A Steampunk Guide to Hunting Monsters 4 | Page 14

Friday, May the Twenty-Eigth The events that transpired in between turned out to be quite nerve-wracking. I flatter myself to think that I had a hand in the relatively safe return of those people to the ground, and yet speaking of my quick wits seems almost self-serving. Yet I am proud of myself. It may be one of the most sensible and quick-witted things I have ever done. Our time in the sky started out fairly mundanely. Mr. Longville and I stood up once the ground leveled out. The palace seemed stable enough. We looked out into the sky as we flew over the Mediterranean. Shortly thereafter, the thief, Cyprien, appeared dressed in a ridiculous approximation of what rich people might wear if one had never seen a rich person in the wild before. He looked like a drunken peacock, or a grammar school pantomime villain. With him was an entire retinue of servants, including several under-dressed young ladies who clung to his arms, giggling. “The Genie has said that everything that was once Al-Khāfid’s is now mine, and as you were his guest, you are now mine! Who is that man with you? He is not your lover?" "He most certainly is not," I said, allowing something of my natural annoyance at having to dispute this assumption. I tried to put some distance between myself and Mr. Longville. He then mistook Mr. Longville for my servant boy, which Percy truly seemed to enjoy. I have never seen so giddy an expression on a man who was not an American. "Come with me, and prepare your eyes to be delighted!" the thief said to me, and I'm still sure to this day I have no idea what he meant by it. Cyprien ordered that an English tea be served, which, I must admit, was fairly