Post
by Keeper » Thu Oct 19, 2023 10:40 am
The wind over the Irish Sea was churning the clouds so that they tumbled over one another like waves breaking on a shore.
Static built up quickly and then erupted in a sheet of white energy that surged across the sky from horizon to horizon. Its appearance was marked, several moments later by a rolling crack that lasted for many seconds before fading.
The storm buffeted a lone vessel that struggled to make its way against the squall through the dark, dangerous night sky.
A flash, a boom, a mighty gust and the craft lurched drastically, eliciting a cry of dismay from the woman sitting behind the pilot.
"Sorry!" she called out above the whine of the ether engines as they fought against the torrent.
"Hey, don't worry about that. I don't think you'll be the only one screaming like a girl today!" Samantha Brockelsby laughed, but gripped the arms of her chair tightly.
"Can you even see where you are going?" Brockelsby inquired without trying to conceal her discomfort at the situation.
"Nah!" Sabbath said nonchalantly. "But how hard can it be to get it right? Just head south by compass and stay above the water. I'm sure we'll get to see better when we get nearer."
"You're an arse, you know that?" Samantha huffed.
From her position behind the pilot she could not see Sabbath's eyes aglow, granting him a sight beyond that of normal men.
He could see the natural ebb and flow of the mana that seeped from the Hollow realms into the living world, that background level of ether that joined all things. Even so, it was still difficult keeping the aerostat on a straight path.
For another thirty minutes Sabbath flew south, noticing slowly that the storm appeared to be easing.
The wind still buffeted the aerostat airship this way and that, but Sabbath was able to control the vessel better.
Brockelsby noticed the reduction too and released her grip on her beleaguered chair. "Are we clear of that storm?" she asked.
"I think so, just normal wind and rain now," he answered optimistically.
She stood up and peered out through the rain shrouded windows into the blackness of night. Leaning forward she could see Sabbath's glowing eyes and she placed her hand on his shoulder consolingly.
"Well done, Gabe," was all she said, softly.
He flew on for another quarter hour in silence, following the compass carefully.
"We shouldn't be too far off, now," he said.
Sam returned to his side and once more peered out into the darkness.
"There!" she exclaimed excitedly as she spotted the flair of light off to her left.
"Nice one," Sabbath said, turning the craft to port and lining the bow up with the light that flared into view every few seconds.
Sabbath turned a dial on the console to his left and flicked a toggle switch on.
Above the console a greenish misty haze formed, ether-static, awaiting someone to answer the call. Eventually green the mist formed into a face, an animated bust of a man who appeared to be in his late thirties, with full sideburns and neat hair, parted on the left and combed tightly over his forehead. "Sabbath residence," the man's visage said formally.
"Owen, I'm about five minutes out. I'd appreciate it if you'd open the barn door for me!"
"Ah, Gabriel! Apologies, I had no idea it was you, or that were coming in this foul weather. Of course, I'll have the doors open by the time you arrive," the crackly voice announced over the speaker.
"Thank you, Owen," Sabbath said and flicked the comms unit off.. The aerostat rocked and swayed as the turbulent air over the water clashed with the steep cliffs of the Welsh coast.
Slowly, as Sabbath cautiously brought the aerostat closer, the lights and grounds of Strumble Head Manor came into view, the flaring beacon of the lighthouse built into the manor itself, clear and bright,
Strumble Head, the outcrop of rock that formed the small Island which the manor was upon, was separated from the mainland by a mere forty feet, and the rocks below the narrow bridge that spanned the gap were often visible at low tide. The headland, approximately circular in shape had steep sided cliffs all round,
A large rectangular opening had been carved into the north-facing, seaward cliff. Normally sealed to the elements by a gigantic door.
In the darkness of night, even with the aerostats lights on full beam, both the opening and the door were undetectable.
However, as the aircraft approached, lights came on in the cliff face, either side of the door. Then a long sliver of light appeared as the huge iron door
hinged downwards like a drawbridge to reveal. the hollow interior of the island, a large well-lit hangar.
"Almost home," Sabbath said pointlessly as he watched the cliffside become a very bright rectangle, but Sam was already watching, eager herself to return home and sleep in her own bed.
As Sabbath brought the aerostat through the hangar threshold he had to be careful not to over compensate as he had been having to do for nearly the whole journey.
Powered down, the vessel rested gently in a cradle built into the hangar floor.
Owen Morgan stood at the bottom of the brow as Sabbath and Brockelsby alighted.
Morgan was a man of thirty five years, average height and build, with neat hair, clean clothes and a very sharp mind.
He shook Sabbath's offered hand. "Welcome home you two. I truly didn't think you'd come down in this weather.
"Ah, well," Sabbath sighed, "Miss Samantha threatened me with castration if she didn't get to sleep in her own bed tonight!"
Morgan choked down a laugh
"No I did not!" Brockelsby objected.
Sabbath gave Morgan a mischievous grin and wink and ignored Sam's protestation. "So, Owen, what have you get for me?"
"Nothing," Morgan said and he stepped in alongside Sabbath as they made their way to the hanger control panel. Morgan pulled a large heavy lever and the great iron door hinged up on huge chains, thudding home with a metallic clang like thunder that shook the bedrock.
"All's well here, and with the lighthouse. I expect Dunn will have a few things to say."
"Hmm, indeed he probably will," Sabbath sighed as he contemplated his upcoming encounter with his mother's stiff and unbending butler, a throwback from his father's day.
Dunn, Sabbath recalled, had been in the Manor for all of the latter's life. An ever present source of fear and dread during his childhood, and a disapproving judge during his teenage years.
It was only when the young lord stepped up and joined the Naval Air Arm that the ever taciturn butler finally seemed to accept Gabriel Sabbath as anything more than a spoilt child.
The three made their way up through the spiralling staircase hewn from the bare rock up to the manor house, their footsteps echoing through the stairwell and informing those at the top of the stairs of their approach.
The two figures sitting patiently in front of the door to the hangar stairs suddenly sprang to their feat and began excitedly barking, yapping barks that Sabbath could hear as though they were in the stairway with him.
He opened the door from the hangar to be assaulted by two small dogs whose whole bodies wagged from side to side in excitement at seeing their Master home.
He knelt down and petted both, equally pleased
to see them. "Banger, my boy!" he said with absolute adoration to the tan coloured miniature Dachshund that kept jumping up at him in search of kisses.
The dog's sister, a black and tan colour always held back but also wanted desperately to get in there.
"C'mon Sizzles!" Sabbath encouraged. He spent a couple of minutes petting the dogs, Morgan and Brockelsby having to step around him as they carried on into the house.
Suddenly the hair on the back of his neck stood up.
"Good evening, Dunn," Sabbath said standing and turning to face the imposing figure who reminded him of a classic Vampire of Legend.
"So very good of you he grace us with your presence", Dunn said with a sneer. "Your mother has retired for the right and won't be available to see you until morning," the tall gangly butter said. Sabbath straightened and looked Dunn in the eye "I think you may wish to address the attitude, Dunn." he warned.
"Attitude? I think not. I merely convey instruction not to disturb Milady at this late hour. If you were to arrive at a more appropriate hour then of course, you would be welcome to seek Milady's Company. But as you chose the early hours of the morning you will of rousse maintain the Sanctity of the house's peace. You will be retiring at your earliest convenience, Boy, won't you?"
"That's enough, Dunn!" Sabbath fumed "The hour I return is mine to choose, and if I wake the whole house in doing so then that is my prerogative." Sabbath's voice raised in anger. "When Last I looked Gabriel Sabbath was Earl of Strumble Manor, not Wilfred Dunn."
Dunn stiffened even further than he already was
"Earl!" he spet the word. "There has only been one Earl here is my lifetime, boy, and your father
bears that honour."
Sabbath's fists clenched. "My father is dead." "Missing," Dunn countered.
"I watched him die, god damn you. In front my eyes," growled the younger man.
"So you mintain. I was not there to witness the event you say happened…"
"Bloody hell, Dunn, you are poking the bear tonight," Despite himself Sabbath still bit. 'And you not Seeing a thing does not mean it did not happen."
"And you saying it did, does not make it so!"
"Dunn!" A stern female voice barked from behind the Butler. "Enough!"
The old man went rigid and half turned.
Storming towards him was a woman in her night clothes, a fur gown pulled about her. She was tall, slim, deep red hair loosely tied.
"By all that is holy, you will show the Earl respect."
The butler's nose curled up but he nodded curtly to the woman who appeared almost the same age as the 'Earl pretender'.
"As you say, Ma'am," Dunn Croaked.
"Please check the doors, then you may tum in for the night," the woman said.
Dunn nodded curtly and walked away.
The woman turned back to Sabbath with a broad smile fixed upon her pretty face and rushed to him, wrapping her arms around him.
"I'm so glad to have you home, Gabriel," she said happily.
He hugged her back. "I'm glad to be home, mum!" Sabbath watched over his mother's shoulder, to ensure Dunn had left.
She sighed. "I know what you are thinking, and you know I can't."
"No," Sabbath conceded, releasing his mother. "But I can, and unless you reign him in, I will."
"I'll try," She sighed.
Sabbath walked her back to her bedroom and said good night
"Oh, I almost forgot. You had a call to the house yesterday, I wrote the message down. They seemed very keen to speak with you," Estaria Sabbath handed her son the note.
He read the name on it; Northrupp, Dodds, Fogg and Honeywell.