Three weeks could be a long time. So much could happen during such a span, so
much could change, and yet, it seemed to Ellis, that the more you crammed into
it, the less time it actually felt. This
had been the shortest three weeks of Ellis' life. It had hurried by in a flurry of fervent
activity as everyone pulled together to get the steam barge ship shape as soon
as possible. The vessel had had to be
scraped clean of rust and patched up where the corrosion had been too much. All its considerably pipework had to be
cleaned and checked for leaks. The steam
engine had to be emptied of fuel and water, resealed and then filled and tested
several times. Masts were made for her
out of old support pillars from the more dilapidated parts of Varokh Vehr,
carefully inserted into the decks and rigged with silk bedsheets in lieu of
sailcloth so that they might have a back-up if any of the steamworks
failed. She was repainted, polished,
made to gleam and it all took hours!
The time had also flown by in a flurry of equally
fervent kisses, as Ellis spent his free time with Siren, catching up on months
of being apart and making up for the tension of their own uncertain
relationship before that. It seemed that
now they had advanced to a new stage, there was so much more to say than there
had ever been before. Siren spoke more
of her childhood, of her years running across the oceans and her guilt about
her mother, whilst Ellis spoke of what he remembered of Earth, the patchwork
identity he now doubted was genuine.
Together they tried to make each other a little bit more whole, first
with words, then with looks and finally with tender caresses, long, luxurious
kisses, nights together in the dark.
Yes, it was the shortest three weeks of Ellis' life
by far, and as they began to draw to an end, he found himself wishing they
never would.
But the steam barge was nearing completion and above
them the world was straining under the yoke of Lakhma and his/her minions, and
Ellis knew that they had to leave and face that danger once more if they wanted
to end it. To stay where they were would
only be selfishness - and most likely a temporary one. They couldn't hide in the Blood Forts
forever.
Siren, as the most skilled sailor, something even
Harker acknowledged, had been allowed the rank of captain aboard the steam
barge and it was also her honour to give the overhauled vessel a new name,
since Lord Blood Dragon had forgotten whatever it used to be called. She sat up late the night before the launch,
not sleeping, just pondering names and even when Ellis called her back to bed
in the small hours of the morning, she just lay there, eyes open, thinking.
The morning of the launch was tense, nervy, bubbling
with excitements: fear, trepidation, eagerness, a sense of the new and the old
all coming together at once. Ellis could
hardly eat his breakfast, instead feeling the fluttering sensation in his
stomach as something almost prophetic, although for good or ill he could not
have said.
The entire crew gathered at the dock straight after
they had eaten and gathered the last of their meagre possessions and what
supplies Lord Blood Dragon had left to offer.
Somehow this most irregular assortment of pirates, philosophers,
adventurers and anomalies managed to seem almost military in their sudden sense
of order and decorum, lined up along the dock beside the restored Steam Barge,
the last few packs and parcels piled neatly nearby. It was Lord Blood Dragon who spoke to them
first, as was befitting his noble status and rights as owner and, in a way,
patron, of the newly refurbished vessel.
"There ith much I could thay," he began,
his thin, high voice holding a little more gravitas than usual, despite the
impediment of his vampiric teeth, "much that could inthpire you all, thtir
you on to gweat deeds and hewoic valour.
There ith much that could be intimated, paththed on, endowed; much
withdom to be bethtowed. In thort, there
ith much hot air I could wathte.
"But that ith not why we are here, and not why
we put tho much effort into fixthing thith thip, and tho, I've thaid enough
alweady. I give you, inthtead, your
Captain. I give you Thiren!"
There was a light flutter of applause as Siren
stepped forward and Lord Blood Dragon took a step to the side, out of the
limelight, his dark eyes seeming proud to gaze upon the strong young woman
before him, though he had known her but a few weeks. Siren herself looked slightly nervous,
slightly abashed, as she came to a stop before the Steam Barge and turned, ever
so slowly, to face her crew. Ellis
watched with baited breath, feeling her nerves within his chest as if they
shared one body, clenching his fists with the strain of it. But he need not have worried. The anxiety in Siren's face passed as
fleetingly as a shadow over the sun, as a rain cloud on a summers day. Her eyes became steely, but her smile was
warm as she stared to speak.
"Blood Dragon is right. There is no time today for speech-making, but
there is one duty which must be undertaken before we set sail. This vessel, this barge, this ship needs a
name. I have thought long and hard about
what best to call it, to send us through the dark passageways of this world
towards our destination and what we hope... what we pray will be a new daylight for all of Shadow. I have thought of the past and of the future,
of my own demons, and of all of yours, and of the hopes we hold dear to
us. In the end I have chosen two names,
one for myself and one for the world.
After my mother, I have named her Beata,
and I hope that she will forgive me for all that I put between us before the
end. And with that same thought in mind
is the second name, a word I hope this vessel will help bring about in all our
lives and in the lives of those who live above us, hiding in fear from the
monster which haunts our skies. For them
and for you and for myself I have named her Absolution."
There was a moment of silence as Siren finished and
she herself took a step back, as if unsure she had said the right thing, but
then there was a clap from one end of the line of crewmen - Ellis thought it might
have come from the Former Baron - and suddenly applause was rippling back and
forth among them all. Siren smiled again
then, a look of simple relief, before her expression hardened just a fraction
and she clapped her hands, twice, loudly.
"Okay, okay," she said, her voice rising
over the gentle buzz, "enough now.
We can't delay here any longer.
Load up the last few pieces of cargo and then let's prepare to make way!"
The orderliness broke into the seeming chaos of
everyone going everywhere and doing everything.
Everyone had a role, or a place, however, and things were going more
smoothly than they appeared. Ellis was
given some crates to load onto the barge, but, after he had shifted the first
one, he found Siren standing beside him, looking a little lost. She was in charge, of course, so that mean
that her role was overseeing things, but it seemed that, with everything going
well, she had nothing in particular to do and there was a look on her face when
Ellis glanced at her that told him she wanted to talk.
He put the crate he was carrying down on the deck,
stepped over towards her and put a hand on her shoulder.
"That was a good speech."
"Yeah," Siren replied with a nervous
laugh, "great for someone who started by saying that it wasn't the time
for speeches."
"There are speeches and there are
speeches. It was the right time for
those words. We're all excited, but
we're nervous too. We know that what
comes next is mostly unknown and dangerous.
We're going to try and go up against a god, after all. It's not
going to be easy. The crew needed the
encouragement. I needed the
encouragement too and... I think you needed it for yourself as well."
Siren said nothing, just gazed into his eyes for a
moment, as if reading something there.
"About your mother..." he began.
"It was self-indulgent, wasn't it?"
"No, no.
Not at all! I think it was the
right thing to do as well. It showed the
crew that you're human - something you sometimes forget about - and... well I
never knew your mother and I'm not sure I know the whole story of what happened
between you, but... I think she must be proud of you now, wherever she is. She would be honoured by your choice."
"I hope so," Siren replied doubtfully.
Ellis leaned in, gave her a gentle hug and a kiss
before he pulled away.
"I have work to do, Captain," he said with
a smile, "and I think so do you."
"Thank you, Ellis," she replied, "I
love you too."
It took another twenty minutes to load the remaining
cargo and prepare the ship to weigh anchor and begin its long journey through
the underground canals of Shadow, but only ten minutes after that they were on
their way, the hypostatick lamps at the Blood Forts' dock a distant speck in
the endless gloom. The Beata Absolution had set sail at last,
the first vessel of its kind to plough the waters beneath the ancient city
world for hundreds of years. But whilst
it seemed that there was only darkness and the unknown ahead, there was a sense
aboard that small ship that they were heading towards something unseen as well,
a secret thing, hidden deep in the hearts of those who possess it: hope.
Mm, Shadow. Delicious! Good chapter, Chris - much enjoyed. Can't wait to see what is to come!!
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