Of course, now there was a fresh worry to ponder.
As another female, Dr. Barlow might notice a few odd things the other crewmen hadn’t. And she was a clever-boots, with all that science under her bowler. If anyone was going to guess Deryn’s little secret, it would be this lady boffin.
“Brilliant,” Deryn muttered, taking hold of the heavy trunk and hurrying for the ship.
SEVENTEEN
The land frigate stood atop a distant rise, its signal flags snapping in the breeze.
“That’s a bother,” Klopp said, lowering his field glasses. “She’s a thousand-tonner,
Alek took the glasses from Klopp and raised them to his eyes.
The
“What’s she doing here at the Swiss border?” Alek asked. “Isn’t there a war on?”
“One might think she was waiting for us,” Count Volger said.
“See that crow’s nest?” Klopp pointed at a tall mast rising from the frigate’s gun deck. Two tiny figures stood on the platform mounted at its top. “That lookout tower isn’t standard equipment.”
“And the lookouts are facing this way—into Austria,” Bauer said. The pilot’s cabin was crowded, the other three arranged around Alek like a family portrait. “I doubt they’re stationed here to protect us from invasion.”
“No, they’re here to keep us in,” Alek said, lowering the field glasses. “They knew we were headed to Switzerland, thanks to me.”
Count Volger shrugged. “Where else would we go?”
Alek supposed he was right. With the war spreading every day, Switzerland was the only country staying neutral—the last place for fugitives and deserters to hide.
But it still didn’t seem fair, running straight into this land frigate. They’d been weaving back and forth across Austria for more than a month— creeping through forests for a few hours every night. They’d been hunted, shot at, even dive-bombed by an aeroplane. They’d spent whole days scavenging parts and fuel from farm machines and junkyards, just enough to keep the Stormwalker running. And finally they’d reached a passage to safety, only to find it guarded by a giant metal spider.
It was certain the
“How far are we from the border?” Alek asked.
“You’re looking at it, sir,” Bauer said, pointing past the frigate. “Those mountains are in Switzerland.”
Klopp shook his head. “Might as well be Mars. Backtracking to another mountain pass will take a week at least.”
“We’d never make it,” Alek said, flicking the kerosene gauge. The needle shivered at the halfway mark, enough for a few days at most.
Fuel had been hard to come by after Alek’s foolishness at Lienz. Horse scouts swept the carriage paths and zeppelins patrolled the skies—all because he’d behaved like a spoiled brat.
But at least Volger had been right about one thing. Prince Aleksandar of Hohenberg had not been forgotten.
“We can’t go around them,” Alek decided. “So we’ll go right through them.”
Klopp shook his head. “She’s designed for stern chases, young master. Her big guns are in the forward turrets— she can pound us without turning sideways.”
“I didn’t say we’d
Klopp shrugged. “Too risky. In the Balkan Wars all the walker battles were in broad daylight.”
“Exactly,” Alek said. “But we’ve crossed the length of Austria in darkness. We’ve mastered a skill that no one else even dares to practice.”
“
“Nonsense, Klopp. You’re still the far better pilot.”
The man shook his head. “In daylight, perhaps. But if we’re doing any running in the dark, it should be you at the saunters.”
Alek frowned. This whole last month he’d assumed old Klopp was letting him pilot for the sake of practice. The idea that he had surpassed his old master of mechaniks was unsettling. “Are you sure?”
“Sure as blazes,” Klopp said, clapping Alek on the back. “What do you say, Count? We’ve given our young Mozart here enough practice in night-walking. Might as well put him to the test!”
They started the engines just after sunset.
The last rays still shone like pearl on the snowy peaks in the distance. But long shadows stretched from the mountains, plunging the pass into darkness.
Alek’s hand moved to the control saunters—
Suddenly a pair of searchlights lanced out from the frigate. They swept across the dark expanse—bright knives slicing the night into pieces.
His hands dropped from the controls. “They know we’re here.”
“Nonsense, young master,” Klopp said. “They’ve realized by now that we move at night. But two searchlights can’t cover the whole border.”
Alek hesitated. There were always rumors of German secret weapons: listening devices or machines that peered through fog and darkness with radio waves. “What if they have more than just lights?”
“Then we’ll improvise.” Klopp smiled.
Alek watched the searchlights carefully. Their paths across the valley seemed to have no pattern. Staying hidden would hinge on pure luck, which didn’t seem like enough. This plan had been all his idea; any disaster was on Alek’s head alone.
He forced the thought away, remembering his father’s favorite line from the poet Goethe:
The real hazard was hiding here in Austria. If they tried to avoid any risks, they’d be found sooner or later. He placed his hands on the saunters again.
“Ready?” he said.
“Whenever you are, Alek.” Count Volger pulled himself up into the top hatch, resting his feet on the back of the pilot’s seat. The toes of his boots tapped Alek’s shoulders, both at once—the signal to move ahead.
Alek gripped the control saunters and took a first step.
Volger’s boot pressed his left shoulder softly, and Alek nudged the walker leftward. It was annoying, being controlled like a puppet, but from topside the count had a better view.
“Easy now,” Klopp said as the walker leaned forward. The path led steeply downhill, into the long, narrow valley that the
Alek nodded, his grip tightening as the walker skidded down the slope a little.
“Drop the rear anchor, Hoffman,” Klopp said into the intercom.
A rattle of unwinding chain came from behind them. Alek felt the tug of the anchor as it cut through roots and undergrowth, dragged along like a child’s toy.
“Bothersome, I know,” Klopp said. “But this way we won’t roll if we fall.”