Frankenstein's Legions (3 page)

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Authors: John Whitbourn

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Disposed against that were legions of Lazarans (though the Conventionary army more tactfully termed them ‘New-Citizens’), backed by massed French cannon in unassailable positions.

Unassailable, that is, to soldiers with a life to lose. A life which they valued. And families. And souls.

The colonel’s ‘413th regiment of Revived Foot’ had few such qualms. Or if they did, bayonets and barbed-whips overcame them. They rushed the French emplacements and blocked grapeshot with their second-hand bodies whilst live troops manoeuvred and won the battle elsewhere.

So it was worth all the grave-robbing and serum and upsetting Littleton and Nelson after all.

Afterwards, men from the ‘Charon brigades’ went and collected any identifiable bits in order that the glorious 413th might become the glorious 414th.

Accordingly, Berlin didn’t fall for a further fortnight.

 

 

Chapter 2: A DAY IN THE LIFE OF JULIUS FRANKENSTEIN

 

‘…how pleased you would be to remark the improvement of our Ernest!  He is sixteen, and full of activity and spirit. He is desirous to be a true Swiss, and to enter into foreign service... My uncle is not pleased with the idea of a military career in a distant country; but Ernest has never had your powers of application. He looks upon study as an odious fetter;—his time is spent in the open air, climbing the hills or rowing on the lake. I fear that he will become an idler, unless we yield the point, and permit him to enter on the profession he has selected.’

 

Letter from Elizabeth Lavenza to Victor Frankenstein

Geneva; March 18th 1793.

 

*  *  *

 

‘Admitted this day of our Lord and Salvation, 23rd March 1801 as sergeant first class, Herr Ernest Frankenstein, citizen of Geneva, aged 24. Widower. One dependent accompanying: son, infant, named Julius.

‘Bears own arms. Previous service with the forces of Genoa, Knights of St John, Poland, the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies and sundry others. Numerous citations and medals from same, cited in the appendix attached. References received from the Grand Master of Malta and Cardinal-Archbishop of Smyrna.’

Subsequently annotated, in French:
‘Deceased—Battle of the Pontine Gate, Rome, during the last conquest.’

 

From the Vatican muster rolls of the Swiss Guard,

stored in the Musée de la Victoire, Paris.

 

*  *  *

 

The previously mentioned pale face at the Heathrow Hecatomb window kept a diary. The day before she came the diary entry read: ‘Same. Breakfast. Visitor, with menaces. Pretend researches. Drink. Bed.’

Which was essentially it. But to expand:

‘You are at risk of being a disappointment to us, Frankenstein. I tell you in all candour: it does not do to be a disappointment to us.’

The visitor, presumably another Secret Service man, leant back to let his words sink in.

  Other senior staff enjoyed a cheroot and coffee after breakfast. It was some compensation for sitting behind steel mesh watching the new revivals relearn to eat. Increasingly however, Julius Frankenstein got hauled over the coals instead.

Yet there was flattery in this. Julius was fairly shooting up the scale of threatening interviews. Slanging matches with local management and ‘final written warnings’ were left far behind. Now there was this nameless man from nowhere, with all the assurance in the world and silky skills to match it.

‘A pity,’ Frankenstein replied. ‘I have significant aptitude in that specialist field. I was a disappointment to my father as he was to his, as I am now to you. It is a family trait polished from generation to generation. However, if my presence is not required...’

The visitor steepled his fingers.

‘I am not a child to be humoured, Herr Frankenstein...’

Indeed not. The visitor was in his seventies if he was a day, though the legacies of a lusty youth still hung around. Particularly in the eyes. As for Julius, he was less afflicted with years but equally steeped in experience.

‘You must know that this is not a post one resigns from,’ the visitor continued. ‘Your current status is a curious one: both a bucket of blessings and the sword of Damocles hang over your head. It is in my power to decide which one falls.’

‘But not in mine to influence the decision.’

The visitor pursed his lips. Julius decided he must have been a fop in earlier days, a dandy about town but with a steely core. Only now the silk and lace contained a withered frame and the man of the world had expanded round the equator.

‘Au contraire, dear sir, au contraire. As the Heathrow Hecatomb’s Head of Research you are very much master of your own destiny. Which you would find out if only we saw some research from you. As it is, at best we get only grade three and four Lazarans from your laboratory: Revivals I wouldn’t trust to make tea. Or look after my library...’

Frankenstein guessed that tea took priority over books in this man’s life by a factor of five at least. The chill between them grew accordingly.

The visitor sensed it, even if he did not understand. He frowned.

‘You must understand, sir, that such mediocrity can be matched by myriad English technicians. Trustworthy technicians. Whereas you possess neither of those admirable qualities…’

Julius Frankenstein looked round the little interview room. It was bare of consolation. Yet he knew full well that if he directed his gaze within it would only meet a similarly bleak vista.

It was open to him to say he’d not asked for the post but had it thrust upon him. But then the visitor would counter he had asked for asylum in England—and got it, which not many did nowadays—and a job besides. A good job, vital to the War effort and his new adopted nation. It was cold and harsh out in the big wide world at the best of times (which this was most certainly not) and he should be grateful for his generous reception. Other nations, even his motherland, would not be so kind: especially those ones who actively sought him. Given his family name, the guillotine was high on the list of likely outcomes should he fall into their hands—once his brain was sucked dry that is.

All true and reasonable, from a certain cock-eyed perspective. So Julius jumped ahead several exchanges to the nub of the matter.

‘I have doubts,’ he said.

 

*  *  *

 

He’d said exactly the same thing when much writing and pleading secured him an interview with the Prime Minister. A four hour wait in an overheated antechamber rubbing shoulders with Field Marshals and Admirals secured him two minutes of the great man’s time.

‘I have doubts,’ concluded Julius, at the end of a long chain of argument, briskly stated.

The Duke of Wellington had not interrupted. Indeed, he’d nodded sympathetically and made notes as Frankenstein explained the whys and wherefore of his ‘doubts.’  Then The ‘Iron Duke’ looked up with his cold-as-iron eyes and said he would:

‘Waste no time looking into it.’

A mere Swiss, innocent of the subtleties of the English language, Julius didn’t straightaway understand.

Yet though Frankenstein was foreign he wasn’t deaf. Before the door had even closed behind him he overheard the Duke tell his secretary:

‘I never want to see that man again!’

 

*  *  *

 

Julius’ present visitor and the Duke were obviously of one mind. The caller sighed but stoically forged on.

‘We all have doubts from time to time, Frankenstein. Let me assure you that we do. Yet I am no priest or confessor. I have no more power to dispel your misgivings than I have my own. ‘Doubt’ is the lot of mankind until we are admitted beyond the veil. When doubtless we shall see clearly, if you’ll excuse the pun. Meanwhile, we must live with it as best we can. Blame the War, Herr Frankenstein, blame the damn Frenchies if it helps. Meanwhile, make use of the days your eyes are graciously permitted to see. Utilise that gifted brain.’

It was an honest speech, as far as it went, with the menaces well in the background. The best Julius had had so far.

‘I will think on what you say.’

The visitor studied him, undeluded, a stranger to illusions.

‘Hmmm. Well, see that you do but don’t dilly-dally about it. Meanwhile, think of me as a chimney-sweep. There is a blockage and a variety to methods to deal with it. First one tries the simple, gentler, less messy, means; then, if success does not attend, the more robust. Ultimately it is always open to a sweep to just thrust a brush up the chimney to... pop the offending item out of there. And as to where that damned blockage falls: who knows?  Or cares?  It is of no worth to anyone.’

An unfortunate metaphor. The Hecatomb had a chimney which never rested. Up it went the surplus to requirement body parts, producing succulent smoke and spreading horrified sniffs all over Middlesex.

‘I shall dwell on the simile this very day, Mr...’

The visitor arose and handed Julius his card.

The richly embossed rectangle simply read:

 

Sir Percy Blakeney

 

and nothing else. Which said a great deal.

 

*  *  *

 

Despite the jostling of his coach heading home, Sir Percy Blakeney jotted a note in Frankenstein’s case file: ‘Matthew. Ch.3  v.10.’ (Which is to say: “Therefore every tree which bring not forth good fruit is hewn down, and cast into the fire.”)

Then, after a brief ponder, he added: ‘One more week. Then, if he’s no use to us, make him no use to anyone else.’

Which was a coincidence. As his last act the day that Blakeney called, Julius Frankenstein added the following to his diary: ‘One more week. If this purgatory hasn’t improved by then, I give myself permission to blow my brains out.’

 

*  *  *

 

The seal on that resolution was set by the remainder of his daily routine. After Blakeney left, Julius retired to his office and doodled till his hand hurt. Then, after luncheon (local Heathrow guinea fowl and game-chips), he practised with his sabre for an hour before seeking diversion along the production line.

The architects’ plans had envisaged steam-driven conveyer belts but it proved simpler to have bargain-basement Lazarans crank the wheels. They didn’t require coal or maintenance and when they broke down were readily replaceable: hence no requirement for engineers hanging around. In fact, the whole development of steam-power had languished on that principle. Things stood much as they had since Mr Watt’s brainwave eighty years before. Abundant undead muscle-power removed the need for faltering development and brain-straining invention. Much money had thus been saved—at the expense of innovation.

The Lazarans’ colleagues-to-be came in from the surgeons’ shop stitched up and ready. Julius Frankenstein paused as a fresh batch were loaded on to the line and then cranked into position under the serum spears.

A click as the retainer was freed and a crash as the array fell.

Even now he still winced to see the spears pierce those still hearts. Wasted compassion: without sense there was no feeling. They remained mere retrieved meat from the battlefield and gallows.

Mostly the former today. When Frankenstein forced his eye to notice he saw the remnants of uniforms: a medley of costume from many different dead men.

Already the spear array was being hauled back up by rope, ready for the next set. Frankenstein moved along the line with the primed batch.

In the galvanising tank they had some privacy, if only on practical grounds. If Frankenstein accompanied them in there he would die when they received life.

Even an observation plate was deemed too risky. The frightful electric charge had to be constrained within seamless insulation. Anyway, the shrieks announced when the job was done.

On a whim, Frankenstein threw the switch himself, swatting the trusty-Lazaran aside. Instantly, the air crackled and an ozone aroma annoyed the nose. Behind the tank’s walls screaming began.

Theorists of Revivalist science speculated that rebirth was akin to being ripped from the womb, made worse by greater than new-born sentience. After the calm of the Great Beyond (for all anyone knew) the rush of sensation jumbled with memory was an agony beyond description. Or so those Lazarans capable of speech seemed to convey.

For Hecatomb staff with feelings left, it creased the heart to hear those revivals whose first word was ‘No!’

Frankenstein lingered to see the seals cracked and armed men crowd the door whilst technicians ventured into the cacophony to grade the successes and cull rejects. Their practised eye easily distinguished between those fit only for soldiering or service, and the few that might aspire higher. Some among those could be sold at auction to the public as clerks and body servants, to boost the State’s tottering finances. Any obvious towering intellects would be retained as civil servants, to relieve their living colleagues of routine duties.

Then labels were pinned on as appropriate, settling their new destiny. The useless balance meanwhile got the knife until they lay still again (which sometimes took time and effort), ready for recycling. Finally, all those thought worthy were unstrapped from the line and led away to life anew.

It was believed essential to start as you meant to go to on, and promptly, before any autonomous thoughts developed. The new recruits, confused and complaining, were chivvied into line and then marched off. No-nonsense sergeant-majors awaited them on the Hecatomb’s parade ground.

Whereas back in his private laboratory, itself a miniature version of the Hecatomb’s production line, a bottle of brandy awaited Julius Frankenstein, then supper, then his diary and then bed.

Barring a miracle, one-seventh of his remaining days was gone.

 

 

Chapter 3: A DAY IN THE DEATH OF LADY ADA LOVELACE

 

The day that she came, Frankenstein’s diary would have read:

 

‘Same. Breakfast. Pep talk. Doodling. Bed. Six days to live.’

 

save that just before bedtime he had another visitor.

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