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Authors: Shelley Adina

Tags: #Fantasy, #Young Adult

Brilliant Devices (17 page)

BOOK: Brilliant Devices
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Claire’s eyes widened as the real source of
her friend’s agitation became clear. A strange, chilly feeling settled in her stomach. “You mean … Mr. Malvern?”

Alice leaned her forehead on the
panels of the bed cabinet. “Yes, Mr. Malvern,” she said into the glossy wood. “Who else?”

“Did something happen last night? Has there been some other trouble?”

A huff of breath might have passed for a laugh. “Trouble. Yeah. Only I would see it as trouble. Any other woman with a ng wha, l lick of sense might have enjoyed it, but me? I’m a darned fool.”

The chilly feeling solidified into certainty. Claire was no mathematician, but she could put two and two together as well as the next person.
Speaking aloud the sum of her conclusions was another matter.

“He escorted me over to the Tiller,” Alice said, turning to lean a shoulder on the cabinet. “I talked with Mike, and then we came back. And under the
Margrethe
, in the shadow, he—he—”

“He kissed you?” Claire whispered.

“Yes!” Alice wailed, and flung herself down on the bunk, burying her face in Claire’s shoulder. “I know it was wrong, but I liked it! Until I thought about him, and you, and what a mess it all is, and so I—I ran away.” She sighed, and sat up, swiping the flat of her hand over her cheek.

Claire’s face felt stiff. But this was ridiculous. She herself had been kissed by another man last evening, and had been just as confused as Alice was now. Was she such a dog in the manger that she could begrudge
Andrew’s giving a kiss when she had been guilty of accepting one with every appearance of enjoying it?

She could not say such things. Better to let her friend
talk away her burden, and keep her own secrets and shortcomings to herself. “Alice, do you care for him?”


I don’t know. I admire him. He can’t care for me, that’s certain. He was only amusing himself. I know that. Why else would he …?”

“How can you be so sure? After your appearance in that gown last night, I know he sees you differently.”

“I don’t want to be seen like that.”

“Like what?”

“Like … like some fragile porcelain shepherdess in a pretty gown, who needs to be protected and escorted and wrapped in cotton wool when she’s put away at night.”

“I’m sure he doesn’t—”

“I’ll tell you for true, he never thought about kissing me before he saw me in that dress.”

Put like that, Claire could hardly argue. “He sees you as a woman, perhaps, not as a mechanic in pants and flight goggles.
There is nothing wrong with that.”

“Shouldn’t make any difference. I’m still me, whether I’ve got grease on my face, or powder.”

“You’re quite right, it shouldn’t.” She squeezed Alice’s shoulders and made a decision. “Cheer up. We’re both in the same boat. Captain Hollys kissed me last night, too, and very thoroughly at that.”

Alice sat up straight and
gaped at her. “He did? When?”

“At the ball. A moment later I came in
from the terrace and found you, and then we met Peony.”

“No wonder you were all colored up. I just thought you’d been dancing.” She huffed another breath, of discovery this time. “So you and Mr. Malvern …?”

Now it was Claire’s turn to lay her cheek on Alice’s shoulder. “I don’t know. I honestly don’t. I don’t even understand myself. How can I enjoy another man’s kiss when all this time I thought I cared for Andrew?”

“Thought? You mean you don’t?”

“Of course I do.” Oh, how could she explain her feelings? They were feelings, not theories or maps or anything else that could be understood and put into words. “I admire him enormously, and like him. He is my friend, the person I trust with my very life. But the trouble is, I can say all those things of you, too.”

A
smile flickered over Alice’s lips, then went out.

“I care—I must,”
Claire said, half to herself, “or I would not have felt such jealousy a moment ago, when you told me he’d kissed you.”

“Claire, please say I haven’t hurt you. I couldn’t bear it. It was so sudden, and—and it was my first time, and—”

“I know what you mean. Andrew was my first kiss, too.”

“We’ll have to form a club.”

That startled her into a laugh. Rosie, who had settled onto the nightstand in sphinx-like repose, looked alarmed until Claire passed a soothing hand over her feathers. “You have not hurt me. If anything, you’ve made me see something about myself that I hadn’t before.”

“And what’s that? We both have excellent taste in men?”

Another smile. “That … and the fact that we can admire the same man and still be friends.” How was that possible? If the flickers were any authority to go by, they should hate each other. “That’s rather remarkable, don’t you think?”

Alice nodded. Her hands, which had been clasped tightly in her lap, relaxed. “You don’t hate me? Because I’ve seen some pretty ugly things at the Resolute Rose, when two of the girls both wanted the same man.”

“I admit, I have been feeling a little jealous since we left Reno, which is ridiculous. I am not proud of it. You and I have seen some dreadful things together. I should think—Alice, I hope—that this would strengthen our regard, not cause us to hate one another.”

Alice hugged her. “You’re a peach.”

“And so are you.”

“But meanwhile, here I am with five hundred miles of sky to deal with.”

“I imagine Andrew is every bit as agitated about this as you are. Perhaps it will be a relief to know that I would rather act as your engineer than sit on the
Lady Lucy
staring out the window wondering how the girls are doing. We might even send a message to the count suggesting that he give Andrew a working tour of the
Margrethe
. After all, we do not know if he will get another opportunity.”

“I knew you would help me.”

“Didn’t you tell me once that we women must stick together?”

“I meant it.”

“And so do I.” Claire got up and extended a hand to pull Alice to her feet. “Come. Rosie and I will help you pack. I do not think all of your new clothes are going to fit into your locker on the
Lass
, so we will have to ask Davina if you may borrow a trunk.”

 

*

 

The Mopsies were delighted that they were to have the Lady practically to themselves for the flight to the diamond fields … though by the fourth hour, when it appeared they would not be called upon to defend the ship, they began to get restless.

“How much further?” Lizzie whined, g
azing down at the endless stretch of land far below, covered in thin pines and punctuated occasionally by a lake or a river. “There ent a thing down there but trees.”

“And reindeer,” Maggie put
in, pointing. “There’s another ’erd.”

“They call them
caribou
in these parts,” Alice said. “That’s a big herd. Must be thousands of them.”

“I do hope Davina does not want to put down and shoot one.” Claire came to join her at the window as they sailed over the enormous
running flow of animals, which swerved under the airships’ three shadows and galloped in the opposite direction.

But the
Lady Lucy
did not alter her elevation, merely kept a steady speed and an unchanging heading of north by northwest.

Lizzie wandered back toward the engine, and a moment later popped back into the gondola. “Alice—we gots a pigeon coming.”

“A pigeon,” Alice repeated blankly. “Where on earth from? There is nothing here for miles.”

“It dropped out of the
Land
-whatsit’s belly, behind us. Maybe the count will fly over and visit.”

“Lizzie, the count is hardly likely to strap on a rocket pack at his age,” Claire sa
id, smiling at the picture. “It is probably a message between captains.”

But it was not.

When the pigeon tucked itself into its landing bay, Alice pulled the pouch out of its belly and read the piece of paper within. Then, her lips thinning, she handed it to Claire and stalked forward to relieve a protesting Jake at the tiller.

 

Dear Alice,

 

In the absence of a single moment alone with you, and in the face of Claire’s sudden change of mind, I have contrived to communicate in this rather unusual manner. The count is a gracious host, and his pigeons being otherwise unoccupied, he has allowed me the use of one.

I wish to apologize for my behavior of last night. It was unpardonable and you have every right not to speak to me.
sk tal manne

However, I hope that in time you will find it in your heart to forgive me. I should not like to see you take to the skies knowing that you had not.

 

Sincerely,

Andrew Malvern

 

Claire folded the letter under Lizzie’s inquisitive gaze. “I beg yer pardon, wot’s ’at?”

“It is a letter to Alice, and none of our business.”

“But she gave it to you to read.”

Drat Lizzie’s logical mind. “She did. It is from Mr. Malvern, on the
Margrethe
.”

Lizzie’s jaw dropped a little. “Mr. Malvern is sendin’
our Alice letters in the middle of the sky? Is ’e in love wiv
’er
, now, and not you?”

Good heavens. “
Lizzie, for pity’s sake, where on earth do you get your ideas?”

“Tisn’t an idea, is it, Mags?” She appealed to her sister, who was sitting at the map
station cutting up a slab of chocolate with Jake’s knife. “Mr. Malvern’s sweet on t’Lady, innit?”

Alice’s back
became ramrod straight as she tipped the wheel a degree to port, following the course of the
Lady Lucy
ahead of them.

“Aye.”
Maggie handed Jake a piece, then Lizzie and Claire. “Want some chocolate, Alice? It’s ever so fine.”

To Claire’s relief, Alice released the wheel long enough to take some. “If you
nosy nellies are done discussing my letter, you might clear out and let Jake see his charts. I want this route plotted before we moor, in case I ever need to come back.”

Maggie cleared away the chocolate—after carving off several healthy chunks—and Claire saw that Jake had been plotting their route all along. Careful notes had been made in his laborious capital letters, following the land forms.

“Well done, Jake,” she said with honest admiration.

His cheeks reddened. “I done it for Alice,” he mumbled as he drew a careful
line to the side of a curving river. “I remember wot the charts and the land look like, but she don’t.”

“His memory is prodigious,”
Claire told Alice. “It is almost as though his brain takes a photograph, with all its detail. If he can see something, he remembers it.”

“Wish I had that talent,” Alice said. “Would’ve come in handy in the schoolroom back when.”

“Ent never been to school,” Jake said, “’cept lately, when the Lady made us—er,” he corrected himself with a hasty look at her, “—helped us learn our letters and numbers.”

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“You can be glad she did, then,” Alice told him. “Navigation means reading a lot of letters and numbers, not just clouds and land forms. It means filling out forms at the port authority and
sending messages on pigeons to other captains.” She paused. “If a man intends to be legal, anyway. Ned Mose never held much truck with letters and forms. Quickest way to get permission, in his mind, was to wave a pistol.”

BOOK: Brilliant Devices
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