hair sticking up every which way. Spoo was rather a prize as far as capability was concerned. She was, as per usual, dressed as a boy and slightly smudged.
âOye up, Lady Captain. Iâve been waiting for you to dock in.â
âGood evening, Spoo. Everything shipshape and Bristol fashion while I was away?â
âMostly.â Spooâs tone indicated that she had gossip to impart. â
Something
is being installed in engineering. Old Aggie wonât let me see, on account of her bitterness over me leaving off sootie for deckling. I think you might want to find out what it is.â
Primrose wasnât interested in this conversation. She undertook the supervision of the shipâs staff, ensuring that tea was served on time and other similar necessities vital to everyoneâs comfort were provided. She couldnât care less about the mechanics of
The
Spotted Custard
âs crew.
âRue dear, I think I might go and do something else.â Strangely, Prim drifted back up on deck when there was nothing to occupy her attention, and the only one awake was Tasherit in lioness form.
Rue wished her a pleasant night. âThank you, Spoo. I shall investigate at once.â
I wonder if this is at Quesnelâs behest? Is this what has Percyâs dander up?
Leaving Spoo to return to her bed, Rue climbed down the spiral staircase to the lowest level of her ship, where the two massive boilers were housed in all their teakettle glory.
Everything was quiet.
The
Spotted Custard
was on low burn; only the main kettle was simmering. The other wasnât needed unless they were in full propeller mode.
A single sleepy-eyed sootie tended to the main. He gave Rue a nod as she passed.
Everything else was still and silent, except in a back corner, behind a coal pile where Aggie Phinkerlington was humming to herself and tinkering with a remarkable-looking gadget.
It was a large tank, not unlike one of those Wardian cases that the mad fern collectors used to display their obsession. This one was empty of ferns and in the process of construction and installation.
Rue cleared her throat delicately.
Aggie didnât jump, not really â she was too stoic for that â but she did reach to flip a horse blanket over the tank and turned around brandishing a wrench and a displeased expression.
Aggie was head greaser, second in command of the boiler room after Quesnel, which made her chief engineer while he was away. For some reason Rue did not understand, Aggie had never warmed to her. Which was a shame, because Rue thought that under more auspicious circumstances she would like the young battleaxe. Aggie reminded her a bit of Lady Kingair.
Aggie was a redhead with a vast sprinkling of freckles over porcelain skin under which blue veins were clearly visible. That skin spoke more to a life spent in engineering than ancestry. She was sublimely fit. Her arm muscles had arm muscles. Rue, who had grown up around werewolves, thought Aggie most impressive even by their standards. She was one of the few women Rue had ever met who actually
looked
like she might survive metamorphosis. Whether she was creative enough to have excess soul, Rue would never know. Aggie rarely let anyone see any part of her but the tetchy efficient bit.
âOh, itâs you.â Aggie frowned. âWhat do you want?â
Not a promising start. âGood evening, Miss Phinkerlington. What is that, if I may ask?â Rue always found herself forced into politeness by the extremity of Aggieâs dislike.
âYou may not ask.â
Rue gave a little sigh. âThis is my ship, Miss Phinkerlington.â
âAnd this is Himselfâs kit. Not for me to say if he hasnât deemed it necessary to tell.â
Aggie was a pain but she was good at her job and she adored Quesnel in a bickering-elder-sister fashion. Which made her reliably loyal â to him if not the rest of the ship.
âYet Mr Lefoux is not here,
Reba McEntire, Tom Carter