Boots for the Gentleman (37 page)

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Authors: Augusta Li & Eon de Beaumont

BOOK: Boots for the Gentleman
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Querry doubted such a day would ever arrive, but he had no time for philosophy. “Let’s sit down and share what we know,” he suggested. The duchess, Jean-Andre, and Captain Saul found chairs, and some of the other people, presumably the leaders, formed a circle around the bench. “Frolic has told us that the top of the tower can detach,” Querry said.

An older woman nodded. “True,” she said, biting on the stem of a pipe. “I don’t know how he fuels it, but it can fly.”

“The magic,” Frolic explained.

“Magic as fuel,” Kristof mused.

“Kristof,” Reg said, “how long would a person be able to survive inside that magical storm without being changed?”

The wizard considered. “Given the high concentration of power and the chaotic nature of it, I’d say not more than a few hours. Maybe less. It’s impossible to say what the magic would do or how long it would take.”

“Then we must lure him away,” Reggie concluded. “We must find a way to force him to fly away from the tower. We could lay a trap for him: create a distraction and draw him into a place where he’ll be confined.”

Saul nodded, looking at Reg with surprised respect. “And then what?”

“Well, he’s still a mortal man. He should die like one.”

“He won’t come alone,” the duchess said. “He’ll have human guards as well as those ghastly clockwork ones he’s been building. And he’ll have the power. It’s more devastating than I can impart to you. The trees, the ground, the buildings and even the sky will be altered when he uses it.”

“All the more reason for stealth,” Reg said. “What we need is a place where men can remain hidden until the last possible moment. Then one of us can take the shot.”

“I know the place,” Querry said. “His home. If we attack Thimbleroy Manor, he’ll be sure to hurry to its defense. He’s building the clockwork soldiers in his basement. I’ve seen them. And there’s a large cathedral right across the street. It has a tower of its own where we can station men. I’d say we could hide at least a dozen of our best marksman up there.”

“And what about the rest of us?” asked a freckled young man with an overbite. “What happens to those of us on the ground? The guards will rip us to pieces!”

“Maybe we won’t need men on the ground to attack,” Querry said. “What about an explosion? Is there any way we could get access to powder, or to dynamite?”

“Only if we break into the plant that makes the stuff,” someone muttered incredulously.

Querry laughed. “Is that all? Well, I’ll get the dynamite!”

“With a lengthened fuse we can detonate it from a distance,” Dink offered.

“Then I volunteer to do that too,” Querry said quickly. “Reg, I think you should be up on the cathedral tower. You’re a fantastic shot.”

Reg looked pleased and nodded. “I’ll knock his monocle off!”

“I’ll hide in the church,” Kristof offered. “As soon as I sense magic, I’ll try to put a shield up around anyone on the ground. Possibly I can negate some of the tower’s effects as well, but I can’t make any promises.”

“I’ll come and watch out for you,” the fey said, “though not inside the
church
. We’ll have to find another place to take shelter. I have much desire to spend a few moments with this man before he dies.” Kristof looked dark, but he reached up and stroked the outside of the faerie’s arm.

“There is still the power,” the duchess said. “Even a small burst could dash this entire plan to nothing.”

They all sat in silence, their optimism evaporated. Finally Dink said, “I may be able to replicate some of the tower’s magic-absorbing ability. I learned more than Thimbleroy knows during my time in captivity there. Probably not enough, unless I had some help. Frolic understands the workings of the mechanisms better than any of us, and we finally have a wizard as an ally. The three of us might be able to come up with something, build a sort of magical lightning rod of our own.” He looked expectantly at his two would-be assistants.

Kristof rubbed his smooth chin. “There are certain elements that attract enchantment,” he said tentatively, “though I know nothing of clockwork.”

“I do,” Frolic said so quietly that only those closest to him heard.

“I was hoping to take Frolic with me to the munitions factory,” Querry said. “Though this seems a bit more pressing. I don’t suppose there’s another experienced thief in our company?”

Lizard cleared this throat and raised his brows when Querry looked at him. Querry slapped his thigh, chuckled, and said, “I thought maybe. The two of us should be able to manage just fine. We’ll go in between shifts, and we shouldn’t need much. It’s just a diversion, after all.”

“Thanks, mate,” the boy said with a bright smile. “I’ll enjoy a few pointers from the best.”

Querry laughed, oddly satisfied. “We’ll start tomorrow morning. First we’ll need to observe, find out where they store the stuff and if it’s guarded.”

“We will also start in the morning,” Kristof said.

“It will take us at least a few days,” Frolic said. “We can’t hope to make anything as sophisticated as the angels, but I already have some ideas.”

“Nothing left tonight but to get some rest then,” Reggie said, stretching his arms above his head. “Do any of you know of a safe place where we could stay? I think it’s in all of our best interests if the authorities remain unaware of our return.”

“You can spend the night here,” the duchess offered. “We have little space, but this location hasn’t been compromised and I have my people watching and patrolling the area. I can offer you a small room in the former servants’ quarters in the attic.”

“Unacceptable!” the faerie gentleman said. “I’ll not sleep on a cot reeking of filthy human scullery maids, old onions, and shoe polish!”

Kristof looked up at him and said a pleading word, and the sharp, defensive angle of his shoulders softened a little. The wizard grasped the faerie’s hand and stroked it with his thumb. “Beloved, you do too much for my sake. I wish you’d stayed where you could be safe and provided for in the manner that you deserve.”

“I shall be satisfied to sleep next to you,” the faerie said with more gentleness than Querry had ever heard him express. “However, I will add this slight to my growing list of offenses this city and its people have committed against me. They try even my good and merciful nature.” His eyes narrowed as he looked around the room. Every man and woman dropped his or her gaze from his vengeful face.

“Thank you,” Kristof said. All of them stood up and followed their hostess toward the tiny cell on the fourth floor.

Jean-Andre stopped Querry with a hand on his elbow. “Might I have a word?”

Querry, his mind full of questions, nodded once as the rest of his party ascended the stairs out of the cellar. The two men stood quietly, waiting until they were alone.

“You are quite the thief,” Jean-Andre said, folding his arms across his chest and leaning back against the stone wall. “I was quite impressed with your skills.”

“What do you want me to say?”

“I want you to say nothing until you’ve heard me out. And then, hopefully, you will agree to what I propose.”

“Go on.”

“As I said, you are good at what you do. You fail, however, to see the bigger picture. Coins and jewelry hold value only so long. In our world, sir, the most valuable commodity is information. Information such as the book in your possession. I wonder if you have any idea what that book is worth? No, of course you don’t. But I do. I also have the connections necessary to find you the highest bidder. For a modest share of the profits, of course.”

“Not interested,” Querry said. “That book belongs to Frolic.”

“The sale of it could provide for him the rest of his life. I’m not talking about dealing with back-alley fences, Mr. Knotte. The people who would be interested in that book would be willing and able to provide you with lands, properties, money beyond your wildest dreams. And that brings me to my second proposition.”

“I doubt I’m going to like this, but go on.”

“I would like to offer you a business partnership.”

“What exactly is it that you do?” Querry asked.

The other man considered. “I make friends with wealthy and important people. I listen and learn useful things. Then I decide who else might want to know these useful things. And who will pay me to know them.”

“Does the duchess know about all of this?”

“I’m sure she suspects,” Jean-Andre said, waving the matter away with a flick of his fingers. “She’s not a fool. I am in her employ at the moment, but without the stipulation that I can’t keep any knowledge I glean from this situation for future use. The knowledge of either magic or industry, possibly both, will determine the course of the future, Mr. Knotte. He who controls that knowledge will control the world. We have turned an important corner in our history. One way or another, clockwork automatons will be produced. I’m offering you a chance to work with me and be a—I don’t know—a guardian after a fashion, of that knowledge.”

“By doing what, exactly?”

“By learning how to dress properly and speak well. Your ability to avoid detection will be quite helpful, as sometimes the useful knowledge I seek is not freely offered. You are also very beautiful,” the Belvaisian said, lowering his head and looking up at Querry through his peach-colored lashes. “I have been told I’m not altogether hideous myself, and let me assure you, that beauty can open many doors for you. I can teach you how.”

Sweat ran down Querry’s spine as he noticed how hot the cellar had become. He noticed the loose waves in Jean-Andre’s hair. The other man stood so close that Querry could smell his expensive cologne, could practically count the freckles that peppered his nose. He took a large step backward and said, “I- I don’t know about this. What about Reggie and Frolic?”

“What about them?”

“I have to think,” Querry said, mopping his moist brow with his shirtsleeve. “I have to go, or the others will wonder what’s kept me.”

Jean-Andre laughed. “You see, you knew without me saying a word to keep this between the two of us! You’re a natural.”

Querry turned away and hurried up the stairs to the servants’ quarters. There was scarcely room for the three narrow beds contained within, and the slope of the ceiling prevented them from standing upright. Reg had lit the oil lantern on the night table and sat down to clean his guns. Kristof took the bed opposite him and held out his hand to his partner. The faerie, though he grumbled incessantly about the conditions, nestled between Kristof’s parted legs with his head on the magician’s chest. Kristof stroked his hair, and in mere moments he fell asleep. Frolic looked from the pair to Reg, as if trying to decide where he belonged. He gave up on sorting his memories and pulled a three-legged stool to the tiny window. With a deep sigh he sat down with his back to all of them and brushed the plain curtain aside. It wounded Querry to see him hurting and confused, and Querry wondered what he might have done differently. Maybe he really was too impetuous sometimes. Somehow he knew not to rub Frolic’s back but to leave him alone. He stretched out on the third bed and folded his arms beneath his head. The guilt he felt over his clandestine meeting with Jean-Andre didn’t help him to relax, either. After thinking over his plan for half an hour, he removed his armored vest, gloves, boots and weapons and got under the coarse sheet. He heard Reg doing the same and let his eyes close. He’d been resting for some time and was almost unconscious when Frolic lifted the bedclothes and curled up beside him. Querry rolled over to embrace him and kiss his forehead before surrendering to a much-needed sleep.

Chapter Twenty-one

T
HE
three days Querry and the others took to make their preparations passed in the blink of an eye. Querry found little time to consider Jean-Andre’s words, and since he didn’t see the man again, he put them to the back of his mind. The temperature rose enough that the five men sat in the small room on the fourth floor with the window wide open. The evening air was warm as tears, and an aroma of fresh green and rising sap drifted on the wind. All of them perched on the edges of the beds, looking at one another. Finally, to break the tension, Querry said, “Here we are, then. Tomorrow morning this all ends, one way or the other.”

“We’re as ready as we can possibly be,” Reg assured him. “It’s a good plan, and it’s going to work.”

Querry nodded, smiled at him, and tried to believe his words. True, they’d done everything to make their scheme work flawlessly, but Querry knew from experience how many things could still go wrong. He looked at the four men: his beloved Reg with his reserved exterior hiding burning passion and brilliant bravery; his sweet Frolic with his innocence and enthusiasm buried beneath disorder and doubt; the faerie who played at being a gentleman but was more a force of nature; and the great magician, Kristof, who had the demeanor of the most unassuming servant. Querry loved all of them more than he ever had, and he decided then and there that he’d die before he saw them come to harm. He memorized the details of each of their faces, hands, and bodies, right down to their eyelashes and fingernails. Each of them was so perfect in his own way. He’d been lucky to know them for the time that he had.

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