at Old Graf, whose own eyes were obscured by heavy brass lookout goggles.
âAh, that puts heart into a man.â Old Graf sighed. His magnified gaze, however, never left the cloud-flecked sky ahead of them. A thin wind blew at their backs, not quite able to penetrate the pale, supple leather of the jackets and trousers they both wore. Overhead, the ever-present bulge of the airshipâs gas envelope blotted out the sun, though in a few hours, the sun would sink behind them, and the decks would grow uncomfortably warm. The netting that hung from the envelope creaked in a familiar rhythm, and the ship swayed beneath it. A faint vibration from the engine propellers came up through the soles of Gavinâs boots. Far below, the Atlantic Ocean lay calm and flat and blue.
Gavin inhaled the sea air. His hair, a pale blond bleached nearly white by the sun, fluttered against his forehead like feathers. Gavinâs face had lost its boyish roundness and acquired the more squared look of a man, but he was a little short for his seventeen years and had no hint of facial hair, two facts the airmen teased him about mercilessly. Old Graf never did, which was one of the reasons Gavin had come up to the lookout post at the front of the airship.
A seagull coasted past with a thin cry that started on an E-flat and descended to a gravelly A. Gavin echoed the birdâs call on his fiddle, matching the pitches exactly. The gull cocked a beady eye at him, then dived away.
ââBlind Maryâ?â Old Graf said.
âHow is that a song for a man on lookout duty?â Gavin countered with a grin.
Old Graf continued to scan the air ahead of them. They were on the forecastle, the foremost section of the ship. An airship like the USS Juniper didnât have a crowâs nestâthe cigar-shaped envelope precluded oneâwhich meant the lookout had to be as far forward as possible.
âItâs a taste of home,â Old Graf said.
Gavin set bow to strings and played. âBlind Maryâ was an old Irish song, one of hundreds heâd picked up as a kid in Boston. In his head, he saw an old woman feeling her way along a country lane, and he let his fingers slide along the strings, playing her sadness and age. Gavin heard every note perfectly in his head. Each note, each chord, each song had its own unique sound, and it seemed impossible to him that anyone couldnât tell them apart. A and A-sharp were as different as red and blue.
Gavin let himself play with the melody the second time through, wandering with it as if Mary had lost her way, stumbling, frightened, but finding her place again at the last second. Yet, in the end, the song still left her blind and alone. Behind them on the main deck, some of the airmen paused in their work to listen until the song ended. Old Graf fished in his pocket for a handkerchief and blew his nose.
âHow is it that a seventeen-year-old cabin boy plays like an immortal angel?â he blurted out, then flushed slightly and coughed.
âIt helps to have a fine listener.â Gavin clapped him on the shoulder. âMy gramps gave me the fiddle, but he said the music is a gift from God. And Captain Naismith says Iâll be a full airman soon enough.â
Old Grafâs weathered face went pale. âDear Lord.â
âMy being an airman isnât such bad news, is it?â
âGliders. Straight for us.â Old Graf flicked the lenses of his goggles up and reached for the alarm bell. Gavin grabbed the spare lookout helmet from the rack, jammed it on his own head, and looked through the lenses as Old Graf yanked the cord. Bells sounded all throughout the Juniper . Through the helmet lenses, Gavin saw ominous birdlike shapes zipping toward the airship heâd been calling home since he was twelve. They were painted blue and white to better hide in the sky, and part of Gavin was impressed that Old Graf had seen them even as the rest of him tightened