Romulus Buckle & the City of the Founders (The Chronicles of the Pneumatic Zeppelin, Book One) (42 page)

BOOK: Romulus Buckle & the City of the Founders (The Chronicles of the Pneumatic Zeppelin, Book One)
6.36Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

And then the world turned upside down.

The
Pneumatic Zeppelin
, and the Axial catwalk with it, suddenly rolled to port so violently that Buckle and the female steampiper, still locked together in battle, were nearly catapulted over the rail. To release a hand to stop one’s fall meant leaving one’s gut open to a stabbing thrust. So they fell together, twisting against the catwalk rail, and then down onto the ramp grating.

The airship pitched forward with a deafening groan as it rolled even harder to port. The Axial deck catwalk dropped away, tilting and continuing to tilt, the angle becoming so dramatic that it seemed as if the massive zeppelin might end up flat on her side.

Unseen crew members shouted and screamed under the noise, sounding far away.

This is it, Buckle thought, as his boots clawed for purchase on the catwalk that was now slipping under him like a steep wall, his hands locked with those of the female steampiper, their heads and bodies thumping into each other, their legs thrashing, as they clutched the catwalk railing. If the
Pneumatic Zeppelin
locked into a roll, she would collapse and plummet into the sea.

Buckle wrenched his sword arm back and forth, but the female steampiper held on. His back and elbows thumped into the catwalk rail supports, repeatedly knocking the air out of him. Buglights slipped from their hooks and fell in wobbling spirals alongside, bouncing off gas cells and tubes, shattering in exploding stars of escaping fireflies. The screams and groans of the airship’s superstructure, deafening in their cacophony, signaled that the entire construction was overburdened and about to fold.

Romulus Buckle did not mind dying. He really did not, especially if he could take a few steampipers with him. He would prefer to live, of course, but what truly agonized him was the realization that he was about to lose his zeppelin and his crew. And he would never save Elizabeth.

Well, they weren’t dead yet.

But whatever had happened, it was up to Sabrina to pull their arse out of the fire.

A PYRRHIC VICTORY

O
NLY A
M
ARTIAN COULD HAVE
made it to the piloting gondola with the speed Max did, as the
Pneumatic Zeppelin
heaved over on her side. Max bounded along angled decks and tilting staircases, crouching, leaping, pulling herself along the railings, as she negotiated her way down the keel.

It looked as if the steampiper attack had been driven off, but Max, fresh from the fray, heart pounding, muscles twitching, nose full of the scent of blood, was in a battle frenzy. The calm center of her brain watched the war beast within her with both contempt and awe; the fight had been a near-run thing, yes, but—and here was the rub—the Founders had not attempted to destroy the
Pneumatic Zeppelin
, they had tried to
seize
it.

Max dropped down the angled staircase of the piloting gondola and now, only a few feet from her engineering station, she was witnessing the end of her beloved airship.

The gondola was badly damaged, the port flank partially ripped away and open to the sky, the elevator wheel entirely missing, the port side of the nose dome shattered. And the black, black ocean was looming large below.

The bridge crew, splattered with glowing boil, fought to hold on as they struggled with levers and wheels that refused to respond. Nero and Garcia lay stunned under the ballast
station. Sabrina and Welly wrenched at the emergency elevator wheel, and Balthazar, his forehead running with blood, red-faced with effort, was throwing his muscles in with De Quincey’s as they attempted to bull the rudder wheel back into line.

Max vaulted the staircase rail and sprang through the air, grabbing hold of the ballast station bulkhead. The
Pneumatic Zeppelin
was almost lying on her side. The airship was not built to withstand the pressures now bending at her every girder and spar. The superstructure would soon collapse under its own weight, if the boilers did not first split loose of their securing rivets and roll to port like burning meteors, igniting the gas cells and blasting all of them to smithereens.

And the black sea gaped below, a gigantic, bottomless coffin.

Max planted her feet on the anchored station chair, avoiding the tilted deck.

“Max!” Sabrina shouted, ducking away from the headbanging current of air roaring through the ruins of the portside bulkhead. “We lost propeller number one!”

Max saw the chadburn shoved to all ahead flank. The engine-room sister dial on the chadburn had not moved in response—it still rested on all ahead full. Hopefully the engine-room crew was simply too busy to make the acknowledging ring on their end of the chadburn, rather than being incapacitated or dead.

Even with all of her damage, with three boilers shut down, and without a main propeller, the
Pneumatic Zeppelin
was responding, inching back toward an even keel, but it was not the quick recovery that was needed to save them all.

Sabrina knew this. “Hydrogen!” she screamed. “Maximum flood! Open all forward hydro tanks from compartments one
through ten and all portside tanks! Maximum emergency flood!”

“Aye!” Max shouted, almost hanging sideways from the instrument panel. She slapped up the forward master hydro lever on the hydrogen board, flooding the front ten compartments of the airship and the portside cells with every last cubic inch of hydrogen left in their main supply tanks.

If any of those gas cells were punctured, if any were on fire, if flames somewhere licked a cracked feeder pipe, well, they would pop, vanishing from existence in one stupendous flash. That was the way so many airships disappeared, without a story or a trace for those left behind. They would live on only in the memories of the clan and perhaps in a children’s story or two about a ghost zeppelin with a Martian aboard.

Max had never considered her own death. Not even when she had been in life-threatening situations before. The end was the end, was it not? It had simply never seemed to warrant much concern. But now, as she stared doom in the face once again, a painful emptiness surged inside her. An unwelcome yearning. She did not want to die. Not yet. She was not sure how, but something in her life was unfinished, unfulfilled. Max ordered her brain to snap out of it. Such worryings clouded the mind and dulled reaction.

Max gritted her teeth as she helped Welly, unsteady and bloody, to his feet. In the pit of her stomach she could feel the zeppelin rolling upright, her nose beginning to rise. She glanced out the hole and was surprised how much closer the sea was now, its whitecaps visible as it rose up to meet them.

“One hundred feet,” Welly shouted, lurching to the altimeter dial.

Her bow flush full of hydrogen, the
Pneumatic Zeppelin
lifted her nose and rolled upright in a spine-crushing swing to the sky.

“Good girl!” Welly cheered.

The zeppelin ascended steadily, though her bank to port was not entirely nulled, and she shook with an unhealthy vibration.

Max took a deep breath of cold sea air that salted her tongue. She could feel the terrible stress on the airframe bleeding away as the airship eased up and approached an even keel.

Sabrina, unclenching her hands one at a time from the emergency elevator wheel to stretch out her cramped fingers, gave Max a worried smile. “We lost Dunn,” she said.

“Yes,” Max replied. She had not known Ignatius Dunn very well. He had been new, a transfer from the
Khartoum
, and he had proved to be something of a loner. But he was a good elevatorman, and those were rare.

“Nice to see a little sky,” Balthazar gasped, eyeing the dark horizon ahead, where the sky and water each filled half of the view. Kellie darted out of her cubby and circled Balthazar’s leg; he rubbed her head in an almost absentminded way, his blood-streaked face looking haggard.

“I am having difficulty keeping her on her keel,” Sabrina said. “She still wants to roll over. We may have taken stabilizer damage when we lost the portside propeller.”

“Rudder is barely responding, Captain,” De Quincey said.

Max stepped to the engineering station and scrutinized her boil-lit system controls. Almost every needle and dial quivered on one red line or another. The deck shuddered again and again under her feet.

Sabrina gave Max a glance that Max instantly understood—they both doubted that the
Pneumatic Zeppelin
, in its current condition, would be able to make it home.

DOPPELGÄNGER

B
LOOD WAS RUNNING INTO
B
UCKLE

S
mouth. He was not sure where it was coming from. Perhaps he had bitten his tongue as he and the female steampiper gripped each other’s wrists, grunting as they tried to press their sword blades into each other’s knuckles, neck, or shoulder.

Even if the catwalk wasn’t tilted anymore, things were not going well for Buckle.

And the female steampiper was trying to head-butt him with her helmet, over and over again.

That was where the blood came from, Buckle realized. She had just thumped him on the chin.

“Damn your hide!” Buckle howled. “Quit it with the blasted helmet!” With the yanking of his head, Buckle felt dizzy, and the canted buglights still swinging on their rail hooks blurred and haloed in his eyes. The damned concussion from the explosion that had knocked him senseless earlier had not quite cleared out of his brainpan, and the whackwillies that clouded his senses now were also making him feel weak in the body.

The wound across his sword arm was bleeding severely, drenching his sword hilt with sticky, warm blood, the loss of which was draining his strength.

He spun loose of the female steampiper’s grip and shoved her away.

Time was working against Buckle and his zeppelin—so, characteristically, he elected to attack. The voice of Gweneviere Gray marched through his brain: quick to the lunge, quick to the thrust, quick to the lunge. Watch every feint, every preference, know their move before they make it. The female steampiper backed up in front of him, parrying his blows, sparks flying, her sword floating in front of her like a cobra’s head. She was damned good, but he had noticed a flaw in her defensive technique, a dropping of her guard just before she went to the thrust, and he waited for it. He eased back, readying for the counterattack he knew would come.

In the moment the female steampiper charged, Buckle saw her hand shift, lowering her guard. He struck, feinting low and whirling his blade upward, over her too-low defensive stroke, and caught her on the helmet, delivering a stunning blow with the pommel of his sword. The female steampiper staggered back, off balance, her sword now gripped vertically in front of her.

Buckle slashed the flat of his blade across her wrist, knocking her sword arm aside. It was a brutal blow, aimed at the main nerve just below the base of the hand, shocking the sinews in her arm and numbing her fingers. He heard her grunt in pain inside her helmet.

Buckle could have chopped her hand off there and then, but he was going for the capture. He wanted a prisoner, a member of the mysterious Founders clan to ask questions of. With a backhanded swing, he whipped his blade across hers, banging her sword out of her hand. The sword spun over the catwalk rail, descending into the gasbag vault in a whirl of silver flashes.

She tried to lunge up into him, to drive that damned helmet into his forehead again. He drove his sword fist into the chest of her cuirass, heaving her sideways against the rail, and with his free hand he grabbed the back of her helmet and yanked it off her head.

When the female steampiper spun around he saw her face, a beautiful, defiant face bordered by a wild, sweat-stuck shock of bright-red hair, a stunningly familiar face with a smattering of freckles about the nose, and pale-green, jade-colored eyes. It was the face of Sabrina Serafim—the same face, the hair just as fire red—a doppelgänger.

Buckle gasped. The helmet dropped from his hand and clanged on the catwalk grating.

The female steampiper bent low, reaching for a dagger in a sheath on her calf with her uninjured hand. Buckle slapped the blade away as she drew it, and it bounced off the catwalk. He brought the handle of his sword up under her chin, knocking her flat on her back.

Other books

Girlfriend Material by Melissa Kantor
Sunset Tryst by Kristin Daniels
All the Houses by Karen Olsson
Miami Blues by Charles Willeford
Slow Hand by Victoria Vane
Close Call by Laura DiSilverio
Black Flame by Gerelchimeg Blackcrane
Center Courtship by Liza Brown