Read Captain Gravenor’s Airship Equinox (Steampunk Smugglers) Online
Authors: Heather Hiestand
Looking Forward, Looking Back and Other Stories
“The Bachelor” in Cupid Gone Wild
Novellas:
Victoriana Adventure
Steampunk Smugglers 1: Captain Andrew’s Flying Christmas
Steampunk Smugglers 2: Captain Fenna’s Dirigible Valentine
Steampunk Smugglers 3: Captain Gravenor’s Airship Equinox
Novels:
Cards Never Lie
One Juror Down
Gunshot Grange
Two on the Hunt
In Flight
Read an excerpt from Heather
Hiestand’s first Steampunk Smugglers novella
Captain Andrew’s Flying Christmas is
available now, as is Captain Fenna’s Dirigible Valentine
CHAPTER ONE
London, December 24, 1892
Linet Fenna shivered in her attic bedroom as she stared out
the open window. Downstairs, all was merry and bright with evergreen branches,
mistletoe and handmade garlands festooning trees and mantles. Under the eaves
here, wind blew through a crack in the undecorated wall and rustled in the
chimneys above.
A fever had made the first housemaid take to bed just after
breakfast and Linet, the second housemaid, had been run ragged all day by her
demanding mistress and her ever-arriving family. Now, finally done with work,
she just wanted to stare at the stars and dream.
“Close the window,” Ann-Marie said, coughing from her iron
bedstead in the darkest corner of the room.
“In a minute.” Linet took one last breath of chilly air and
had her hand on the sill when she heard a metallic chugging in the distance.
The sound came from outside, and wasn’t likely to be Father Christmas.
The automen who secured England for Prime Minister Gladstone
had yet to master the skies. Linet had once known the world above the streets
well, as daughter of the famed smuggler Rhys Fenna. Some had called him a sky
pirate, and his neck had been broken on a gibbet three Boxing Days ago. She had
become a maid of all work to support herself in the aftermath of his death. This
position in a larger home had seemed a blessing at first until she realized
she’d moved into a house owned by an automen manufacturer. The factory, only
steps away, belched smoke and steam into the air at all hours, and it kept the
brass fist of authority ever alive in her mind.
As Ann-Marie coughed behind her, Linet pulled at the tight
high collar of her black dress and leaned forward into the open window, looking
for the source of the sound. She darted back a step instinctively when
something pinged against the glass above her head. A bird? Surely none were
about at this late hour.
When she looked up, the astonishing sight took her back
three years. No wonder she’d heard chugging. “A ladder?” she whispered.
“What?” Ann-Marie croaked.
“Nothing, go to sleep.” Linet hurried to the washstand by
the sick girl’s bed and blew out the candle. “There, that’s better. You need to
rest. I can’t manage alone with all these guests.”
“Do you want to go to sleep so soon?”
“Of course. That will make Father Christmas come all the
sooner.” She felt the girl’s forehead. Not dangerously hot, thankfully.
“He doesn’t come for the likes of us,” Ann-Marie muttered. A
rustling told Linet she had turned over.
Linet dashed back to the window. Yes, a rope ladder, just
like the ones she’d climbed thousands of times to her father’s dirigible, the
Christmas
,
dangled outside, a little lower now. Ladders had been the staircases of her
life until she was seventeen, carrying her from earth to sky, larceny to
freedom.
Who had found her? Her father had enemies, to be sure, but
no enemy would be visiting her on Christmas Eve. No one from her old life had
crossed her path in all this time. Perhaps her sister Terrwyn had finally
reappeared?
She reached through the window and grabbed the ladder, then
frowned. That knot with a gash on the left side looked familiar. One run was
painted red, the next, green. Her gaze rose, unbelieving.