard, and wrote, in a ladylike cursive, the words “Neurasthenic Degeneracy.” She turned, aimed a false and brilliant smile at the audience over her shoulder, and for the first time Mallory recognized her. She was Florence Russell Bartlett. Mallory stiffened in his chair with a half-stifled gasp of shock. Something — a fleck of dry cotton from within his mask — lodged like a barb in his throat. He began coughing. And he could not stop. His slimy throat was lacerated. He tried to smile, to whisper a word of apology, but his windpipe seemed pinched in iron bands. Mallory fought the racking spasms with all his strength, hot tears gushing freely, but he could not stop himself, nor even muffle the nightmare hacking. It called a deadly attention to him like a coster-monger’s bellow. At last Mallory jerked to his feet, knocking his chair back with a clatter, and staggered away half-bent, half-blinded. He tottered, arms outstretched, through the blurry wilderness of booty, his feet tangling in something, some wooden object falling with a clatter. Somehow he found a spot of shelter, and bent there shaking violently, his breath choked now by a loathsome bolus of phlegm and vomit. I could die from this, he thought in desperation, his eyes bulging in their sockets. Something will rupture. My heart will burst. Then somehow the clog was gone, the fit defeated. Mallory drew a ragged squeak of air, coughed, found his wind and began to breathe. He wiped foul spittle from his beard with his bare hand, and found himself leaning against a piece of statuary. It was a life-sized Hindu maiden in Coate’s patent artificial stone, half-nude, with a water-jug poised on her draperied hip. The jug was solid stone, of course, though every atom in him cried out for a cleansing sip of water. Someone clapped him firmly on the back. He turned, expecting Tom or Brian, and found the Marquess there. “Are you quite all right?” “A passing fit,” Mallory croaked. He waved one hand, unable to straighten. The Marquess slipped a curved silver flask into his hand. “Here,” he said. “This will help.” Mallory, expecting brandy, tilled the flask to his lips. A treacly concoction, tasting vaguely of licorice and elm, flooded his mouth. He swallowed reluctantly. “What — what is this?” “One of Dr. Barton’s herbal remedies,” the Marquess told him, “a specific against the foetor. Here, let me soak your mask in it; the fumes will clear your lungs.” “I’d rather you didn’t,” Mallory rasped. “Are you fit then to return to the lecture?” “No! No.” The Marquess looked skeptical. “Dr. Barton is a medical genius! She was the first woman ever to graduate with honors from Heidelberg. If you knew the wonders she’s worked among the sick in France, the poor wretches given up for dead by the so-called experts –” “I know,” Mallory blurted. Something like strength returned to him, and with it a strong urge to throttle the Marquess, shake this damned and dangerous little fool till the nonsense squeezed out of him like paste. He felt a suicidal urge to blurt out the truth, that he knew this Barton to be a poisoner, an adulteress, a vitrioleuse, wanted by police in at least two countries. He could whisper that confession, then kill the Marquess of Hastings and stuff his wretched body under something. The fit left him, replaced with a rational cunning cold and brittle as ice. “I should rather talk with you, comrade,” said Mallory, “than listen to any lecture.” “Really?” said Hastings, brightening. Mallory nodded earnestly. “I . . . I find I always profit by listening to a man who truly knows his business.” “I cannot make you out, comrade,” the Marquess said. “Sometimes you seem to me a typical self-seeking fool, but then again you seem a man of quite sophisticated understanding — certainly a cut above those friends of yours!” “I’ve traveled a bit,” Mallory said slowly. “I suppose it broadens a man.” “Traveled where, comrade?” Mallory shrugged. “Argentina. Canada. On the Continent, here and there.” The Marquess glanced about them, as if looking for spies a-lurk in the birdbaths and chandeliers. When none showed, he seemed to relax a bit, then spoke with a renewed but quiet urgency. “Might you know the American South at all? The Confederacy?” Mallory shook his head. “There’s a city called Charleston, in South Carolina. A charming town. It has a large community of well-born British exiles, who fled the Rads. Britain’s ruined cavaliers.” “Very nice,” Mallory grunted. “Charleston is as refined and cultured a city as any in Britain.” “And you were born there, eh?” Mallory had blundered to speak this deduction aloud, for Hastings was sensitive about it, and frowned. Mallory hastened on. “You must have prospered in Charleston, to own a Negro.” “I do hope you are not an anti-slavery bigot,” the Marquess said. “So many Britons are. I suppose you would have me pack poor Jupiter off to one of those fever-ridden jungles in Liberia!” Mallory restrained his nod of agreement. He was in fact an abolitionist, and a supporter of Negro repatriation. “Poor Jupiter wouldn’t last a day in the Liberian Empire,” the Marquess insisted. “Do you know he can read and write? I myself taught him. He even reads poetry.” “Your Negro reads verse?” “Not ‘verse’ — poesy. The great poets. John Milton — but you’ve never heard of him, I wager.” “One of Cromwell’s ministers,” Mallory said readily, “author of the ‘Areopagitica’.” The Marquess nodded. He seemed pleased. “John Milton wrote an epic poem, ‘Paradise Lost’. It’s a Biblical story, in blank verse.” “I’m an agnostic myself,” Mallory said. “Do you know the name of William Blake? He wrote and illustrated his own books of poems.” “Couldn’t find a proper publisher, eh?” “There are still fine poets in England. Did you ever hear of John Wilson Croker? Winthrop Mackworth Praed? Bryan Waller Procter?” “I might have,” Mallory said. “I read a bit — penny-dreadfuls, mostly.” He was puzzled by the Marquess’s strange interest in this arcane topic. And Mallory was worried about Tom and the others — what they must be thinking as they sat and waited for him. They might lose all patience and try something rash, and that wouldn’t do. “Percy Bysshe Shelley was a poet, before he led the Luddites in the Time of Troubles,” the Marquess said. “Know that Percy Shelley lives! Byron exiled him to the island of St. Helena. He remains a prisoner there, in the manse of Napoleon the First. Some say he’s since written whole books of plays and sonnets there.” “Nonsense,” Mallory said, “Shelley died in prison ages ago.” “He lives,” the Marquess said. “Not many know that.” “Next you’ll be saying that Charles Babbage wrote poetry,” Mallory said, his nerves raw. “What’s the point of this?” “It’s a theory of mine,” the Marquess said. “Not so much a proper theory, as a poetic intuition. But since studying the writings of Karl Marx — and of course the great William Collins — it has come to me that some dire violence has been done to the true and natural course of historical development.” The Marquess paused, smirked. “But I doubt you can understand me, my poor fellow!” Mallory shook his head roughly. “I understand well enough. A Catastrophe, you mean.” “Yes. You might well call it that.” “History works by Catastrophe! It’s the way of the world, the only way there is, has been, or ever will be. There is no history — there is only contingency!” The Marquess’s composure shattered. “You’re a liar!” Mallory felt the foolish insult gall him to the quick. “Your head’s full of phantoms, boy! ‘History’! You think you should have a title and estates and I should rot in Lewes making hats. There’s nothing more to it than that! You little fool, the Rads don’t care tuppence for you or Marx or Collins or any of your poetic mummeries! They’ll kill the lot of you here like rats in a sawdust pit.” “You’re not what you seem,” the Marquess said. He had gone as white as paper. “Who are you? What are you?” Mallory tensed. The boy’s eyes widened. “A spy.” He went for his gun. Mallory punched him full in the face. As the Marquess reeled back, Mallory caught his arm and clubbed him, once, twice, across the head, with the heavy barrel of the Ballester-Molina. The Marquess fell bleeding. Mallory snatched up the second pistol, rose, glanced about him. The Negro stood not five yards away. “I saw that,” Jupiter said quietly. Mallory was silent. He leveled both guns at the man. “You struck my master. Have you killed him?” “I think not,” Mallory said. The Negro nodded. He spread his open palms, gently, a gesture like a blessing. “You were right, sir, and he was quite wrong. There is nothing to history. No progress, no justice. There is nothing but random horror.” “That’s as may be,” Mallory said slowly, “but if you cry out I will have to shoot you.” “If you had killed him, I should have certainly cried out,” the Negro said. Mallory glanced back. “He’s still breathing.” There was a long silence. The Negro stood quite still, his posture stiff and perfect, undecided, unmoving, like a Platonic cone balanced perfectly upon its needle tip, waiting for some impetus beyond causality to determine the direction of its fall. The Negro sighed. “I’m going back to New York City, ” he said. He turned on one polished heel and walked away, unhurried, vanishing into the looming barricades of goods. Mallory felt quite certain that the man would not cry out, but he waited a few moments for the evidence that would confirm that belief. The Marquess stirred where he lay, and groaned. Mallory whipped the paisley kerchief from the man’s curly head and gagged him with it. It was the work of a moment to shove him behind a massive terra-cotta urn. The shock of action had left Mallory dry. His throat felt like bloodied sandpaper. There was nothing to drink — except of course that silver flask of quack potion. Mallory dragged it by feel from the Marquess’s jacket-pocket, and wet his throat. It left a numbing tingle at the back of his palate, like dry champagne. It was vile, but it seemed to be bracing him, somehow. He helped himself to a number of swallows. Mallory returned to the lecture-area and took a seat beside Fraser. The policeman lifted one brow in silent query. Mallory patted the butt of the Marquess’s pistol, lodged within his waistband opposite the Ballester-Molina. Fraser nodded, by a fraction. Florence Russell Bartlett was continuing her harangue, her stage-manner seeming to afflict her audience with an occult paralysis. Mallory saw to his shock and disgust that Mrs. Bartlett was displaying quack devices intended to avert pregnancy. A disk of flexible rubber, a wad of sponge with a thread attached. Mallory could not avoid the dark imagining of coitus involving these queer objects. The thought made his gut lurch. “She killed a rabbit a moment ago,” Fraser hissed from the corner of his mouth. “Dipped its nose in essence of cigar.” “I didn’t kill the boy, ” Mallory whispered in return. “Concussed, I think . . . ” He watched Bartlett as her rant drifted into queer plans for selective breeding to improve the stock of humanity. In her futurity, it seemed, proper marriage would be abolished. “Universal free love” would replace chastity. Reproduction would be a matter for experts. The concepts swam like dark shadows at the shore of Mallory’s mind. It struck him then, for no seeming reason, that this day — this very afternoon in fact — was the time specified for his own triumphant lecture on the Brontosaurus, with kinotrope accompaniment by Mr. Keats. The fearful coincidence sent a queer shiver through him. Brian leaned suddenly across Fraser, seizing Mallory’s bare wrist in a grip of iron. “Ned!” he hissed. “Let’s get out of this damned place!” “Not yet,” Mallory said. But he was shaken. A mesmeric flow of sheer panic seemed to jolt into him, through Brian’s grip. “We don’t know yet where Swing is hiding; he could be anywhere in this warren –” “Comrades!” Bartlett sang out, in a voice like an iced razor. “Yes, you four, in the back! If you must disturb us — if you have news of such pressing interest — then surely you should share it with the other comrades in the Chautauqua!” The four of them froze. Bartlett raked them with a Medusa glare. The other listeners, freed somehow from their queer bondage, turned to glare backward with bloodthirsty glee. The eyes of the crowd glowed with a nasty pleasure, the relief of wretches who find their own destined punishment falling elsewhere — Tom and Brian spoke both at once, in frenzied whispers. “Does she mean us?” “My God, what do we do?” Mallory felt trapped in nightmare. A word would break it, he thought. “She’s just a woman,” he said, quite loudly and calmly. “Knife it!” Fraser hissed. “Be still!” “Nothing to tell us?” Bartlett taunted. “I thought not –” Mallory rose to his feet. “I do have something to say!” With the speed of jack-in-the-boxes, three men rose from within the audience, their hands raised. “Dr. Barton! Dr. Barton?” Bartlett nodded graciously, gestured with the chalk-wand. “Comrade Pye has the floor.” “Dr. Barton,” cried Pye, “I do not recognize these comrades. They are behaving regressively, and I — I think they should be criticized!” A fierce silence wrapped the crowd. Fraser yanked at Mallory’s trouser-leg. “Sit down, you fool! Have you lost your mind?” “I do have news!” Mallory shouted, through his gingham mask. “News for Captain Swing!” Bartlett seemed shocked; her eyes darted back and forth. “Tell it to all of us, then,” she commanded. “We’re all of one mind here!” “I know where the Modus is, Mrs. Bartlett!” Mallory shouted. “Do you want me to tell that to all these dupes and slaveys?” Chairs clattered as men leapt to their feet. Bartlett shrieked something lost in the noise. “I want Swing! I must speak to him alone!” As chaos rose, Mallory kicked the empty chair before him into skidding flight, and yanked both pistols from his belt. “Sit down, you bastards!” He leveled his pistols at the audience. “I’ll blow daylight through the first coward that stirs!” His answer was a fusillade of shots. “Run!” Brian screeched. He, Tom, and Fraser fled at once. Chairs splintered, toppling, on either side of Mallory. The audience was shooting at him, ragged popping shots. Mallory leveled both his pistols at Bartlett at her podium, and squeezed the triggers. Neither gun fired. He had neglected to cock the hammers. The Marquess’s gun seemed to have some kind of nickeled safety-switch. Someone nearby threw a chair at Mallory; he fended it off, absently, but then something struck him hard in the foot. The blow was sharp enough to numb his leg, and knock him from his stance; he took the opportunity to retreat. He could not seem to run properly. Perhaps he had been crippled. Bullets sang past him with a nostalgic drone from far Wyoming. Fraser beckoned at him from the mouth of a side-alley. Mallory ran to him, turned, skidded. Fraser stepped coolly into the open, raising his copper’s pepperbox in a dueling stance, right arm extended, body turned to present a narrow target, head held keen-eyed and level. He fired twice, and there were screams. Fraser took Mallory’s arm. “This way!” Mallory’s heart was jumping like a rabbit, and he could not get his foot to work. He limped down the alley. It ended abruptly. Fraser searched frantically for a crawl-way. Tom was boosting Brian atop a great unsteady heap of cartons. Mallory stopped beside his brothers, turned, raised both pistols. He glanced down swiftly at his foot. A stray bullet had knocked the heel from his shoe. He looked up an instant later to see half-a-dozen screaming bandits approaching in hot pursuit. A vast concussion shook the building. Heaps of tinned goods clattered to the floor in a billow of powder-smoke. Mallory gaped. All six of the wretches lay sprawled and blasted in the alley, as if lightning-struck. “Ned!” shouted Brian, from atop his heap of cartons. “Get their weapons!” He crouched there on one knee, the Russian pistol gushing smoke from its opened loading-chamber. He loaded a second cartridge of brass and red waxed-paper, as thick as a copper’s baton. Mallory, ears ringing, lunged forward, then slipped and almost fell headlong in the spreading blood. He grabbed right-handed for support and the Ballester-Molina went off, its bullet whanging from an iron beam overhead. Mallory paused, uncocked it carefully, uncocked the Marquess’s pistol as well, stuck them both into his belt, precious seconds ticking as he dithered. The alley was awash with blood. The blunderbuss blast of the Russian hand-cannon had lacerated the men hideously. One poor devil was still gurgling as Mallory pried a Victoria carbine from beneath him, its stock dripping red. He struggled with the fellow’s bandolier, but gave that up for another’s wooden-handled Yankee revolver. Something stung his palm as he snatched up the pistol. Mallory looked stupidly at his wounded hand, then at the pistol-butt. There was a corkscrewed bit of hot shrapnel embedded in the wood, a razored thing like a big metal-shaving. Rifles began to crack from a distance, slugs plowing into the bounty around them with odd crunches and a musical tinkling of glass. “Mallory! This way,” Fraser shouted. Fraser had uncovered a crevice along the warehouse wall. Mallory turned to sling the carbine and look for Brian, seeing the young artilleryman leap across the alley for another vantage-point. He followed Fraser into the crevice, grunting and heaving, for several yards along the wall. Bullets began whacking into the brick, before them and behind them, but well above their heads. Ill-aimed shots burst the tin-sheet roof with drum-like metal bangs. Mallory emerged to find Tom working like a demon in an open cul-de-sac, flinging up a barricade of spindle-legged ladies’ vanity-tables. The things lay piled in a white-lacquered heap like dead tropical spiders. The cracking of rifles, sharper now, made the warehouse a cacophony. From behind them Mallory heard shouts of rage and fear over the dead. Tom drove a length of iron bedstead into a heap of crates, put his back into it, and toppled the mess with a crash. “How many?” Tom panted. “Six.” Tom smiled like a madman. “That’s more than they’ll ever kill of us. Where’s Brian now?” “I don’t know.” Mallory unslung the carbine, handed it to Tom. Tom took it by the barrel and held it at arm’s-length, surprised by its caking of gore. Fraser, maintaining close watch at the crevice, fired his pepperbox. There was an awful, girlish scream and a thrashing, like a poisoned rat in a wall. Bullets began to plunge into the rubble around them with somewhat greater accuracy, attracted by the scream. A thumb-sized conical slug fell from nowhere at Mallory’s feet and spun like a top on the floor-boards. Fraser tapped his shoulder. Mallory turned. Fraser had tugged the mask from his face; his eyes glittered and stubble showed black on his pale chin. “How now, Dr. Mallory? What new inspired maneuver?” “That might well have worked, you know,” Mallory protested. “She might have taken us straight to Swing if she’d believed me. There’s no accounting for women . . . ” “Oh, she believed you right-enough,” said Fraser, and suddenly he laughed, a strange dry chuckling like the rubbing of resined wood. “Well, what do you have there?” “Pistol?” Mallory offered Fraser the salvaged revolver. “Mind that bit of shrapnel in it.” Fraser scraped the embedded barb free on his boot-heel. “Never saw the like of that lad’s barker! I rather doubt it’s legal, even for one of your gallant Crimea heroes.” A rifle-shot knocked a spinning chunk from one of the vanity-tables, narrowly missing Fraser. Mallory looked up, startled. “Damn!” A distant sniper clung monkey-like to one of the iron rafters, fitting another round into his rifle. Mallory snatched the Victoria from Tom, braced the bloodied strap around his forearm, and took close aim. He squeezed the trigger. To no effect, for the single-shot had been fired already. But the sniper’s mouth opened in an O of terror and he leapt from his perch with a distant crash. Mallory yanked the bolt back, flinging the dead cartridge. “I should have taken that damned bandolier –” “Ned!” Brian appeared suddenly to their left, crouched at the top of a heap. “Over here — cotton-bales!” “Right!” They followed Brian’s lead, scrambling and heaving atop the booty in a cascade of whalebone and candlesticks. Bullets whizzed and thwacked around them — more men in the rafters, Mallory thought, too busy to look. Fraser rose once and took a pot-shot, to no apparent effect. Dozens of hundred-weight bales of Confederate ginned cotton, wrapped in rope and burlap, had been stacked almost to the rafters. Brian gestured wildly, then vanished over the far side of the cotton-stack. Mallory understood him: it was a natural fortress, with a little work. He and Tom heaved and toppled one of the bales free from the top of the stack, stepping into the cavity. Bullets thumped with gentle huffs into the cotton as Fraser rose and returned fire. They kicked out another bale, and then a third. Fraser joined them in the excavation, with a leap and a stumble. In a frantic, heaving minute they had burrowed their way into the thick of it, like ants amid a box of cube sugar. Their position was obvious now; bullets popped and thudded into the cotton fortress, but to no effect. Mallory yanked a great clean wad and wiped sweat and blood from his face and arms. It was dire hard work, hauling cotton-bales; no wonder the Southrons had relegated it to their darkeys. Fraser cleared a narrow space between two bales. “Give me another pistol.” Mallory handed him the Marquess’s long-barreled revolver. Fraser squeezed off a shot, squinted, nodded. “Fine piece . . .” A volley of futile shots came in reply. Tom, grunting and heaving, cleared more space by lifting and dropping a bale off the back of the heap; it struck something with a crash like a splintering pianola. They took inventory. Tom had a derringer with one loaded chamber; useful, perhaps, if the anarchists swarmed in like boarding pirates, but not otherwise. Mallory’s Ballester-Molina had three rounds. Fraser’s pepperbox had three caps left, and the Marquess’s gun five rounds. And they had an empty Victoria carbine, and Fraser’s little truncheon. There was no sign of Brian. There were angry, muffled shouts in the depths of the warehouse — orders. Mallory thought. The gunfire died away quite suddenly, replaced by an ominous silence, broken by rustling and what seemed to be hammering. He peered up over the edge of a forward bale. There was no visible enemy, but the doors of the warehouse had been shut. Gloom flew across the warehouse in a sudden wave. Beyond the glazed vaulting of the ceiling, it had grown swiftly and astonishingly dark, as if the Stink had thickened further. “Should we make a run for it?” whispered Tom. “Not without Brian,” Mallory said. Fraser shook his head dourly — not speaking his doubt, but it was clear enough. They worked in the gloom for a while, clearing space, digging in deeper, heaving up some of the bales to serve as crenellations. At the sound of their activity, more shots came, muzzle-flashes savagely lighting the darkness, bullets screaming off iron braces overhead. Here and there in the heaps of merchandise, the kindled light of lanterns glowed. More shouted orders, and the firing ceased. There was a flurry of pattering on the metal roof, swiftly gone. “What was that?” Tom asked. “Sounded like rats scampering,” Mallory said. “Rain!” Fraser suggested. Mallory said nothing. Another ash-fall seemed far more likely. The gloom lightened again, quite suddenly. Mallory peered over the edge. A crowd of the rascals were creeping forward, almost to the foot of the ramparts, barefoot and in hushed silence, some with knives in their teeth. Mallory bellowed in alarm and began firing. He was blinded at once by his own muzzle-flashes, but the Ballester-Molina, kicking and pumping, seemed to have a life of its own; in an instant the three remaining rounds were gone. Not wasted, though; at such short range he had not been able to miss. Two men were down, a third crawling, and the rest fleeing in terror. Mallory could hear them re-grouping out of sight, milling, cursing each other. Mallory, his gun empty, grasped its hot barrel like a club. The building shook with the awful roar of Brian’s pistol. The silence afterward was broken by agonized screams. A long and harrowing minute passed then, filled with infernal yells from the wounded and dying, with a crashing, a cursing and clattering. Suddenly a dark form came catapulting into their midst, stinking of gunpowder. Brian. “Good job you didn’t shoot me,” he said. “Damme, it’s dark in here, ain’t it?” “Are ye all right, lad?” Mallory said. “Nicks,” Brian said, getting to his feet. “Look what I brought ye, Ned.” He passed the thing into Mallory’s hands. The smooth heavy form of stock and barrel fit Mallory’s grip like silk. It was a buffalo-rifle. “They’ve a whole crate of such beauties,” Brian said. “Out in a pokey little office, across the way. And munitions with it, though I could only carry two boxes.” Mallory began loading the rifle at once, round after brassy round clicking into the spring-loader with a ticking like fine clockwork. “Queer business,” Brian said. “Don’t think they knew I was loose among them. No proper sense of strategy. Don’t seem to be any Army traitors among this rabble, I’ll tell you that!” “That barker of yours is a marvel, lad,” Fraser said. Brian grunted. “Not anymore, Mr. Fraser. I’d only two rounds. Wish I’d held back, but when I saw that lovely chance for enfilading-fire. I’d got to take it.” “Never you mind,” Mallory told him, caressing the rifle’s walnut stock. “If we’d four of these, we could hold ’em back all week.” “My apologies!” Brian said. “But I won’t be doing much more of a proper reconnaissance-in-force. They winged me a bit.” A stray bullet had seared across the front of Brian’s shin. White bone showed in the shallow wound and his filth-caked boot was full of blood. Fraser and Tom wadded clean cotton against the wound while Mallory kept watch with the rifle. “Enough,” Brian protested at last, “you fellows carry on to beat Lady Nightingale. D’ye see anything, Ned?” “No,” Mallory said. “I hear them plotting mischief, though.” “They’re back in three mustering-grounds,” Brian said. “They had a rally-point just out of your line-of-fire, but I raked ’em there with the Tsar’s slag-shot. I doubt they’ll rush us again. They’ve not got the nerve for it now.” “What will they do, then?” “Some sort of sapper’s work. I’d wager,” Brian said. “Advancing barricades, perhaps something on wheels.” He spat dryly. “Damme, I need a drink. I haven’t been this dry since Lucknow.” “Sorry,” Mallory said. Brian sighed. “We had a very pukka water-boy with the regiment in India. That bleeding little Hindu was worth any ten of these buggers!” “Did you see the woman?” Fraser asked him. “Or Captain Swing?” “No,” Brian said. “I was staying to cover, creeping about. Looking for a better class of firearm, mostly, something with a range. Queer things I saw, too. Found Ned’s game-rifle in a little office-room, not a soul in it but a little clerky chap, writing at a desk. Pair of candles burning, papers all scattered about. Full of crated guns for export, and why they’re keeping those fine rifles back with some clerk, and passing out Victorias, is beyond my professional understanding.” A wave of drowned and greenish light passed into the building — outlining, as it passed, an armed man rising up a pulley-line, seated in a noose. Swift as thought. Mallory centered his bead on the man, exhaled, fired. The man flopped backward, dangled from his knees, hung limp. Rifle-fire began to smack into the cotton. Mallory ducked down again. “Fine emplacements, cotton-bales,” said Brian with satisfaction, patting the burlapped floor. “Hickory Jackson hid behind ’em in New Orleans, and gave us a toweling, too.” “What happened in the office-room, Brian?” Tom asked. “Fellow rolled himself a sort of papirosi,” Brian said. “Know those? Turkish baccy-wraps. ‘Cept the bugger took an eye-dropper from a little medical vial, dribbled it about on the paper first, then wrapped some queer leaf from a candy jar. I’d a proper look at his face when he lit his smoke from the candle, and he’d a very absent look, deluded you might say, rather like brother Ned here with one of his scholarly problems!” Brian laughed drily, meaning no harm. “Scarcely seemed right to disturb his fancy then, so I took a rifle and a box or two real quiet-like, and left!” Tom laughed. “You’d a good look, eh?” Mallory asked. “Surely.” “Fellow had a bump on his forehead, right here?” “Damme if he didn’t!” “That was Captain Swing,” Mallory said. “Then I’m a chuckleheaded fool!” Brian cried. “Didn’t seem right to shoot a man in the back, but if I’d knowed it was him I’d have blowed his lumpy headpiece off!” “Doctor Edward Mallory!” a voice cried, from the darkened floor below. Mallory rose, peered around a bale. The Marquess of Hastings stood below them, his head bandaged and a lantern in one hand. He waved a white kerchief on a stick. “Leviathan Mallory, a parley with you!” the Marquess shouted. “Speak up then,” Mallory said, careful not to show his head. “You’re trapped here, Dr. Mallory! But we’ve an offer for you. If you’ll tell us where you’ve hidden a certain object of value, which you stole, then we’ll let you and your brothers go free. But your police-spy from the Special Bureau must stay. We have questions for him.” Mallory laughed him to scorn. “Hear me, Hastings, and all the rest of you! Send us that maniac Swing and his murdering tart, with their hands bound! Then we’ll let the rest of you creep out of here before the Army comes!” “A show of insolence avails you nothing,” the Marquess said. “We shall fire that cotton, and you’ll roast like a brace of rabbits!” Mallory turned. “Can he do that?” “Cotton won’t burn worth a hang when it’s packed tight as this,” Brian theorized. “Surely, burn it!” Mallory shouted. “Burn down the whole godown and smother to death in the smoke.” “You’ve been very bold. Dr. Mallory, and very lucky. But our choicest men patrol the streets of Limehouse now, liquidating the police! Soon they shall return, hardened soldiers, veterans of Manhattan! They’ll take your little hideaway by storm, at the point of the bayonet! Come out now, while you’ve yet a chance to live!” “We fear no Yankee rabble! Bring ’em on, for a taste of grapeshot!” “We’ve made our offer! Reason it through, like a proper savant!” “Go to hell,” Mallory said. “Send me Swing; I want to talk to Swing! I’ve had my fill of you, you poncey little traitor.” The Marquess retreated. After some moments, a desultory firing began. Mallory expended half a box of cartridges, returning fire at the muzzle-flashes. The anarchists then commenced the painful work of advancing a siege-engine. It was an improvised phalanx of three heavy dolly-carts, their fronts lashed with a sloping armor of marbled table-tops. The rolling armor was too wide to fit down the crooked alley to the cotton-bales, so the rebels dug their way through the heaps of goods, piling them up by the flanks of the freight-dollies. Mallory wounded two of them at their work, but they grew wiser with experience, and soon had erected a covered walkway behind the advancing siege-works. There seemed to be far more men in the warehouse now. It had grown darker yet, but lantern-light showed here and there and the iron beams were full of snipers. There was loud talk — argument it seemed — to add to the groans of the wounded. The siege-works crept closer yet. They were now below Mallory’s best line-of-fire. If he exposed himself in an attempt to lean over the ramparts, without doubt the snipers would hit him. The siege-works reached the base of the cotton-bales. There was a sound of shredding at the base of the wall. A warped and muffled voice — assisted perhaps by a megaphone — sounded from within the siege-works. “Dr. Mallory!” “Yes?” “You asked for me — here I am! We are toppling the wall of your palace, Dr. Mallory. Soon you will be quite exposed.” “Hard work for a professional gambler. Captain Swing! Don’t blister your delicate hands!” Tom and Fraser, who had been working in tandem, toppled a heavy cotton-bale onto the siege-works. It bounced off harmlessly. Well-concerted fire raked the fortress, sending the defenders diving for cover. “Cease fire!” Swing shouted, and laughed. “Have a care, Swing! If you shoot me, you’ll never learn where the Modus is hidden.” “Still the Mustering fool! You stole the Modus from us at the Derby. You might have returned it to us, and spared yourself certain destruction! You stubborn ignoramus, you don’t even have a notion of the thing’s true purpose!” “It belongs by right to the Queen of Engines, and I know that well enough.” “If you think that, you know nothing.” “I know it is Ada’s, for she told me so. And she knows where it is hidden, for I told her where I keep it!” “Liar!” Swing shouted. “If Ada knew, we would have it already. She is one of us!” Tom groaned aloud. “You are her tormentors. Swing!” “I tell you Ada is ours.” “The daughter of Byron would never betray the realm.” “Byron’s dead!” Swing cried, with the terrible conviction of truth. “And all that he built, all that you believe in, will now be swept away.” “You’re dreaming.” There was a long silence. Then Swing spoke again, in a new and coaxing voice. “The Army now fires upon the people. Dr. Mallory.” Mallory said nothing. “The British Army, the very bulwark of your so-called civilization, now shoots your fellow citizens dead in the streets. Men and women with stones in their hands are being murdered with rapid-fire weapons. Can you not hear it?” Mallory made no reply. “You have built on sand, Dr. Mallory. The tree of your prosperity is rooted in dark murder. The masses can endure you no longer. Blood cries out from the seven-cursed streets of Babylondon!” “Come out, Swing!” Mallory cried. “Come out of your darkness, let me see your face!” “Not likely,” Swing said. There was another silence. “I intended to take you alive. Dr. Mallory,” Swing said, in a voice of finality. “But if you have truly confessed your secret to Ada Byron, then I have no more need of you. My trusted comrade, my life’s companion — she holds the Queen of Engines in a perfect net! We shall have Lady Ada, and the Modus, and futurity as well. And you shall have the depths of the poisoned Thames for your sepulchre.” “Kill us then, and stop your damned blather!” Fraser shouted suddenly, stung beyond endurance. “Special Branch will see you kicking at a rope’s end if it takes a hundred years.” “The voice of authority!” Swing taunted. “The almighty British Government! You’re fine at mowing down poor wretches in the street, but let us see your bloated plutocrats take this warehouse, when we hold merchandise worth millions hostage here.” “You must be completely mad,” Mallory said. “Why do you suppose I chose this place as my headquarters? You are governed by shopkeepers, who value their precious goods more than any number of human lives! They will never fire on their own warehouses, their own shipping. We are impregnable here!” Mallory laughed. “You utter jolterhead! If Byron’s dead, then the Government is in the hands of Lord Babbage and his emergency committees. Babbage is a master pragmatist! He’ll not be stayed by concern for any amount of merchandise.” “Babbage is the pawn of the capitalists.” “He’s a visionary, you deluded little clown! Once he learns you’re in here, he’ll blast this place into the heavens without a second thought!” Thunder shook the building. There was a pattering against the roof. “It’s raining!” Tom cried. “It’s artillery,” Brian said. “No, listen — it’s raining, Brian! The Stink is over! It’s blessed rain!” An argument had broken out beneath the shelter of the siege-works. Swing was snarling at his men. Cool water began dripping through the ragged fret-work of bullet-holes in the roof. “It’s rain,” Mallory said, and licked his hand. “Rain! We’ve won, lads.” Thunder rolled. “Even if they kill us here,” Mallory shouted, “it’s over for them. When London’s air is sweet again, they’ll have no place to hide.” “It may be raining,” Brian said, “but those are ten-inch naval guns, off the river . . . ” A shell tore through the roof in a torrent of blazing shrapnel. “They’ve got our range now!” Brian shouted. “For God’s sake, take cover!” He began to struggle desperately with the cotton-bales. Mallory watched in astonishment as shell after shell punched through the roof, the holes as neatly spaced as the stabs of a shoemaker’s awl. Whirlwinds of blazing rubbish flew, like the impact of iron comets. The glass vaulting burst into a thousand knife-edged shards. Brian was screaming at Mallory, his voice utterly drowned by the cacophony. After a stunned moment, Mallory bent to help his brother, heaving up another cotton-bale and crouching within the trench. He sat there, the rifle across his knees. Blasts of light sheeted across the buckling roof. Iron beams began to twist under pressure, their rivets popping like gunshots. The noise was hellish, supernatural. The warehouse shook like a sheet of beaten tin. Brian, Tom, and Fraser crouched like praying Bedouins, their hands clamped to their ears. Bits of flaming wood and fabric fell gently onto the bales around them, jumping a bit with each repeated concussion, smoldering into the cotton where they lay. The warehouse billowed with air and heat. Mallory absently plucked two wads of cotton and stuffed them into his ears. A section of roofing collapsed, quite slowly, like the wing of a dying swan. Rain in torrents fought the fires below. Beauty entered Mallory’s soul. He stood, the rifle like a wand in his hands. The shelling had stopped, but the noise was incessant, for the building was on fire. Tongues of dirty flame leapt up in a hundred places, twisted fantastically by gusts of wind. Mallory stepped to the edge of the cotton parapet. The shelling had knocked the covered walkway into fragments, like a muddy crawl-way of termites, crushed by a boot. Mallory stood, his head filled with the monotone roaring of absolute sublimity, and watched as his enemies fled screaming. A man stopped amid the flames, and turned. It was Swing. He gazed up at Mallory where he stood. His face twisted with a desperate awe. He screamed something — screamed it louder still — but he was a little man, far away, and Mallory could not hear him. Mallory slowly shook his head. Swing raised his weapon then. Mallory saw, with a glow of pleased surprise, the familiar outlines of a Cutts-Maudslay carbine. Swing aimed the weapon, braced himself, and pulled the trigger. Pleasantly tenuous singing sounds surrounded Mallory, with a musical popping from the perforating roof behind him. Mallory, his hands moving with superb and unintentioned grace, raised his rifle, sighted, fired. Swing spun and fell sprawling. The Cutts-Maudslay, still in his grasp, continued its spring-driven jerking and clicking even after its drum of cartridges was empty. Mallory watched, with tepid interest, as Fraser, leaping through the wreckage with a spidery agility, approached the fallen anarchist with his pistol drawn. He handcuffed Swing, then lifted him limply over one shoulder. Mallory’s eyes smarted. Smoke from the flaming warehouse was gathering under the wreckage of its roof. He looked down, blinking, to see Tom lowering a limping Brian to the floor. The two joined Fraser, who beckoned sharply. Mallory smiled, descended, followed. The three then fled through the whipping, thickening fires, with Mallory strolling after them. Catastrophe had knocked Swing’s fortress open in a geyser of shattered brick dominos. Mallory, blissful, the nails of his broken shoe-heel grating, walked into a London reborn. Into a tempest of cleansing rain.

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58

Leave a Reply 0

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *