December 13
th
, 1885
While I had wished to set out upon the
Gypsy's Promise
under Captain Teach, the simple fact was that Mr. Bates' chosen man for all things nautical was simply not in the docks at Tarant, but was rather shipping freight to a mysterious, undisclosed location. Entirely above board, I was sure. Surely, Captain Teach would
never
mislead customs officials to transport goods for Mr. Bates in an extralegal fashion. The very idea was preposterous. And so instead, we paid for passage aboard a clipper called The
Fairgale,
under Captain William Rikerson. A bloviating, fat, goateed fellow with a bald patch and an ego nearly the same size as his boom, Rikerson was a positive boor for the entire voyage. Fortunately, he only invited me to his cabin to dine once - 'to meet the first orcish technologist!' he had said -- and spent the rest of the voyage down the Hadrian and around the southern tip of Arcanum trying to get into Virginia's good graces (to utterly no success.)
We sailed nearer to the island of Cattan than to the port city of Dernholm, but I still marked Dernholm upon my Atlas, using the telescope to fix the coordinates in my mind. I was still planning to head there, once this business with T'Sen-Ang was dealt with.
But still. On 13
th
of December, 1885, the
Fairgale
arrived in the port of Caladon, the capital of the Kingdom of Arland. It was just as magnificent as I remembered: A broad city that looked to be nearly half the size of Tarant, with a bare fraction of the factories -- and what smoke there was struck crackling fields of magick that sparkled and flashed above the city proper. The dock district bustled and thrummed with activity, with stevedores unloading cargo from ships bearing the flags of several cities, while finely dressed Royal guards marched along the docks, displaying their weaponry: A magickal sword on the left hip, a revolver in the right.
Caladon sought to merge the two practices of technology and magick. I had heard interesting rumors about their successes (and their spectacular failures) in the field. The magickal gun invented by Professor Bronnywick? An explosive, lethal boondoggle. But those mages who had used the school of Air magic to disperse the smog before it could add a malodorous pal to the city? That seemed to be working quite well. It stuck me, then, that the solution was proximity and distance: The spells were being cast in the air
above
the city, not on the factories themselves.
"This place is quite something!" Gillian exclaimed, looking about herself at the broad main street that wound past shops. "It's like Tarant, but...smaller. But not nearly as provincial as I had expected. Obviously, it lacks
some
of Tarant's polish..." She nodded, unaware of several passing pedestrians turning to glower at her less than well chosen words. "Ah! Is that the castle?"
"Ah, hum..." I coughed. "Gillian, do remember, we're guests here."
"What the devil?" Virginia muttered. She stooped down, her face darkening. "Oh that
blasted
Wight!"
"What?" I turned and saw that Virginia had found upon the ground a folded, yellowed copy of The Tarantian, which looked to be packed full of news from Caladon. I knew that the Tarantian had quite a reach, but to find it even here, in one of Tarant's few remaining rivals upon the continent of Arcanum, was quite remarkable. But then I saw the headline and my blood ran cold: WHYTECHURCH MURDERER STRIKES!
Virginia handed me the paper. Unfolding and reading it, I found that the story was just as I expected from Victor Wight's yellow journalism: Gratuitous description of the victim as a 'young lady of decadence' and 'a half-elven strumpet.' The article went on at length at the fashions by which this poor girl had been dismembered but seemed to care little for the fact that she had been a living woman until a few days before. But I did take note that, at the end of the article, the chief of police for Caladon -- one Chief Inspector Henderson -- was interested in any who knew a thing of this 'Whytechurch Ripper.'
"I wonder why there's such -
hic-
such a fuss about it," Sally said, her voice only somewhat bleary as she wobbled along the path behind us. "S' a dangerous prof...proffershin..." She ducked her head forward. "S'almost as bad as sailoring it is."
"Sally, did you sneak some vodka off the Fairgale?" Gillian asked, frowning ever so slightly.
"Nnnnooooo," Sally said. "I
took
it."
Thus, we walked through the streets of Caladon, getting a feel for the place. Virginia stayed ever by my side, but 'Magnus' and Sally did sometimes take excursions upon themselves, to investigate bars and taverns and other places that would slow us down. By the time the evening began to settle around the city, I was feeling better about my grasp of its dimensions -- though it was grand, it was far from the same size and stature of Tarant. Virginia, though, looked increasingly wary as the day passed on into dusk, and when we took a moment to rest our feet at a coffee shop, she ordered a pot with as much cream and sugar as could be contrived to fit in a cup while leaving room for coffee. Drinking it down, she started to drum her heel upon the ground.
"What is it, Virginia?" I asked.
"Oh?" she asked. "What?"