The Cold Beneath Read online

Page 6


  Lightbridge’s smile faltered, turning at the edges ever so slightly. “See her again …” He let the word trail off as if unsure what I was asking.

  I suspected I was causing discomfort, but at the time I had no idea why. “Maybe she—”

  “Gideon,” Geraldine interjected. “Tell us again how you rescued your regiment from certain doom.”

  Lightbridge returned to his jovial self at the sound of her question. “Which time?” Then he burst into another round of uproarious laughter.

  The uneasy tension between Geraldine and Albert was not lost on me. There was something afoot behind those furtive glances, but I knew not what. Later, after dinner was finished and I excused myself to the solitude of my room, Geraldine caught up with me in the hallway. By some conspiring whim of fate, her room in the oversized dwelling was just across from mine.

  “Are you nervous about tomorrow?” she asked as we walked to our respective rooms.

  “Yes,” I answered. “It’s been some time since I’ve traveled such a distance.”

  “You get used to it. Travel, I mean.”

  I bristled at her implication. “Did you and the world-famous Elijah travel that much?”

  She flinched at my verbal jab. “Yes. But nothing quite this spectacular.” We fell quiet as we mounted the broad staircase together. After a few steps she asked, “Did you ever marry?”

  “No,” I said. “I was too busy with work.”

  “You shouldn’t let that stop you.”

  “Such is life.” I shrugged. “Love is not meant for everyone, else it wouldn’t be special.”

  She smiled, and once again it was as beautiful as I remembered. “Sometimes I think only the very foolish and the very mad are blessed with requited love.”

  I snorted a small laugh. “That’s very astute of you.”

  “Lightbridge is a bit of both, you know.”

  “The idea had occurred to me, yes.”

  We came to rest in the hallway, just outside of our doors, when Geraldine took me by the elbow. She drew me close, lowering her voice to a whisper. “His wife is gone.”

  I stared into her eyes, unsure of what she was driving at. “So he said. She is visiting her—”

  She shushed me with a shake of her head. “She’s gone. Has been for some time.”

  The way she stressed the word ‘gone’ explained it to me. “You mean she’s … passed on?”

  “Yes. But for heaven’s sake don’t let on that you know.”

  I was horrified. I may not have been a psychologist or even an armchair philosopher, but it seemed a very bad idea to me for the entire crew to play into one man’s delusions about his dead spouse. I said as much, only to be reprimanded.

  “It’s not our place to judge,” she snapped. After a few deep breaths to center herself, she continued. “From what I understand, her death crushed the man, swallowed his soul, nearly killed him along with her.”

  “I’m sorry to hear that,” I said.

  “Not as sorry as I,” Albert said, joining us in the hallway. The man moved on cat feet when the notion took him. “I’d known the pair of them for years, and had never seen two souls more in love. When she took sick, there was nothing we could do to console him. He tended to her every waking moment. Then when she finally breathed her last …” Albert’s look was desperate, a pained soul worried about his friend. “I was sure he would never recover.”

  “And now?” I asked.

  “Now he’s stable.” Albert lost the pained look in favor of his silly, wide grin. “Well, he is more stable than he was. At the time he was two shakes of a lamb’s tail away from an asylum. But then one day he started to pretend she was still alive. Suddenly, everything was all better. Bessy was visiting relatives, away to a garden party, or even just out back in the greenhouse. We went along with it at first, wondering how long he could keep it up. When he didn’t stop, neither did we.”

  “But … surely he knows.”

  “Of course he knows. He just doesn’t want to deal with it. And after having such a deep love ripped away from him, can you blame the man?”

  No, I could not. As one who also had my love ripped away, I was all too sympathetic to his plight. “I see.”

  “Then you understand?” Geraldine asked.

  “I suppose so.”

  “What’s all this then?” Lightbridge asked as he crested the steps behind us. “Powwowing in the darkness? Aren’t considering a mutiny already, are we?”

  “You should know better than that,” Geraldine said. “We were just discussing tomorrow’s flight.”

  Albert slapped me on the back. “Seems our friend here has a touch of the nerves.”

  I grinned sheepishly at the idea. What seemed just a cover story also happened to be true. I was very nervous about the flight, still unconvinced that such travel was safe, or prudent. “I suppose I just can’t get used to the idea of man taking to the heavens.”

  “You will soon enough,” Lightbridge declared. He clapped, rubbing his hands together in excitement. “The whole world will travel by air one day. You just wait and see.”

  We all nodded in agreement, though I still worried. After bidding everyone goodnight, we slipped into our separate rooms and prepared for bed, though it was almost impossible to get any sleep that entire week. How could I sleep when such a fantastic journey lay ahead of us? And that night, there was even less sleep in the light of my recent discovery.

  I was traveling in the company of a certifiable madman.

  ****

  back to toc

  ****

  Ten

  Liftoff

  I suppose I should describe in full the wonder that was the Northern Fancy. I am not sure in what state you shall find her, how much more decay will occur before our remains are discovered, so allow me to illustrate how she looked upon our departure. Then perhaps you will appreciate how beautiful Lightbridge’s vision really was.

  Again she looked just like a sailing vessel, but the similarity stopped at the outside. Inside, she was built in two levels, with no ‘upper deck’ as a normal maritime ship would have. Instead she had an observation port that doubled as a mess hall built onto her aft. It sported a beautiful oval window at least six feet across, from which one could see every little thing that rolled along under us. The bridge also sported a decent-sized window, as did either side of the top deck. There were also a series of small portholes that ran the length of the ship, one for each room.

  As for other openings, there was a main bay door on the lower half of the ship, through which supplies were loaded. There was also a ramp that led to the second deck, where sat a proper entrance bearing an elegant archway and finely carved door. Lightbridge insisted that it was all for show, but I suspected he and his men modeled the idea after existing ocean vessels; one entrance for staff and cargo, another for passengers. Personally I was pleased not to be restricted to the lower entrance like some common servant or workman. At the time, I supposed if our trip was successful, and air travel indeed became a common thing, then such an entrance wouldn’t be for show at all.

  After I spoke with Lightbridge about my reservations regarding traveling on the ship with Geraldine, I was assigned to a small room on the aft end of the ship, just across from the mess hall cum observation room. Geraldine’s quarters, as well as her medical lab, were stationed at the bow of the ship, beside the bridge. That put a full length of ship between us, but it never felt like enough, considering I still had to visit her students weekly.

  The bulk between us was made up of the small berths for the rest of the crew, the kitchen, and a row of small but adequate water closets fitted with functional showers including a steady stream of heated water via the ever-boiling boilers. Given Lightbridge’s military background, it was almost inevitable that there was a simple brig on the lower deck, beside the engine room. Other than the engine room, the lower deck mostly consisted of coal bins and cargo bays. A six-month nonstop journey with a forty-man crew required a
n awful lot of supplies, which in turn took up an awful lot of space. The ship was also equipped with some modern surprises: electrical lighting, running water, individual heating units for each room, and even garbage compactors and a mechanical cooling unit in the well-equipped kitchen.

  But the real beauty of the ship was her heart.

  Her engine.

  From the moment I was first invited to inspect the engine, I was enthralled. It was something to behold, a gorgeous marriage of steam and manual power. While coal kept the large boilers running, which in turn drove the props that provided partial lift, there was also a steady rotation of manual power that helped to fuel the rest of the ship’s needs. This came in the form of strange machines that lined the hallway along the length of the ship. Each looked like a skeletal metal horse, but where the saddle would rest, there was instead a padded seat, and instead of stirrups there were square pedals attached to a large flywheel. This gear was looped with a pulley that disappeared into the floor beyond.

  I remember staring at them in disbelief, wondering aloud what they were.

  “Pedometric generators,” Albert explained. “Something the boss and I worked up to lighten our fuel load.”

  “You’re too kind, Albert,” Lightbridge said with a modest dip of his head. “It was all his idea. I merely requested an activity for the men to pass the time.”

  “I’m afraid I don’t understand,” I admitted, though I was sure I did. I could see the obvious applications of the contraptions right away, but refused to believe they would attempt such a thing.

  “It’s all very simple,” Albert said, taking great pleasure in schooling me. “When one sits here,” he paused to pat the padded seat, “and works the pedals, the flywheel spins, directing the resulting kinetic energy to a secondary engine beneath the floor.”

  “The boilers fuel the ship’s primary needs,” Lightbridge added. “The props, the lifts, the navicom and so forth. The manual engine fuels the simplest of ship needs, such as the kitchen appliances, the lighting, and the ventilation for the heating.”

  “Heating is secondary?” I asked. “We are headed to the North Pole, and you consider heating a secondary need?”

  “Yes,” Lightbridge said. “Considering we will be flying a few miles above the Earth, I do believe heating is the least of our worries. One can put on a parka, but one cannot sprout wings.”

  I eyed the metal contraptions with worry. “It seems a bit crude, though. I mean, relying on manual power like this.”

  Albert waved away my concern. “Crude it might be, but effective. These beasts give off a fraction of the power the boilers produce, but ‘tis enough to allow us to drop a full ton of coal from our cargo.”

  My eyes widened at the news. That was a considerable amount of weight. But again my concern outweighed my awe. “How will you keep the things going? Surely the men will grow weary of such an experimental exercise.”

  “Exercise is just the right word for it,” Albert said in a hushed voice.

  “They won’t grow weary of it,” Lightbridge said. “And neither will you.”

  “Me?” I asked, my eyes returning to their wide state.

  “Time with a pedometric is compulsory. Part of the Regimen.”

  There it was again. The Regimen. I hung my head, knowing I had lost the argument long before it even began.

  “Don’t be so disappointed,” Lightbridge teased. “I dare say it will do you some good.”

  I sighed, knowing he was right but still not liking it. “I would never have signed on had I known you intended to work me like an ox.”

  “Then in the future, I suggest that you read before you sign.”

  And that was that.

  True to his requirements, the machines remained manned almost every hour of the day, some men preferring to pedal deep into the night. I must admit, after a fashion, I grew fond of the activity myself. It was lonesome and distracting, two things I craved more the longer I maintained a proximity to the beautiful Geraldine. But I’m getting ahead of myself again.

  Despite Lightbridge’s military background, he refused to allow the men to bring firearms aboard the Fancy. Some of the men voiced the need for weapons as a concern for safety, sighting possible run-ins with the wild Northern natives while we spent our month at our destination, while others just wanted to bring their weapons to hunt the unusual game that thrived in the Arctic. But Lightbridge was steadfast. His concern that a stray bullet might puncture the balloon was not unfounded. So each man promised by oath to leave his weapons behind, though I noticed Lightbridge didn’t bother to search the luggage as we loaded our things.

  He was trusting of his crew.

  I was not.

  When the day arrived for us to depart, I once again found myself filled with worry. The airship, the entire huge ship, had been built inside of an enclosure. While this wasn’t unusual—seabound vessels are sometimes moored in warehouses for repair—I noticed something striking on the morning of our scheduled departure. Something of which I had failed to take notice for the whole week.

  The greenhouse doors weren’t large enough to accommodate the ship.

  How would we get her out?

  No one else seemed to notice; they loaded the ship right there in the greenhouse as if it were standing free in some open field. I asked several of the workers what the plan was, but each one shrugged me off or directed my questions to Albert or Lightbridge. And considering how many questions I had asked the pair already, I kept my mouth shut for fear of looking as foolish as I felt.

  Of course the solution was simple, and revealed itself upon inspection of the greenhouse itself. What I assumed were leftover clockworks in the corner of the building were instead the mechanisms of a skylight. The entire ceiling folded away with the pull of a crank, which provided the ship just enough clearance to escape.

  The single thing I dreaded more than the bitter cold into which we were throwing ourselves was the publicity sure to be aroused by our venture. With a personality like Lightbridge, I was convinced the place would be swarming with journalists and glory seekers alike, all eager for a piece of the history our crew was destined to create. Yet as it turned out, there was no big send off. No media storm to see us on our way.

  I was relieved, but I must admit I was also a little disappointed.

  The whole affair was simple. As soon as the Fancy was finished, one short week after my arrival, the men packed her tight and prepared to shove off. Or rather up, as it were. Those who worked on the ship became her crew, with Albert shifting from foreman to first mate, losing none of his stride along the way. If anything, he was more unyielding than before, accepting only perfection from his readymade sailors.

  And so the hour arrived, and we were ready to embark upon our life-changing journey. No one, aside from Lightbridge’s household staff, bore witness to our exodus.

  “Why the lack of fuss?” I asked.

  “What do you mean?” Lightbridge asked.

  “Don’t get me wrong, I’m no fan of the media, but I am curious why a man who wants to leave a mark on history refuses to make a bigger deal of it.”

  “The world will hear of our success. And only our success.”

  He wouldn’t say more on the matter. I suppose that is why I feel compelled to relate this story in written form, so that the world will know just what happened. Even as I write this, I wonder if anyone will ever find us.

  For the sake of all humanity, I pray it will never be so.

  ****

  back to toc

  ****

  Eleven

  The Journey

  Despite my reservations, the bulk of the journey itself was quite humdrum. From the moment the Fancy drifted out of the greenhouse and into the warm spring air, the trip was smooth and almost carefree. I say almost because, due to our close quarters and part of the Regimen, I had to deal with Geraldine more directly than I cared for.

  The ship ran with a blinding efficiency. Routines were the bread and butter
of the whole crew, with rosters and work chits posted all over the ship informing any passing crew member where he was supposed to be almost every hour of the day. Even I was given a schedule, though it was mostly blank save for my required time on the pedometrics, my daily vitamin injection, my weekly physical and a bimonthly checkup of Lightbridge’s legs. I filled the rest of my time reading, or lending a hand when some small mechanical thing went awry, or watching the scenery roll beneath us from the sun-drenched windows of the bridge.

  This last bit was illuminating to say the least. My entire exile to America had seen me as a veritable hermit of sorts. In fact, my previous experience of treading upon American soil consisted of hustling from the port of my arrival into an estate purchased sight-unseen by arrangement of my family barrister, and then refusing to venture beyond my domain unless absolutely necessary. As a result I had viewed little of the country herself, and never from such a fantastic bird’s-eye view. Even those native to the land were in awe of the passing scenery, oohing and ahhing as if witnessing the beauty of their own countryside for the first time.

  Though I could hardly fault them. Witnessing the majesty of America from such a high and peaceful outlook left me just as moved. The patchwork blankets of vast farmlands, segmented by years of sharecropping; the peaks and valleys of the scrolling geography still pocked with the scars of battles long since passed; the contrasting grays of the bustling industrialized cities as opposed to the natural hues of the tranquil villages; small veins of creeks leading to wide arteries of rivers, which themselves emptied into the heart of the endless ocean; and at last the coastline teeming with tall ships and schooners and masses of travelers all seeking a new life in a new world.

  The hardest thing to get used to was the increasing daylight hours. With the spring came eternal sunshine in the Arctic, and the closer we drew to True North, the less darkness we had to deal with. By the time we would reach the Arctic Circle, the sun would circle the sky in an endless chase, rolling about the horizon but never setting. It would always be sunny, at least for the months we planned on being there. I found the prospect almost maddening.