Arcadia Snips and the Steamwork Consortium - BestLightNovel.com
You’re reading novel Arcadia Snips and the Steamwork Consortium Part 25 online at BestLightNovel.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit BestLightNovel.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
CHAPTER 25: IN WHICH WE ONCE AGAIN RETURN TO THE PAST AND DISCOVER THE DAFFODILS' FATE AS WELL AS THE EVENTS THAT LEAD TO THE 'LOST HOUR'.
"You started a war," Jeremiah said.
"Extraordinary problems require extraordinary answers."
"You started a war," Jeremiah repeated, stepping forward.
"You used your contacts throughout the Society-throughout the whole d.a.m.n city-and you started a G.o.dd.a.m.n war."
"Only a small one, Jeremiah."
"Was that supposed to be a joke? Am I supposed to be laughing?" Jeremiah asked. "Blood will be spilled, Nigel. Over nothing more than a boundary on someone else's map. People will die because of this."
"I fail to see the significance. People die every day," Nigel said. "And it's certainly not as if our country could lose this little conflict."
"That's not the b.l.o.o.d.y point, and you know it!"
"Really, Jeremiah, you need to consider the broader picture," Nigel told him. "This war will help release some of the pressure-help reduce the severity of the war to come. It may even delay it," he added, "buying us precious time to reconsider our method of attack."
"We can't stop it," Jeremiah said. "Any attempt to do so will only make it worse."
"Obviously, this minor scuffle will not do so. But I refuse to believe that stopping the Great War is impossible," Nigel said. "A decade ago, if I had told you that it was feasible to replace a heart with a machine, you would have called me mad. Do not tell me what can and cannot be done. With determination and genius, anything is possible."
Jeremiah stiffened. "If it weren't for what you did for my boy, Nigel, I swear I'd-"
"What? Turn me into the authorities?" Nigel asked. "On what grounds? I've done nothing but send letters to a few public officials. Or perhaps you'd release information concerning my little social club? Tell the world how it's all a sham? No one of importance would believe you, and the only way to convince them would be to reveal the existence of our probability engine. Which would leave it in the hands of men far more capable of evil."
"Neither Abigail nor I will allow you to use the engine anymore," Jeremiah pointed out. "We won't submit any more data for it. We're both through with it."
"Yes, yes; it doesn't matter. I no longer need your help,"
Nigel said. "I've learned how to program the original engine myself."
"We'll stop you."
"How? And more importantly, why? You and Abigail made it clear that you are unwilling to do what is necessary to prevent the Great War. I am. I shall take the burden, Jeremiah, and I will bare the consequences. Alone."
"You're insane," Jeremiah said.
"I'm a moral pragmatist, Jeremiah. A few thousand lives are of less value than a few million lives. Can you not see the simplicity of it? One man's life now is not worth a hundred tomorrow."
"Morality is not a matter of simple arithmetic, Nigel!"
"And why not?"
"Because it's murder!" Jeremiah replied. "It's villainy!"
"In an era such as ours," Nigel said, "one must sometimes play the villain to remain a gentleman."
The probability engine growled angrily beneath the Steamwork as Abigail fed the last equations into it. As it reached the end of the problem's thread, the dials began to spin wildly out of control; a valve hissed inside the machine as it began to choke on the results.
Something gave. A belt snapped; a gear popped. Abigail shut the engine off, leaving it to splutter with impotence.
"He's sabotaged the engine," Abigail said, voice grim. "It's nothing more than an overglorified adding machine, now. b.l.o.o.d.y brilliant, really."
"How?" Jeremiah asked. "No one works with it but us. The vault is locked-no one else can get in. I don't understand how he could-"
"By using his engine," she said. "He set a chain of events in motion that lead to our engine failing to function. But for an effect that specific, he must have been planning this for some time. For a very long time," she added. "Perhaps ever since we realized that the war was coming."
"If he's willing to use the engine to sabotage us," Jeremiah began, shuddering. "The things that one could accomplish with a machine like this-"
"Once we stop him, we should destroy our own," Abigail said. "Back then, we thought it was too much power for one man.
We were wrong; it's too much power for any number of men."
"If only we knew what he intended."
"He intends to create a disaster powerful enough to stop the coming war," Abigail stated flatly.
"But how?"
"That I do not know. But it would be best for us to keep William away. He is safe with his grandmother, for now."
"Wait-back then, when Nigel asked you how to stop the war. What were the possibilities you told him?"
"A nation collapsing," she said. "Or perhaps a city disappearing overnight-Jeremiah? Is something wrong?"
Jeremiah's face had gone stark white. "I hadn't even considered it at the time. Such forethought! Such horrible, murderous forethought!"
"What? What is it, Jeremiah?"
"When we replaced William's heart," Jeremiah said. "The only way to power the machine was with my mother's invention- the radium generator. We disa.s.sembled it, and I explained its operation to Nigel-some time afterward, I noticed that the blueprints and several key parts that had been left over were missing. I thought nothing of it at the time, but-my G.o.d!"
Abigail's jaw dropped. "He wouldn't-he couldn't-"
"An entire city," Jeremiah said. "Gone, overnight."
"Tens of thousands dead-"
"To save hundreds of thousands more," Jeremiah finished.
"We must find him. We must stop him before it is too late."
The device resembled a boiler more than a bomb; pipes and valves protruded from every inch of it, keeping tabs on the reaction that struggled to escape from deep within its belly. Nigel checked the readings a third time, nodding in approval.
"Nigel."
He turned; several of the society's initiates stood around Abigail, watching her warily. One of them opened his mouth to explain her presence here in the center of the chapter house- despite Nigel's very specific instructions that he was not to be disturbed-but Nigel dismissed him with a wave of his hand.
"Madame," Nigel spoke, bowing. "I wish I could say I was surprised. Is Jeremiah with you?"
"I only have one question," she said, her eyes like steel.
"What you did to William-was it part of your plan? Was it unnecessary?"
"No," Nigel told her. "It was merely fortunate coincidence."
"Of that I remain unconvinced." Her eyes strayed to the device as it trembled and shuddered. "I a.s.sume, then, that this is the bomb?"
"A brilliant machine," Nigel said, "both fascinating and terrifying in design."
"You intend to destroy the city, then."
"Only half," Nigel said. "Only half should be sufficient, if my calculations are correct. And they always are," he added.
"I have come here to convince you to give up this task, Nigel. I hoped to appeal to your sense of decency-"
"The stakes are too high for a sense of decency, my dear.
The stakes are too high for anything at all," Nigel said. "If it brings you some peace of mind, denounce me as a villain, but the actions I take now are wholly necessary. As for you..."
The initiates s.h.i.+fted, stepping forward to surround her.
Abigail's eyes narrowed.
"Do not fear, Abigail. You will be spared, as will Jeremiah, if he has the good sense to show up," Nigel said. "I have a dirigible ready to flee the city; the device will detonate shortly, but we will be well out of range."
"Always so b.l.o.o.d.y a.n.a.lytical," she said. "Always so b.l.o.o.d.y well thought out. Well, Nigel, there's something you haven't considered-an element you missed."
Nigel gestured to the initiates as they moved to seize her by the shoulders; at once, they stepped back. "Tell me," he said. "Tell me what I have missed. For I would certainly quite like to hear of it."
Abigail smiled grimly. "You forgot who you're dealing with."
Somewhere above them, there was a gentle thrumming; a buzzing that built to a maddening hum. Nigel frowned, looking up.
"We are not scientists, Nigel," she added, and now the hum grew to a steady, throbbing roar.
"What on earth-" Nigel began.
"We are mad scientists."
The ceiling of the Society's chapterhouse collapsed inwards as a ma.s.sive mechanical spider slammed down feet-first directly behind Abigail.
Smoke and dust swirled up in a thick and stifling cloud as the initiates stumbled backward, climbing over one another to get away. Nigel narrowed his eyes and stepped back, trying to pierce the fogging shroud; a figure stood atop the machine, equipped with a dreadful looking device.
"You know," Jeremiah said, hunched over with the weight of the battery strapped to his back, "I've always wanted to do that."
Long coils of insulated wires ran up along his arms and to a set of electrified gauntlets. His goggles gleamed brightly in the room's fluttering gas lights.
Abigail leapt to his side, arming herself with a modified blunderbuss. Rather than having to be manually loaded, the rifle was equipped with a device that used the energy of the gun's shot to snap the next round into place. She swept the weapon's barrel about, squinting one eye to peer down its barrel as she aimed at Nigel.
"Now," she said, "if you would, please kindly disarm your bomb."
"This is absurd," Nigel said. "I've already activated the device. There's nothing left to be done."
"I mean, ever since I was a little kid, I've secretly wanted to crash into someone's secret lair like that. It's a shame I didn't have some clever line at the ready," Jeremiah said.
"Deactivate it," Abigail said. "Now."
"Or what?" Nigel suppressed a laugh. "You will kill me? If a man is willing to kill for something, he d.a.m.n well better be ready to die for it. And I am."
"Maybe something like, 'so sorry to interrupt, just thought I'd drop in'," Jeremiah continued. "Oh! That's a good one. I must remember that one."
"Darling," Abigail said, sighing. "Focus, please."
"Oh, right." Jeremiah turned his attention to Nigel. "Come on, then. Turn the b.l.o.o.d.y thing off, eh? You've gone far enough with this nonsense."
"I am afraid I cannot do that," Nigel said.
Jeremiah frowned. "Nigel, please-"
A screeching howl emerged from the bomb; pressure escaped from the vents, spewing out great clouds of steam throughout the room. Nigel dashed to the side, reaching for an antique flintlock mounted on the wall; Abigail cursed and fired in a blaze of flame and pitch, riddling the room with buckshot.
Jeremiah darted forward. An initiate who had yet to flee tried to intercept him, but the engineer backhanded him with a galvanized fist, sending him cras.h.i.+ng to the floor; he reached the bomb just as the dials began their wild and frantic spin.
Nigel reached the flintlock, spinning about and taking aim for Jeremiah; Abigail descended upon him in a wild fury, swinging the blunderbuss down as if it were a hatchet. It cracked across the side of his skull, sending him reeling to the floor.
"Jeremiah!" Abigail cried, running to join her husband.
"Can you turn it off?"
Jeremiah had thrown the iron gauntlets down and was now studying the valves intently. As he looked up from them, Abigail saw the dark look that pa.s.sed over his face.