The Aeronaut's Windlass (78 page)

BOOK: The Aeronaut's Windlass
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Grimm waited until he saw the enemy ship begin to roll to present her broadside to
Predator
, and then called, “Ascend!”

Mister Kettle threw the ship into her new maximum amount of climb, and Grimm staggered and nearly fell despite his grip on the handrail.
Predator
sailed as swiftly and cleanly as a worthy soul winging to its eternal reward. Eight of the enemy cannon rent the air
Predator
had just departed with their fury, and the single blast that did manage to strike home brought forth only the incandescent green gleam of
Predator
’s own protective shroud.

Grimm had timed their maneuver successfully. The
Mistshark
’s gunners tried to track
Predator
as she rose but reached the limit of their elevation short of catching up to the lighter, faster ship. In order to track back onto
Predator
, the
Mistshark
’s pilot would have to rock the ship back up to level and onto her other side, all while being dragged forward, listing and pitching, by the uneven pull of a single quarter of her web. Shifting that much awkward mass against its own momentum and inertia would require crucial seconds—seconds Grimm had no intention of giving away.

“Fire!” he called.

Again the gunners did their job. A single stray blast slipped through the web and flashed against the enemy’s shroud, but the other half dozen raked through the
Mistshark
’s last remaining length of web, tearing it from the ship and setting it ablaze.

Mistshark
’s acceleration immediately dropped to nothing, her drunken, wallowing form now gliding forward on nothing but waning momentum. Desperate signal rockets again flashed away from her, and Grimm saw the enemy ship struggling to stabilize itself with its trim crystals alone—a tricky proposition without enough forward motion to allow the more responsive maneuvering planes to assist with the task, and until it was completed, the
Mistshark
was virtually helpless against
Predator
’s mobility. As long as Kettle could keep their ship out of the firing arcs of
Mistshark
’s cannon,
Predator
could pour fire down upon the enemy without reservation or fear of reply—and Mister Kettle knew his business as well as any man alive.

Kettle guided
Predator
into a high arc, rolling the ship onto her starboard side to present their broadside to the enemy, slowing just enough to give the gun crews the cleanest shot possible.

Grimm felt his stomach twist, and he tried to swallow through a dry throat.

He was about to find out whether or not his duty would require him to murder Calliope and her crew.

He flipped down the telescoptic on his goggles and focused his attention intently on the
Mistshark
.

“By the numbers!” Grimm shouted. “Fire!”

“Gun two!” Creedy bellowed. “Fire!”

The frontmost cannon of the starboard side of the ship howled, its blast smashing into
Mistshark
’s straining shroud.

“Gun four!” Creedy called. “Fire!”

The second starboard gun unleashed its fury, hammering down at the enemy’s shroud, hungry for the vulnerable, unarmored airship beneath.

“Gun six! Fire!”

The
Mistshark
’s shroud’s bright illumination grew dimmer, more translucent.

“Gun eight! Fire!”

The blast scorched the topmost mast of the enemy ship—and Grimm saw what he had been looking for: A tall, lean figure—Calliope herself, he supposed—rushed the aft dorsal mast and smacked a boarding ax down onto one of the lines running up it. The line parted, and the
Mistshark
’s Dalosian colors, a white star upon a bisected red-and-blue field, went fluttering down toward the ship’s deck, in the aeronaut’s universal signal of surrender.

“Cease fire!” Grimm roared. “Cease fire!”

“Cease fire!” Creedy echoed to the crews.

And the reverberating, thunderous howl of the last shot from the number eight gun faded and vanished into the open blue. The
Mistshark
lay quietly, meekly, beneath them as Kettle brought
Predator
around, keeping the enemy covered with her starboard cannon. Grimm let Creedy and Kettle handle the maneuvering, while he watched the enemy’s gunners. They were, in proper form, retracting their cannon back into their secure position, where they would be unable to fire.

It would appear that their surrender was genuine—though it was Calliope, after all. Grimm would proceed by the numbers, without dropping his guard. He felt a fierce smile stretch his lips. “Mister Creedy,” he called. “Fire up the launch, if you please. Signal to Captain Ransom my compliments: ‘Surrender and prepare to be boarded.’”

The cheer that rose up from his aeronauts made the planking beneath Grimm’s feet vibrate, and he fancied that
Predator
was voicing her triumph along with the men who crewed her.

*   *   *

W
ithin a quarter of an hour, Calliope crossed to
Predator
on her launch, its steam engine chugging the little craft steadily over from the
Mistshark
. She had two crewmen with her to manage the launch, in addition to both of Master Ferus’s missing wagons and a slender volume matching the one in Grimm’s coat pocket, stolen from the Great Library.

If Calliope had just been soundly defeated by a smaller, less heavily armed vessel, it did not show in her swagger or her confident expression. If she was intimidated by the dozen or so primed gauntlets being aimed at her, it could not be seen from the outside.

She stepped up to the bow of the launch as it docked with
Predator
with her usual smirk on her lips. “Permission to come aboard, Francis?”

Grimm reminded himself that she was calling him by that name only because she knew it annoyed him, and that he should not surrender to manipulation. “Granted,” he called calmly.

Calliope hopped down onto
Predator
’s deck and peered around the ship curiously as she paced to the bridge and ascended the steps to it. “Well, well, well,” she said. “That was a bit of a surprise. What on earth have you been feeding her?”

“Enemies.”

Calliope threw her head back and laughed.

“Book, please,” Grimm said.

She tossed him the volume amiably, and he caught it. “You’ve no idea the foul looks I collected when I went to get it.”

“Did the Aurorans give you any trouble about striking your colors?”

“Nothing I couldn’t handle,” she said breezily. “I must admit, Francis, you do gorgeous work. That was excellently done—though you’d never have beaten me in a fair fight.”

“I avoid them,” Grimm replied. “So do you.”

Her teeth flashed very white when she smiled. “True.”

Grimm nodded to Creedy, who sent several men to take charge of recovering the wagons from the
Mistshark
’s launch. They bustled the wagons away toward the etherealist’s cabin without delay.

Calliope watched them go. “That takes care of the preliminaries, I suppose,” she said. “What do you intend to do with my crew?”

“I mean to return them, and you, to Spire Albion for arrest and trial,” Grimm said. “The Aurorans will be taken prisoners of war and treated accordingly.”

Calliope shook her head. “You mean to have my crew tried as civilians for committing an act of war? They’ll never submit to that. No Albion court would give them a fair trial and they know it. They’ll call them pirates and hang them.”

“Possibly,” Grimm said. “On the other hand, if you refuse to surrender, then by the articles of war I could blast your ship down to the surface here and now. Which alternative do you think they’d find more attractive?”

Calliope’s face darkened, and she clenched her jaw a few times before answering. “My crew are soldiers, fighting as soldiers. They
will
be tried and judged as soldiers in a time of war.”

“Or what?” Grimm asked mildly.

Calliope stared at him, her mouth working on words that never quite formed, her eyes all but glowing with the heat of her anger. Then she closed her eyes and muttered a savage curse beneath her breath.

“Or what?” Grimm asked again, in exactly the same tone.

“You’ve made your point,” she said in a bitter tone. “You’ve made your point, you bastard. I am in no position to make demands of you.”

“No, Captain Ransom, you certainly are not,” Grimm said.

Calliope made a face as though she had just bitten into a piece of rotten vat meat. “I . . .
request
that my crew be taken as prisoners of war and held as such, Captain Grimm. Please.”

Grimm nodded slowly several times. “I want you to know something.”

She frowned and peered at him.

“I know that you didn’t have to use the firing pattern you did at the Landing Shipyard,” he said. “You could have targeted
Predator
first, instead of last.”

“Yes,” she said simply.

“I also want you to know that I realize why you offered me that contract the last time you came aboard. You didn’t want me to be present for what was going to happen. You wanted
Predator
out of harm’s way.”

Her head moved in what may have been the barest fraction of a nod.

“Why?” Grimm asked.

Calliope looked away. The question hung heavy in the silence. After a moment she said, “Once, she was my home too.”

Grimm’s stomach stabbed with a little ache of echoed pain he thought he’d left behind him.

“I remember,” he said quietly. “Captain Ransom, I hereby declare your crew, your passengers, and yourself prisoners under the articles of war. Mister Creedy, make a note to that effect in the ship’s log.”

“Aye, Captain,” Creedy said firmly.

Calliope closed her eyes for a moment and then nodded once to him. Her lips began to shape words several times, but evidently she could not force herself to actually say them.

Grimm had his victory. There was no point in rubbing it in any further. “Your thanks are not necessary, Captain Ransom. I will be sending engineers back with you to board the
Mistshark
and disable your cannon. You will sail with
Predator
back to Spire Albion. You will be under my guns the entire way. If you deviate from any order I give, no matter how slightly, I will open fire. Do you understand?”

“I’m not an idiot, Francis.”

Grimm fought against annoyance but felt a muscle at the corner of his mouth twitch despite his best efforts. Calliope saw it too, and her smirk settled back into place upon her lips.

“I suppose not,” Grimm said. “All the same, Calliope, the past several days have been an almighty trial. Do not test m—”

“Contact!” shouted one of the lookouts in
Predator
’s dorsal mast. “Captain, contact!”

Grimm’s head snapped around toward the lookout. “Where?”

“Inbound vessel high, west by southwest, coming fast!”

An airship coming from the west? But the Fleet was operating exclusively east of their current position. . . .

Grimm’s stomach clenched and he felt his knees go a little loose and unsteady.

He turned, flipping down his telescoptic again, and spotted the incoming airship at once, heading for them at breakneck speed. He studied her through the telescoptic carefully, and tried to ignore the way his heart had begun beating faster and his hands had begun shaking.

“Calliope,” he said quietly. “You don’t need to be here. Get in your launch and go. Now.”

He heard her draw in a small, sharp breath of her own as she saw the approaching ship. “I don’t suppose I could convince you to surrender.”

Grimm gave her a look over his shoulder.

Her smirk turned bitter. “Ah. No. Of course not. Duty.”

She shook her head, and with a few easy strides was off the bridge and heading back to her launch.

“Sound general quarters, if you please, Mister Creedy. Come about. Extend the web around the clock and get us moving.”

The XO boomed out the orders, and once again the ship’s bell began to ring. Men scrambled for their posts, quickly recinching their safety harnesses. Aeronauts swarmed into the masts, playing out the expansive lengths of the ship’s web and getting
Predator
under way.

Grimm stood motionless on the bridge, watching the menacing shape of AAV
Itasca
growing larger with unnerving rapidity, and wondered whether it was already too late to escape.

Chapter 67

BOOK: The Aeronaut's Windlass
6.97Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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