Arcadia Snips and the Steamwork Consortium - LightNovelsOnl.com
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Basil had arranged several planks of wood atop of a heated pipe to serve as a makes.h.i.+ft table. Atop it were several of his experiments; while Snips scavenged his work desk for information, William inspected each device in turn.
"There's a bulb, you can 'ave that one," Marge said, pointing to one of the bulbs on the table. William politely thanked her and placed it inside his coat.
One device in particular caught William's fancy: a small metal lever had been attached by insulated wire to a light bulb that was fitted into an iron frame. He pressed the lever down and watched with rapt fascination as the bulb immediately hummed to life; when his finger left the trigger, the bulb instantly turned off.
He repeated this action several times, puzzling over what the device could mean. Then he looked up.
"Miss Snips."
"Where did he put his blueprints? Nothing like that in any of these drawers," Snips said. "Just tools, tools, more tools-what is this? Is this a screwdriver? This doesn't look like a screwdriver."
"Miss Snips."
"It's got a spring on it. What sort of screwdriver has a spring on it? We're dealing with a deranged mind here. I think-"
"Miss Snips!"
Something about his tone drew Snips away from the desk.
She turned, looking at William. His head was tossed back, his gaze glued to the ceiling. Snips followed his eyes and noticed just what it was he was staring at.
The insulated wire that ran from the lever to the light bulb did not travel directly to its target. Instead, the wire went from the trigger to the ceiling-where it curled over itself in several dozen bundled loops, cluttering the ceiling in coiled bundles that must have been at least a mile's worth of cord. The wire eventually dropped back down, leading up to the bulb.
Staring up at the extraordinary length of wire, William pressed the trigger again. The light bulb reacted instantly.
"Miss Snips," he said, his voice stark and quiet. "Do you know the stories of Professor Hemlock?"
"Bits and pieces," Snips said, eyeing the bundles stapled to the ceiling. "I've heard them, anyway."
"A brilliant inventor so far removed from the common day that his creations resemble magic more than science," he said, voice hushed with awe. "A man who, driven by the fear that his genius would be misapplied, sought to hide it from the world."
"An absurd bedtime story." Snips stepped forward, detaching the trigger from its battery with a snap of her fingers.
"It's hogwash. Besides, I don't see the big deal. So Basil invented a light you can turn on from far away."
William's head slowly dropped back into place. "He proved that electricity travels instantly. He invented a way to communicate across vast distances with impossible speed."
"And so Hemlock flew down in a steam-powered chariot and blew Basil to kingdom come to protect us from the horrors of reliable mail service," Snips shot back. "By Jove, I think you've done it, Mr. Daffodil! Excellent work!"
William's distant look was dispelled by a flash of anger.
"Simply because you do not understand the significance of Mr. Copper's invention, Miss Snips-"
Marge cleared her throat. Both Snips and William turned, their faces flushed with frustration.
"Yer lookin' for blueprints, right? Because if you are, they're right over there." She pointed the frying pan to the far wall, where several blueprints and notes for Basil's various inventions had been plastered.
"Yeah," Snips said, glaring at William. "Yeah, that's what I was looking for."
"If there's nothing else you need, Miss Snips," William began, gritting his teeth and stepping up to the wall to s.n.a.t.c.h the blueprints up. It was only then that he noticed the small niche that had been hidden behind the doc.u.ments. "What on earth-"
He began, but never finished; at that precise moment, the device that was contained within the hidden s.p.a.ce activated. The string that had been carefully hooked to the back of the posters was snapped by the violence of his motion, which caused it to wind back into the contraption. It produced a hiss followed by a distinct and unpleasant odor.
And then it exploded.
They had less than half of a second to react. William did nothing but stare with blank-eyed surprise at the blossom of flame that belched forth from the alcove; it was Snips who darted forward and s.n.a.t.c.hed the umbrella out of his hand, unsnapping it as she thrust herself between him and the device.
A wave of fire splashed across the parasol's iron-reinforced canopy, rus.h.i.+ng around its edges to eagerly tickle at their shoulders. William coiled an arm around Snips' waist as the force of the explosion repelled them violently back into the room, tumbling toward the exit; when they at last came to a rest, they were left bruised and dazed.
"Oh dear," William muttered in confusion.
"Fire!" Marge roared. "Fire!"
They looked up. The explosion that had been designed to kill them had ignited several small fires throughout the workshop.
Bulbs of gla.s.s began to pop; tools were engulfed in the rapidly spreading blaze. As they watched, the grease-soaked room went up in a brilliant flash of heat-and the fire showed no signs of contenting itself merely with the bas.e.m.e.nt.
"The rest of the building," William panted. "We need to evacuate it immediately!"
Marge charged out of the room at once. William carefully disentangled himself from Snips, glancing back at the table full of Basil's work.
"We cannot leave his machines," William said, and Snips caught the quivering reluctance in his voice-as if he were under great spiritual duress. "We must-"
"No time. We've got people upstairs we need to warn."
They ran.
CHAPTER 13: IN WHICH MR. TWEEDLE BEGS FOR A CELL WITH A VIEW AND OUR t.i.tULAR PROTAGONIST MAKES A LEAP OF FAITH.
Mr. Tweedle threw himself down at Miss Primrose's feet.
"Please, I beg of you," he said with a wet and sloppy sob. "I beg of you! Cease with your tireless interrogations, your endless questions! All I ask is that I be given a dry, warm cell. Perhaps one with a view-maybe where I can see a pretty bird once and a while. Maybe a tree?"
Miss Primrose scowled. "Mr. Tweedle, contain yourself. I haven't asked you anything yet."
"But you will!" Mr. Tweedle said. "And then you'll figure everything out. You detective types, you're all so desperately clever."
"Have some dignity, Mr. Tweedle!" Miss Primrose shoved the weeping bureaucrat back towards his desk with the tip of her foot. "Seat yourself at once."
Still cowering and whimpering, Mr. Tweedle crawled his way back to his chair.
"Now, Mr. Tweedle," she said, taking her seat. "Let us start from the beginning, shall we? And this time, try to have a little backbone, please?"
"I'll try," Mr. Tweedle said.
Miss Primrose gave him a polite smile. "Good evening, Mr. Tweedle. My name is Miss Primrose."
"Good evening, Miss Primrose," Mr. Tweedle said with a sniffle.
"I'm here on an investigation on the Steamwork's behalf.
Would you mind if I asked you a few questions-"
"I did it!" Mr. Tweedle cried, throwing his hands to the desk and dropping his head into his arms. "I admit to it! Please, just take me away-"
Miss Primrose scowled once again. "Mr. Tweedle!"
"I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I just can't take it anymore. The terrible guilt, the horrible crus.h.i.+ng despair-"
"What precisely is it that you're confessing to, then?"
Mr. Tweedle looked up with one gla.s.sy wet eye. "What is it you're investigating again?"
"Mr. Copper's recent demise."
"Oh yes, that. I killed him! I admit to it! Take me away!"
Mr. Tweedle shoved his wrists out in front of him, offering them to Miss Primrose. "Lock me up and throw away the key! Take me somewhere I'll never have to look at another bank figure again!"
"Stop being ridiculous," Miss Primrose said. "You couldn't have killed Mr. Copper."
"Why not? I'm perfectly capable."
"You're an idiot," Miss Primrose said. "And you don't have enough spine to murder a fly. What has happened, Mr. Tweedle?
Why is the bank in such a state of chaos? Why are you so desperate to enter into our prison system?"
"You're-you're not going to arrest me?" Mr. Tweedle asked.
"No, Mr. Tweedle. I am not."
"It's so awful," Mr. Tweedle said, sinking his face into his hands. "So wretchedly, terribly awful! I cannot take working at this bank for a day more."
Miss Primrose's hard glare softened a bit. "Why do you not simply resign, Mr. Tweedle?"
"Because I don't know where the resignation forms are! The investors have hidden them from me, the wretched monsters!"
Miss Primrose pursed her lips. "Why do you wish to leave the bank? Certainly, it cannot be that difficult."
"Ever since this whole Steamwork matter has started, it's constant stress," Mr. Tweedle said. "That and this awful Hemlock business. Before that, it was absolutely lovely." He lifted his head, his eyes getting a far-off look. "Every day, I'd come into the bank office, and the secretary would ask me-'One lump or two, Mr. Tweedle?'-and I'd say-'One lump, of course'-and then I would spend the rest of the day enjoying a cup of tea, reading my paper, and watching the birds in the tree from my window..."
"I don't quite understand, Mr. Tweedle. What has changed?"
"Now they expect me to make decisions!" Mr. Tweedle cried. "Big, important decisions! Every day-I have to decide this or that. And what's worse is that they took my window away!" He pointed to the side of the office, where a window had been recently bricked up. "My investors said it was 'distracting me from the important business of a bank'."
"I, er, see, Mr. Tweedle. Still, I only wanted to ask you about some curious matters that I discovered while investigating several of the Steamwork's patents. It seems you've cosigned several of the patent licenses, and I merely wanted some clarification as to why."
Mr. Tweedle wetted his lips. "Tell me something, Miss Primrose. Do you think-if someone does something illegal, and someone else helps them in a rather roundabout way, fully aware that the act is illegal-is that second person performing a crime?"
"In most cases, yes," Miss Primrose said. "They are an accomplice."
"And could they go to prison?"
"Perhaps, Mr. Tweedle." Catching on, Miss Primrose added: "In fact, I am quite sure of it."
"Hm. Interesting. Very interesting." Mr. Tweedle leaned back, twiddling his thumbs. "Well, if I tell you everything I know, and you discover that Mr. Eddington is doing something illegal, would it be too much to ask that you a.s.sume I knew about it all along?"
"I, er, that is," Miss Primrose said, trying to follow the man's runaway train of logic. "I suppose I could."
"Then it might be worth mentioning that Mr. Eddington is up to his ears in debt," Mr. Tweedle said, leaning back with a serene smile. "And that he is probably willing to do anything to escape."
Fire seeped up from beneath the floor, unfurling into tongues of flame that painted the walls black with their hungry licks. Snips and William gaped at the sight; Marge emerged from nowhere, carrying snot-nosed bratlings under either arm. She gave Snips and William a glare, then started firing off orders with all the bravado of a general on the front lines.
"Upstairs. More folks. Get 'em downstairs as fast as you can," she snapped. "I'll try to rustle up a bucket brigade."
She turned and crashed through the front door, leaving the two blinking. Slowly, their sense of obligation began to rea.s.sert itself.
"Upstairs, Miss Snips," William said.
"Right," Snips replied.
They turned and ran up the stairs. Men, women, and children were already tumbling out of their rooms, coaxed into the hallways by the sound of an explosion below. Several looked up at the scorched pair-William in particular, with his charred umbrella and clean suit-and gawked.
"Fire," Snips shouted, flinging her arms back the way she came. "Everyone out!"
Only later would Snips ponder the wisdom in shouting 'fire'
to a crowd of people as she stood between them and the nearest exit.
Both William and Snips fought their way through the retreating throngs, working to stay afloat and not be dragged out by the currents of fleeing families. They struggled to the next set of stairs, making their way step by step through the narrow halls.
The flow soon quieted to a trickle, leaving the task of gathering up what few people remained to Snips and William.
They knocked on doors, shoved through living rooms, and hollered into bedrooms; it soon became apparent that no one remained.