The engineers apprentice, p.1

The Engineer's Apprentice, page 1

 

The Engineer's Apprentice
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The Engineer's Apprentice


  Contents

  Dedication

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter 11

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Chapter Thirty

  Chapter Thirty-One

  Chapter Thirty-Two

  Chapter Thirty-Three

  Chapter Thirty-Four

  Chapter 20

  Chapter Thirty-Five

  Chapter Thirty-Six

  Chapter Thirty-Seven

  Chapter Thirty-Eight

  Chapter Thirty-Nine

  Chapter Forty

  Chapter Forty-One

  Chapter Forty-Two

  Chapter Forty-Three

  Chapter Forty-Four

  Chapter Forty-Five

  Chapter Forty-Six

  Your dedication here.

  CHAPTER ONE

  “AS WE WORK together to make you a licensed engineer, Ms. Sakdavong, I’d like to know what motivates you. Why do you want to be my apprentice and become an engineer?”

  I sat in Issa Obasi’s study as his maid, Mrs. Miller, filled cups with an aromatic tea. If he’d asked me the question yesterday, the answer would have been simpler. I would have confidently said I wanted to become a steam engineer to satisfy my curious nature, better understand star metal, or be the first woman to build a humanoid automaton. Understanding star metal’s impact on industry would be reason enough. Each option sounded good, but they were all lies. Professor Cross had prepared me for this line of questioning but the formulaic answers sounded hollow to me now. I decided to go with a story that seemed the most honest.

  “Well, it’s hard to know where to start. I’ve been working on designs for a humanoid automaton. They’re in the tube I handed you earlier. There are many reasons…”

  “Ms. Sakdavong, let me make it clear, automatons don’t interest me. What interests me is the situation we find ourselves in now.”

  Mrs. Miller returned from the kitchen with a cup and sipped it as she sat down in the chair beside Issa. I glanced between the two wondering about their relationship as she sat casually in on an interview with her employer. For that matter, I wondered how a mature white woman had come to be employed by a young black man in the first place.

  “I don’t think I understand your meaning, Master Obasi. What situation do we find ourselves in?”

  Mrs. Miller placed her cup on the table. “Annie, dear, I’m sure you’ve noticed, Issa is a black man and you’re a woman.”

  She patted my knee, and I didn’t know whether she was patronizing me or really thought me stupid. Either way I felt heat in my stomach and I gritted teeth.

  “Yes, I believe that’s obvious.” I stared at the woman hard, wondering If she’d be a problem when I moved in and started my apprenticeship.

  “Look, neither of you know a thing about me. Are you accepting me as your apprentice or not? If not, I can find somewhere else to go. I’m smart and should have been valedictorian at the university. There are a dozen other master engineers that would take me on.” I stood, reaching for a sword hilt I’d abandoned long ago as my voice grew louder.

  “No, you don’t,” Issa said.

  Mrs. Miller pointed to my reaching hand and raised an eyebrow. I straightened trying to force myself to be calm. Issa nodded and stared at me while sipping tea. I paced back and forth, frustrated.

  I glared at them. “You both seem to know a lot about me already. How about you tell me why I want to be an engineer.”

  “Strangely enough, I did ask Mrs. Miller to look into that. She didn’t find much.”

  “I’ve never done much work for the Asian community, I’m afraid. Fewer contacts.”

  I frowned. “Contacts? Aren’t you a maid?”

  “Yes, dear, and a damned good one.” She sipped her tea.

  “How about you sit down and tell us what’s really going on,” Issa said.

  I clenched my fist then grunted before plopping back in my chair. The two stared at me as I shifted my gaze between them.

  Issa sighed. “Let’s restate the obvious. First, there are no female engineers; therefore, we’ll leave the idea of an unwed woman moving in with her teacher out of the equation, for now.”

  “Where are you going wit…” I began.

  Issa held up two fingers. “Second, you are one of Jacob Cross’s students. If you’re as good as you say, why didn’t he take you on.”

  I shrugged. “He told me a major project required his attention. He even let his last two apprentices go.”

  Issa raised an eyebrow and glanced at Mrs. Miller.

  I continued. “The letter of recommendation is right there.”

  Issa lifted the letter. He studied it, then ripped it to pieces, and placed them neatly on the table. I jumped from my seat again, wanting to bash the man’s head in with my fist.

  Issa raised three fingers. “Third, you do not act like a learned engineer. You seem violent. But anyone could pick up on that temper.”

  Mrs. Miller sucked her teeth.

  Issa added another finger. “Fourth, what’s my research dealing with?”

  I dropped into the chair again. “How am I supposed to know? I just got here.”

  Issa frowned. “I’m researching a way to integrate runes with steam. Basically, I want to see if we can use magic to generate steam. It would mean…”

  I interrupted Issa. “No more mining or Uranium Sickness. Plus, you might be able to create finer steam works. That’s amazing, I thought the two were incompatible.”

  Issa grinned. “Very good, Mrs. Sakdavong. You catch on quick, few engineers would. You’re correct. The issue is the impurities in the processing plants and the land overall. You’d need pure metals and a non-standard method to shape them.”

  “That’s perfect. I also do my own fabrication since I learned smithing as a child. I guess you know how to use runes?”

  “No, unfortunately, I never learned to use them. It caused some issues for me back home, so I came here.” Issa turned to Mrs. Miller.

  “That must be the information I couldn’t get to.”

  “Are you two going to clue me in?” I asked.

  “Let’s think about it from this perspective, but I want the truth. Why would an unmarried Asian woman apprentice herself to an unmarried African man she knows she’s obligated to move in with as part of her apprenticeship? I’ve spent years looking for an apprentice, and you’re the first one who’s ever come to my door with a recommendation letter. So I want to know why you’re here, really.”

  I understood then, and my shoulders fell.

  “Whether or not I become your apprentice depends on the answer, I assume. And whether or not it’s the truth.”

  “It does,” Issa said.

  I sighed. “I don’t want to become some random man’s blade.”

  “I don’t understand,” Issa said.

  “I’m the oldest daughter to a merchant. Honestly, I should take over the company, but after my little brother was born, well…” I trailed off.

  “Go on.” Issa pressed.

  I shook my head. “I’m supposed to be a sword maiden. I should be married to form an alliance with another merchant and become his bodyguard. This would strengthen my father’s business dealings. Merchants with many wives are seen as powerful because they have many blades sleeping beside them for protection.”

  “Mrs. Miller, have you ever heard this before?”

  “No, but those merchants are a secretive lot.”

  “Since I’m the oldest, and my mother is my father’s head maiden, she forced him to allow me to pursue my own goals. I decided to become an engineer, but if I fail, my mother told me yesterday she will see to it herself that I’m married off to a worthy husband.”

  “Shouldn’t you determine the worth of your husband for yourself?” Mrs. Miller asked.

  “I don’t plan on getting married. Part of the ceremony would be me promising to dedicate my blades to him.”

  “I assume if you become an engineer, you can marry someone who doesn’t see you as a blade,” Issa said.

  I opened my mouth to speak then closed it. Thinking about marriage always twisted my stomach into knots, and I’d never thought about marrying someone who wasn’t a merchant.

  “Honestly, we’re similar. I was supposed to follow in my father’s footsteps. But since I couldn’t use runes, I was ostracized. It seems neither one of us wants to be beholden to tradition.”

  Mrs. Miller sucked her teeth. “Sounds to me like neither of you wants to deal with the fact that those traditions make you who you are. Evolve them, don’t run from them.”

  Issa nodded then continued. “I also want to make sure that my research isn’t stolen. I bel

ieve I’ll do some real good if I can get the kinks worked out.”

  “That’s nice, and all, but am I your apprentice or not?”

  “Mi casa es su casa, for now. Welcome to my home, Annie.” Issa stretched out a hand.

  I gripped the offered hand and shook it joyfully. When I released him, Mrs. Miller wrapped me in a hug.

  “Sorry about all the cloak and dagger stuff, dear. We thought you may be a thief, or worse.”

  “What’s worse than a thief?” I asked.

  “Well, a beautiful young woman like you coming into this house, and you have a rich and powerful father. That’s potential for a different type of trouble if you catch my meaning.”

  “You think I’ll fall for Issa?”

  “I was thinking worse than that, dear.”

  I nodded, still not understanding.

  “Mrs. Miller, can you show her around. I have some work to do in the lab.” Issa left.

  “Now that we’re friends, tell me anything you need, and I’ll get it for you. Spare no expense.”

  “Is Issa fine with that?”

  “As long as it serves a purpose… maybe.” Mrs. Miller shrugged, “Ask for forgiveness, dear, not permission. Let’s go upstairs and get you settled.”

  CHAPTER TWO

  ISSA’S DUSTY LABORATORY had fast become my favorite place in the house. The scent from the leather bound books and old documents brought back my favorite college memories. I’d spent so many happy hours studying alone in the library it had become a second home to me.

  I marched in and placed a newly forged cane on Issa’s drawing table. Issa glanced at me, then the cane, and continued placing books onto the shelf.

  “This is my offering, Master Obasi.”

  “Couldn’t this have waited until after I’d finished?” I’d realized after a week how much Issa hated a mess.

  “You asked me to bring it as quickly as possible.”

  Issa sighed. “I did, but I literally just finished designs for a rune heating chamber.”

  “Can I take a look?”

  “Yes, they’re underneath your cane.” He turned back to the shelves.

  I tossed the cane towards Issa without thinking.

  “Issa…” before I could say more, Issa turned and snatched the cane from the air. He made a flourish then brought it down beside his foot.

  We locked eyes, and I stumbled through an apology.

  “It’s fine, Annie. No harm, no foul. Be more careful with weapons in the future.”

  He placed the books he held on the table and examined the cane. Delicate, yet strong, veiny hands gently caressed the walking stick, exploring the design.

  “Press the left button,” I instructed.

  Issa raised an eyebrow and pressed the button. With a hiss from expelling steam, the cane extended into a bronze quarterstaff. Issa continued to study the shaft, touching the expanded engraving. I wondered whether the method or the design itself interested him more

  “Press it again, and it shrinks. Steam does it all.”

  Issa pressed the button, and the staff became a cane once more pointed at me.

  “What’s the other button do?”

  “Don’t press that it shoots…” I barely moved in time for the cane’s tip to pass my head as it sprang away from the rod. I heard the tip thud into a book’s spine on the shelf behind me.

  Issa strolled to the book and pulled the tip from the spine. “Whoops.”

  I thought I saw a slight smile, part his lips.

  “Whoops, really? That could have killed me.”

  “But did you die?” Issa studied the tip before clicking it back in place on the cane.

  My laugh caused me to snort unexpectedly.

  Issa head shook as he tried to hold back a grin. “Now that we’ve had a good laugh, you can look at the blueprints I mentioned.”

  “Do you think your theory can work for an automaton?” I asked.

  Issa stared at me. It felt like he wanted to be sure I was asking a serious question before answering. “I’m not a fan.” He said.

  “Why?” This was the first time I’d heard of someone not being interested in automatons. They were the current rage and hot topic in academia.

  “Cognitive fluid. It’s made from dead animal brains. I believe dogs commonly because they’re trainable. You never know what you’re getting really. Plus, something just seems wrong. It feels to close to playing God.” The shudder the seemed to run through Issa surprised me.

  “It’s not like they use human fluid.”

  Issa waved a hand dismissively. “You never know what some sick person will do. Either way, not a fan.”

  “What would you use your magic steam for?” I asked.

  “I just want to stop the harm caused by uranium mines. The sickness is spreading.”

  I bent over the blueprints examining the rune boiler Issa had designed. “How can you tell?”

  “Have you ever been to the Native Lands, Ms. Sakdavong?” Issa asked.

  “No, never had a need nor the desire.” I flipped the pages.

  Issa tapped the cane on the ground. “If you ever go, you’ll see the difference for yourself. It’s amazing and sad at the same time.”

  “Soups on.” Mrs. Miller yelled from the kitchen.

  I smelled the freshly baked biscuits buttery aroma on my way to the kitchen with Issa. My mouth watered, anticipating the woman’s cooking. I’d fallen in love with her food my first night having dinner with the two. Every morning and night, I made sure to ask for seconds to show my appreciation for the woman’s skills.

  She’d just connected the kettle to the steam spigot when I entered the kitchen. I sat down and grabbed three biscuits, loading them with butter. Mrs. Miller made her own jams, and this morning I used the strawberry, plum, and honey separately on my treats.

  I passed the knife to Issa in time to take my teacup from the housekeeper. I filled it with cream and sugar and began munching on my mid-morning meal.

  “They’re about done with the upstairs mini furnaces. Are you sure you want that thing in the house?”

  Issa swallowed a bite. “It’s fine, it gets hot, but it’s no worse than having a stove for heating. It might be safer since Ms. Sakdavong is experienced. Besides, this isn’t a smithy, she’s just fabricating small parts, and I use the workshop outback to repair steam carriages.”

  “If you say so, Issa.” Mrs. Miller sipped her tea.

  I chomped into a biscuit, nearly biting it in half. “Thanks for getting that done so quickly.”

  “Oh, it’s fine, dear, gave me an excuse to get the porch installed.”

  Issa’s head jerked up. “What?”

  “What?” Mrs. Miller grinned.

  Issa’s head fell into a waiting palm. “Jesus.”

  “You said we could have one, Issa.”

  “I know, I know. I’ve been putting it off, hoping you’d forget.”

  “That was never going to happen.”

  “A man can dream.”

  “How long have y’all had this arrangement?” I asked.

  “Many years, dear. Issa was a friend of my husband before he passed.”

  I paused mid bite. “I’m sorry, I didn’t know.”

  “It’s fine. He passed years ago, and Issa took me in as a favor.” She patted Issa’s hand.

  The tension in my back released. “Got it.”

  “Is it okay if I work on my designs for the rest of the day?”

  “Sure, we don’t have any work,” Issa said.

  I shoved my last biscuit in my mouth whole and took off to Issa’s lab.

  “Be careful going upstairs, dear.” Mrs. Miller said.

  I grunted as I left the kitchen.

  I stopped in the washroom and cleaned my hands before heading to the lab. The cane lay across Issa’s blueprints. I grabbed the documents, leaving the staff, and ran upstairs to update my automaton’s design.

  CHAPTER THREE

  NONE OF THE men exiting Professor Cross’s classroom recognized me as they walked past. It saddened me not a single woman appeared to be taking the engineering class with them. Shaking my head, I stepped inside the room to talk to my former professor, who I’d decided to come see after updating my automaton design. Professor Cross had been my first choice when I’d begun looking for an apprenticeship. He said he wanted me to be his apprentice but something had come up and referred me to Issa instead.

  Inside I found a red haired woman speaking with him through sign as he spoke aloud. Her fingers seemed stiff, and I wondered if she’d received an injury recently.

 

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