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Icebreaker

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by Lian Tanner




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  Table of Contents

  About the Author

  Copyright Page

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  For Margaret Connolly, with love and thanks

  MAIN CHARACTERS

  ON THE OYSTER

  PETREL

  an orphan and an outcast; known to the crew as Nothing Girl

  MISTER SMOKE

  a rat, and a law unto himself

  MISSUS SLINK

  another rat, and one with a talent for stitching wounds

  ORCA, First Officer

  a woman with little patience for fools (Braid)

  CRAB, Second Officer

  a man who values tidiness above all things (Braid)

  DOLPH, Orca’s daughter

  a girl as sharp and proud as her mam (Braid)

  KRILL, Head Cook

  a huge man whose gruffness is all on the surface (Duff)

  SQUID, Krill’s daughter

  a young woman with quick wits and a kind heart (Duff)

  ALBIE, Chief Engineer

  a cunning, vicious-tempered man, and Petrel’s uncle (Grease)

  SKUA, Albie’s son

  a bully, but not as dangerous as his da (Grease)

  THE SLEEPING CAPTAIN

  who may or may not exist

  A NAMELESS BOY

  found on an iceberg and brought onto the ship

  OTHERS

  THE MAW

  a monstrous fish that follows the Oyster

  BROTHER THRAWN

  leader of the fanatical Anti-Machinists known as the Devouts

  THE THREE TRIBES

  THE OFFICERS

  They navigate and steer the ship. They live on the upper decks of the Oyster, which are called Braid.

  THE COOKS

  They feed the crew and keep the stores. They live on the middle decks, or Dufftown.

  THE ENGINEERS

  They keep the ancient engines running, and anything else mechanical. They live on the lower decks, which are known as Grease Alley.

  PROLOGUE

  The child’s face was beaten silver. His mind held the knowledge of ten thousand libraries. His fingers were so cunningly made that they could mend the broken bones in a kitten’s paw, setting each one in place with care and precision.

  So far, every moment of his short life had been spent hiding from the Anti-Machinists.

  For all his cleverness, the child could never understand why his enemies hated him so much. “They have not even spoken to me,” he said to Professor Serran Coe. “They do not know me.”

  “Ah, but they think they know you,” said Coe with an angry laugh. “They think they know all about you. According to them, you are an abomination, even worse than the automobiles and trains that they delight in smashing. They say you are too clever to be trusted. That you wish to set yourself up as a false god.”

  “That is not true,” said the mechanical child.

  “No, of course it isn’t,” said the man who had made him. “The whole thing would be laughable, if only their aims were not so deadly. Last week they burned seven libraries and besieged a university. Their ideas are spreading, and not just in this country. A battle is being fought all across the world, between knowledge and ignorance … and ignorance is winning. I fear we are heading into a new Dark Age—”

  A knock interrupted him, and a young woman peered anxiously around the door. “The Antis have found us again, Professor. They are twenty minutes away, a hundred or so of them, shouting their stupid slogans and brandishing their axes. We must leave, immediately. The carriages are waiting.”

  Serran Coe did not move. Instead, he sat and stared at the mechanical child, as if trying to fix those fine silver features in his mind.

  “Professor?” said the young woman.

  “Yes, yes, I heard you.” Coe stood up and stuffed various papers into the pockets of his coat. “I will take him to the ship,” he said over his shoulder.

  The young woman’s face lost its color. “Must you?”

  “We cannot put it off any longer. You and the others had best go to the university and begin packing up the laboratory. I will meet you there as soon as I can. Be careful. The mobs will be watching for us.”

  The young woman bit her lip. “I wish they would chop each other to pieces,” she said fiercely. Then she rushed forward, kissed the mechanical child on his forehead and hurried out of the room with tears in her eyes.

  “The ship?” said the mechanical child, staring after her. “I do not know of any ship.”

  “It is my finest creation, after you,” said Professor Coe, taking a long metal box from a cupboard and placing it carefully on the table. “There has never been another ship like it. It could cruise for a hundred years at the farthest end of the earth if necessary, and never come to port.”

  He grimaced. “Perhaps such a long voyage will not be needed. Perhaps this Anti-Machinist nonsense will fizzle out by summer’s end. But somehow I doubt it. Come here, my dear.”

  The mechanical child stood trustingly while a panel in his shoulder was unscrewed. “Will I like the ship?” he asked.

  “You will like it—very much.” Professor Coe swallowed, peering down at the screwdriver in his hand as if it were an assassin’s knife. “Forgive me,” he mumbled. Then, before he could change his mind, he dipped his fingers into the child’s body and removed two intricately wired devices.

  The light in the child’s eyes died immediately and he fell against Coe in a jumble of limbs. The professor cradled him, then laid him carefully in the box, straightening his arms and legs and stroking his silver face.

  “I have hired the most trustworthy crew I could find,” whispered Serran Coe, “but I dare not give you the run of the ship, in case there are Anti-Machinist spies among them. Sleep well, my dear. You are my joy, and the hope of the world.”

  It was only when he had kissed the child’s cheek and closed the lid of the box that he took a second box from the cupboard. This one was considerably smaller, and when Serran Coe opened it, a reluctant smile flickered across his face.

  “You will be his guardians,” he said. “And when the world is safe again, your sacrifice will wake him.”

  Before he left the house, the professor paused in the hallway to wrap his cloak around the boxes. Then he threw open the front door, looked both ways for signs of the approaching mob and ran down the steps to the waiting carriage.

  Professor Coe was right—the Anti-Machinists did not fizzle out by summer’s end. Instead, their grip on the world gradually tightened. They infiltrated armies. They toppled governments. They killed anyone who disagreed with them.

  In this way, a hundred years passed.

  And another hundred years …

  And another. At the farthest end of the earth, the ship kept its course. But on board, much had changed …

  CHAPTER 1

  NOTHING GIRL

  Petrel was asleep when they came after her. She’d made a nest of rags in the narrow space around the shaft of the wind turbines, and for once she was warm and almost happy. The familiar sound of the icebreaker’
s engines rumbled through her dreams like a lullaby, and she smiled, and snuggled down deeper into the rags.

  The Officer bratlings might’ve caught her there if they’d had more sense. But they were so sure of themselves—so certain that this time they had her trapped—that they didn’t even try to be quiet. Petrel woke to the sound of eager voices coming at her from two directions, and the smell of hot tar.

  “This way! This way!”

  “We’ve got her!”

  There were ten of them, mostly girls, with Dolph grinning in anticipation at the front. Petrel saw them out of the corner of her eye as she sprang from her nest and leaped for the iron ladder above her head.

  Dolph screamed, “There she goes! Quick, grab her!”

  But by then Petrel was halfway through the rusty hatch that led to the next deck, and running for her life.

  As she tore desperately along the passageways she could hear the bratlings a little way behind her, laughing and shrieking, “Rat hunt! Rat hunt! Catch the rat!”

  “I found her paws,” cried one of girls. “Look, I’ve got her nasty little paws.”

  Which was when Petrel realized she had left her gloves behind.

  Furious with herself, she snarled over her shoulder as if she really were one of the ship’s rats. Then she ducked into a cabin, scrambled under a hammock full of wailing babies, dived through a rusty hole in the bulkhead and threw herself beneath the first berth she came to, with no idea whether it was occupied or not.

  The footsteps pounded past. As soon as they were gone, faded into the distance along with the ugly clank of the tar bucket, Petrel scrambled out from under the berth. An old man peered up at her from his pillow. She made a clumsy curtsy to him and crawled back the way she had come.

  The babies had quieted now, soothed by their mothers, a trio of women with Officer stripes tattooed on their muscular arms. As Petrel tiptoed past, hunching her shoulders and making her eyes blank and stupid, the Officer women whispered to each other.

  “She’s a strange one.”

  “Not Officer nor Cook nor Engineer. Imagine not having a tribe!”

  “Well, you remember what her parents did.”

  “Disgraceful…”

  Petrel goggled witlessly at them.

  “What are you doing in Braid, Nothing Girl?” one of the women asked loudly.

  Petrel didn’t answer. Silence was one of the few weapons she had against the crew that had rejected her. Silence, stubbornness and the knowledge that she was not who they thought she was.

  “It’s no use talking to her,” said a second woman. “She’s as thick as winter ice. You might as well chat to a toothyfish.” She made a shooing gesture. “Go away, Nothing Girl. We don’t want you here.”

  Petrel crept down the passageway and through the hatch, hoping that her pursuers might have dropped her gloves in the excitement of the chase. But there was no sign of them, no sign of anything except for the dollops of tar all over her nest.

  She sighed. “Can’t stay here now,” she muttered in her hoarse voice. “Dolph’ll be watching for me, sure as blizzards. Better keep away from Braid for a while; find somewhere safer to sleep…”

  The trouble was, nowhere was really safe, not for Petrel.

  During the Oyster’s long voyage, the ship had accumulated centuries of rust, and a hull as battered as an iceberg. But that wasn’t the worst of it. Roughly two hundred years ago, a midwinter disagreement between crew members had flared up into three months of violent warfare. Nearly half the crew died in that war, and precious books and papers were burned, among them the ship’s log, with all its history and instructions.

  In the bitter aftermath, with everyone blaming everyone else, the Oyster had been divided into three territories, each of them jealously guarded. The bottommost part of the ship, with its engines and batteries, was called Grease Alley—that was where the Engineer tribe lived and worked. The middle decks, which included the kitchens and storerooms, was Dufftown. That was Cook territory. And the upper decks, Braid, belonged to the Officers.

  Petrel, who had no tribe, was the only one who could move freely between the three groups. But that freedom came with a high price. None of the tribes turned her away at the border, it was true. But none of them welcomed her, either, or fed her, or protected her against cruelty.

  As she stood there, thinking, she thought she heard the clank of a bucket. Dolph, she thought, and she rose on tiptoe, as alert as a gull. The clanking sound came again, and Petrel ran.

  Braid, where the Officers lived, was a maze of cabins. Most of them were floored with iron, but in others the original deck had rusted away long ago, and been replaced with driftwood or netting, or bones scavenged from ancient whaling stations.

  There were folk everywhere on the Braid decks—bratlings hopping from one whale rib to another in a game of chasings, babies tied to their hammocks with seal gut, grown men and women rubbing their eyes as they woke, and calling greetings to their neighbors.

  Petrel shuffled between them, eyes lowered. Most folk ignored her; they were too busy with their own lives to bother themselves over a witless girl.

  Which suits me, thought Petrel. Safety lies in being ignored.

  She trotted along the passages until she came to one of the Commons ladderways, where fighting between the ship’s three tribes was forbidden. Her nerves were still jangling, and she had a sudden overwhelming desire for sunlight and salty air.

  She glanced around to make sure the Braid border guards weren’t watching, then fumbled behind the ladderway for her ancient and very ragged sealskin jacket.

  “You’re getting old, you are,” she muttered to the jacket as she wriggled into it.

  As if in answer, there was a dull tearing sound and several gray scraps fluttered to the deck.

  Still, the jacket was better than nothing. Petrel fastened the strings, then scurried up the ladderway to the hatch that led to the Oyster’s foredeck.

  There must have been a time, centuries ago, when the hatch had been weather tight. But now the damp and the cold seeped through it like sea fog. Petrel drew the tattered hood of her jacket over her head, then she turned the clamp, pushed the hatch open and stepped out onto the deck.

  The cold air hit her like a bucket of water.

  “Oof!” she yelped, then jammed her lips shut and scuttled away from the hatch in case someone had heard her.

  The sea was dotted with icebergs. The morning sky was yellow. Petrel ran for’ard across the snowy deck as quickly as she dared to where an ancient crane loomed, and the wind fiddles sang their endless song.

  There was a sheltered area there, beneath the body of the crane, and she tucked herself into it, out of the wind. Spring was on its way to the frozen south, and the song of the wind fiddles was luring penguins, seals, whales and every other speck of life back to their summer haunts.

  But the air was still cold.

  “Ice cold,” mumbled Petrel. “Bone cold!” And she stuck her hands into her armpits and wondered whether Dolph would think to look for her out here.

  Probably not. The fishing shift would start soon, and men and women from the Oyster’s three warring tribes would have to work together to feed the ship. Like the Commons ladderways, the open decks were neutral territory where knives, poison and pipe wrenches were forbidden. Even hot tar would be seen as a weapon on the foredeck.

  Which meant that the only real danger for Petrel—apart from the cold—was that someone might creep up behind her and push her overboard.

  “Trouble is,” she muttered, “if I stay out here for much longer my nose’ll fall off. I’ll have to take my chances inside.”

  With a grumble, she stepped out into the wind. On the horizon, something flashed white … and was gone. Petrel squinted after it.

  “Must’ve been a berg. Though I’ve never before seen one so neat and square.”

  The next moment she had completely forgotten that odd glimpse. Because the ship was sailing past another berg, and this one
had an ice cave near its summit.

  Petrel never tired of watching ice caves. Some of them were so blue and so beautiful that they made her heart ache. She leaned on the rail, stamping her feet for warmth. The berg came closer.

  That’s when she saw him. A boy, laid out on the ice like a dead fish, with a scattering of snow almost covering his face. A boy, where there should have been nothing but the memory of winter.

  A frozen boy.

  CHAPTER 2

  THE FROZEN BOY

  Petrel was so stunned at the sight that her wits almost deserted her.

  “A—a—a stranger!” she whispered.

  She had to dredge the word up from the depths of her memory. She’d never had need of it before. In all the hundreds of years that the Oyster had been trudging around the southern ice cap, there had been no strangers. Not a single one.

  There were stories, of course. There were always stories, especially in the long winter dark when there was nothing much else to do but mend clothes and fishing lines, plot against the other tribes, and listen to the blizzards thrashing about the ancient iron hull.

  But no one took those stories seriously. So what if there were other folk in the world? They were of no interest to the Oyster and its crew. The ship was what mattered. The ship was a world in itself, it was life and shelter, birth and death, love and hatred and protection against the elements. It was all any of them had ever known or wanted.

 

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