Alek realized that a huge shadow was moving beneath him, steam huffing from its joints into the cool night air. One of the great claws was reaching out.…
He fell, dropping into the giant metal hand. The impact knocked the breath from him, sending pain shooting through his sore ribs. He skidded for a moment, the buttons of his tunic snapping against steel, but the claw closed into a huge bowl around him.
He looked up—the arm was still moving, carrying him closer to the walker. Its face was splitting open, like a viewport cranking wider and wider. A moment later the pilot’s cabin was exposed.
There were three men inside. Two stood leaning over the edge, peering down at the alley, pistols gripped tightly in their hands. The third sat at the walker’s controls, a curious look on his face.
Clouds of steam swirled around them, puffing from the joints of the machine. Alek realized that its engines were still silent; it had used stored pneumatic pressure to spring to life.
“You speak German,” the man at the controls said. “And yet the Germans are chasing you. How interesting.”
“We’re not Germans,” Alek answered. “We’re Austrian.”
The man frowned. “But still Clankers. Are you deserters?”
Alek shook his head. His allegiances might have been tangled lately, but he was no deserter. “May I ask who
The man smiled and worked at the controls. “I’m the fellow who just saved you from falling to your death.”
“Sir, should I …,” came Bauer’s voice from the rooftop, but Alek waved him silent.
The giant hand drew closer to the walker’s head, and opened flat. As Alek rose to his feet, one of the other two men said something in a language he didn’t recognize. It sounded more like Italian than the Turkish he’d heard on the streets today. It also sounded unfriendly.
The first man laughed. “My friend wants to throw you back, because he thinks you’re Germans. Perhaps we should pick another language.”
Alek raised an eyebrow. “By all means. Do you speak English?”
“Exceedingly well.” The man switched effortlessly. “I studied at Oxford, you know.”
“Well, then. My name is Aleksandar.” Alek bowed a little, then pointed up at the rooftop, where Bauer was staring down, wide eyed. “And this is Hans, but I’m afraid he has no English.”
“I am Zaven.” The man waved a hand dismissively at the others. “These two barbarians speak nothing by Romanian and Turkish. Ignore them. But I can see you are an educated gentleman.”
“Thank you for saving me, sir. And for not … throwing me back.”
“Well, you can’t be all bad, if the Germans are chasing you.” Zaven’s eyes twinkled. “Did you do something to annoy them?”
“I suppose so.” Alek took a slow breath, choosing his words carefully. “They’ve been hunting me since before the war started. They had issues with my father.”
“Aha! A second-generation rebel, as am I!”
Alek looked at the others. “So that’s what you three are? Revolutionaries?”
“We are more than three, sir. There are thousands of us!” Zaven snapped upright in his piloting chair and saluted. “We are the Committee for Union and Progress.”
Alek nodded. He remembered the name from six years before, when the rebellion had demanded a return to elected government. But the Germans had stepped in to crush them, keeping the sultan in charge.
“So you were part of the Young Turks’ rebellion?”
“Young Turks? Fah!” Zaven spat into the alley below. “We split off from those cretins years ago. They think that only Turks are true Ottomans. But as you can see, the Committee takes in all kinds.” He gestured at the other two men. “My friends are Vlachs, I am Armenian, and we have Kurds, Arabs, and Jews among us. And plenty of Turks, of course!” He laughed.
Alek nodded slowly, remembering the chalk scratchings in the passageways below, some sort of code assembled from the empire’s jumble of tongues.
And all of them fighting the Germans—together.
For a moment Alek felt unsteady on the giant metal hand. Perhaps it was just an echo of his near fall, but his heart was racing again.
These men were allies. At last, here was a chance to do more than simply run and hide, a way to strike back at the powers that had murdered his parents.
“Mr. Zaven,” Alek said, “I think you and I are going to be friends.”
TWENTY-TWO
“Get out, you barking horrible spice!” Deryn yelled, then sneezed for the hundredth time that day. The sultan and his entourage would be aboard in an hour, and the whole crew was due in full-dress uniform in half that time. But no matter how hard she scrubbed, the red stain in her shirt wouldn’t budge.
She was well and truly stuffed.
A yip came from the door of her cabin, and Deryn turned to see Tazza bouncing happily on his hind legs, a fresh bone in his mouth. That was one benefit of Dr. Barlow’s mad scheme of pretending to give the
The lady boffin appeared, right behind her thylacine. She’d managed to dig another dazzling dress out of her luggage, and a hat with abundant ostrich feathers that matched her long white gloves. Even Tazza was wearing a fancy collar, a band of diamonds glittering around his neck.
“Mr. Sharp,” she said, and tutted. “Once more I find you in a state of disrepair.”
Deryn held up her dress shirt. “Sorry, ma’am. But this is ruined, and I haven’t got another!”
“Well, it’s lucky you won’t be serving the sultan this evening. Mr. Newkirk will be stepping in for you.”
“But the whole crew is meant to be in full dress!”
“Not those with more important matters to contend with.” Dr. Barlow handed over the thylacine’s leash. “After you walk Tazza, please join me and the captain in the navigation room. I think you’ll find our conversation interesting.”
Tazza tried to pull her out the door, but Deryn stood firm. “Pardon me, ma’am. The barking
The lady boffin smiled coolly. “Partly. But it also concerns your recent behavior. If I were you, I wouldn’t dawdle on your way there.”
The navigation room was at the bow of the ship, just below the bridge. It was a small, quiet cabin where the captain sometimes retreated to think, or to have an awkward conversation with a wayward crewman.
Deryn felt her stomach tighten as she drew near. What if the officers had noticed her fencing lessons with Count Volger? Whenever Deryn brought him a meal, she stayed for twenty minutes or so, practicing swordplay with mop handles.
But the captain himself wouldn’t issue a reprimand for mere dawdling, would he? Unless he also knew that she’d been supplying Volger with newspapers, and had even told him about Admiral Souchon and the
But when the lady boffin had announced this meeting, she’d been
The late afternoon sun was slanting in through the windows that curved around the navigation room. Dr. Barlow and the captain were already there, along with the bosun and Dr. Busk, the officers all in resplendent dress