Read Khronos (Hanover and Singh Book 3) Online
Authors: Chris Paton
Tags: #Steampunk Alternative History
Khronos
A HANOVER & SINGH ADVENTURE
By Chris Paton
Copyright © 2015 by Chris Paton
Cover Art by Nicole Cardiff
This book is a work of fiction. The names, characters, places and incidents are products of the writer’s imagination or have been used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to persons, living or dead, actual events or organisations is entirely coincidental.
All rights are reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without the prior permission in writing of the author.
For Jan and Ian – otherwise known as
mum and dad
Chapter 1
Severnaya Dvina Shipyard
Arkhangelsk, Russian Empire
May, 1851
As the fifth of eight deep-draught cargo steamers whistled its arrival at the Severnaya Docks, Kapitan Stepan Skuratov adjusted the ceremonial sword hanging at his side and tousled the hair of his thirteen year old son, Nikolas. Pressed between crowds of spectators, the Skuratovs watched from the quay as the deckhands tossed thick ropes to the
stividors
running alongside the fat ships sitting deep in the water. Clouds of condensation curled across the surface of the water as the sun beat down upon the dock and Stepan sweated beneath his tight-fitting cap.
“Papa,” Nikolas picked at the metal stars stitched onto his father’s sleeve insignia. “Why are your stars not red?”
“Red?” Stepan turned his wrist and looked at his sleeve. “Silver is the colour of my rank.”
“But red is a better colour, papa,” Nikolas pointed at the crimson hulls of the steamers wallowing through the river water to the dock. “See?”
“But blue,” Stepan brushed his wool uniform, “is the colour of the Imperial Navy, Nikolas. It is your family’s colour. Skuratovs have been serving in the Navy for generations.”
“I like red, papa.” Nikolas leaned on the flat wooden railings nailed into the tarred posts of the dock. Folding his arms on the warm wood, he leaned forward and rubbed his chin along his shirt sleeves. “It is hot. When will they begin?”
Stepan smoothed his sleeve over the three watch faces stitched into the leather wristband he wore on his left wrist, his elbow bumping the arm of the man next to him. “My pardon,” he dipped his head. The man smiled and turned back to look at the activity on the docks. Stepan studied the hands of the largest of the watches and tugged his sleeve down to his wrist. “There isn’t space at the docks for more ships. I am sure they will begin unloading shortly.” He smoothed an errant lock of blond hair from his son’s forehead. “It was good we came early,” Stepan looked over Nikolas’ head. “There is quite a crowd.”
“More than when your boat docks, papa,” Nikolas angled his head on his arm and looked at his father. “Why don’t people come to look when your boat comes in to dock?”
“My boat,” Stepan pressed his cheek against his son’s head, “is a secret. The Navy is not ready to put their submersibles on display. I will tell you when they are.”
“Do you promise, papa?”
“I promise.” Kissing Nikolas’ head, Stepan straightened his back and rested his hands on the railing. “Look, they are moving the gangplanks into position.”
“And the cranes are turning,” Nikolas lifted his head. Bouncing on his heels, he gripped the edge of the railing and beamed at his father. “We are right at the front. We will see everything.”
“Yes,” Stepan smiled. “It is good that we came early. We won’t miss a thing.” He grinned at Nikolas. “Be sure to remember every detail. Your mama will want to know
all
the details.”
“Yes, papa.” Nikolas stopped bouncing. “I am sorry she can’t be here to see this. To see
them
.”
“I am sure she will enjoy you telling her just as much. Look, now. Here they come.”
Nikolas pressed his chest against the railing and leaned into his father. Stepan curled an arm around his son’s thin shoulders. The man standing next to Stepan grinned and lifted his daughter up onto the railing, her heavy shoes tugging at her feet as her legs dangled over the edge. Wrapping his arms around her waist, he hugged her close. Stepan and the man exchanged looks.
“Exciting, eh?” Stepan smiled.
“Yes, Kapitan. The most exciting thing to happen in Arkhangelsk in years. Something to tell our wives, when we get home.”
“Forgive me,” Stepan paused, “is your wife sick too?”
“Yes,” the man nodded. “It has been several...”
“Papa,” Nikolas hopped within his father’s grasp. “Here they come.”
Stepan and Nikolas felt the press of the crowd as the spectators jostled along the length of the quay to see the first of the steamers unload. The creak of the hawser in the wooden pulley was lost in an excited murmur as the people of Arkhangelsk pinched and pricked one another, pointing at the procession of men and women streaming onto the deck of the steamer. The small wooden chests they carried swung from the leather harnesses strapped across their chests. The crowd leaned around shoulders, stood on tiptoe, stared and wondered.
Deckhands onboard the steamer scrambled with ropes, connected hooks to large stone counterweights that they raised with the deck cranes towering above the men and women at the ship’s rails. Lowering the stone weights into the water, the deckhands braced against the rails as the ship leaned, the starboard side dipping toward the gunwales. Stividors loosed the thick mooring lines as the steamer’s port side lifted. The men and women at the steamer’s rails secured themselves to the ship’s railing with ropes attached to their harnesses.
“There is Mayor Chelyuskin,” Stepan pointed. “Do you see him, Nikolas?”
“Yes,” Nikolas gasped against the wooden railing. “Papa...”
“Hey,” Stepan bumped forward as the crowd jostled behind him. “Steady on.” He turned and glared at the men and women pressing into his back.
“Papa...”
Stepan looked down at his son as the small boy shrank in his grip, slumping onto the stone floor of the quay. An arrowhead of spectators pierced the space above Nikolas.
“Hey,” Stepan shoved the crowd back, winding an older man as his forearm whipped into the man’s sternum.
“What are you doing?” the man recoiled as Stepan’s actions rippled through the crowd.
“Nikolas?” Stepan turned within the confines of the men and women pressing him against the railings. Reaching down, he gripped his son’s jacket and heaved him to his feet.
“Imperial Navy officers,” the winded man clutched his chest. “Think they own the waterfront.” The spectators pressed against Stepan’s arm, locked at right angles, shielding his son.
“Come on, Nikolas.” Stepan lifted his son into his arms, clearing a path with a scowl and the threat of violence. “Let’s get you home.”
“But, papa,” Nikolas slurred. “I want to see the mechanical men, the emissaries, the ones from the poster.”
“You will, Nikolas,” Stepan reeled as the crowd surged into the space at the railing. “Just not from here.”
A cheer from the crowd slowed Stepan’s progress as he neared the outer row of people. Stepan turned and craned his neck to see.
“Are they coming, papa?”
“Yes,” Stepan set Nikolas on the ground. He kneeled down, the tip of his scabbard scraping upon the stone surface of the quay. “Come on, up on my shoulders.” Nikolas turned as Stepan gripped him under the arms and lifted him up and over his head, setting him down on his shoulders. Nikolas cupped his hands beneath his father’s chin. “Not too tight,” Stepan stood up, raising Nikolas two heads taller than the press of people in front of him. “Can you see?”
“I can see,” Nikolas’ heels beat gently against his father’s chest.
“Describe it for me.”
“There are some big doors in the side of the ship,” the beating of Nikolas’ heels slowed. “Really big doors, papa.”
“And?” Stepan curled his hands around the toes of Nikolas’ tired leather shoes.
“The men and women on deck are pulling some kind of wire out of the boxes.”
“An antenna, maybe?”
“Yes, an antenna.” Nikolas twitched his heels. “The doors are opening papa. Mayor Chelyuskin is walking down to the ship.”
“Is there a gangplank, Nikolas?” Stepan leaned forward, lifting his heels for a moment to peer over the men in front of him.
“Yes, bigger and wider than anything I have ever seen. The cranes are moving it into position.”
“What’s that music? Is there a band?”
“It’s
your
band, papa. I can see Poruchik Nemtinov. He is conducting.”
“Good old Aleksey,” Stepan’s lips stretched, curling upward, the corner’s of his eyes wrinkling.
“Can you hear it, papa?”
“Yes, I can hear it.” Stepan took a deep breath, filled his lungs and joined the crowd as they sang the
March of the Common People
, Nikolas’ fingers flexing beneath his chin. Flicking his eyes up to see his son, Stepan smiled through the chorus as Nikolas wiped away the tears trickling down his father’s cheeks.
The crowd gifted the chorus from the people of Arkhangelsk to the men and women, sailors and officers of the German Confederation preparing to unload the first of the steamships at the dock. The men and women on deck straightened the antenna, opened the boxes clipped to their chest harnesses and tucked their heads beneath the lids. The last chorus was flattened by the clang and shudder of the gangplank slamming into place.
A hush spread through the crowd. The last of Stepan’s tears swelled upon the skin of Nikolas’ finger and dribbled over the top, splashing onto the stone at his feet.
The creak of the mooring lines masked Mayor Mikhail Chelyuskin’s steps as he walked to the gangplank and waited.
“What’s happening, Nikolas?”
“Shh, papa,” the crowd fidgeted beside them.
Nikolas leaned down and whispered into his father’s ear, “Mayor Chelyuskin is waiting for something. He is staring into the ship.”
“Into the hold?”
“Yes.”
“Is there anything inside?”
“Wait, papa,” Nikolas let go of his father’s head and straightened his back, the tips of his toes arched downward within Stepan’s grasp.
“Nikolas?”
“Something is coming out,” the crowd murmured. “Something big. It
is
them. They have arrived.”
“What do you see, Nikolas?”