Frankenstein's Legions (13 page)

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Authors: John Whitbourn

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BOOK: Frankenstein's Legions
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‘I defer to you in the matter of calculations...,’ said Julius, unbelieving.

A distant splash and howl signalled that a Lazaran must have fallen into one of the deep drainage ‘guts.’  It was not as great an emergency as it might be, for one of the few benefits of revived life was lack of need for air. Shipwrecked Lazarans had been known to survive in the water for months, only finally coming to grief via rocks or sharks. In the past, escaping Lazaran slaves had dashed into the sea and, for all anyone knew of it, lived and failed to breathe under the waves still.

It was an enviable quality to possess—possibly their only enviable quality—when about to embark on a hazardous voyage. It merited mentioning to Lady Lovelace, if only to cheer her up.

‘Has it not occurred to you, madam, that you might safely walk to France?’

Obviously not. Ada grimaced and indicated her scarlet gown and just-so coiffure. Despite the premature streaks of grey she was proud and protective of her crowning glory.

Julius persisted.

‘I meant if you were not such a lady, if your appearance upon arrival was no consideration?  In reality you have no need of a vessel as we do.’  He turned jocular. ‘Consider further, my lady: we mere living creatures are holding you back!’

Ada nodded and turned to look at him, deadly serious.

‘Yes,’ she said. ‘Now that I had considered. Often.’ 

Frankenstein suddenly felt a chill even deeper than the night’s. He’d just glimpsed a future master species different from his own.

‘All aboard!’ came a shout from seawards.

 

Chapter 11: A VISION OF VECTIS

 

Maybe it was his title that made Talleyrand think of the Isle of Wight. ‘Lord Vectis’: after the classical name for the place. The Prime Minister’s erudite little joke to match making him Island Governor too.

Well, let the great man and his cabinet laugh. If they crowned him King of Duck Island in St James’s Park, as per Ada’s fantasy, he’d take that seriously too. As ever, Talleyrand ate what was set before him and made the most of it. Made a relished meal of it, in fact. It was only who had the last laugh that mattered.

Talleyrand had never visited Wight and probably never would. However, full of good intentions now that he was solely responsible for a concrete somewhere, he’d carefully appointed a civilised man as manager. Someone thoughtful and a stranger to passion. Also someone who, as compensation for all the prodding and probing involved in getting the job, would be hugely rewarded for his troubles. Or, alas, punished likewise. Linked to that lavish salary was a clause spelling out that the penalty for corruption—even a shilling’s worth of corruption—was death. Labour laws in contemporary England had got to the stage where such contracts were commonplace—and quite legal. Many factories had their own gallows (to save time and bothering the State).

 Talleyrand’s first assigned task for him (bar the prescribed sexual purgative each morning) was to rid the Isle of soldiers and other tax-eaters. They could remain in the fortresses central Government felt necessary, but nowhere else. In a well-run polity shepherdesses should be able to roam unmolested, and hard-working people work hard without robbery.

Then the Prince scoured all democracy from the Island whilst simultaneously inflating an illusion of it. Any number of ‘consultative councils’ and councillors were created: but with no real power but to feast and talk and keep themselves out of mischief. For Talleyrand did not just fear ‘crude and licentious’ soldiery and busy-body bureaucrats: he knew from personal experience that humans had to be protected from the political class no less than they were from pirates.

Of course, some social-cannibals are not susceptible to reason and, like foxes, do what they do driven on by urges. No blame therefore attaches: but neither is there point in appealing to their better natures. Lawyers were warned once about their behaviour and second time shot. There were limits even to Talleyrand’s tolerance.

Whilst still intact their bodies then hung in cages on the walls of Yarmouth and Cowes Castles. Thus, all arrivals to Wight were met with visible demonstration of its enlightened penal system. Swift, cheap, Justice, with a moral, and a 100% record of reform.

After that it was merely a matter of setting up first-rate free schools (bilingual, naturally) and then ‘Lord Vectis’ work was done.  He and his manager could sit back and let things roll, relying on human nature. Just a century or so should see peace and prosperity become their default setting.

Because, in a perverse way, the Prince had a benign view of humanity (setting aside, of course, its obvious innate depravity). He had long observed that, left in peace and protected from bullies, the invincible trajectory of man was to prosper. Restrained from war and preying on one another, they couldn’t help themselves but build things: useful things like houses and businesses and families. And then they tended them like a garden, finally handing on the baton to loved ones or relatives before laying down to eternal rest, fairly satisfied. Or else drank themselves to death early.

It wasn’t glorious or noble, there was little drama and no poetry; and Talleyrand had no wish to join in himself, let alone, God forbid, socialise with such people. But he was convinced that this was what they really wanted—and, who knows: perhaps what the Almighty wanted too?

If there was one thing the Prince de Beavente, Lord Vectis, Charles-Maurice de Talleyrand-Perigord was above all, it was polite. And it was surely polite to give people (and deities) what they wanted. Where possible. If he felt like it.

Word was that tax yield was now way up. People were moving there from elsewhere and native smugglers going straight, finding better, more relaxing, ways to make a living. All good signs. Soon there’d be agitation for a mainland link and Solent bridge—though he’d veto that: let Shangri-la remain its sweet self and require a little effort to get to…

Meanwhile, goodness knew what his manager did all day, sitting there in Carisbrooke Castle; twiddling his thumbs or playing with himself probably: but Talleyrand wished him well. He recalled from one interview (the fourth, or was it fifth?) the man saying he liked to read History. Well, thanks to Talleyrandian rule there were now free libraries on the Island that he could read his way through and grow even wiser (if not happier).

So, everything should have been fine and civilised and yet here Talleyrand was apparently visiting the place one morning, contrary to all intentions, and finding things—everything—gone so very wrong. Just as there was no sign of his manager anywhere there was excess signs of soldiers everywhere.

They straggled all over the place, discipline as eroded as their uniforms. And even civilians were in arms, brandishing weapons and acting like drunkards. And at this time of day too!  Some of them looked like death-warmed-up. In fact, on closer inspection, they were.

Talleyrand couldn’t recall arriving (which was strange), or even what type of craft he’d sailed in. Presumably his secretary had arranged things. But then surely they would also have arranged for his reception. And not by a yelling rabble either. Yet all he could see through the strands of morning mist were men running hither and thither, all rudely ignoring him. It was worse than a Greek fire-drill!

There were the sounds of gunshots also, something Talleyrand deplored. When he’d ran Napoleon’s empire for him there’d been perpetual musketry the length and breadth of Europe, despite all his best efforts and advice. And look how that had ended up!

He was in Yarmouth, Talleyrand felt fairly sure. Though not blessed with personal acquaintance, he’d heard that its castle was of the squat modern sort rather than picturesque and ruined kind. And here beside him reared a boring wall of the type you’d imagine. It had the royal coat of arms (Henry VIII’s, if Lord Vectis read correctly) above its gate but was otherwise unadorned: a pared-down weapon of unwelcome. He’d read that the fabric incorporated stone from Quarr Abbey, suppressed during that King’s ‘Reformation.’  Surveying the result as an aesthete, if nothing more, Talleyrand considered it a very poor exchange.

And what was this?  Canon fire from the Castle’s portals?  That wasn’t meant to happen!  And certainly not in his model state. What a state of affairs!  How extraordinary.

Talleyrand went to investigate. A dozen paces on he discovered Lazarans hurling themselves at the fortification, only to be blown back (and apart) by grapeshot. The consequent gore and gunpowder residue threatened his cravat. Naturally he retreated.

A siege?  By unruly undead?  Everything had gone to pot he concluded.

And had it confirmed for him by meeting one in Yarmouth High Street. A great cauldron, perhaps pillaged from an inn, bubbled away atop a fire made of furniture. Into it the undead fed bits of people. The suspiciously long limbs protruding from it were instantly identified. In an adjoining alley Talleyrand now saw a pen of human prisoners, either resigned or wailing, being one by one converted into portions by Lazaran butchers armed with cleavers.

He’d always heard that rogue Lazarans consumed their victims whole and live: no gourmands they!  Yet these seemed a higher sort (the Jane Austens of their species perhaps) who demanded daintier rations. Or perhaps it was a refinement of revenge.

Naturally, Lord Vectis recoiled—straight into the arms of one of his surviving subjects (apparently an endangered species…).

‘Save yourself!  Save yourself!’ said the man, gripped by strong emotions and delayed in the act of fleeing. ‘All is lost!’

‘No, sir!’ replied Talleyrand, and went so very far as to reprimand him with his walking cane. One, two; light mock-knighting blows to each shoulder. ‘No, I say. You save yourself—from shameful abandon!’

He drew the man to him by a handy chain draped about his neck. Then they were temporarily alone and out of the action, secluded in a shop doorway. All the shop windows were shattered, its display of lady’s-wear dishonoured.

The man rallied slightly. He looked at Talleyrand but did not really see.

‘They came out of the waves at Freshwater,’ he said—or babbled. ‘While we were clinging on at Totland!  All is lost!’

Well, plainly he was, but, although a fabulously wealthy man, Talleyrand could not afford to join him. Panic was the most expensive of luxuries. Cathartic, possibly: but ruinously expensive. There would be time enough for panic in the grave (where it had the habit of putting you).

‘How can all be lost?’ he asked the man whilst he still had him. ‘This is just the Isle of Wight…’

‘Man’s last stand!’ said the man. ‘The end of England!’ And he wept. And fled. Leaving behind in Talleyrand’s hands his mayoral chain of office.

And then Lord Vectis was suddenly elsewhere (which was strange), oddly unclear about travelling between the two places. He now stood below verdant green downs. The village sign said ‘Brighstone.’

Its cottages were afire and there was that confounded pop pop pop of small-arms fire again. Oh, how he detested it!

Fortunately, the vile sound proved to be short-lived. Less happily, it derived from last gasps and mopping-up operations. Lazarans were in charge now. They strode the streets like masters and directed how things should be for the superseded species.

He observed prisoners being corralled in the main street and edged utensils being sharpened. He watched a Lazaran leader drag a respectable matron by a halter round her neck, screaming towards the village church. Perhaps she was his prize and treat. Talleyrand did not envy anybody here their fate.

The matron saw him. ‘Help!’ she called out as a change from shrieking, arms outstretched, clutching at fence posts and straws as the darkness of the church interior drew near. ‘Help me, sir, I beg you!’

Talleyrand bowed to her.

‘Never fear, madam,’ he said, at maximum dip. ‘I shall.’

And the fact that he stood by as she was ravished and eaten didn’t alter that resolve one bit.

Then Talleyrand woke up. Then he sat up. That portion of his silk sheets nearest his hands had been shredded. All of them were sweat-soaked (no mean feat for a diminutive man)

Well!

It was not nice: he’d go so far as to say (the strongest condemnation in his armoury) it really was appalling. Men of his vintage and calibre did not deserve to be appalled. It would not do and up with it he would not put.

Till then he’d had an mild preference for one side and policy. He’d dabbled here and directed there as mood took and opportunism offered. His core was not engaged (naturally). But now he sensed a need for commitment: urgency even!

Which was not like him at all. So perhaps he was being directed in his turn. But it was no angel that had shown what he’d seen. Nor would Jehovah send one of his famous ‘dreams’ to such as he. Would He?  Surely not!

Though not so fast!  Technically Talleyrand was still a Bishop. He’d left the business, true, and been excommunicated to boot, but in one sense the brand remained on him and always would. ‘A priest for life’ they’d intoned at his ordination ceremony all those years ago (though he’d been distracted by a piquant chorister at the time). So just maybe…?

Talleyrand had always taken it as a point of honour to examine all evidence in the problems Life presented him: no matter how disquieting some evidence might be. Braving disquiet and damage to the soul was the courage he’d shown in preference to scampering round a battlefield at someone’s else’s behest. Valour in the service of self and commonsense had always struck him as the far better part of… well, valour. Ditto not intercepting speeding lumps of metal.

Whatever the source, he now felt called to a decision. One of the big ones in his life, not like ‘Napoleon or the restored Bourbons?,’ or ‘loyalty to France or dealings with the enemy?  No, this ranked alongside choosing a cover story for his club-foot (a childhood injury and neglectful nurse = sympathy), or appointing his chef (the all-rounder Carême or potato sorceress—but mad harpy—Madame Mérigot?)

Talleyrand could not find it in himself to love his species—even he was not capable of that level of deceit—but by and large he wished it well. For what was the alternative: the rule of trees and lichen?  Or insects?  Or Lazarans?  It would be peaceful, granted, but not interesting.

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