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Gaslight Hades by Grace Draven (4)

CHAPTER FOUR


Nathaniel groaned under his breath at the sight of Lenore strolling down one of the cemetery paths to her father’s grave. Hidden by an ancient elm bedecked in ivy, he consumed her with his gaze, taking in the bombazine gown of unrelenting black, the upswept hair that revealed her pale neck and highlighted the line of her jaw.

She tortured him with these weekly visits to her father’s grave. Pulled from the opposite side of the sprawling cemetery as if by a lodestone, he sensed her presence the moment she passed through the entrance archway. Coves of hanging ivy and the shadows cast by crypts kept him hidden from view as he admired her profile and listened to the easy pitch of her voice.

She conversed with her father at each visit as if he were standing before her, his eyes bright with the avid curiosity he’d passed on to his only child. Nathaniel could have told her that Arthur’s spirit didn’t linger the way some did, that it had crossed the ethereal barrier; the body beneath the bricks had been an empty vessel at burial. Nathaniel was not, however, a cruel man. He recognized her need to hold onto some remnant of her loved one, to accept her sorrow and gradually let it go. Other mourners did the same. The difference was he didn’t eavesdrop on their conversations with the dearly departed.

Many might say he breached every form of courtesy in listening to her one-sided conversations with her father. He invaded her privacy, but he couldn’t stop or bring himself to feel any shame. He’d thought his love for Lenore Kenward had been ripped out of him along with his humanity. His first glimpse of her at her father’s graveside had re-ignited emotions once lost in the hazy memories of a distant life. Seeing her again had been an ecstasy. Knowing she was forever out of his reach an agony. He concentrated on her words and closed his eyes as a wave of homesickness washed over him.

“I visited with Nettie today, Papa. She sends her regards. The Pollux will be in port at Maldon for a few more days, then Nettie is taking her out. I’m to understand she will act as escort for the Andromeda. They will face the Redan.”

The Redan. The dimensional fissure. Images flashed behind Nathaniel’s closed lids.

He’d never get used to seeing it, never lose the terror that churned his guts and sucked the air from his lungs. The black tide of roiling clouds pounded the protective barrier, searching—always searching—for the one weakness that would allow it to breach the wards woven by Her Majesty’s best guild mages and rip the fissure even wider.

The nebula writhed and twisted, illuminated by flashes of sour yellow lightning that revealed the monstrous things surfing its waves—colossal maws baring teeth the length of cathedral spires, segmented legs of insectile abominations bristling with spiky black fur, and slick tentacles that whipped from the fissure to tongue the wards with a barbed stroke.

Wind, flecked with ice crystals and smelling of ozone, blasted across the Pollux’s gun batteries and glazed the empyrean-loaded carronades in a thin sheet of ice.

The gunnery crew shouted as one when a tentacle lashed out of the obscuring cloud, the curving claws stretched across its underside extending and retracting as it reached for the Pollux. The ship dove, narrowly avoiding the shredding appendage. The tentacle retreated into the miasma.

“Steady, men,” he called out to the other gunners.

“Look sharp, lads.” Nettie’s command traveled through the speaking tube, as bracing as the wind threatening to freeze his hands to the battery shield.

Despite the numbing cold, sweat trickled down his ribs beneath his heavy woolens. The fissure contorted and labored as if trying to whelp the unearthly life squirming within it.

Three tentacles burst out of the nebula and struck the ship.

“Fire!” he roared into the link. “Fire!”

Crimson light filled his vision as the carronades belched empyrean from their barrels. An explosion deafened him. The Pollux squealed and yawed hard to starboard. Wood shrapnel and broken tether lines exploded into the air. A wash of heat splattered his face. Blinded, he wiped at his eyes and came away with a glove smeared in blood. Something heavy struck his shoulder and bounced across the gunnery deck—an arm, shredded at the shoulder joint, and no body attached to it.

The Pollux suddenly pitched back on her rudder, sending him careening into the nearest cannon. His tether cable jerked taut, smashing his stomach against his backbone. Scorched wool filled his nostrils. He clutched at a broken railing to stay upright. Hot metal burned through his glove, searing his palm. He gritted his teeth against the pain and held on. The agonized screams of men rent to pieces filled his ears.

He looked up—far, far up to the boiling sky where an arching nightmare laced with curving white claws hurtled toward the wounded Pollux. The deck bucked hard beneath his feet. He lost his grip on the railing and jittered across the slick surface like a marionette dancing to the tune of the shuddering ship...

...the shuddering ship.

Nathaniel’s eyes snapped open. He inhaled a strangled breath. A voice, achingly familiar, cut short its casual monologue.

“Who’s there?”

He blinked, desperate to clear his mind of the images that seized and held him fast in frozen horror.

“Who’s there?” The sharp tones of Lenore’s repeated question, didn’t quite disguise her fear. She peered into the ivy shielding him from view, poised to take flight at the slightest motion, her brown eyes wide in her pale face.

Nathaniel breathed deep, willing away the terror, the memory of the churning nebula, the whipping tentacle.

...the shuddering ship.

“Forgive me, miss,” he said in a smooth voice and stepped from the ivy’s concealment. “I didn’t mean to frighten you.”

Despite his knowledge of her character, he still expected to her run. She didn’t. Instead, she wilted, her stiff shoulders relaxing in obvious relief. It was a first for him in this new incarnation. Guardians weren’t persecuted outright, but they were shunned and feared. Most people avoided them as if they were plague-ridden. Lenore wasn’t most people.

She drew closer, head tilted. “The Guardian.”

He acknowledged her designation with a low bow but said no more.

Her somber features softened a little, and her eyes warmed. “You’ve done a fine job taking care of Highgate’s citizens.” She gestured to Arthur’s grave. “Not a brick moved. Even the flowers I placed here last time are as they lay.” She bent to trace the discolored edge of a wilted white rose with one fingertip. It had taken all of Nathaniel’s willpower not to claim the small bouquet for himself or at least the ribbon that bound it together.

“It isn’t safe to be here alone, miss. Have you no companion?” Some things never changed. The one time he’d remarked on Lenore’s penchant for taking solitary jaunts, she’d arched an eyebrow at him and tipped her chin in such way that he braced himself for a setdown. She wore the exact same expression now.

“This isn’t Whitechapel, sir, and we’re in broad daylight with many perfectly respectable people nearby taking the air.” She shrugged. “Besides, had I a maid or companion with me, she would no doubt have abandoned me to my fate the moment you made an appearance.” The eyebrow lowered, and she offered a faint smile.

He tipped his head. “While I might argue the wisdom of taking the air of London, I cannot refute the last. Guardians aren’t sought after for their charming wit and illuminating conversation.”

“True, but there is a difference between avoidance and fear.” A puzzled line creased the smooth skin of her forehead. “People flee when they see Guardians, as though their lives are in immediate danger if they so much as glimpse you, yet I’ve never heard of a Guardian doing harm to anyone.”

That was because he and his brethren made certain there was nothing to investigate or report when they did away with resurrectionists. The only evidence left of the ones Nathaniel had immolated were soot marks on the grass, and those had washed away with the next inevitable rain. All but one body thief’s soul had crossed the Veil, and Nathaniel ignored that ghostly voice which joined the chorus of others. He admitted none of this to Lenore.

“We’re frightful sights to look upon, and our choice of employment far too macabre to discuss over tea.”

Her mouth tightened, a sure sign she was settling in for an argument. “Those aren’t adequate reasons to flee as if the Dartmoor Hound were snapping at your coat or dress hem.”

“For some, those are perfectly acceptable reasons.” He suspected people would be more inclined to linger and stare if they saw the Hound. It was a creature far removed from themselves in every way. He, on the other hand, was still a little too similar for comfort. After Harvel’s experiment, and with gehenna-tainted blood in his veins, he was no more human than the Hound and a hundred times more terrifying. Like those fearful folk, he’d once been an ordinary person. Now he represented the horrors that might have happened to any one of them but by the grace of God had not. In his observations, people feared the almost far more than the what if.

The ever-present pall over London deepened. Clouds, heavy with rain, lowered even more. Drizzle that had threatened all afternoon finally fell to beat an arrhythmic tattoo on High Gate’s crypts and verdant landscape.

Lenore snapped open the umbrella looped on her wrist and swung it over her head. She raised an eyebrow. “Improper or not, it seems hardly fair that you become drenched while I remain dry. I’m willing to share.”

Nathaniel smiled a little, as charmed by her offer cloaked in challenge as he was by the memory of her subduing a belligerent pack of butchers boys on a Camberwell street with the same umbrella.

Rain didn’t bother him. He acted as sentinel here in all weather, had even survived a lightning strike once with only the acrid smell of burned hair to mark the event. Still, her offer tempted him beyond words. To be close to her once more, breathing in her scent of bergamot and lemon water and hearing the gentle rise and fall of her breathing...

“Your offer of shelter is kind, miss, but it’s only water. Everything dries in time.” He noted the continually darkening sky. Once the rain stopped, the fog would roll in, blotting out what little light still remained and turning the city into a murky sea. “You should return home. Even the hardiest person doesn’t stroll through a pea-souper if they can help it.” He frowned. “And it isn’t safe for those alone, even when you aren’t in Whitechapel.”

A soft whirring sound overhead forestalled her reply. Nathaniel followed her gaze to watch one of the many airships dotting London’s sky drift past them. It flew low under the cloud ceiling, the whirring noise that of the two rotating disks that spun around its girth at bow and stern. Nathaniel recognized the ship; so did Lenore.

“After the Pollux, my father was always partial to the Merope. Her design made it easy to retrofit her engines for adiabatic demagnitization.” Her smile was wistful. “He was almost as proud to see her inaugural flight after the upgrade as he was to watch the Pollux after retrofit.”

Rain sheeted off the ship’s sleek exterior as it glided past them. Nathaniel had sailed on the Merope once years ago when Nettie brought him with her to inspect the gun batteries for ideas on how to improve upon her own ship’s arsenal. He’d come away unimpressed. The engines were indeed a marvel, no longer subject to overheating from the volatile empyrean used to fuel them, but the Pollux’s firepower remained superior. The Merope was built for transport, the Pollux for war, and their designs reflected their different purposes.

“She’s a good ship for a thermal and her pilot one of the best. He’d have to be to keep her from porpoising every time the throttle settings change.”

The weight of Lenore’s measuring gaze rested heavily on him. “You know something of airships,” she said in a voice both curious and admiring.

“A fact here and there,” he replied. The common knowledge they shared—his through experience as a deckhand, hers through design and theory—had provided him with the perfect excuse to talk with her when he visited her father’s workshop. She’d seduced him as much with her passionate descriptions of membrane structures and buoyancy ratings as she had with her beauty.

She asked him a question that made the breath die in his chest. “Would you like to sail in one in the future?”

Of everything he’d lost since the Pollux’s near disaster at the Redan and Dr. Harvel’s experiments, the greatest—besides Lenore herself—was his post on Nettie’s ship. Any ship for that matter. He strove to keep his voice even and free of bitterness lest she sense it and question him, as had always been her wont.

“I’m neither a creature of air nor ocean, miss, but of earth.” He swung an arm to encompass the cemetery with its wide field of headstones, crypts and mournful angels. “My place is here.”

Despite his best efforts, something of his regret must have colored his words. Lenore’s pitying gaze turned his stomach. He steered the conversation back to her. “And you, miss? Would you like to see the world from an airship gondola?”

Her expression lightened, but his delight in the change was short-lived. “I would, and I may yet have the chance. I’ve requested a post on the Pollux, serving under Captain Widderschynnes.” She grinned, unaware of Nathaniel’s growing horror. “I’ll know in a few days if I have a place.”

Nathaniel stared at her, no longer seeing a woman clothed in black under an equally dark umbrella silvered with rain, but the gunnery deck of the Pollux slippery with ice and blood.

“Sir, what troubles you?”

He blinked, refocusing on Lenore’s pale features and the puzzlement clouding her expression. He shook his head. “I beg your pardon, miss. I’m more familiar with the ships than I am with their captains.” A lie as white as his hair. “But Widderschynnes is well-known.”

Lenore’s shoulders straightened even more with pride, as if the accolades were hers instead of Nettie’s. “She is a fine skyrunner captain—the best in the fleet, I daresay.”

He couldn’t agree more, and the second he laid eyes on Nettie Widderschynnes again, he’d wring her neck like a Christmas goose. What was she thinking to even consider allowing Lenore on a battleship?

Rain fell harder, and Lenore huddled tighter under her umbrella. “Forgive me. I’ve trapped you out here for a good soaking.”

Nathaniel shrugged. “As I mentioned earlier, miss, it’s merely rain. I’m in no danger.” He gestured toward the cemetery entrance. “You, however, could catch your death out here. Allow me to escort you to the gates and hail transport.”

Her soft laughter almost blunted the terror riding him at the thought of her on the Pollux. Almost. “You’re very kind, but as we’ve both witnessed, you...intimidate most people. I think a driver would whip the poor horse to a faster pace if he saw you and abandon me to my fate.” She held up a gloved hand to thwart any argument. “You may accompany me to the gate and wait there if you wish until I’ve caught a hackney or omnibus. Agreed?”

He nodded, and they started toward Highgate’s grand entrance. Twice he gripped her elbow to keep her from slipping on the wet lanes. Her arm rested delicate and warm in his too-brief grip. What would she do were he to take her in his arms, not as Nathaniel Gordon, but as the deathless Guardian, armored and strange?

God, he missed her.

She bid him goodbye at the gate. “Until next time, sir, should I see you again when I visit my father.”

“Safe journey, miss.” Come back to me, Lenore. I’ll be waiting. The words flowed through his mind and remained tightly behind his teeth. He doffed an imaginary topper at her and bowed.

His ordinary action somehow startled her. Badly. She gasped, her eyes wide beneath her bonnet. The umbrella shook above her, and the cloth of her glove stretched tight across her knuckles where she clutched the handle in a death grip.

“Miss Kenward?” he inquired and almost reached for her. He dropped his hand at the last moment, fingers twitching with the desire to touch her.

Lenore blinked and shook her head before offering him a rueful half smile. “Forgive me. I remembered...” She shook her head a second time as if to clear her thoughts. Nathaniel wondered at the sudden glossiness in her eyes: tears.

They exchanged farewells a second time before parting; he to linger in the gate’s shadow and keep watch, she to stand at the edge of the road.

She’d been right that he intimidated others, but any driver attempting to bypass Lenore as she stood in the rain waiting for a ride would have found himself suddenly off his high seat and on his backside in a puddle while Nathaniel himself took her home. Fortunately, for all involved, an empty omnibus halted a few minutes later, for which he was grateful, and carried her away from him.

He waited until he no longer heard the clop of hooves on cobblestone before setting off eastward to the Bishopsgate station. His reputation as a vigilant, lethal Guardian served him well. Resurrectionists hesitated to rob Highgate of its newly buried citizens during daylight, and Nathaniel didn’t think they’d try again anytime soon—at least not now when he abandoned his post to seek the person who once commanded his most devout loyalty.

The streets were almost empty of people. Most who hadn’t found shelter indoors huddled in doorways, and none accosted him. He avoided the main roads, keeping to side lanes and squalid alleyways ankle-deep in water. If any saw him pass, they said nothing, wishing no acquaintance with an apparition possessing eyes that resembled gateways to Hell.

Nathaniel made quick time to the train station, unencumbered by crowds. The station itself offered numerous places for him to blend or disappear, concealed by shadows and a Guardian’s unique talent for being overlooked by even the most observant gazes.

He avoided the passenger trains. Stowing away was easiest on the freight lines run by freight guards instead of the more eagle-eyed conductor guards. He hid in an empty car on a freight bound for Maldon and its vast mooring field of airships, tapping his foot impatiently and cursing his former captain under his breath the entire journey. The trip took a little more than an hour, and he was off the train and out of the station before anyone noted his presence.

Maldon’s airfield stretched over a flat of land next to a farmer’s fields, but this one’s crop flew instead of fed. At least a dozen airships of every size and design rocked gently at their tall mooring masts. Nathaniel paused for a moment to admire them. The sweet ache of recollection filled him. These majestic lasses had occupied his dreams since he was a boy and caused the rift between him and his family. He never regretted his course of action—to serve in the fleet instead of on the family estate—even when he fell from the Pollux’s deck and into the Atlantic’s frigid depths.

The ache grew when he spotted his previous mistress docked at her mast tower. He knew every inch of her as intimately as he did Lenore’s own supple frame and loved both with equal ferocity. The ship’s thin metal envelope sparkled in the wet gloom, beckoning him to stroke her once more with an affectionate hand.

He’d happily stand all night staring at her, but he came with a purpose, and it didn’t include hours of forlorn, lovesick gazes that put a green lad to shame. Mud sucked at his feet, and the fog rising off the fields didn’t wait for the rain to stop. It rose to his knees to swirl around his legs, creeping ever higher. By the time he reached the mast tower, a gray shroud enveloped him completely.

A pea-souper only worked in the favor of thieves and murderers, and in this case, Guardians as well. The fog lapped over the Pollux’s keel, obscuring the control room gondola windows and any occupants. A clearer day and alarms would have sounded across the field, along with the warning crack of rifle shot, at the sight of him shimmying up the tower like a spider on a skeleton.

The long spike attached to the tip of the airship’s nose aided in tethering her to the mooring mast and, much to Nettie’s disgust, earned her the nickname the Narwhal. Despite the ridicule, the steel horn had saved the Pollux numerous times, generating a buffer shield that protected her from attack by both enemy ships and the otherworldly monstrosities lurking in the dimensional rift.

The shield was powered down, and Nathaniel used the spike as a death-defying bridge to cross onto the airship’s broad back instead of the platform the crew used to enter the ship’s interior. Rain made the metal sheathing slippery as ice. His balance was exceptional, but he grasped the cable that ran the length of the ship like a sliver of spine from some prehistoric beast and raced toward the stern. Halfway there, he used the line to sling downward, snagged a second cable stretching from one of the engine gondolas and caught his footing on the ladder leading from the gondola to an opening in the ship’s hull. He slipped inside unseen to drop silently onto a narrow catwalk.

He breathed a longing sigh at the familiar view. The belly of the beast. Longitudinal and transverse girders filled his vision--the rigid frame that gave the ship her streamlined shape. Corded and wire netting ran from girder to girder, completing the massive metal spiderweb. The catwalk he stood on ran perpendicular to the much longer gangplank that stretched from the Pollux’s bow to her stern, suspended above the ship’s helium and empyrean-filled gasbags.

Many a trip out, he had walked these narrow planks and climbed the girders. His fingers danced across a section of framework, following a span of varnished duralumin tubes riveted together. He imagined the Pollux sang to him down the weave of wire bracing, her metallic serenade welcoming home a much-missed, if wayward son. It was good to be near her, inside her and see her whole and undamaged once more.

Voices originating from the rear gondola spurred him toward the ladder that spanned the distance between gasbag deck and keel corridor. He wasn’t fast enough.

“Oy! Did you see ‘im?”

“See what?”

The first voice, exasperated, grew louder. “Looked like a vicar climbing into the keel!” Disbelieving laughter followed the remark, but the chase was on.

Nathaniel dropped from the ladder into the narrow corridor. Gaslights attached to long tubing flickered overhead and ran parallel to the speaking tube and water line. His familiarity with the ship served him well. Unless Nettie had builders gut the Pollux and change everything—which, knowing Nettie, seemed unlikely—he’d find her quarters near the ship’s bow. He just needed to reach her without encountering more of the crew.

His luck didn’t hold. A crewwoman almost cannoned into him as she emerged from a berth doorway. Her surprised shriek set his ears to ringing as he swung around her at a dead run toward the bow. Were he truly a vicar, her colorful curses would have set his ears alight.

He raced past crew quarters and storage rooms containing water ballasts, weaponry, fuel and food. In different circumstances, he might have laughed at the shouts behind him.

“There’s a churchman on the ship!”

“See? Mary saw him too!”

“Why’s he running away?”

“Ain’t no soul on this ship can be saved that fast.”

Others joined the pack as more of the crew sought out the source of the commotion.

A voice rose above the rested, its tone one of revulsion. “Bloody hell, that ain’t no vicar. It’s a bonekeeper!”

Nathaniel paused to glance briefly over his shoulder. That alone brought the foremost pursuer to a sudden halt, causing the line behind to crash into him. They went down like pins in a nine pin match. The resulting chaos bought him a few moments of reprieve but cost him his goal.

He turned to flee again and found himself staring down the business end of a double-barreled Howdah pistol. The woman holding it in a steadfast grip resembled a ragged and beaded trull straight out of a Whitechapel crack. The cold gleam in her eyes warned she’d put a bullet in him if he so much as twitched an eyelash.

“Mate, you’re either very lost or very stupid. This ain’t a graveyard yet, but to back-slang it onto my ship is a sure way to see you end up berthing next to the dead you watch over.”

Nathaniel exhaled a slow breath and bowed, never breaking eye contact. “Captain Widderschynnes,” he said softly, his great affection for her surging into his voice. Surprise flickered in her flat stare. “It’s been far too long.”

Her aim never wavered. “You’ll pardon me if I don’t recall our association.”

He knew that tone. Step lively or be shot. “I wish to speak with you.” The crew gathered behind him, a silent, breathing beast ready to tear him apart at its mistress’s signal. “Alone.”

One of Nettie’s eyebrows lifted in a doubtful arch. “Is that so? I’m not in the habit of having chinwags with Guardians.”

“I’m here regarding Lenore Kenward.”

Nettie’s finger flexed on the trigger, and Nathaniel’s body reacted. Fabric transformed to steel, encasing him from head to foot in black armor. Various cries calling upon the Almighty filled the narrow hallway.

“‘Oly mother o’ ‘Baub!”

“Blue damn, it’s a demon!”

To her credit, Nettie didn’t blink, even when the only thing she saw of Nathaniel were his eyes behind a mask of plate steel. She gave orders to her crew. “Back to work and carry on proper.”

A chorus of reluctant “Aye, Captain,” answered her, and Nathaniel listened as the crewmen backed slowly down the corridor, in no rush to leave Nettie alone with him.

Her stoic expression grew annoyed. “Move it!” she snapped, and this time the running thud of boots filled the space. Nathaniel himself had to squelch his own reaction to the order and not race after them.

His armor softened, changing back to cloth and the ensemble that many mistook as a vicar’s. She might still shoot him, but her trigger finger had relaxed. She gestured toward the door at the bow. “Through there,” she said. “I’ll follow.”

Once inside her quarters, she motioned for him to sit in one of the chairs facing her desk. Nettie’s quarters were exactly as he remembered, even down to the heavy silk coverlet folded neatly at the foot of her bed—a gift from the crew a decade earlier. The comfortable chamber reflected a mix of both her rank and her personal tastes—books, maps, souvenirs from her many travels, some beautiful, others macabre.

She settled into her own chair opposite him and laid the pistol down within easy reach of her right hand. Her left hand, hidden from view, rested idle in her lap—or so she liked her visitor to believe.

Nathaniel knew better. The danger to himself was no less now than when he stood in the corridor staring cross-eyed at the Howdah. He had no doubt Nettie’s index finger caressed the trigger of the loaded 12-gauge break-action shotgun mounted and braced under the desk, its sawn-off double barrels guaranteed to put down anyone sitting in the chair he now occupied.

“You’ve always been a suspicious sort, Captain.” He hid a grin when her eyes narrowed to slits. “I’m no danger to you or anyone else on the Pollux.”

“Then I suggest you crack the bell, mate, and make it quick, or I might just shoot you for playing games and wasting my time.” Her lips tightened, and she spoke the words through her teeth. Lamplight bounced off the beads in her wild hair and cast her sharp features in partial shadow.

He nodded. Nettie never issued idle threats. “Miss Kenward told me she requested a post on this ship.”

Nettie cocked her head to one side, puzzlement replacing hostility. “And why would she say such a thing to the Highgate Guardian? I knew you two spoke, but I didn’t think you chums.”

The bottom of his stomach dropped out at her statement. “She mentioned me to you?” He closed his eyes for a moment, relishing the idea.

“Just today in fact. You’ve watched over her father’s grave.” Nettie’s fingers tapped out a drumming rhythm next to the Howdah. “And now you’re here, making her affairs yours. Why is that?” She perched on her chair, a harpy ready to rip his face off with her talons if she didn’t like his answer.

“The Pollux is a risky mistress to serve on, a battleship suitable only for the most experienced crewmen. Her architect’s blue-stocking daughter has no place on such a ship, even if serving under so able a captain.”

Nettie snorted, her suspicious gaze stripping him down to bone. “Be that true or not, what business is it of yours?”

He struggled with how to adequately convey his fear without revealing why. “Her safety is of utmost importance to me.” He tried another tack. “I knew her parents. Jane Kenward will disapprove and Arthur Kenward’s spirit will be troubled.”

Nathaniel knew the first to be absolute. The second—he wasn’t so sure. Arthur had given his only child a great deal of freedom when he was alive, encouraging her various exploits and thirst for adventure. His spirit might well applaud the idea of his daughter serving on the ship he designed and Nettie captained.

“The chance to watch Jane Kenward pop a stay-lace isn’t the best way of convincing me Lenore shouldn’t come aboard.” Nettie’s hand, as free of jewelry as her hair was heavy with it, played across the Howdah’s grip. “As for Arthur, either you just told me a lie or you didn’t know the man at all.” The dead flatness returned to her voice. “I don’t like liars.”

Clearly, almost dying once wasn’t enough for him. His fate demanded he waltz with the Reaper twice. He forced back the warning crawl of armor on his skin and leaned forward to rest his elbows on the desk in a casual pose. “Do you want her to meet the same end as Nathaniel Gordon?”

Nettie’s eyes blazed. He barely heard the cracking echo of the shotgun before a round of shot pummeled him point-blank in the stomach. The chair rocked under him, and he bent over with a low wheeze, certain he’d just been kicked in the gut by a pair of Shire horses. Wet heat streamed down his torso, and silvery blood painted the strands of his loose hair where they dragged through the growing pool of gore in his lap.

“Damnation, Nettie Eliza Whitley,” he said between gasps. “That hurt!”