“Hey!” Gavin said. “I can play the fiddle!”
“And he sings,” Alice pointed out, feeling defensive.
“I could walk a tightrope, too,” Gavin muttered. “And learn the trapeze. Wouldn’t take more than ten minutes. Stupid clockwork plague gives me stupid extra reflexes. May as well make some extra money out of it before it kills me.”
“The Flying Tortellis would drop something on my head if I put you in the ring,” Dodd said with a grin. “Besides, you’re supposed to be hiding. I was joking about the dead weight. You really do have trouble with British humor, don’t you?”
“Now, look—”
“I’ve never visited the Ukrainian Empire,” Alice interrupted. “But if it’s the center of the plague, I should certainly go there with Gavin. Why are you so unhappy, Feng?”
“They are Cossack barbarians,” Feng spat. “They build and pollute and fight. They care nothing for balance or beauty.”
“You worry about balance?” Alice asked archly.
“And the Chinese put them in power,” Gavin said.
“That doesn’t make them any less barbaric,” Feng shot back.
“In any case, I want to go there with Gavin,”Alice repeated. She stood the elephant back up and sent it to the side of the ring. “But please explain that remark about power.”
Feng crossed his arms. “England had an arrangement with China,” he said. “After the Napoleonic Wars ended, it became clear that parts of Europe—the west—and the Ottoman Empire—the east—could unite and become a threat to Britannia and China. Our governments didn’t want that to happen. So we came to an understanding. Britannia took the west and China the east.”
“I don’t need a history lesson,” Dodd complained. “Will the elephant work for anyone, Miss Michaels, or just you?”
Alice waved him away. “Anyone, Ringmaster. What do you mean by took, Feng?”
“Took charge.” Feng was pacing again. “Napoleon’s nephew was supposed to rule France after the old emperor was exiled, but the man died. With no strong ruler, France fell into civil war, and now it is four fragments. Why do you think that was? Prussia is ten tiny kingdoms who never agree. Why is that? Your Calvinists and Lutherans war with each other as well. Why does this happen?”
“You’re going to tell me the Third Ward keeps everyone off balance.”
“Indeed.”
“Up!” Dodd said, gesturing. “Up! Miss Michaels, he isn’t moving.”
“You have to use your left hand, Ringmaster,” Alice replied absently. “I assume China has a role as well?”
“China,” Gavin put in, “destabilized the east. Russia and Poland had split Ukraine in half and were draining it dry. The resources gave both countries enough power to make China—and Britain—nervous. Then the clockwork plague hit Ukraine again. For some reason, it created more clockworkers than normal in Kiev. A Cossack captain named Ivan Gonta ended up with a special talent for war machines, and his superior Maksym Zalizniak used Gonta’s inventions to start a revolution.”
The elephant got up and lumbered around the ring. It picked up speed, steam trailing from its tusks. Dodd waved frantically at it, but it didn’t slow down.
“Oh! I vaguely remember something about that from a history book, now that you mention specific names,” Alice said. “Gonta and the other clockworkers put together hundreds of war machines and slaughtered thousands of Russians and Poles until they abandoned Ukraine to the Cossacks.”
“Hello there!” Dodd shouted. “Runaway elephant!”
“Did you ever stop to wonder where Gonta and Zalizniak found the money and materials to build all those machines?” Feng asked.
Alice gestured sharply, and the elephant screeched to a halt. “I have the feeling it came from China.”
“Was that a malfunction?” Dodd asked. “Because I swear I did the exact same thing.”
Feng nodded. “The emperor chose wisely—the Cossacks are content to defend their borders without expanding them, and they make an excellent wedge between Russia and Poland.”
“I am your boss, Miss Michaels,” Dodd said.
“Of course you are,” Gavin murmured.
“At any rate,” Feng concluded, “the ruling Cassocks are actually crueler to their own people than the Poles or Russians ever were. It’s the nature of the warrior class.”
“And we’re walking right into them?”
“Steaming into them,” Dodd said. “We have a train. But I told you not to worry. They love us. Now, show me how to work this damned elephant.”
Alice gave him a wide smile. “What’s the magic word, Ringmaster? As a hint, I’ll tell you that it isn’t damned.”
Gavin laughed, and Alice thought it was the most musical thing she had ever heard.
Later that afternoon, Alice opened the hatchway on the Lady of Liberty in her hiding place at the abandoned stable and climbed belowdecks. The familiar narrow corridor faced with doors greeted her. The creaking space felt eerie and claustrophobic without Gavin here. Alice went past her stateroom all the way down to the end and slid the last door open. Inside was the tiny laboratory Gavin had built into the airship. The entire place was set up for efficiency. Tools hung on the bulkheads, tabletops folded up, tiny drawers kept everything pigeonholed. It even had a tiny forge, which was currently glowing and made the room hot and stuffy. The place was also hung with half a dozen clocks. They ticked madly, their exposed gears whirling. Stuck everywhere were pieces of paper, large and small. Every one of them had the same drawing, one of a three-dimensional wire cube that twisted Alice’s eye. Part of the back passed over the front, or perhaps the front passed under the back. The drawings were done in pencil, charcoal, colored ink, and one medium that looked suspiciously like blood.
Dr. Clef was standing in the midst of all this with his back to Alice. He seemed to be scratching something in a notebook. Click leaped down from the rim of a porthole and hurried over to her, purring loudly. Alice scooped him up. His skin was cool and smooth.
“Click,” she said. “Oh, I’ve missed you.”
Dr. Clef turned and pushed his goggles up. “Alice! When did you come back, my dear? I have not seen you in weeks.”
“Weeks?” Alice stroked Click’s brass back. “Doctor, it’s been only two days.”
“Oh. Are you sure?” He glanced at the clocks. “How interesting. Did you know that gravity affects a clock?”
“Er… no.”
“Look at these.” He pointed at the ones closest to the ceiling. “They are moving at a slightly different rate than the ones down there at the floor. It gets more noticeable when I put them on top of the ship’s envelope. It is because they are farther away from Earth’s gravity.”
“They look the same to me, Dr. Clef.”
Dr. Clef shrugged. “They are not.”
“Are you trying to re-create your Impossible Cube, Doctor?” she asked.
“With difficulty.” He pointed at a small cable spool on the worktable. It was wound with fat, stiff-looking wire. “I have managed to reforge some of my special alloy using nails and other scraps from the barn, but I do not think I can re-create the Cube itself. And I do miss it.”
“What’s the problem?”
“It is—was—unique in all time and space.” Dr. Clef sighed. “I am beginning to think it cannot be re-created, for that would violate the basic nature of its uniqueness. But look at what I have learned while I am trying.” He held up a notebook with a number of formulae scribbled in it. “When you measure certain events, you change them. You can, for example, discover how fast a certain piece of… of matter is moving or you can learn its location, but you can’t pin down both. It is very odd.”