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    Under a Pole Star


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      Under a Pole Star

      Also By

      Also by Stef Penney

      The Tenderness of Wolves

      The Invisible Ones

      Title

      Copyright

      First published in Great Britain in 2016 by

      Quercus Editions Ltd

      Carmelite House

      50 Victoria Embankment

      London EC4Y 0DZ

      An Hachette UK company

      Copyright © 2016 Stef Penney

      Map and illustrations copyright © 2016 Liane Payne

      The moral right of Stef Penney to be

      identified as the author of this work has been

      asserted in accordance with the Copyright,

      Designs and Patents Act, 1988.

      Lines from Back to Methuselah by George Bernard Shaw

      reproduced by kind permission of the Society of Authors,

      on behalf of the Bernard Shaw Estate.

      All rights reserved. No part of this publication

      may be reproduced or transmitted in any form

      or by any means, electronic or mechanical,

      including photocopy, recording, or any

      information storage and retrieval system,

      without permission in writing from the publisher.

      A CIP catalogue record for this book is available

      from the British Library

      HB ISBN 978 1 78648 116 0

      TPB ISBN 978 1 78648 117 7

      EBOOK ISBN 978 1 78648 118 4

      This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters,

      businesses, organizations, places and events are

      either the product of the author’s imagination

      or used fictitiously. Any resemblance to

      actual persons, living or dead, events or

      locales is entirely coincidental.

      Typeset by CC Book Production

      You can find this and many other great books at

      quercus.co.uk

      Dedication

      For Mr Van

      North Polar Regions, 1893

      Epigraph

      ‘You see things; and you say “Why?” But I dream things that never were; and I say “Why not?”’

      George Bernard Shaw

      Contents

      Prologue

      PART ONE: A PEG, SHAPED LIKE A WHALE

      Chapter 1

      Chapter 2

      Chapter 3

      Chapter 4

      Chapter 5

      PART TWO: VEGA IN LYRA

      Chapter 6

      Chapter 7

      Chapter 8

      Chapter 9

      Chapter 10

      Chapter 11

      Chapter 12

      PART THREE: REGELATION

      Chapter 13

      Chapter 14

      Chapter 15

      Chapter 16

      Chapter 17

      Chapter 18

      Chapter 19

      Chapter 20

      PART FOUR: ARCTURUS IN BOÖTES

      Chapter 21

      Chapter 22

      Chapter 23

      Chapter 24

      Chapter 25

      Chapter 26

      Chapter 27

      PART FIVE: POLARIS

      Chapter 28

      Chapter 29

      Chapter 30

      Chapter 31

      Chapter 32

      PART SIX: THE CONCRETE SEA

      Chapter 33

      Chapter 34

      Chapter 35

      Chapter 36

      Chapter 37

      Chapter 38

      Chapter 39

      Chapter 40

      Chapter 41

      Chapter 42

      PART SEVEN: THULE

      Chapter 43

      Chapter 44

      Chapter 45

      Chapter 46

      Chapter 47

      Chapter 48

      Chapter 49

      Chapter 50

      Chapter 51

      PART EIGHT: DESTRUCTIVE INTERFERENCE

      Chapter 52

      Chapter 53

      Chapter 54

      PART NINE: THUBAN IN DRACO

      Chapter 55

      Chapter 56

      Chapter 57

      Chapter 58

      Chapter 59

      Chapter 60

      Chapter 61

      Epilogue

      A Glossary of Inuit words

      Acknowledgements

      Prologue

      McGuire Air Force Base, New Jersey, 40˚0’N, 74˚35’W

      April 1948

      The aeroplane, a modified Douglas C-47 Skytrain, is a fat, shining cigar of aluminium, brilliant in the sun. The word Arcturus is stencilled on the fuselage in a confident upward sweep. The journalist has done his homework, but there are things he does not know: for example, that grease monkeys spent days polishing the skin, and that the name has been added especially for this trip – a celestial name deemed more heroic and appropriate than the boring clutch of numbers on its tail. The Skytrain was a bomber throughout the war, but now it is carrying an overtly peaceable cargo; there are air force men, it is true – weary-­eyed, beribboned and grizzled – but there are also scientists from several universities, a camera crew from ABC, the journalist.

      The film crew takes some footage of the scientists standing by the plane. When ordered, they wave and smile, raggedly, never all at the same time. The air force men stand to attention until their commander smiles – then the rest of them relax a little, but not as much as the civilians. There is one last arrival – a special guest – a British woman of advanced years, who was known, for a time, fifty years before, as the Snow Queen.

      When the old lady – white-haired, erect and rather forbidding – is introduced to the scientists, the Harvard physicist claims that his father met her many years ago and had spoken of her to his family. The Snow Queen nods and moves on, giving no indication whether she remembers the father, or was even listening to what he said. The film camera whirs, recording the handshakes. The journalist thinks that, in the resulting film, there will be a graphic of a globe, a tiny plane crawling over it, dragging a dotted line across the world. The thought thrills him.

      .

      At last they are ready to embark. Randall is nervous – not of the flight, not really, although it is his first – but because he wants to bag a seat next to the old lady. He has been thinking about this meeting for months. She doesn’t look at him as he sits down, but stares out of the window. He buckles himself in, opposite the oceanographer from Harvard, behind the civilian whose field of expertise no one seems quite sure of, who is engrossed in an automobile magazine. They take off with a tremendous roaring, a steep upward trajectory that drags him back in his seat. His scalp prickles. Quite quickly, the nose of Arcturus levels off, the plane swings round, and fierce sun stripes the cabin, blazing off one face after another.

      .

      Randall turns to his neighbour and attempts to start a conver­sation, rather hampered by the din of the engines.

      ‘I have some of your old press cuttings,’ he shouts.

      She frowns, probably because she can’t hear a thing.

      ‘Your press cuttings!’ he yells.

      She frowns some more.

      ‘It was such an exciting time. You knew everybody.’

      ‘Who are you?’ she asks, although they were introduced on the ground.

      ‘Randall Crane . . . Crane! Hi! I’ve been commissioned to write up the trip for World magazine.
    ’

      ‘The journalist.’

      She might as well have said, ‘A cockroach,’ or ‘A hernia.’ Something decidedly unwelcome. She looks away, through the window next to her, to where sunlight burns on a smooth field of white cloud.

      ‘It’s beautiful! Is this what the Arctic looks like?’ He leans towards her, eager and also moved, made almost breathless by the strength of the light, the hot blue of the sky. After the visceral experience of take-off, it feels as though they aren’t moving at all.

      ‘You’ve never been there.’

      ‘No,’ he admits, cheerfully. He can’t help grinning. He has been told he has a winning smile. ‘I can’t wait to see it. I hope you don’t mind me saying: I’ve been reading about you.’ Does she cock her ear towards him, slightly? Flattery never fails with these old birds. ‘You were a superstar. You knew all the explorers, didn’t you? Armitage, Welbourne, de Beyn and the rest? It was an amazing time. All those discoveries. You were a pioneer.’

      ‘Well, yes.’

      ‘And the . . . the controversy – I’ve always been fascinated by what happened. What was your take on it?’

      He could slow down – should, probably – but he’s so full of energy; it bubbles up through him like an unstoppable spring.

      ‘What controversy?’

      ‘The Armitage–de Beyn controversy . . . The mystery over what happened to them. You knew them, didn’t you?’

      ‘Goodness! It’s such a long time ago. They’re all dead, except me.’ The way she says this – it is impossible to tell whether she feels satis­faction or regret. ‘What does it matter now?’

      ‘Doesn’t the truth matter?’ He gazes hopefully at her eyes, which avoid his, and give nothing away. ‘No one seems to know what really happened. I’d love to know what you think, as someone who was there.’

      ‘“What really happened”?’ She smiles, not at him, but for herself. ‘You flatter me if you think I know the truth.’

      ‘I’d like to know your opinion. Could I talk to you about it?’

      ‘It’s very noisy here.’

      ‘Oh, yes – not here, of course. It is noisy, isn’t it?’

      .

      The Snow Queen leans her head back against the seat, her eyes angled out of the window. She looks tired – but, to Randall, from his unassailable vantage point of twenty-seven years, old people always look tired. She must be – what? – seventy-seven. Older than his grandmother, Lottie. Her hair is as white as the clouds outside; her eyes, dark grey, unreadable, like boring pebbles. She wears discreet make-up, so she cares what people think. That gives him hope. He has done his homework on her, too: read her books on the north and trawled the archives for contemporary accounts. Newspaper reports from the 1890s described her as beautiful, although he found this hard to verify from the accompanying photographs – usually blurred and tiny; she tends to be one of a group of white-faced people staring at the camera, wearing hats. Lined up at the gunwale of a ship. Standing on a quay. At the front of a lecture theatre. But there was one portrait, taken when she was in her early twenties: it is a studio-based fantasy, wherein the girl known as the Snow Queen poses stiffly in front of a painted icy landscape, her round, smooth face emerging from a halo of furs, lips closed, her eyes fixed on an imaginary horizon. A thick snake of hair winds over her shoulder. Handsome, rather than beautiful, in his opinion. If Randall stared at the picture for long enough, he felt he could discern something in the wide-open eyes, but what was it? Arrogance? Ambition? Alarm? Almost any emotion, once he thought of it, could be imputed to those frozen features. Like most old portraits, it tantalised and revealed little.

      In the seat next to him, the Snow Queen’s eyes are closed. He cannot see the girl she was in her face. He suspects she is not asleep. His grandmother claims never to sleep – says you dispense with the need when you get old. Randall looks around him. Some of the scientists are dozing; some reading magazines (not World magazine, he notes). He is not in the least discouraged. They have hours to go before they reach their destination.

      Flora Cochrane (her name has been many things, but this is the one she will have when she dies) awakens with a jolt. She was dreaming about places and people she has not dreamt about for decades. Her mouth tingles with the remembered pressure of warm flesh. A surge of erstwhile feeling has washed through her. Years since she had such a dream. For a moment she cannot think where she is. An infernal noise hammers her brain. The surroundings are distressingly bright. Then the lissom feeling in her body evaporates, and she remembers that she is old. A juddering – ah, yes, she is on the plane. Arcturus. She looks round to see the absurdly young man next to her; he turns towards her, too quickly. She keeps her eyes unfocused as she scans the cabin, wondering if she moaned in her sleep. No one is looking at her. They couldn’t have heard her anyway.

      ‘We’re just coming down to Newfoundland, now.’

      He leans towards her and shouts in her ear. Flora nods minutely without meeting his eye, hoping he won’t start another conversation. She would like to go to the bathroom, but doesn’t remember anyone mentioning whether there was one on board. Although she was once used to it, it is still tedious to travel in all-male company. As they descend through a layer of clouds, the plane performs a series of bumps and bounds, like a small ship in a crossing sea. All very interesting, this mode of travel. They have come over a thousand miles in just a few hours. Think of all the walking that would have entailed. Even sailing, travelling at the speed of the wind, it’s a distance that would have taken days. Now she leaves the wind far behind. It is as well she is speeding up, she thinks. At her age. The thought slots into her head: how he would have loved this. He would have laughed with delight . . .

      ‘What’s funny?’

      The young man is smiling, tenacious. But his familiarity is less irritating than she would have thought. There is something charming and puppyish about him; perhaps it is his brown eyes, or his hair, which flops across his forehead, untamed by the pomade he uses; or his slightly buck teeth, eager to show themselves.

      She shakes her head and points to her ear – the engines are roaring harder. He nods and gives her his pretty smile, biding his time.

      RCAF Station, Gander, Newfoundland, 48˚57’N, 54˚36’W

      They have landed at an airbase by a crooked-finger lake in Newfoundland, which, though far from luxurious, is designed to cater for women as well as men. They even rustle up a woman for her, to show her to her quarters and explain how to put on the extraordinary padded garment they expect her to wear tomorrow; it looks as though it were designed for giant babies, or lunatics. The woman, who has solid-looking hair and a smear of lipstick on her teeth, shows her how to put it on. There is a flap that zippers open and shut around the bottom, ‘For, y’know, emergencies? We recommend you practise while you’re here, to get the hang of it.’ She is tactful enough about it, but still.

      ‘How long is it since you were up there?’ the woman asks – someone did introduce them, but Flora has forgotten her name.

      ‘Oh, hundreds of years. During the last ice age.’ She smiles to show it is a joke rather than a put-down. The woman laughs, mechanically, without humour. Flora has never been good at humour. She tried it for a while, in her twenties, then gave it up. She decides to make amends. ‘I’m surprised they asked me. That there wasn’t anyone more . . . important.’

      ‘Not from that time. You’ve outlived them all,’ says the woman, smiling. ‘Good for you.’

      Flora is annoyed.

      ‘You know,’ the woman goes on, ‘When I was young, I read about you and your expeditions. It was so inspiring to think that a woman could do that, even then.’

      ‘Well . . .’ Perhaps she has misjudged her. ‘It wasn’t easy. I’m sure it’s not easy now.’

      ‘No. Things changed a bit during the war, but since then, when all the men came back, we’ve kinda had to get out of the way, if you know what I mea
    n.’

      She does up the zipper with a noisy flourish. Flora isn’t sure she does know what she means, but nods.

      ‘Thank you. I think I can manage now.’

      ‘We’re having dinner in an hour. I expect you’d like to get some rest before then. If you need anything, just holler.’

      As she closes the door, she finally remembers the woman’s name – Millie . . . Mindy . . . something childish like that. She is aching to lie down. Sleep. Perhaps recapture that feeling from the plane . . . Then, afterwards, maybe she will allow herself to have a cocktail. One of those sweet, deceptive things she had in New York. She stretches out on the bed with a sigh of relief.

      It will be twilight for hours. The clouds have gone. The air is very clear and still. She hasn’t seen air this clean for years, but then it is years since she has been this far north. Through the window, she acknowledges the faint, familiar stars as they rise. There is Arcturus, which the Eskimos call the Old Man, Uttuqalualuk. She cannot remember the names of the people she met earlier today, but those names learnt so long ago, she has never forgotten. There, just above the horizon, is the Old Woman – Vega. The Caribou, known to others as the Great Bear. Cassiopeia: the Lamp Stand. And, just rising now, with its faint hint of red, the ghoulishly named Sikuliaqsuijuittuq – the Murdered Man.

      She opens the window and leans out, inhaling the chill blue air. She cranes her neck to look for Draco, coiling around Polaris, and searches for Thuban, its once and future Pole Star. She stares until her eyes water, but it must be too early, too light, or perhaps her eyes are too tired, and she cannot find it.

      .

      Since she knew she was coming on the flight, she has been thinking again of that time. She closes her eyes and can see the valley spread out in front of her: duns and greens and greys; minute jewels of colour; the lake of breathtaking blue. Impossible Valley, they called it. But it was possible, if only briefly.

      Recently, her old friend Poppy fell ill and Flora had managed to see her, before it was too late. Lying in bed, looking tiny and somehow both sexless and ageless, she had talked calmly about her approaching death. She believed in heaven. She knew that she would meet her sons there: reluctant soldiers, unwitting martyrs.

     


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