Nathan Yocum - Automatic Woman

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Automatic Woman: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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“Steampunk done right. If you want your Sherlock Holmes ala Guy Richie, with the all the grit, cockney, and braggadocio of 19th century that never was,
is the one not to miss.”
— E. Golosovker “There are no simple cases. But… there are plenty of simply great books.
happens to be one of them.”
— Krystal Wade, bestselling author. “Beautiful is a good word for
. So are incandescent and mesmerizing.”
— Vicki Keire, bestselling author.
The London of 1888, the London of steam engines, Victorian intrigue, and horseless carriages is not a safe place nor simple place… but it’s his place. Jolly is a thief catcher, a door-crashing thug for the prestigious Bow Street Firm, assigned to track down a life sized automatic ballerina.
But when theft turns to murder and murder turns to conspiracy, can Jolly keep his head above water? Can a thief catcher catch a killer?

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I waded into the cacophony of machinery rattle. The secretaries were producing a night’s shift of reports for Central Bureaucracy, our internal auditors, and our third floor taskmasters. Written reports were transcribed. Transcriptions were duplicated into punch cards through Bouchon processors. As the old saying goes, “Words for my boss, cards for the Queen.” A couple of porters gathered finished products, collated, signed, had the secretaries sign, separated, and sent via pneumatic tubes the reports and cards. Reports in one tube, cards in the other. Low was the fate of the porter who switched a cards tube and a reports tube.

The lead secretary, Miss Walker, rose upon my entry. She was a serious gray bird, old as time and twice as devastating.

“Mr. Fellows, you are not allowed here!”

Owens strolled past and gave me a two-fingered salute, leaving me as Billy No-mates. Miss Walker stepped to and gave me a firm jab in the chest.

“Turn around! Be on your way!”

I tried to soften my face, tried to get my gob to smile nicely. I’ve been told the result of this is hideous.

“Miss Walker, love. I just need my effects.”

By effects, I meant my files, a replacement cobra, and the service revolver I brought back from the trouble in Afghanistan. Her face turned sour, or rather, it became more sour.

“Mr. Fellows, Lord Barnes has specifically forbidden you from entering for any reason, up to and including retrieving your goods. Besides, they are no longer present in your office.”

“Come again?”

“The Metropolitans cleaned your office out yesterday. Even if you got to it, there’d be nothing for you but dust mites and what I assume are gin-addled memories.” She issued me another jab.

“Take it easy, grandmother. I’ll be on my way.”

I stepped lively out the door. Miss Walker is not one to be trifled with. I considered returning to my flat, but realized the futility of taking refuge in a place where all comforts had been smashed.

I wandered down to the St. George & Dragon Public House, a place whose proximity to my work made me a regular. I substituted my lack of home comfort with the comfort of lager pints punctuated with shots of Yank whiskey. I contemplated getting pissed, but a better plan formed itself. When the clock struck one in the a.m., the public house was graced by one Orel Hersh, porter extraordinaire, St. George & Dragon regular, and business acquaintance to yours truly. He recognized me right away and approached. We’d been social on occasion and I once cold-cocked a blighter on his behalf. Some drunk geezer thought Orel was talking up his sweet. Things between Orel and myself were peachy. Better yet, he owed me a favor.

“Oy, guv’nor. Give us some love!” I shook Orel’s wrist and gave him a weak slap on the face. He was a big man like me, only without the fat and hanging jowls.

“I insist on paying for no less than one of your drinks,” he said with fake posh. It sounded like he’d been nipping the flask at work. Good old predictable Orel.

“I’ll hear of no such thing, mate,” I replied. “You drink on my tab and my tab only. I’m a free man today; this is my freedom party.”

I pushed a shot of whiskey to him and motioned for the barkeep to set up fresh rounds.

Orel drank to my health. Then we drank to his health, then to freedom and liberty and Queen Victoria in all her homely glory.

Here’s a secret. One shared by all men of weight. It’s bloody near impossible for me to get drunk. The only rational explanation is that fat filters alcohol and holds it away from the blood. I, and every fat bastard I’ve ever run across, can drink, and drink, and drink. Now you know. You’re welcome.

We had ourselves a party. We drank after the pub regulars and codgers packed it in. We outlasted the young men and the very moon and stars themselves. We kept the libations flowing until the sky turned navy gray and the sun threatened to punch black both my eyeballs.

I paid the tab and walked my new best friend out the front door into God’s accusatory light. Orel hung on my arm like drapes as I escorted us back to the home offices.

“Whaaa?” he slurred. To say Orel was inebriated would be an understatement. I imagine Orel was in that place where he still had control of motor skills, but just barely. He was in a place where balance was tenuous and the memories of this moment may or may not have a future in his mind.

“Back to the office, mate. I forgot my effects.”

Orel stopped and thought for a minute.

“But…”

“Don’t be thick, Orel. I need your help. Take the fire ladder up to my room and bust out the window. Everything I need is in a lock box under the third floorboard.

“Jolly?”

I interrupted him with a good shake.

“This is important! Listen closely. Third board from the door. Big, fuck-all lock box.”

“But the guards?”

I set Orel onto the fire escape and gave him a good shove up the ladder.

“Don’t worry yourself with guards, mate. They know me. Lock box, third board. Repeat it back to me.”

Orel shook his head and started up the ladder, leaving my instructions unrepeated. I’m sure I’ve had worse plans, though none come to mind. I’d lifted Orel’s flask while shoving him up the escape. I uncapped it and poured a good three fingers of bad Scotch down the front of my shirt.

The firm was shut to the world in the early morning hours, but we employ a couple of inside guards to stop the very thing I was having poor Orel do on my behalf. I hefted a dustbin and threw it overhand against the barred entrance gate. The can rebounded with a terrific crash. Just to be sure, I threw the bin a second time with the same rattling, terrifying results. Neighborhood dogs barked, newly awakened blokes looked out windows. I was a regular spectacle.

“Oy, you fuckers!” I yelled at the gate. “Let me inside!”

Both guards came out. I knew them. Blaine, the taller, was a religious chap. Aaron, the shorter, was a dirty joke enthusiast. Both were decked in suits and holding extended cobras. Blaine looked relieved to see me.

“Jolly, what are you up to?”

“I’m up to punching your smug face if you don’t let me inside.” I put up my mitts and exaggerated a drunken sway. I should have been an actor.

“You know we can’t do that, Jolly. You’re not allowed here while your suspension stands.”

“If you Nancies want to keep me out, you’d better call some friends.”

I strode to the door in my best tough guy strut, all legs and arms. To his credit, Blaine stepped first and poked his cobra into my chest.

“That’s it, Jolly. Go home and sleep it off. No need to do something to apologize for later.”

In the far distance I heard the crash of glass and knew Orel had made it in. The bloke just needed more time. I grabbed Blaine’s baton.

“You’re not the boss of me, Jack. Step south or I’ll let you have my best.”

“Um, Jolly. Come on, let’s talk this out,” said Aaron. The shake in his voice told me he was all mouth and no trousers.

“I’ll talk your face in!”

Suddenly, there was a terrific crash in the alley. By the sound of it, Orel had just dropped my box into a dustbin from two stories up. Drunken bastard.

Blaine and Aaron turned their heads and I knew swift action was the only action that wouldn’t get me and poor Orel nicked. I wrapped my arms around the distracted Blaine and lifted him off the ground.

“I want my things!” I shouted and shook the besieged guard left to right.

“Put him down, Jolly or I’ll…” Aaron waved his club but took no step forward. I was roaring like a mammoth and Blaine was wiggling like a wee baby in my arms. A scared, pissed-off baby.

I dropped the man into a heap on the dirt road. Blaine found his legs, sprang up, and walloped me across the face with his cobra.

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