The Boundless (24 page)

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Authors: Kenneth Oppel

BOOK: The Boundless
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“There we go,” says the ringmaster. “We're on our way again.”

“What about Brogan and his men?” Will says. “They must've been looking for me. Why else were they out there?”

“I hope they all drowned,” Maren mutters.

“I doubt that,” says Mr. Dorian. “But I'm hopeful they might not have seen you properly. In any event, there are too many people up and about tonight for them to try anything. Our door is locked, and I have no need of more sleep. I hope you're not thinking of running again, William.”

Will lets out a deep breath. Twice they've saved his life—and that counts for a lot. Even if he wanted to run, he doesn't have an ounce of energy left.

“I'm not going anywhere,” he says, and is rewarded with a smile from Maren.

“Good.” From his breast pocket Mr. Dorian takes one of the Native tools Will saw mounted on his stateroom wall.

“What is that?” Will asks uneasily.

“A Cree hide-scraper. Tricks can be useful, but I've often found this can be equally persuasive.” He rests the wickedly sharp metal blade on his lap and turns to face the door.

“Are you standing guard because of Brogan? Or because of me?” Will asks.

Mr. Dorian glances back with a smile. “You should try to get a little more sleep before daybreak, both of you. We have a performance at noon.”

IN THE SALOON

Will sleeps late, and when he wakes, Maren is already dressed, sitting cross-legged on the floor and looking out the window.

“Where's Mr. Dorian?” he asks.

“He's gone to get us some breakfast. He doesn't want us walking around.”

Outside the window, trees flash past, their leaves bright with the morning sun. The Boundless has left the muskeg behind. Will sees farmland, enclosed with rough fences, mist still pooled in the low fields. There's a house and barn in the distance, a horse in a pasture.

From his bunk he pulls his trousers and shirt from a peg. He dresses under the covers.

“Do you think it's true?” he asks.

“The canvas? I don't know. He knows so much about so many things. Nothing tricks him—he
knows
all the tricks.” She shakes her head. “If he thinks the fountain of youth is real, it must be.”

“How well do you know him?”

“Not well. I don't think anyone does. He's charming when he wants, fiercer than he needs to be sometimes.”

“Is he a good man?” Will says hopefully.

“Well, he runs a good circus. No one's better at finding talent and putting together new attractions. He's got the best show in the Dominion, and he wants to be the best in the world. Some people think he's a slave driver, because he gets people to sign contracts for a long time.”

“Like yours.”

She nods. “He pays pretty well, and treats the marvels pretty well, but he keeps most of the money they bring in. I heard he had a pretty hard life, growing up.”

“Because he's Métis,” Will says.

“He hardly talks about it. But I think something bad might have happened to his mother. That's about all I know. He's a mystery—like everyone, I guess.”

“It's just . . .” Will shakes his head, searches for the right words. “Why should
he
get his portrait on that canvas? Why not the sick boy in colonist class? Why not you? Why does he deserve it? They say the world's full of saints, and I'm pretty sure he's not one of them.”

He looks at the door to their compartment. No one's guarding it right now.

“Still deciding whether to help him?” Maren asks.

Will sighs. “I'm not sure about him. But I want to help
you
.”

“You'll stay?”

“I'll stay.”

Will feels his face heat up in the glow of her smile.

She takes her remarkable spool of tightrope from the shelf and brushes some dried muskeg muck off it.

“Why'd you bring it with you last night?” he asks.

“It's kind of a habit. You'll think it's silly, but just having it with me makes me feel better. Like I can get out of any scrape.”

“That doesn't sound silly,” he says. “It makes complete sense to me.”

“I have a dream sometimes that I'm crossing a big space on my wire. . . .”

“Niagara Falls?” Will asks.

“Maybe. And I'm halfway across, and there's water beneath me, mist churning. I'm so far from land, I can't even see either shore.”

“Is it scary?”

“Not at first. It always starts off peaceful. But then I don't know which way I'm supposed to go.”

“If it were my dream, I'd probably fall,” Will says.

“Oh, I have those, too. Anyway, my spool comes with me everywhere. Just like your pencil, I suppose.”

Will laughs in surprise. “Yeah. I guess my thoughts . . . well, they float free when my hand and eyes are busy. It helps me think things through. Also, I love it.”

“I can tell.”

“It's fun when you get to certain parts.”

“Like what?”

“Oh, I don't know. There's parts you just know are going to be fun. Like a curtain, with all the folds. And shadows, I love those too.”

“It seems like it'd be hard.”

He laughs. “Not as hard as wire walking!”

“When I'm up there, I feel like I can do anything.”

“Well,” Will says. “I'm not that good a drawer yet. But I want to be.” He thinks of the conversation he had with his father on the first night. “My father wants me to join the company as a clerk.”

“Is that what you want?”

“Well, I was thinking, if I worked for the railway, I could maybe make things better for the colonists. Get rid of people like Peters.”

“That would be good,” Maren agrees.

“And I might be able to help design things,” Will tells her. “Bridges and ships maybe.”

“I'm sure you'd be good at it.”

“It'd be a good job,” Will says.

“Yeah. You don't really want to do it, do you?”

“No. There's an art school in San Francisco I want to go to.”

“So why don't you?”

“My father doesn't want to pay.”

She sniffs. “You could work. Pay your own way. I was working from the age of five.”

He feels childish. Even when he was poor, Will never had to work. Those years when it was just him and his mother, he took care of himself, and ran errands and chopped wood and pumped water and helped wash and clean. But he never worked. Plenty of kids did. In factories, or workshops. He was spared that, anyway. It sounded hard to make money on your own.

“Maybe I'm not suited for a hard life,” he says. “That's what my father thinks.”

“Do you believe that?”

He shrugs. “If Mr. Dorian hadn't taken me in, Brogan would've killed me. I got hagged—I didn't even remember to put those muskeg spectacles on. I would've drowned if it weren't for you. . . .”

“You're looking at it the wrong way around,” she says. “You got free of Brogan! You ran the deck of the Boundless—
at night
! That's something!”

He nods, and smiles a little. “I like your way of looking at things better.”

“So you should go to this art school of yours.”

*   *   *

When Will opens the door to the saloon car, noise pours over him like a cascade of poker chips. A song peals from the upright piano in the corner, nearly obliterated by the laughter and stamping of the patrons.

A high wooden bar runs almost the entire length of the carriage. Men perch atop stools, their boots on the brass foot rail, drinking and jetting their tobacco juice into spittoons. Behind the bar the wall is a long stretch of mirror, reflecting the room back at itself, so it seems even bigger and more crowded. A pair of stuffed pheasants stands startled atop the counter. The antlered head of an elk watches solemnly over the gambling tables.

Gusting through the maelstrom of smells (stale beer, cigar smoke, sweaty leather) is the scent of women's perfume—something Will hasn't smelled since his first night aboard the train. But this fragrance is totally unlike the pale scents he's used to sniffing in drawing rooms, and on his mother. This smell is big and loud, to match the colorful pleated dresses he sees on the women serving tables, or dancing with the men. The dancing seems all the more raucous because of the general rocking and rolling of the train. Everyone lurches and reels.

The saloon is a double-decker car, and on the second level, men stand against the railing with their drinks, watching the dancers and the card tables. Doors lead into small rooms, and Will spots a man being led into one by a woman with bare shoulders. He catches Maren looking at him and blushes.

Their porter ushers them over to the middle of the saloon. Against a wall they've made a small platform out of whiskey crates and hung a curtain across it so there's a little backstage area for the performers.

“I hope this is all right,” the porter says.

“I'm sure we'll have their undivided attention,” Mr. Dorian replies drily.

“Oh, they've come to see you,” the porter says. “That's why it's so crowded.”

At one of the card tables a man stands up with a whoop of glee and a fistful of cash. Immediately one of the other men launches himself at the winner, and they tumble about on the floor, beating each other. Behind the bar the barkeep takes a sledgehammer from its brackets on the wall and slams it loudly onto the counter. Quickly the fight breaks up and several men limp away, bloodied.

“Well, I'm looking forward to this,” Maren says as the porter swiftly departs.

“Shall we prepare?” Mr. Dorian says, ushering Will and Maren behind the curtain.

Hidden from the saloon, Will removes his coat and thinks:
After this, just two more performances, and then I'm back in first class.
But another part of him surges with nerves and excitement for the show.

They arrange their props carefully. Removing his jacket, Mr. Dorian suddenly winces, his face pale, but then he takes a breath and stands taller.

“Are you all right?” Will asks.

Without a word the ringmaster steps through the gap in the curtain.

Will and Maren put their faces to the opening. He's aware of the faint metallic mustiness of her jeweled costume, but also the gentler fragrance of soap and skin and hair that seems such an innocent smell in the saloon's oppressive beeriness.

Mr. Dorian stands on the makeshift stage, saying nothing. Somehow his mere presence quiets the crowd. The noise ebbs like a gale that has blown itself out. Silently, methodically, Mr. Dorian rolls back his sleeves to the elbows.

Will has no idea what the ringmaster will do. He doesn't discuss it ahead of time. So Will is just as curious as everyone else. Mr. Dorian lifts his arms into the air, fingers spread. Then he closes his hands, and when he opens them again, he's holding a card in each one, between thumb and first finger. Will can see they're both the two of hearts.

A few grunts and whispers rumble across the saloon.

“My granny does it better,” someone sneers.

Behind the curtain Will whispers to Maren, “They don't seem too impressed.”

“Just wait.”

“What's he going to do?”

“You'll see.”

Mr. Dorian holds the cards aloft, turning them from side to side, showing the crowd they are just single cards he holds, no more.

With a flick of his wrists, a three of hearts is added to each hand. There are a few grunts of appreciation, and a smattering of tepid applause. Mr. Dorian stamps his foot against the crate floor, as though reprimanding them for their disbelief, and a third card appears in each of his hands. Very slowly he waves his arms in the air like entranced snakes, closer together, farther apart. And more cards keep appearing in his hands: a five of hearts, a six, a seven . . . and he is moving faster, stamping time with his heels like a flamenco dancer, the cards forming fans.

The room is totally silent now except for the furious beat of Mr. Dorian's heels. Even the poker games have come to a standstill, all the cardsharps staring in frank admiration.

A jack of hearts, a queen, a king. Mr. Dorian's arms flash in the air in ever more intricate patterns—and then with a flourish an ace of hearts appears in each hand, completing the full suite.

The room bursts into applause, but Mr. Dorian isn't done yet. He throws his two sets of cards into the air, and they fan out in slow intersecting arcs, shuffling themselves in midair. The ringmaster stands observant, hands uplifted as if conducting them, urging them on as they spiral about one another.

“Enough!” he shouts to them, and they cascade back into his hands. He combines them into a single pile and starts to put them back into his trouser pocket. Then he changes his mind and hurls the cards into the audience—but they become two dozen white pigeons that soar up to the ceiling and disappear through the high windows.

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