YULETIDE MIRACLE
Robert Appleton
Copyright @ Robert Appleton 2013
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
This book is a work of fiction. Characters, names, places and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to any actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
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Table of Contents
Title Page
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
About the Author
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Chapter One
Christmas Eve, 1901
London
A wet farthing slipped through Red’s fingers as he handed the customer his change for the toffee apple. The coin tinkled on the cobbles behind the hot chestnut stall and rolled under Angharad’s skirt. Red sighed, almost didn’t want to disturb her. How small and frail she looked huddled over that hot barrel, her tatty, lopsided shawl draped over her right side, hiding a missing arm and a gouge the size of a horseshoe inches above her hip—war wounds from her aeronaut days in the Angolan conflict. Like him, she was a veteran fallen on hard times, charitably employed to tend the emporium’s stalls over Christmas.
“Well, what ya waitin’ for, old timer? Bleedin’ thing ain’t gonna sprout wings.” The idiot waiting for his change rocked on his heels, thumbs in pockets.
“Won’t be a moment, sir.” Red fingered the side of his brass kneecap, feeling for the gear lever to unlock his mechanical limb from its rigid posture. “Damn thing is frozen stiff. Doesn’t do the joint much good, me standing about all day.”
The young man peered over the counter and stuck out his bottom lip as though he hadn’t realized Red was handicapped. His hair was as black and spiked as a sweep’s brush, and he also had a chipped front tooth. He retrieved a pocket watch, began whistling tunelessly.
“Ah, there she goes.” Red shifted his weight to his left leg as the gear ratcheted into position in his right knee joint, starting the mechanism with a stutter that tickled through him. He crooked the limb himself while he bent to retrieve the coin. But the cobblestone was slick—his left boot slid. He twisted.
Clickety-click.
“Ah, hell.”
The brass leg straightened itself prematurely, hooking Angharad’s petticoats.
“Oi, what do you think you’re—”
Red scrambled to right himself but his balance was gone—as he wheeled back, the leg hiked her skirt up to her shoulders and knocked her forward into the barrel. Hot chestnuts spilled everywhere. The poor woman rolled onto her back, soundless, and gazed up at the giant Norway spruce Christmas tree that lorded over the emporium.
Red dragged himself beside her. “Angharad, dear! Are you hurt? I’m so sorry. I—”
The gentlest, warmest fingers he’d felt in years slid into his cold mitt. She pulled him down next to her. “A rare old view, ain’t it?”
’Twas indeed. The dawn of the twentieth century.
Watching the brass and iron steam-powered exhibits work overtime on their tinsel-decorated podiums, hearing hisses strike up like a chorus of cobras all around, and the indefatigable chug-chug of machinery binding the whole exhibition together, sank him into a snug feeling of forward motion. An uncommon feeling. The world did not wait around for those who couldn’t catch up on their own. The likes of him and Angharad and Joe DiStepano were already forgotten—“heroes” reluctantly given alms in place of lost limbs or the prideful retirement they’d earned by risking their lives protecting the empire.
They were the smashed baubles under the great Christmas tree. The fallen nutcrackers. Eyesores and smithereens. Under everyone’s feet.
A middle-aged mother and her two sons helped Angharad up. Steam and smoke stuck like a gigantic, wet miner’s rag to the glass channel bisecting the roof, before it leaked out through half-clogged vents. The emporium had been a major airship hangar once. Its copper pipes and riveted beams were decades old, stained green by condensation and relentless industry. Red shook his head. Who would have imagined it would become an overgrown toyshop, a magical Yuletide grotto for the kids, with more colour than a kaleidoscope?
Bitter sweetness on his tongue spread like an ache, then gushed straight to his heart.
For the kids?
“All right, I’ve got you, Red.” Joe DiStepano hooked the long, black fingers of his one hand under Red’s mechanical knee. Hedy Durante, a matronly florist with only one eye, grabbed his other leg, while Red slung his arms over their shoulders.
Hedy said, “One, two, three...oops-a-daisy,” and they lifted him to his feet, propped him up while he set his knee-joint to its regular walking gear.
“Thank you.” He quickly scanned the scavengers gathering hot chestnuts from the filthy cobbles. “Where’s Angharad?”
“Here.” She was behind him, helping herself to a toffee apple. A willowy yet brash woman with strawberry-red hair, in her mid-thirties—a similar age to his wife when she’d passed, not quite a lifetime ago. “Might as well salvage something.” She munched with her mouth half-open.
Red grinned, nodded at the strewn chestnuts. “You figured I owed you, eh?”
“Um, you owe yourself, Red, darling. ’T weren’t no gentleman you got down on your hands and knees for.” Angharad clamped the apple between her teeth and shook his empty money box, then spat the apple into it. “Away in a manger, no crib for a bed—’cause some bleeder went and nicked it for firewood. Have yourself a sherry and a very merry Christmas. That bugger will, whoever he is.”
“I ask you! Why do we bother at all?” Hedy scrubbed her tired face with plump hands.
“That’s why.” Angharad blew a few strands of ginger hair away from her face and waved her toffee apple at several carriages full of beaming children. Their pint-sized train wound its way around the emporium’s layered perimeter, higher and higher until it reached Father Christmas’s log cabin at the top. The children then had a choice of descending either by slide or steps, while the next group, having climbed the steps, got to ride the train down backwards.
“When I was that age,” she said, “I wouldn’t have missed this for the world. And we get to be a part of the magic, if only for a few days. Well worth a few tumbles, I reckon.”
“When did you get to be so chipper?” Joe flashed his still-impressive-for-his-age white teeth between thick lips. “Next thing you’ll be telling us where you hid them diamonds.”
“Yeah. Not on your life, bluecoat. I’m savin’ those for my big engagement.”
“Oh? And who’s the lucky man?” Red watched her eyes light up, then narrow to bitter, cornflower slits.
“Right now? Whoever can make me something like that.” She pointed to Red’s mechanical limb—the maker of which he’d refused to identify. He shrugged, smiled at her playful squint. Whatever happened, only he must know that little secret. More than his emporium job and this camaraderie he shared with the veterans was at stake—his very life depended on it. No, the authorities must not learn any more about why he was in London than he’d already divulged to the navy harbourmaster. He’d selected a few vague details of his past to share: engine man on a Gannet ship in West Africa, th
e one Englishman in an all-African crew. Seasoned combat veteran. Honourably discharged after suffering severe injuries in a disastrous uncoupling during a typhoon.
They’ll know what they need to know. Nothing more.
“Well, we’d best be getting back to our posts.” Joe pulled his blue tunic straight, raked a few spots of mud out of his grey beard. The most senior officer among them—a lieutenant colonel in the Royal Fusiliers, formerly the 7th Regiment of Foot—he had spent the best part of a decade fighting with the British-sponsored “bluecoat” militia against Spanish guerrillas in the Para district of Amazonian Brazil, where, he often boasted, not even the hellish tropical conditions had robbed him of the pride he took in maintaining a clean uniform. “A prickly old stickler,” Angharad liked to call him. “The sort who’d prop a dead man up and inspect him if he was ordered to.” But they were all fond of old Joe. He refused to bow to circumstance, and carried their collective glory days with undying loyalty in his breast.
“We still on for drinks later—under the tree?” Angharad eyed each of them in turn, nodding at their assent. She turned to Red. “How about it, Mulqueen? You up for a few gins and some good old Yuletide misbehavin’?”
“Count me in.” He craned his neck to see the old Admiralty clock over the exit, but his eyesight wasn’t what it used to be. Mm, still good enough to appreciate the pale, shapely Snow Queen clad in fur and satin atop her winter sleigh in front of the steam-powered moving pictures exhibition. She blew glitter over the men and boys fawning at her feet. Dainty, yet a complete tease—how much she reminded him of—
No, don’t let her haunt you forever. Things change. Change with them, damn it.
“You’re not half distracted today, Red, love.” Angharad patted his shoulder, whispered, “Best snap to, deary—you’ve got a customer waitin’.”
“Huh? Oh, right.” He reached into his tunic pocket for his spectacles, but found only glass shards and wire. “Bugger,” he muttered. “Hey, do you me a favour, Angharad? Read me the time. My spec—”
“Ten minutes to ten.” She turned away and began sweeping up the spilled chestnuts, the broom nestled awkwardly under her one arm.
“Shout for Bertie or one of the others,” he said. “Someone needs to watch my stall for a while.”
“Why? You have some kind of royal engagement we don’t know about?”
“Not exactly royal, but...I’ll explain later. Have to fly. Sorry.” From behind the crate of fresh apples under the counter he snatched the pile of letters he’d written over the past few nights. He counted them—all there. He checked to make sure no one was watching, then he slid the letters into his leather belt pouch, fastened the stud, and patted it for good luck.
The bemused father of three waiting to be served tipped his bowler as Red limped out from behind the counter, the clank, click-click, clank of the mechanical leg an object of fascination for the toddlers. Red marched with as much spring as he could manage, ignoring the gasps from passers-by—expensive clockwork limbs like his were rarely seen outside high society. A steam organ’s soft, nasal rendition of Land of Hope and Glory trailed him all the way to the exit. It recalled warmer days tinged with patriotism, the naive, blissful kind that swelled an Englishman’s heart. A feeling he’d lost long ago.
He glanced around to make sure he wasn’t being followed. A Leviacrum agent might be anywhere or anyone these days, scouring for hints of sedition. He sucked in a wintry breath and sighed. These people were so impressed by all this steam power and modern science. How little they knew about what was really underway in London and Angola, the true power set to be unleashed. And soon, very soon, he would have to return to the fighting.
After Christmas, damn it. I’ve at least earned that much.
Chapter Two
Do they even know it’s Christmas?
Edmond watched his father and mother walk arm-in-arm past all the best shops on Bishopsgate without even looking—Fergal O’Malley’s Scale Models, the sweet shop that sold strawberry bonbons for sixpence a quarter and all those delicious European chocolates, Perigore’s phantasmagoria, even Father’s favourite, Harry’s Handy Shop, where he bought all those odds and ends for his workshop. Christmas Eve? The day already ranked somewhere beneath exams day at his boarding school or having a tooth out in Father’s workshop—pass the pliers and cotton gauze, if you please—and it wasn’t even lunchtime yet.
“Mother, where are we going?”
“Hurry up, Edmond. Don’t dawdle, sweetie.”
“But we’ve been walking for hours.”
“Don’t exaggerate.” Father glanced back, a half stern, half amused look battling for control over his tired—always tired—demeanour. His oblong face had a few more wrinkles than the last time they’d all gone shopping together, in the summer.
People often said Edmond looked a lot like his father. He’d loved that comparison once. Now, with the old man resembling more and more one of those sleep-deprived professors from the penny dreadfuls, cooped up day and night in his laboratory, well, it was all a bit embarrassing really. His friends had begun to remark on it, too. “Sandman,” Ginny Burke had called him. “A bit creepy and a bit mysterious and always dead on his feet.” Edmond had pushed her over and made her cry for saying that, but he couldn’t quite shrug the insult off. It was a horrid thing, to think ill of his father—but damn it, Father was never around long enough to disprove it.
“What about the emporium? Are we going to skip that, too?” he asked.
They didn’t even acknowledge that remark. He kicked a mound of snow into the road, showering a steam-powered penny-farthing that appeared from out of nowhere between stationery post-chaises. The rider honked her horn, shook her fist at him. Edmond dashed to the safety of his parents, slid the last few feet over the ice to Mother’s side.
“Good heavens! Mind your footing, dear. There’s a good boy.” Mother adjusted her touring hat decorated with Bird of Paradise plumes and resumed her dutiful chuckle at one of Father’s never-ending funny stories. Probably one he’d told a hundred times before...and practised on the dog first.
Edmond sighed. At least he only had to survive one more day. It was worth enduring Yawnsville and all its little hamlets—endless stops at the homes of aunts, first cousins, grandparents, thousandth-cousins-ninety-million-times-removed he saw too often at only once a year—for the boatload of presents tomorrow morning. Yes, he could endure anything for that.
Anything except face the boarding school debacle again. God, no. How could he possible tell them now, after more than a week had passed? That familiar dull ache in his stomach anchored his steps, made him want to lie down and half-die so Mother and Father would say he had to stay at home for the rest of his life.
How he hated that Château d’If of a school. One year in and already he was allergic to the entire draconian institution, and it to him. Yes, he’d learned lots of big new words there. No, the place wasn’t worthy of any of them. It was ancient and—
All right, it might be worthy of one word:
Excrement.
“Look there, Edmond.” Father pointed up to the sky over the city centre. “You can see the top of the tower.”
Yippee-rotten-do. “You mean the place where they used to torture people?”
“Edmond.” Mother’s stern tone reminded him of the talks they’d had about his father’s important job in the Leviacrum tower and how the old man wanted Edmond to be proud of him.
“What?” Edmond asked. “People were locked up in the Tower of London all the time. Some of them never saw daylight.” Just like you, Father.
Out of the blue, the old man knelt beside him, retrieved a brass telescope from out of his duffel coat and extended it. “Here you go, son.” He handed the spyglass over. It weighed a ton. An uncharacteristic warm smile—uncharacteristic as in not distracted by anything—lit Father like a streetlamp in the snow. It melted Edmond a little, surprised him even more.
“Why don’t you use my shoulder.” H
e stood and then stooped, almost in the gutter, allowing Edmond to rest the telescope at eye level on his duffel. A coarse, alien coat that seemed larger than life. “Now, adjust the knobs either side of the eyepiece to focus, then I want you to find the second tier from the top, the one ringed with white railing. Let me know when you’ve found it.”
Edmond suddenly felt nervous. He’d used telescopes before in astronomy class, even looked through the giant one in the Westminster Observatory and visited the orrery on the floor below, but Father’s spyglass was special. It had over a dozen magnifications, and was custom-made for the detection of exotic energy spectrums—the slits for the different filters lined the first two segments. Its value was...he couldn’t even guess. But to Edmond, its most special attribute was simple.
It belonged to his father.
“There. Found it.” The Leviacrum tower measured thousands of feet in height and grew taller every year. No one really knew why the Council kept expanding it like a metal beanstalk to the clouds. Some said it would one day reach space itself. But it housed the brightest scientific minds in the empire—no, the world—and Father’s job there, Laboratory Supervisor, was a pretty important one for research.
“What do you see?”
“Figures wearing all-white suits and oxygen masks. About eight or nine.”
“What are they doing?”
“Building snowmen?”
Father laughed hard, and Mother joined in. She straightened Edmond’s bob hat. He rolled his eyes.
“Hmm, it looks like they’re holding dustbin lids upside-down. Some sort of metal dishes?” He glanced up to the boulder-like clouds sitting darkly over the tower’s pinnacle. “They’re waiting to catch the next snowfall?”
Father nodded, held his hand out for Mother to take. For some reason, Edmond felt the old man was proud of that answer, as if it was the one he’d hoped for. But he didn’t say so. As usual.
Yuletide Miracle (The Steam Clock Legacy Book 3) Page 1