Pain.
Gritted teeth.
A wrenching sensation.
Then darkness...
When Nix opened his eyes again, he found that he was in what appeared to be a rough metal container - the scent of hay and livestock heavy in his nose. He started to sit up, but was arrested by a warm palm against his chest. A face of silver and steel, with red paint daubing her cheeks like whiskers, peered down at him. Enterprise. Her brow was furrowed, and her voice was nervous - turning her Yankee drawl into something sweeter than water for Nix's ears.
"Miss Nixon? Are you okay?"
Nix blinked again, then closed his eyes.
Her eyes.
She was too tired to cling to false maleness. She shifted her head against the softness that she rested against, opened her eyes to look at Enterprise again. Then she closed them.
When she woke a second time, it was with a squeal of brakes and hissing pistons. The chamber she was in rocked and Nix grunted with a faint throb of pain in her back. She jerked her head up, then looked around wildly, panicking. Enterprise was behind her, her head resting against the wall, her eyes closed, her turbines humming softly. She was asleep - in an off watch, it seemed. Nix was able to actually move now, even if her arms felt leaden and heavy. She rolled onto her side, then winced and pushed herself up. She was dressed in her leggings and a wrap around her back and shoulders - gauze stretched taut over her muscles and tight around her breasts. She looked around and saw that there was the bloody ruin of her shirt and her jacket - her jacket had a small hole and a bloodstain, but her shirt had been shredded like a tiger had been at it.
Or surgical scissors.
She rolled her shoulder, felt the twinge of pain, then looked back at Enterprise. The sleeping spirit was utterly beautiful.
The sliding door built into the livestock compartment - for that was what Nix recognized the chamber to be - opened. The spirit of a rather adorable steam burner from the 1900s peeked in. She was a squat and generously curved girl, with bright green paint on her sides and a rather impressively hooked nose - she had to have a pretty hefty cowcatcher. Her shoulders were daubed in first native symbols that Nix didn't recognize, but that meant it was a tribal train, not one of the big concerns that were situated in Boston or Washington.
"W-We're here and my conductor is asking me what got me so nervous and I don't know what to tell him please help!" she said.
"Uh..." Nix said.
Enterprise jerked her head up, shaking her head. "Huh?" She looked around, saw the train, and frowned at her. "Are you whining again?"
The train chewed on her knuckles nervously. "I don't wanna lie to him anymore, but...but you said he was a technician!"
"I am a technician," Nix said, rubbing his back. "Guh. Tell your conductor that I asked for this berth - I'll pay him in trade."
"H-He won't be mad?" she asked.
"He might be a tad annoyed," Nix said, gently. "But more at me than you."
The train relaxed, sighing. "Okay, thanks." She closed the door with a rattling clink, leaving them alone with a bare electrical bulb. Nix sighed, then frowned at the shirt that had been so handily ruined.
"Damn it all."
"Sorry," Enterprise said, her voice soft.
"You cut the shirt off?" Nix asked. "And..." She paused. "You patched me up?"
"Don't sound so fuckin' shocked," Enterprise said, her cheeks flushing so red that her markings almost vanished. "I've got a fully stocked sick bay."
Nix wasn't impressed, precisely. What she felt was a deep, overriding fear. An uneasy awareness of what had happened. Enterprise had, in the panic, dragged Nix onto a train car. There, she had extracted a bullet, stitched the wound up, applied whatever medicines she could. She looked down at her wrist and noticed a small welling of blood. There were old stories - IVs with saline and plasma and other magical reagents that spirits had been able to deliver to their wounded crew. But the thing was, a modern English spirit, arising from an airship, say, could direct such things...from within their hulls. Not drawn from
nothingness
. Nix forced down the cold creeping dread in her gut as she asked: "How'd you get the train to carry us?"
"Threatened to blow her up," Enterprise said, looking down at her hands. "I was...in a hurry."
Nix sighed, slowly. "Okay," she said. "Could you have done it?"
Enterprise frowned. "I fuckin' don't know."
Silence hung between them. Nix shook her head. "Listen, I need a shirt." She paused. "Got any laundries in you?"
"A big one, actually," Enterprise said.
***
The door opened and the conductor - a first native man of mixed blood and a weathered complexion - stood at the entrance and peered at Nix, who had just finished throwing his jacket on over his brand new white shirt. He had a long rifle with a lever action swung over his back, and a large knife strapped to his ankle. His features were long and horselike and he swept his gaze over Nix slowly. "Huh," he said, quietly. "That big ship of yours was right. You really are in a lot of trouble, aren't you Mister?"
Nix blinked. "I-"
"Do you think my sweetie,
Weetamoe,
can actually hide a single thing from me? She plays poker with her hands held backwards," the man said, his voice dry. "I'm Johnathan Smith, conductor. You are a technician, yes? And that boat with you, she's an airship?"
"Not quite," Nix said. "I'm Marion Nixon."
"Huh," Johnathan said.
"Where are we, exactly?" Nix asked.
"We took the Old Route out of New England, into the Wasteland," Johnathan said, stepping back and letting Nix hop down. "The Green Lady will keep us safe - and we have a hold full of cattle that needs delivering to towns outside of the Empire. We're near the Chicago Ghostlands."
Nix slowly turned to Enterprise, who was standing at the lip of the car. She looked out, her mouth opened in confusion. The landscape was all dry grass, sweeping towards Lake Chicago, whose sprawling glassy waters glittered in the distance. There were a few odd hills, festooned with narrow trees, which might have once been building. A huge old pier remained, cracked in half and forged in concrete. Marshy wetland clumped here and there, and the old roads were half visible - the grass slowly peeling it apart and crumbling it apart. Enterprise looked around herself, her eyes wide as saucers. "My...a lot of my crew came from here, I..." she whispered.
Jonathan arched an eyebrow.
"You're a smuggler," Nix said.
Jonathan shrugged one shoulder. "You were the one who left Burned York in a tearing hurry with the police running all around with their guns out and an English airship overhead." He sounded as unperturbed as the glassy waters out there. The cold wind blew towards the train. Nix frowned and knelt down. The train was resting on rusted, ruined tracks - bent and warped and left to rot. They weren't joined and every few yards, it seemed like another chunk was missing, or had been knocked aside.
"Your
Weetamoe
is quite a skilled train, to run on tracks like these," Nix said, impressed.
"Thank you," Johnathan said. "She's a mite faster on proper track, but, the communities out here have enough time to bribe the President." He smiled, slightly. "Now, I let you lie, but I would like to know what precisely it is you've got going on, Mr. Nixon."
Nix sighed. "I've annoyed some very unpleasant characters. I need to get down to New Austin - my niece moved down there and I'm worried they're going to hurt her."
Jonathan considered. "In exchange for labor, and for pitching in at my stops, I can get you to New Austin in a week," he said, firmly.
Nix considered. The run from Burned York to New Austin could be as short as a day, if you were in a fast courier. It could be in under a day if you flew with the Royal Hurricanes. But the Mechanical Turks had to be reeling with the death of Mr. Jeremiah. And who knew what havoc Sister Zimmerman was unleashing on them. Then he slapped his forehead. "Damn! I'm a fool!" he exclaimed, then touched his ear - where his mobile telephone waited.
"Hello? Miss Rhina!" He said, then waited. The tone was scratchy and distant. He didn't know if he was close enough for-
"
Ssss-
Mr -
sss -
on? I can...-arely hear you!"
"Miss Rhina! Send a telegraph to Josephine Dour, and make haste to New Austin. I will be heading to New Austin."
"-ssss- Dour and Austin...sss
-
ot it! Dour and Austin, repeat, I am g-
ssss
!"
"Capital," Nix said, then took the small pebble from his ear, then stomped on it. "My apologies, dear heart, to spurn your gift, but...they can track that." He lifted his gaze to Johnathan. "I accept your kind offer, Mr. Smith."
Johnathan offered his hand, nodding. "So," he said. "You go by Mr. Nixon, eh?" His eyes flicked up and down Nix's body, slowly, and then he arched an eyebrow.