Kevin J. Anderson - The League of Extraordinary Gentleman

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THE LEAGUE OF EXTRAORDINARY GENTLEMEN
NOVELIZATION BY
K. J. ANDERSON
BASED ON THE SCREENPLAY BY
JAMES DALE ROBINSON
ADAPTED FROM THE COMIC BOOK BY
ALAN MOORE
ONE
Central London, 1899
Night
On the edge of a century's turning, London was a sprawling mosaic of crooked
tile roofs, shuttered windows, cobblestone streets, and garbage-strewn
alleyways. Fog crept through the city like pestilence, mixing with the foul
breaths of smoke from coal grates and great belches from factory smokestacks.
Cold buildings huddled together as if seeking warmth against the nights chill.
Nearly two millenia of history had seen London evolve from a Roman settlement to
a Saxon stronghold, then a burgeoning commercial center and religious axis.
Ultimately, London became a pinnacle of European political might as well as a
powerful industrial hub. World-shaking events would begin—or end—here.
For decades now this place had endured the turns of the industrial revolution,
which had transformed it from a grand city of one million inhabitants into a
vast metropolis teeming with more than four times as many people, all of them
trying their best to survive.
In the distance Big Ben chimed its lonely but predictable tones. Most people no
longer even awakened to the clock towers hourly ritual, especially not so late.
The steady sequence of gongs drifted past like a lullaby, reassuring the city's
sleeping inhabitants that all was well.
Big Ben fell silent again, and so did the streets.
Then a low rumble started deep underground, as if the convoluted sewers near the
Thames suffered from indigestion.
In Moorgate Passage, a pair of dogs hungrily dug through garbage in search of
edible scraps, as they did every night. They half-heartedly snarled at each
other, too hungry to notice the mysterious sounds.
But the noise rose steadily in volume, like buried, restless thunder. The
ominous trembling grew louder and louder, shaking forcefully until it rattled
loose roof slates and chimney pots…
One mutt lifted his head and pricked his ears. The second dog used the
opportunity to seize a rank-smelling fish head from the trash heap and bounded
away with his prize. Then he, too, paused, whining. His jaws opened and the
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moist fish head fell to the slick street. The rumble grew more ominous, a
different sort of growl.
The two dogs snarled at the sound that seemed to come from everywhere beneath
and around them, then they scuttled away in fear. The second mutt doubled back
to snatch up the fish head, then sprang down the alley just as the sound reached
an explosive roar.
A dark brick wall at the opposite end of the alley split and broke as something
huge, black, and mechanical hammered its way up from beneath the streets,
knocking bricks and timbers apart. Walls fell, brushed aside from the leviathan
as if they were little more than dust and dry leaves.
Both dogs ran for their lives as the immense subterranean machine roared and
clanked after them.
Though he had been deeply asleep, immersed in dreams of playing in the park with
his father on a Sunday afternoon, Bartholomew Dunning sat up quickly in bed. The
pallid six-year-old boy clutched an old woolen blanket and stared into the faint
light that came through the window of his cellar bedroom. On a narrow brick
windowsill above the bed, his tin toy horse and buggy shuddered and rattled, as
if they had come alive.
The rumbling made the entire tenement shake. Dust sprinkled down from the
ceiling, captured in the hazy moonlight that penetrated the fog.
Bartholomew wanted to call out for his father, but he knew Constable Dunning
would be out walking the streets, keeping London safe, as he did every night…
all night. But right now the boy wanted his father. He pulled the blanket up to
his chin, hoping to hide. But the noise grew louder.
The toys jittered and wobbled, then finally tumbled off the windowsill. More
dust sifted down from the tenement ceiling, and Bartholomew could hear shouts
from the residents in the floors above.
Gathering his courage, thinking of his father in his fine policeman's uniform
striding down dark alleys and arresting pickpockets and murderers, Bartholomew
scurried out of bed as the monstrous noise came deafeningly close. Someone
upstairs let out a loud yell.
Because his father worked every night, and slept most of the day, Bartholomew
could spend time with him only on Sunday. But Constable Dunning put food on the
table and coal in the grate for the boy and his two sisters; they had to care
for themselves without a mother to watch over them. His sisters snored together
in the inner room, not even awakened by the noise. It was up to the boy to see
what was happening outside.
Shrill whistles pierced the growing noise, and he took comfort in knowing the
police were rushing to the scene.
Bartholomew went to the window, stood on tiptoe, and used the flat of his hand
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to wipe fog from the pane. The glass remained blurry from the grime outside, but
an immense shadow passed along the street. When he pressed his face close, the
boy could see well enough that his eyes widened in fear.
Massive mechanical treads rolled past at street level, crushing cobblestones,
clanking and clattering like the loudest factory line.
Bartholomews windows splintered and fell in. He screamed, scrambling backward as
the whole frame came crashing down. Part of the wall and ceiling slumped under
the crushing passage of the huge vehicle. Broken bricks and crumbling mortar
buried and destroyed his toy horse and buggy.
He crawled for shelter under his bed, a place usually reserved for nighttime
monsters. Right now, though, the boy was only afraid of the very real and
tangible beast outside.
Then the mechanical juggernaut surged past, smashing gutters and shouldering
aside brick corners that got in its way.
As dust and rubble continued to patter all around him, Bartholomew peered out
from his hiding place. Safe, for now.
But he knew his father was out in the streets, armed with little more than his
whistle and truncheon. Even a stern constable in a clean uniform would be no
match for that thing.
Tabard Row had been quiet all evening, and Constable Dunning paused in his
rounds to smoke his pipe. He took a long draw on the tobacco, savoring the
moment of bliss.
His children were home together, asleep. Their mother had died of consumption
two years earlier, and the boy Bartholomew had been forced to grow up much
faster than he should have. Once, he'd playfully tried on his fathers constable
cap, and it had nearly fallen down to his small shoulders. Bartholomew was the
man of the house whenever his father left to patrol the night streets, and the
boy took his responsibilities with admirable, heart-aching seriousness, though
his father occasionally saw him playing with his toys. Just a little boy, no
more than six years old.
At least he was safe tonight…
Constable Dunning's peaceful feeling was suddenly shattered by the pitiful
wailing of dogs. A moment later a monstrous rumble shook the ground, accompanied
by breaking glass and shattering walls.
Dunning drew his baton and trotted toward the sound, by habit tapping his
truncheon on the wall as he went, making a sound like rapid gunfire. Shrill
whistles sounded the alarm from other officers heading in the same direction.
Drawing a deep breath, he blew a long high-pitched note on his own whistle.
"Its down in Moorgate Passage!" one of the policemen called, joining up with
Dunning. They ran together, reacting out of instinct without stopping to worry
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about the nature of the threat. From the sound of it, this was more serious than
a drunken brawl, a cutpurse, or a pair of whores trying to claw each others'
eyes out.
The two constables sprinted onto Threadneedle Street, heading for Moorgate.
Dunning stumbled and nearly sprawled on his face in a filthy gutter as he and
his companion collided with a pair of utterly terrified dogs racing in the
opposite direction, off into the night.
"Bleedin' ratbags! Whats gotten into 'em?" said Dunning.
Then again perhaps the mutts had the right idea.
Like a factory-made demon, a giant, armor- plated machine careened around - and
through - a corner of the narrow street, demolishing everything in it's path.
"Good Christ!" Dunnings companion skittered to a halt, eyes wide. His truncheon
drooped in his grip, laughably insignificant compared to the mechanized titan
lurching toward them with a roar of engines and a belch of oily exhaust smoke.
It was a tank vehicle plated with thick iron sheets, riveted into place on a
body that rode on implacably paired tracks. Glaring headlamps shone forward like
the baleful gaze of a dragon. It's reinforced bow slammed like a battering ram
through the wall, knocking it down without pause. The heavy treads crushed
fallen bricks into powder. Dunning couldn't even guess how many tons the vehicle
weighed.
Three other constables converged from their own beats, stopped in their tracks.
"Its an infernal Juggernaught!"
"Run!" Dunning's tone was urgent as he backed away. Not cowardly—just sensible.
There would be no real protection against a mechanized leviathan that could plow
through solid walls.
While three of the policemen staggered backward, Dunning's companion took an
unexpected initiative. Swallowing hard, he raised his truncheon, stepped into
the middle of the street, and blew his whistle again for good measure. He stood
his ground in the glare of the behemoths headlights, raised his hand, and said,
"Halt! In the name of the Queen!"
"Get out of the way, you fool!" Dunning shouted.
When the land ironclad did not slow down, the man tried to dodge into a doorway,
but the lumbering vehicle filled the narrow street. The young constable was
caught between the treads and went down. His scream was cut short with a wet,
squelching sound under the increasing roar of the demonic engines.
The tank moved onward, without pause.
Sickened and angry, Dunning ran to his comrades aid, but he arrived too late.
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Courageously—though futilely— he beat the metal monster with his baton and his
fists. He made barely a mark on the thick plating.
Ignoring him, the land ironclad rolled on down the street.
Dunning ran after the machine, not knowing how he might stop its inexorable
progress. The street opened up, away from the crowded slums, grimy pubs, and dim
opium dens. Ahead stood a particularly impressive building with an ornate
multistoried facade of marble columns, graceful statues, and stately blocks of
gray-white stone.
Dunnings stomach clenched as he glanced up at the deeply engraved words BANK OF
ENGLAND on the lintel over the building's main entrance. "Not the Old Lady," he
muttered, hardly able to conceive of such a violation.
The tank rolled toward it, picking up speed.
The privately owned bank, often referred to as the Old Lady of Threadneedle
Street, had been established more than two centuries earlier. In the past two
hundred years, the Bank of England had become more than simply a financial
institution: The Old Lady was a symbol of England itself.
The juggernaut smashed into the bank's broad central door. Columns broke apart
and tumbled down; the massive locked door collapsed inward.
And the mammoth machine kept moving forward all the way into the financial
fortress, undeterred.
The tank's heavy treads, now bloodstained, clattered down a flight of marble
steps that groaned and cracked under the immense weight. Picking up speed, the
land ironclad ground its way across the polished marble floor of the lobby.
A night contingent of British soldiers guarding the bank drew their guns and
opened fire. Like hail pattering on a tin roof, the bullets ricocheted
ineffectually off the iron armor plates. The panicked soldiers leaped aside as
the tank smashed through teller desks, back offices, records archives, private
consultation rooms lined with security boxes—and finally into the vault room.
Constable Dunning came running after it, picking his way through the rubble of
stone and splintered wood and glass. He was aghast at the sheer carnage all
around him. The soldiers recovered themselves then yelled indignant threats
after the rampaging machine. Scrambling together, they all raced toward the
vault room.
As if stymied, the mechanical monster came to rest against the massive iron door
of the vault.
Dust and debris settled in ominous silence as Dunning and the soldier guards
crept purposefully into the vault room. "Hah!" Dunning called, a bit disoriented
by the frantic activity going on around him. "That door's too solid even for a
beast like that!"
Several other constables, panting hard from their long run, entered the bank and
stared at all the destruction.
The tank just sat there, throbbing, pressed up against the thick vault door. It
seemed to be defeated… or simply gathering its breath, preparing to strike
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again.
The shaken soldiers arose and, together with the constables, encircled the
machine. Dunning edged closer, peering at one of the scraped plates on the front
of the tank. "What is it doing?" he asked, not expecting an answer.
With a loud clang, a panel opened and two human eyes stared out through the
narrow slot. Dunning sprang back with a yelp. The slot slammed shut. "There're
men inside that thing!"
Clanking, winding, slotting sounds began to emanate from within the mechanical
beast. A panel thwacked open on top of the machine, and a fat cylinder extended,
swiveled about in search of a target, then locked into place. It was aimed at
the vault door.
Everyone there could recognize a cannon barrel when they saw it.
"Get back!" shouted Dunning. He clapped his hands over his ears, but many of the
others didn't react quickly enough.
The weapon fired with a deafening sound as if all the heavens had cracked
asunder. The shock wave in the enclosed vault room threw constables and soldiers
to the ground. The merciless cannon fired again, and then a third time.
Finally, the massive, dented vault door teetered, slumped, and at last fell
inward. It crashed to the stone floor with a sound as deafening as the artillery
explosions.
The air inside the ruined bank was thick with choking dust. The men's ears were
bleeding. Dunning shook his head to clear it; with the back of one hand, he
wiped powder and sweat from his eyes.
A thick metal hatch opened high on the juggernaut's flank and a step ladder
cantilevered down. Men wearing easily recognizable German army uniforms emerged,
led by a pale-eyed man who wore cruelty on his face as naturally as another man
might wear a moustache. The uniformed men carried sleek, modern-looking
snub-nosed firearms and boxy radio sets on their hips.
Constable Dunning had never seen anything like it. He had heard, though, the
Kaiser had been stepping up his war effort, planning against the British Empire.
And here was the proof!
The foremost invader turned back to the dark interior of the massive ironclad
machine. He spoke in clipped German. "We are ready, Herr Fantom."
Only then did their leader step into the open, emerging from the infernal
machine. Dramatically garbed in black clothes and a sweeping cape, the man cut a
formidable presence. He wore gleaming black boots, crisp gloves—and a
frightening silver mask that hid most of his features. Dunning caught only a
partial glimpse of a terribly disfigured face.
Dunning stared, burning the Fantom's face into his memory. He had read something
about a similar murderous villain who had terrorized the Paris Opera House, not
many years ago. But that Fantom had supposedly been killed…
Now the man in the metal mask gazed around the room, ignoring the astonished
constables and soldiers as if they were no more relevant than insects.
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"Ah, I love a night out in London," the leader said in German. "Lieutenant
Dante, instruct our men to go about their work. We have other appointments to
keep."
The cruel-faced Dante dispatched a team of German soldiers who scrambled out of
the land ironclad and into the vault. Others, brandishing their futuristic
snub-nosed weapons, held the intimidated bank soldiers and constables at bay.
When the invaders marched brazenly into the ruins of the Bank of England vault,
one of the British guards broke free. "Here now, you can't be—"
With a flourish, the Fantom pulled out a snub-nosed gun and callously shot the
outspoken British guard between the eyes. As the guard crumpled, the masked
leader tossed his gun to Lieutenant Dante. "Leave one of them alive to tell the
tale. Only one. What you do with the rest… I leave to your vivid imagination."
Striding through the debris, his cape flowing behind him as if no dust would
dare cling to his black clothes, the Fantom entered the vault, leaving Dante and
the others to their given tasks.
As the ruthless executions began, Constable Dunning squeezed his eyes shut and
thought of his children.
As the crack of gunfire and pleading screams resounded from outside the vault,
the Fantom's Germans used crowbars and the butts of their weapons to break open
security boxes of all sizes. The men spilled the contents onto the floor—bank
notes, gold, jewelry, bonds—but they were searching for something in particular.
An eager henchman picked up a gold brick and could not help admiring it. "Such
treasures."
"Treasure, yes," the Fantom agreed, hardly sparing a glance for the chunk of
precious metal. "Some worth more than others."
With a gloved hand, the masked man snapped the latch of a mahogany plan-chest
and reverently drew open the long drawer to reveal a sheaf of fragile parchment.
He lifted one sheet, then another. Behind the metal mask his eyes darted back
and forth.
The pages of age-yellowed paper bore hand-drawn architectural plans of a city on
water, its deep foundations crumbling and cavernous. In spite of the faded ink,
the detail was incredible, drawn by a genius centuries ago.
"Ah, here is the key to our labyrinth." The horribly scarred lips, barely
visible beneath the silver mask, smiled. The Fantom snatched up the pages and
swept out of the vault, ignoring the rest of the gold and treasure. "Time to go.
We have what we need."
Outside, Constable Dunning huddled in horror and misery, his face spattered with
blood. As relieved as he was to be alive, he felt a piercing guilt at being the
only survivor among dozens of slaughtered policemen and soldier guards. The
German henchmen ignored him as they climbed back aboard the land ironclad.
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The Fantom also vanished inside the vehicle, while his lieutenant spared a final
glance for the surviving constable, who seemed oblivious to the departing
soldiers. Dante said to him, "Count your blessings."
Then he swung the hatch shut, and the land ironclad roared back off the way it
had come.
TWO
Voalkyrie Zeppelin Works
Hamburg, Germany
Like gigantic inflatable whales, six zeppelins floated inside a construction
hangar that was large enough to swallow a small town. Spotlights shone on the
graceful curved sides of the hydrogen-swollen dirigibles.
Atop the hangar, red wind socks extended parallel to snapping giant flags that
displayed the colors of the German Empire. In the cool breezes that swept across
the grassy lowlands off the Elbe River, the zeppelins strained against their
tethers, as if restless.
Ferdinand Graf von Zeppelin had designed these huge airships, supported
internally by a light skeletal framework and guided by rudders and propellers.
Zeppelin himself had envisioned the military uses of these giant and silent
craft after ascending in observation balloons with Union forces during the
American Civil War. After retiring from military service, Zeppelin had spent
most of his life's savings on independent aeronautics research—until finally the
Kaiser himself had become interested enough in the work to provide much-needed
financial backing.
In the past several years, Kaiser Wilhelm II had invested a fortune in the
secret Valkyrie Zeppelin Works. The graceful, yet intimidating airships would be
Germany's pride, drifting across the skies in fearsome formation. They looked
silent and peaceful, like slumbering giants of the north.
The first gunshot rang out even before shouted orders launched the sneak attack.
A German guard screamed as he died. Others scrambled for their weapons, taken
completely by surprise. But no matter what they did, it was too late for them.
The Valkyrie Works were destined to fall this night.
"Forward, men! Tallyho! For Queen Victoria!" Heavily armed men wearing British
military uniforms let out a simultaneous yell and rushed forward into the
zeppelin factory:
Ratcheting sirens blared like prehistoric beasts in the cavernous construction
hangar. Warning shouts rang out above the din, a mixture of German and English.
Straight-backed and grimly satisfied with how the operation had proceeded so
far, Lieutenant Dante emerged from a workers' room. Tonight, for this second
phase of the Fantoms plan, he was dressed as a British commander, even sporting
a pencil-thin moustache. He directed squads of "British" soldiers as they
roughly herded frightened German factory workers down iron steps from the
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catwalks and construction platforms above.
The radio box at Dante's hip squawked. He grabbed it, pressed it to his ear, and
listened to the report from his scouts outside the factory perimeter. He
scowled. "Fantom! We won't have the time we expected. The Germans are already
arriving in force."
With his gleaming silver mask affixed to his mysteriously malformed face, the
gaunt Fantom waited at the bottom of the metal stairs. "I expected the Kaiser to
respond without delay."
Both of them spoke in richly accented English this time. The German
workers—anyone who survived, that was—would hear him and remember who had
attacked the extravagant new zeppelin factories in Hamburg. The Kaiser wasn't
likely to be very forgiving of the British Empire.
Brandishing their modern snub-nosed weapons and shoving, the Fantom's men drove
the other prisoners away. The sounds of fighting echoed intermittently through
the hangar, screams, gunshots. Although the resistance was dwindling, the
Kaiser's troops would arrive before long.
The Fantom turned, swirling his black cape. "But that is not relevant, Dante. Do
we have the man we came for?"
The Fantoms lieutenant snapped his fingers, and one of the henchmen shoved a
meek academic scientist forward. "As you requested, Fantom. This is Karl Draper,
at your service, whether or not he bloody well likes it."
The Fantom regarded the cringing man before him. The German scientist wore
spectacles and work overalls; from one pocket protruded a wad of cloth with
which he had frequently mopped beads of perspiration from his forehead. Karl
Draper looked into the bright, demonic eyes behind the silver mask; he swallowed
hard at what he saw there.
"W-what do you want?" Draper asked in German, the tension of terror modulating
his voice to a higher pitch.
"The world, Herr Draper. I want the world." Barely visible beneath the lower
curve of his mask, the Fantoms' lips curled in a sinister smile. "And you will
help give it to me."
The scientist looked as confused as he was frightened. "But… but I have no
secret knowledge! I am just an architectural engineer."
The Fantom looked at Draper as if he were only a mildly interesting specimen in
a very large collection. "Yes. I know."
Dante checked his boxy radio and frowned. "The Kaiser's troops have reached the
gate, Fantom. They will be inside in a matter of moments, and they seem to be
surprisingly well armed."
Below the mask, the Fantoms' twisted lips smiled. "Yes, the Kaiser has been
gearing up for war for many years now."
Dante stood, waiting for more detailed orders. "Should I tell the men to prepare
for a pitched firefight?"
"Nothing so troublesome, Lieutenant. I'll provide a distraction to cover our
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exit. I think it will be rather impressive."
The Fantom glanced up to the hangar's next level and gestured to one of his
loyal henchmen who stood on the iron steps above. The soldier tossed down a
sleek and complicated rocket-launching weapon. The masked leader shrugged his
cape out of the way, shouldered the weapon, and cocked the firing pin.
"Are you mad?" the German scientist cried upon seeing the rocket launcher. "This
place is full of hydrogen gas!"
"Exactly." He turned to Dante. "Get Herr Draper to safety please."
Shouting into his radio box, Dante sounded the retreat. Leaving the corralled
factory prisoners waiting for rescue from the incensed German army, the invading
soldiers in British uniforms beat an orderly withdrawal from the main work area.
The masked leader swung the weapon to bear on the space behind them, where the
six enormous zeppelins hovered by the yawning open doors of the hangar. Shouting
curses at the English, the Kaiser's reinforcements swarmed through the front
doorway, demanding that the British troops surrender.
When the oncoming German soldiers were halfway across the hangar, running
directly under the dirigibles, the Fantom fired the heavy rocket launcher.
"Nein!" Karl Draper shouted, his face filled with horror. Dante pushed him
impatiently ahead.
Whistling, sputtering, and buzzing as it flew, the rocket trailed a control wire
behind it. The Fantom studied the trajectory like an expert skeet shooter and
adjusted his aim to put the nearest zeppelin in the crosshairs. He couldn't
possibly miss.
The wire-controlled rocket angled up and tore through the side of the gas-filled
airship, then detonated. Though a single spark would have been sufficient, the
Fantom found this extravagant method more dramatic and satisfying.
Contained within baffled chambers of the huge lighter-than-air dirigible, the
rich hydrogen gas erupted in incinerating flames. The explosion sent out shock
waves powerful enough to knock the rushing German soldiers flat. Many of them
caught fire, like living candles, screaming as they burned and fell to the
hangar floor. The trapped factory workers and defeated guards tried to escape,
but the flames rolled forward like fiery floodwaters from a burst dam.
A wave of flame spewed from the first dying zeppelin and ignited its nearest
counterpart, triggering a catastrophic chain reaction that leaped from one
zeppelin to the next. Soon, the entire Valkyrie Works were in flames.
The Fantoms' silver mask caught and reflected the dazzling firestorm. He admired
the holocaust he had triggered. Quite impressive.
Then he turned and followed his men, thoroughly satisfied with how well he had
stirred the hornets nest.
THREE
The Brittania Club
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Kevin J. Anderson - The League of Extraordinary Gentleman.pdf

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分类:外语学习 价格:5.9玖币 属性:148 页 大小:346.46KB 格式:PDF 时间:2024-12-13

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