Silver Skin Read online




  Silver Skin

  Joan Lennon has had novels, stories and poems published for readers of all ages, all over the world. She appears regularly at book festivals, libraries and schools throughout the UK, giving talks and leading workshops for readers and writers.

  Dedicated to Lindsey Fraser, the best agent/editor/champion a book or writer could ask for

  First published in 2015 by

  Birlinn Limited

  West Newington House

  10 Newington Road

  Edinburgh

  EH9 1QS

  www.birlinn.co.uk

  Copyright © Joan Lennon 2015

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored or transmitted in any form without the express written permission of the publisher.

  The right of Joan Lennon to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by her in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988

  ISBN: 978 1 78027 284 9

  eISBN: 978 0 85790 847 6

  British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data

  A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

  Typeset by Iolaire Typesetting, Newtonmore

  Printed and bound by Grafica Veneta

  www.graficaveneta.com

  Contents

  Part One

  Mrs Trevelyan: Mid Victorian Age, by the Bay of Skaill, Orkney

  Rab: Age of the Alexander Decision, Tower Stack 367–74/Level 56, Delta Grid, Northwest Europasia

  Cait: Late Stone Age, Bay of Skaill, Orkney

  Rab: Bay of Skaill

  Cait: Bay of Skaill

  Rab: Skara Brae

  Cait: Skara Brae

  Rab: Skara Brae

  Cait: Skara Brae

  Rab: Skara Brae

  Cait: Skara Brae

  Rab: Skara Brae

  Cait: Skara Brae

  Rab: Skara Brae

  Cait: Skara Brae

  Rab: Skara Brae

  Part Two

  Voy: North of Skara Brae

  Cait: Skara Brae

  Voy: Skara Brae

  Rab: Skara Brae

  Cait: Skara Brae

  Rab: East of Skara Brae

  Cait: East of Skara Brae

  Rab: Skara Brae

  Cait: Skara Brae

  Rab: Skara Brae

  Voy: North of Skara Brae

  Cait: Skara Brae

  Rab: South of Skara Brae

  Voy: North of Skara Brae

  Cait: South of Skara Brae

  Rab: Beyond the Near Hill

  Cait: Beyond the Near Hill

  Rab: Beyond the Near Hill

  Voy: Beyond the Near Hill

  Cait: Skara Brae

  Part Three

  Rab: The Way to the Ring of Hills

  Voy: The Ring of Hills

  Cait: The Encampment by the Loch of Harray

  Rab: The Encampment by the Loch of Harray

  Voy: The Encampment by the Loch of Harray

  Rab: The Ring of Stones

  Cait: The Encampment by the Loch of Harray

  Rab: The Ring of Stones

  Cait: The Encampment by the Loch of Harray

  Rab: The Ring of Stones

  Cait: The Encampment by the Loch of Harray

  Rab: The Ring of Stones

  Cait: The Ring of Stones

  Voy: The Old Women’s Encampment

  Rab: The Ring of Stones

  Cait: The Ring of Stones

  Voy: The Ring of Stones

  Rab: The Ring of Stones

  Voy: The Ring of Stones

  Rab: The Ring of Stones

  Voy: The Ring of Stones

  Cait: The Ring of Stones

  Rab: The Ring of Stones

  Cait: The Ring of Stones

  Rab: The Ring of Stones

  Part Four

  Cait: Return to Skara Brae

  Rab: Skara Brae

  Cait: Skara Brae

  Rab: Skara Brae

  Cait: Skara Brae

  Rab: Bay of Skaill

  Cait: Skara Brae

  Rab: Bay of Skaill

  Mrs Trevelyan: mid Victorian Age, Bay of Skaill, Orkney

  Epilogue

  Note to Readers

  PART ONE

  Mrs Trevelyan: Mid Victorian Age,

  by the Bay of Skaill, Orkney

  She woke in the winter dark, still half in the dream. She clutched the covers and felt her heart thudding against her ribs as the wind shrieked and moaned round the house. Lost souls … why does it sound like lost souls? The window frames rattled as if shaken by desperate hands, trying to get in. Sand from the shore hissed against the glass. Who are you? She sat up. I can’t help you – I can’t! I can’t! But the dream voices went on crying and wailing.

  Sudden lightning slashed the blackness, thunder right on its heels before she could even begin to count.

  The storm must be directly overhead. That’s what woke me, she told herself firmly.

  She lit a candle – there wasn’t gas laid on, with the house being so remote. The flame flickered and bent in the draft from the windows.

  It was a far cry from Edinburgh – which is exactly what I wanted, she reminded herself.

  She thought of the day Mr Trevelyan first brought her to the island they called the Mainland, to see what would be her new home. He’d planned for her to have one of the big main bedrooms at the front of the house for her own – had even offered what had once been his mother’s, God rest her – but she’d asked instead for the room that looked back towards the sea and the green hump so quaintly named the Howe of the Trows, out to the grey headlands and the long white beach. When it was calm, she’d explained, she loved the soft sounds of the waves on the sand.

  ‘Well, and when there’s a storm, what then?’ he’d said and straight back she’d answered,

  ‘Better to look your enemy in the eye than to turn your back.’

  She’d heard her father say things like that her whole life, and the words just popped out.

  ‘Or so my father says,’ she’d added quickly. Humbly.

  She knew what Mr Trevelyan was thinking. Now she’s about to be a married woman, shouldn’t it be MY sayings that she hears in her head? I never say things like that. Too fanciful. I’d have thought better of the old man.

  He was remarkably transparent.

  ‘I love this house,’ she murmured, watching him from under her eyelashes. ‘And I do love this room.’

  And he’d given it to her, just like that, all magnanimous. He’d even patted her arm. It was an odd sensation, but she found she didn’t mind. Her father had chosen a decent man for her, even if there was a gap between their ages. Her mother had taken her aside on the wedding morning and given her some quiet information and advice – some of it quite surprising, though now she knew it to be almost entirely true.

  The proposal and the preparations, the marriage ceremony itself – it had all passed by so quickly. Almost like a dream. And then her father kissed her on the forehead as he handed her into the carriage, and murmured, ‘God bless you, Mrs Trevelyan.’ That had been the moment she’d realised it was all … real.

  She was a woman now. Twenty next birthday, lately returned from her wedding trip on the Continent, with a husband and a fine house to run, on a fine island estate – a bit wild, a bit remote, it was true, but substantial. Something to be proud of. Something to build a life out of.

  The house shook.

  We never had storms like this in Edinburgh, she thought. Nothing exciting ever happened there.

  She slipped out of bed and drew back the curtains at the window. There was nothing but blackness to see. Blackness, and the white smudge of her face reflected in the glass.

  She shive
red and retreated to her bed again. The draft from the window rustled the pages of the book she’d been reading. Not exactly in secret, but there was no point in waving it about in Mr Trevelyan’s face. Dante’s Inferno. She’d bought it on a whim, when Mr Trevelyan wasn’t looking, in an English book shop in Rome. She knew what he’d say – Fancies. And foreign fancies at that! – but she was enchanted and moved by the story. It was so sad, so achingly sad, especially the way the poet wrote about the Second Circle of Hell, the one where lovers were punished, swept about forever in an endless wind, so that they could never find rest. It was clear Dante had suffered from the pain of love, the grand passion she’d read about, in other books Mr Trevelyan would not have approved of.

  She gave herself a mental shake. No wonder she was having bad dreams, and hearing voices in the storm. Fancies. That was all it was. Nothing more.

  The storm shrieked and moaned and beat about the walls. Mrs Trevelyan wrapped a soft shawl of fine wool tightly around her shoulders. She watched the little flame thrashing on the candle wick and waited for the morning.

  Rab: Age of the Alexander Decision, Tower Stack 367–74/Level 56, Delta Grid, Northwest Europasia

  ‘Oh, come on – not a storm as well!’ moaned Rab, but his friends just laughed.

  ‘You can do it, Rab!’

  ‘Bet you’re wishing you still had that knife, eh?’

  Chillingly realistic rain was now drenching all the participants, but none of the others were having to wrestle with a wolf at the same time.

  ‘Com? Com! I could do with some help here!’ said Rab, desperately trying to keep the wolf from closing its jaws on him. It was growling continuously and its breath stank disconcertingly of half-digested meat.

  ‘As your friend suggests, your options at this point are substantially fewer since you broke the knife at the last level,’ said his Com. It was sounding smug, since it had advised strongly against using a knife on a rhinophant. It was also safe from the wind and the rain, lodged in Rab’s wrist unit.

  ‘Yeah, yeah. Get on with it.’

  ‘So at this point you could either a) strangle the beast, which, given the average historical thickness of wolf neck fur and the digital reach and compressible strength of your hands, has only a zero point six per cent chance of success, or b) engage Vulcanski’s Pack-Mind Manipulation Gaze. Since the Gaze is almost certainly fictional I have no statistics on the likelihood of its success, but it would certainly have the element of surprise.’

  ‘That’s all you’ve got?’

  ‘Yes.’

  Rab groaned as the wolf arched suddenly and almost wrenched itself free.

  ‘Or …’ said his Com.

  ‘OR WHAT?!’

  ‘Or you could just let go and see what happens.’

  Thanks, thought Rab. He tried to remember what he knew about the Vulcanski Gaze. I think there’s no blinking. He shifted himself round until he could see the wolf’s eyes. The close quarters made it go squinty. And then I pour all my innate superiority into its skull – no doubts, no uncertainty – I’m the Alpha male – that’s me, not you – you are inferior – you are inferior – you are …

  The wolf burped, but showed no other sign of being intimidated.

  ‘Hey, Rab! Your mum’s here,’ one of his friends called.

  Rab risked a glance over to the observation booth. His mum was waving something – a package – at him. But while the simulation programme was running, she couldn’t come in.

  ‘Work with me here,’ Rab whispered so only the wolf could hear. ‘My mum’s watching …’

  There was a brief pause while the wolf thought about this. Rab had the distinct impression it was reliving moments of its own cubhood. A look passed between them, and Rab carefully loosened his grip …

  In elaborate slow motion, the wolf lowered its head, tucked its tail between its legs, flattened its ears. Rab maintained his gaze. The wolf began to back away …

  ‘Look at that!’ said his Com. ‘It’s working!’

  And the wolf disappeared.

  Rab leapt into the air. ‘Yay! Ha! Me – ONE. Canis lupus – NIL. Rab is OFF the menu!’ And he pranced across the floor, doing a wild gangly victory dance. The others joined in, three young men who had momentarily forgotten their dignity.

  From the observation room, Rab’s mum smiled at her tall brown son. He’d been working so hard, for so long – she couldn’t remember the last time he’d just taken the time out to be silly. His friends too, of course. They’d all been studying and researching and writing and analysing – whatever their chosen subjects, they were all desperate to acquire enough credits to move out of their parents’ spaces. Ever square centimetre of living space in every tower stack in the world had to be earned.

  She glanced down at the package she was carrying.

  Rab deserved the best chance, the best equipment his mother could provide. And the Retro-Dimensional Time Wender with Full Cloaking Capability – the one they called the Silver Skin – was it. It was the future of historical research. It was what her Rab needed to move ahead. To move out.

  She tried to imagine what it would be like to have her space to herself again, after all these years, but her mind shied away.

  Her Com heard her sigh. ‘I know,’ it said. ‘But it’s time.’

  And then Rab came in, freshly sanitized and glowing with excitement.

  ‘It’s come?’ he yipped.

  ‘It’s come?’ echoed his Com, going squeaky.

  ‘It’s come.’ And she handed Rab the package.

  He stared at it, his brown eyes wide. The reports – first-hand reports, not just something from sources – he could produce with a cutting edge tool like the Silver Skin – it would be amazing … His studies in history so far had got him on the way to a tiny unit of his own, but with this, who knows – he might even manage a window!

  ‘Mum – thank you!’ And he enveloped her in a rare, rough hug. A tiny part of his mind wondered, When did she get so small? But the rest was too excited to do anything but repeat over and over, My own place! I’m going to earn my own place!

  Rab’s Com had downloaded the extended manual and kept trying to read it aloud to him. ‘The suit will protect us from danger – weapons discharged, for example, even at close quarters, will not be able to penetrate our molecular structure because of the sideways displacement – projectiles will simply pass through the space we’ll be occupying, or not occupying – would you like me to read you the bit with the quantum physics?’

  Rab raised a hand. ‘No, no. That’s fine.’

  His Com sighed.

  Rab sighed too. He was passionate about history and ecstatic about his new bit of kit, but he couldn’t care less about its innards. He knew enough about the new time travel to know that it was ridiculously technical, but the basic premise boiled down to this: a traveller’s position remained constant and time passed by them, rather than the other way around. So instead of Rab moving back and forth in time, time moved back and forth around Rab. Which was all fine and good, but so far he was just moving himself back and forth, in the tiny bit of his mum’s unit where he slept.

  ‘Come ON!’ he groaned. The Silver Skin was lying there on his bed, shimmering tantalizingly. His Com just clicked at him and went on with its calculations. So Rab went back to pacing – three up, three back, three up, three back.

  Ever since they’d first heard rumours about the Silver Skin – first started fantasizing about getting hold of one – Rab and his Com and his friends and their Coms had been arguing about which period of history it could be best used on.

  The others all liked the Catastrophe Ages best, when things fell apart and the world teetered on the brink of annihilation – and Rab was tempted too. The Nadir, the Flood, the time referred to as The Bulge, just before the Alexander Decision finally managed to put a cap on the world’s runaway over-population – near-disasters were always exciting, especially now that everything was so safe.

  But the time for idle sp
eculating was over. It was time to make a choice.

  ‘If we want this to get noticed, we’d need something that hasn’t already been done to death.’

  ‘Pre-Nadir, then, do you think? But that still leaves an awful lot of history.’

  ‘Something that’s far enough back in time that there isn’t a lot of vid evidence already available. Something like … Com! I did that project – remember? – on the First Industrial Revolution? That was Victorian – and they didn’t even have vids. Or wait, no, they were just inventing cameras and stuff, but they were rubbish. No sound, no temperature control, no colour, single point of view – nothing.’

  They discussed it back and forth, getting more and more excited. There were so many aspects of the time period that would be utterly fascinating to study at first hand. How could they possibly choose just one?

  It was his Com who came up with the idea of Victorian archaeology.

  ‘It was pretty much the beginning of that, wasn’t it? Properly, I mean, not just bashing in, looting the gold, making wild guesses?’

  Rab was delighted. ‘That’s it – but we won’t do the sites everybody’s heard about already. Not Egypt or China or Atlantis. Someplace obscure …’

  And then it hit them.

  ‘Someplace like right here?’

  It was a brilliant idea. Every bit of the world had history of some sort – and the location of Tower Stack 367-74 was no exception. Fifty-six floors down was the site of the Orcadian Islands from long, long ago.

  ‘Right under our feet!’ His Com began to download co-ordinates into the Silver Skin’s arm panel. ‘Time: 1850, the year of the discovery of a Stone Age village which became known as Skara Brae. Place: what was then called Orkney and is now called – here! Stack 367-74, Delta Grid, Northwest Europasia. We’ll use the big storm that winter – the one that blew away the sand, uncovering the village for the first time in thousands of years – as the anchor point. Neap tide. Full moon. Factor in a test stop … mid Deluvian …’

  Rab wasn’t really listening to the details. ‘This is going to be amazing – they didn’t have Coms or scanners or infra-beige – nothing! Just shovels and little brushes!’

  ‘And now, it’s time to download me!’

  As the Com’s download into the arm panel proceeded, the suit began to change. It shimmered more quickly, in and out of focus, like a heat wave or a mist. It was there, but only just.