Deaderick grinned at her. “Sounds promising.”
“It’s not promising, but it’s better than nothing. We have to get that thing out of the lake. We have to get it out to sea, to the Federal Navy. Once they get a crack at it, it’s just a matter of time. Ganymede could change everything.”
“I know,” her brother said, putting his arms around her. “And it will.”
In the distance, a cheer went up and so did a small flare — a little rocket of a thing that cast a pink white trail of burning fire into the sky. A second cheer followed it, and the clapping of a crowd.
“Goddamn Texians,” Josephine said wearily, the words garbled against his shoulder.
“What are they doing?”
“Tearing up the cathedral square, gambling on livestock, and shooting off fireworks. It isn’t right.”
Deaderick nodded, but noted, “You haven’t been to church in half a lifetime.”
“Still,” she said, “that doesn’t make it right, what they’re doing over there.”
A faintly burning chemical stink joined the city’s odors, trapped in the humid fog of Gulf water and river water that crept through the Quarter like a warm, wet bath. Gunpowder and animals, men and women, alcohols sweet and sour — bourbons brought from Kentucky, whiskeys imported from Tennessee, rums shipped in from the islands south of Florida, and grain distillations made in a neighbor’s cast-iron tub. The night smelled of gun oil and saddles, and the jasmine colognes of the night ladies, or the violets and azaleas that hung from balconies in baskets; of berry liqueur and the verdant, herbal tang of absinthe delivered from crystal decanters, and the dried chilies hanging in the stalls of the French market, and powdered sugar and chicory.
Josephine leaned her head on Deaderick’s shoulder as she hugged him good-bye. She breathed, “We’re drowning like this, you know,” and she saw him off with tears swallowed hard in the back of her throat.
Two
Andan Cly folded the telegram shut and said, “I’ll be damned.” He slipped it into his shirt pocket, then changed his mind and set it instead on the bar — as if he were reluctant to touch it, but didn’t want to let it out of his sight.
“What for?” Angeline drew her feet up onto the stool’s bottommost rung and looked at him expectantly. She was dressed in her usual preferred attire, a man’s shirt and pants cut down to size. A slouch-rim hat sat atop her head, crowning the long gray braid that hung down her back.
The pilot and sometimes-pirate cleared his throat and signaled the bartender for a glass of something stronger than what was already in front of him. “It’s … it’s a message. From someone I used to know, a long time ago.”
“Must be a woman.”
“I didn’t say it was a woman.”
“If it wasn’t, you wouldn’t be hemming and hawing like a schoolboy.”
“Hush, you,” he told her, not for a moment expecting her to do so.
Lucy O’Gunning slipped a shot in front of him and then put a bottle of whiskey beside it. “One for you, too, Princess?”
“Since you’re offering.”
Lucy poured another drink, using her one mechanical arm as deftly as any bartender ever used two of the usual kind. “And what have we got here?” She reached to pick up the cheap slip of transcription paper, but Cly snatched it back, crumpling it in his hand.
“It’s a note from a woman,” Angeline informed her. “He won’t admit it, but that’s what it is. Telegram came up from Tacoma. Freddy Miller brought it in his sack with the last batch of mail; I just brought it along, ’cause I was passing through anyhow.”
“A woman?” Lucy gave Andan Cly a suspicious squint. “You airmen, all the same. A girl in every port.”
“It ain’t like that,” he insisted. “I haven’t seen this woman in … I don’t know. Eight or ten years. She’s a few thousand miles away, and she didn’t dash off a note because she missed me.” Under his breath he added, “I can promise you that.”
“Ooh.” Lucy leaned forward, planting her matronly bosom on the countertop and propping her chin in her clockwork palm. “Sounds interesting.”
“What does she want?” Angeline asked bluntly, unconcerned by the blush that climbed the fair-skinned fellow’s neck. Cly’s hair was cut close to his scalp, and it was light enough to plainly show the pink when embarrassment made it all the way to the top of his considerable frame.
“She wants to hire me.”
“For what kind of job?” Lucy asked.
“She wants me to come to New Orleans. There’s a craft she wants me to fly, but I don’t know anything more than that. The telegram is thin on details.”
Angeline harrumphed. “Sounds like a trumped-up excuse to bring you out for a visit.”
“She’s not that kind.”
“You don’t sound so sure of it,” Lucy said. She waited for him to down his shot. When he did, she poured him another before he had a chance to ask for it.
“I’m plenty sure of it, and now you’re just trying to liquor me up so I’ll tell you more.”
“You complaining?”
“No. Keep ’em coming.” He cleared his throat again and said, “There’s got to be a catch. New Orleans is a huge place — big port, big airyard. She could get a perfectly good pilot by setting foot outside her front door and hollering for one.” Unfolding the paper, he reread a few lines and said, “All I know is, it’s got something to do with this thing, the Ganymede.”
The bartender asked, “What’s a Ganymede?”
“A dirigible, I assume. She needs someone to take it from Pontchartrain to the Gulf, and she’s willing to pay … but it’s only a few miles, from the lake to the coast. Why she’d want me to go all the way out there to move it for her, I just don’t know.”
“Ask her,” suggested Angeline.
“Not sure it’s worth the trouble.”
Ever the practical one, Lucy asked, “Is it enough money to make the trip worthwhile? That’s a long way to go, to fly a ship a few feet.”
“Almost, but not quite. She’s offering low, asking it like a favor for old times’ sake.”
Angeline smiled. “Old times must’ve been good.”
Lucy straightened up and grabbed a towel. She pretended that the bar needed a good wipe-down and said, “I never been to New Orleans.”
“Me either, but I done heard about it,” the older woman said, her smile still firmly in place — and now with a playful gleam twinkling in her eyes. “I hear it’s a city for music and dancing, and drinking, too. I hear it’s all Frenched up.”
Cly swallowed his beverage but put a hand over the glass when Lucy used her bar rag to nudge the bottle his way. “New Orleans is one hell of a city, or it was last time I saw it. Even though Texas had been sitting on it for years.”
Angeline’s smile contorted into a puzzled frown. “What’s Texas got to do with it?”
He picked up his glass and fiddled with it, tipping it this way and that between his fingers. “Early in the war — back in 1862—the Union went after the city. They thought if they could control the port and the river, they could get a good choke hold on the Confederate supply line. So they took the place. Trouble was, they couldn’t keep it.”
“Texas took it away from them?” Angeline guessed.
“Yeah. The Rebs couldn’t pry the Federal troops out on their own, not for trying; but the Texians didn’t like having the Union presence so close by, so they agreed to lend a hand. They freed up the city in ’64, I think. But once they’d booted out the Union, they had a problem: The Rebels didn’t have enough people on hand to keep the city secure, and the Union wanted back inside it real bad. That’s the biggest port this side of the world, you understand? So Texas could either hold down the fort, or it could withdraw and risk an enemy stronghold right outside its eastern border.”
“So Texas stayed,” Angeline inferred.
“Texas stayed. And nobody likes it much.”