Part 11 (1/2)

These days, since the Mehler's arrival, what had been lawn was mostly garden. Herr Mehler had become seriously interested in what one of Rachel's many books called ”French intensive gardening,” so he had deeply dug three-foot wide beds with paths between them.

”It still seems strange that so few people in the town knew about Rachel,” Jacob said. ”Now that her salon's are so well attended.”

”She kept to herself, mostly.” Heather hesitated. ”After the accident, when she couldn't get around very well, she got to be pretty reclusive. In a way, the Ring of Fire did her a favor, I guess. That's what Cora said. I mean, people sort of knew who she was, since she grew up here. But she went off to college and didn't make a real big splash when she came back.”

The house was laid out in a typical farmhouse pattern, with four rooms on the ground floor. Considering the number of bodies in the living room, Heather was glad the ceiling fan was turned on. Jacob introduced Heather to Rachel with what seemed a proprietary air. What Heather couldn't figure out was what he was being proprietary about, Rachel and her salon or Heather. He seemed to be showing off the cultural jewel of the salon to Heather and Heather to the gathered group. It was quite a group, at that.

There were eleven people in the living room. Jacob introduced Heather to them all. Father Gus from Saint Mary's was there, along with Father Nick Smithson. There was also a Spaniard who introduced himself as Don Diego Valdez y Mendoza. He immediately wanted her to confirm that up-timers really did believe in astrology. After all, they published horoscopes in the newspapers up-time. It was immediately apparent that this was a conversation that was repeated with each new up-timer to join the group.

Apparently he wouldn't, or couldn't, give up on his pet notion.

A Frenchman with the name of Pierre de Cancavi claimed ”I'm going to build an airplane as soon as I can put together the money.”

He was arguing with an Italian named Gasparo Berti, who insisted, ”Waste of money. Lighter-than-air craft are the real future of aviation. It was no more than an accident of history that that prevented the up-timers from properly exploiting the advantages of dirigibles. Granted, they were-and are-militarily useless but who cares about that?”

”The military?” Magdalena Van de Pa.s.se, one of the few people Heather knew, suggested. Heather hid a giggle.

Gasparo Berti paused and looked atMagdalena severely for a moment. Then gave a half smile and a hands-in-the-air Italian shrug. ”Dirigibles are elegant. Stately even. Besides, they carry more.”

Heather let herself be carried by the flow of the group. She saw Vladimir Yaroslavich and looked around for Brandy Bates. Seeing Prince Vladimir without Brandy was a surprise these days. ”We were caught in the middle of changing the structure of our armed forces.” He was talking to a Polish gentleman named Jan Brozek. ”Don't make too much of it, Jan. We won the next one after all.”

”But that was after the great freedom had turned into license,” Jan Brozek insisted. ”That won't happen this time.”

”Neither did the Smolensk War,” Prince Vladimir countered ”At least not yet. Don't count too much on it going the same way. It did in that other time line, but too much has changed. Guatavus Adolphus is still very much alive-busy with the league, but alive and well with his army intact.”

”Why the change from Important Speeches to Frivolous Music?” Heather could hear the capitals in Herr Gulden's voice. She learned later that he was in Grantville fromAustria . Meanwhile she shot Jacob a look and he cringed.

”Yes, why?” Herr de Groot actually seemed interested rather then calling her to task. She later learned he was fromHolland .

”Because people like music,” Heather said to the nice one. ”They don't, as a general rule, like speeches-at least not to listen to everyday . . .”

Then she got into a discussion about the difference between seventeenth-century and twentieth-century ballet. The French guy was back, insisting that for the most part the down-time French version was better-though there were no doubt a few points they could pick up and had she seen the Christmas show inMagdeburg ?

It was starting to get a bit much for Heather. It wasn't that the people here were dumb, quite the contrary. But she was rapidly coming to the conclusion that no one could foul up like a smart person.

They would say something really insightful, then finish the sentence with something totally off the wall.

Rachel caught her eye and indicated a door with her eyes. Heather retreated and found herself, eventually, in the kitchen with Rachel and Frau Mehler, a stout German woman.

”Did the air heads drive you out?” Frau Mehler looked cross. She was was.h.i.+ng up a stack of the trays that refreshments had been served on.

Rachel grinned. ”Be nice, Helen.” Then she looked at Heather. ”I call it 'candy store syndrome.'”

Heather gave her a questioning look.

”Believe it or not, that room-” Rachel pointed at the living room. ”-has some of the brightest minds inEurope in it. Seven out of ten of those people made it into the history books as great thinkers of their time. It's not requirement to get invited; I don't work that way. Still, it's true. The reason they seem a little . . . ah . . . vague sometimes is that they are the ones who got to Grantville and jumped into the ocean of knowledge we brought with us without bothering with a life preserver. Some of them haven't come up for more than the occasional breath in the last three years. They're like kids in a candy store, nibbling on this piece of knowledge, then getting distracted by that one. No time to digest what they have already learned. There is always another chocolate covered truffle of information to try to swallow whole.”

”I've seen the effect.” Heather laughed.

By the end of the evening, Heather's head was spinning. She was full of the snacks that had been served, as well as the beer and wine. Perhaps a bit too full, since the spinning head might not be just from all the conversation. She had stayed with Jacob, mostly. He moved from group to group, sometimes listening, sometimes conversing. That had helped, since it kept Heather from feeling that she was in over her head.

She took a deep breath of the misty air. ”Wow. Who knew?”

”Well, I did,” Jacob said. ”Perhaps it is just because everyone is always so busy. You up-timers, at any rate. Always working, day and night, so many of you. Always doing.”

”I suppose.”Right now , Heather thought,what I'd really like is for you to take my arm again. The thought surprised her a bit. Then she realized that with Judy and the other girls gone toMagdeburg , she was simply lonely, without the companions.h.i.+p she'd come to rely on. Which was another surprise, that she relied on anyone.

He didn't take her arm again, though. Or try to kiss her good night at the door. Or any of the other stuff a guy who was interested in you tried to do. It was kind of disappointing.

Jacob didn't try to kiss her that night. He didn't have the nerve. Trying to kiss a young, pretty girl who is much richer than you are-and an up-timer to boot-took nerve. At least for Jacob it did. It took several more visits to Rachel Hill's gatherings before he worked up the nerve. Plus some not-that-gentle prodding by Rachel. It was the covetous looks that Pierre de Cancavi was casting Heather's way that finally pushed Jacob to boldness.Pierre really wanted someone to fund his airplane and Jacob was afraid that he would try to seduce the money out of Heather. Well, at least that's how he justified it to himself.

The Launcher

By Richard Evans

Bern, Swiss Confederacy, Early Spring, 1634 ”Will this spot work?”

”Looks high enough.” A few steps toward the edge of the cliff let Peter gaze down toward the ever-but slowly-growing lake below. The lake, cut out of the fast-flowing River Aare, had been intended to slow the river down as it pa.s.sed the city and allow for new dockyards to be built, as well as to give the city access to the river rock needed for its explosive growth.Bern was trying its best to be the center of technology and science in the Swiss Confederacy.

Technology, dribbling in from the city called Grantville, was making its way toBern andLucerne . The other cities of the confederacy, exceptingBasel , were waiting to see which way the winds blew.

Karl and Karl were surprised when Peter, a journeyman clock-worker and newly-named master machinist, had offered them a deal to develop an aerial launcher overlooking the new s.h.i.+pyard. He never really told them what it was for, but he needed their help and was paying for their expertise.

”Come spring the pamphlets will go out. By summer we are to expect many compet.i.tors to arrive.

You've seen the latest posters, have you not? Should more arrive, we'll stretch out the compet.i.tion. The visitors will spend all summer perfecting their machines and I will be enriched by the monies they spend.

It's my shops they will rent to perfect their designs to make the parts they need!

”Imagine every mountain top having its own catapult and a messenger craft to fly out mail, or warnings, and even to take the rich for rides in the sky! We'll be rich,” Peter exclaimed. ”Rich indeed! We pay the winning designer a small prize, just a percentage of the entrance fees. And then we'll own the rights to develop the craft, too!”

”And all we have to do is build this launcher?” The shorter Karl, Karl Hoffman, crooked an eyebrow and peered over the edge. He was a carpenter by trade, but had recently been trained in machining aimed towards making better roads and tracks for the new mountain rails.

Due to their rich patron, Peter Gerber, he and Karl the Tall had work for the next year at least. And it was a council-approved job that would also count towards their new guild's training requirements.

All they had to do was design a proper horizontal catapult to give any craft placed on the tracks enough impetus to clear the thick trees below and-hopefully-reach the new lake . . . or perhaps even beyond.

Any craft, be they packages using something called ”parachutes” or man-powered gliders or even aircraft powered by pedals and gears or engines. Karl had seen his first engine last winter. It just powered a small toy boat, but ran on nearly pure alcohol, naphtha and lamp oil. But he could imagine larger versions of such engines.