Authors: Alexa Egan
She swallowed the lump in her throat. This was the third time in a week she’d been asked to find a child. She hated these requests the most. Not only were children difficult to summon but they were notoriously hard to bind long enough for conversation. And they were such delicate fluttery bright little things. She always felt as if she’d captured a firefly in a jar, its tiny body flinging itself against the glass, desperate to escape. Little Joe Hopewell had been no exception, barely offering his bereft parents a spark of comfort before he slid from her grip, to be lost within the tangle of roads leading to deeper reaches where she dared not trespass.
But it had been enough. She’d seen that as soon as she passed back through the door and into her body to find Mrs. Hopewell snuffling into her handkerchief, Mr. Hopewell’s eyes suspiciously bright.
“You shouldn’t be here,” she said, picking up the first and largest of the three bells to polish it. Key had an ebony handle engraved with the sword and cauldron of Arawn. Its deep, solemn tone paired with her tracing of the proper symbols freed her powers to unlock the door between the realms of the living and the
dead. Allowed her to pass through into the vast frozen tangle of paths where cold sapped the strength from her body and deadened her aching limbs. Mother had warned her never to stop moving once she entered death and never to tarry lest the demons and dark spirits find her and take advantage of her weakened state.
Unfortunately, she’d never told Callista how to avoid the monsters within her own house.
Corey came up behind her and put his hands upon her shoulders, fingers digging into her skin. “I like to watch you do your hocus-pocus act.” He leaned down to whisper in her ear, his breath hot against her cheek. “Better than a night at Vauxhall. You’ve the gift of the actress. A real showman, you are. Had them eating out of your hands.”
“Well, the show’s over.”
Doing her best to ignore him, she placed the bell in its case and picked up Summoner, the next in size and the one whose higher strident ring called and bound the spirits to her so that she might speak with them. With the pad of her thumb, she caressed the four faces carved into the ash wood handle: the maiden, the warrior, the innocent, and the priest. Ran the cloth over the aged sheen of the silver before placing it, too, in the case.
Lastly, she wiped clean Blade, the smallest of the bells but the most deadly, and her only weapon against those creatures that made the underworld their home. Its hawthorn handle was always warm to the touch, its call sharp as a soldier’s sword. If only its power to banish and disrupt worked on the living.
“You’ll find my brother in his office counting his
coins,” she said. “Why don’t you go gloat over the misery of others with him and leave me alone?”
Corey spun her around to face him, leaning in close. She could smell a mix of cloves and brandy on his breath. “You think you’re better than me, don’t you? I have news for you, you’re nothing but a sideshow freak. The same as that chap locked upstairs.”
The man upstairs. David.
The name suited him. Strong yet with a touch of upper-class panache.
Unfortunately, knowing the prisoner’s name only made her feel worse about knocking him over the head and dragging him into this mess. Not to mention that had she accepted his help as it was meant, she might have made her escape. She might even be aboard a northbound coach by now. Free and clear. On her way to Scotland and Aunt Deirdre.
Safe.
“All of our kind are afflicted with powers that make us strange and different. Make us more than human.” Corey looked past her and muttered a few words of household magic, causing the candles upon a side table to burst into flame and the fire in the hearth to roar to life. “It’s what we do with them that’s the key.”
“Just because you use your powers to swindle and scam doesn’t mean I should do the same.”
She winced as he turned the same intensity of expression on her that he’d used to kindle the candles. “Those powers were all that kept me from starving when my pa chucked me out. Six years old I was, and lucky he didn’t have me tied in a sack and drowned in the river for being a monster. But I didn’t starve, did I? I succeeded. Got rich. And made sure the old
man knew it, right before I gutted him like a market hog.”
She tried to edge away from him, but the table dug into her back, the chair cutting off her escape. “I didn’t know.”
His scarred face twisted in a cold look of fury. “Of course you didn’t. You think I go about advertising what I am or where I come from? You think you’re something special, but you’re not. You’re a dealer in dreams just like I’m a dealer in goods. We each use what we have the only way we can to get ahead and to hell with the stupid prats who don’t have our advantages. They deserve to be swindled.”
She dropped her gaze to her hands, the truth of his words more painful than the grip he had on her chin. “That can’t be all there is. Or the only reason for our gifts. I won’t believe it.”
“So grand and selfless, but the world doesn’t bow to the meek and the righteous. It’s power and money that make men respect you.” He smiled, licking his lips, undressing her with his eyes. “Another few weeks and you’ll belong to me. Together we’ll show the world what
monsters
can do. We’ll show them
real
power.”
“What do you mean?” Callista asked, though she knew already she’d not like the answer.
“Hasn’t Branston broken the news? Your brother has accepted my very generous offer. You and I are to be married by special license in a few short days.”
She wanted to be sick. “I’ll never marry you. You may dress like a dandy and ape the manners of a gentleman, but you’re nothing more than a common street thug.”
Corey grabbed her, his fingers digging into her
upper arms until tears burned in her eyes. “I’ll have you if I have to drag you bound to the altar and afterward I’ll show you just how common I can be.”
Before she could respond, he clamped his mouth on hers, shoving his tongue between her teeth while his free hand fondled her breasts. She struggled, but it only made him press his body closer to hers, his excitement shoved between her thighs. She couldn’t breathe. His hand pinched at her nipple until tears stung her eyes. The case fell with a clang of spilled bells to the floor, their ring sizzling along her bones, the paths into death opening like a tumbled knot in her skull, her spirit lifting away from her.
He bit her lip, blood mingling with his spit, and she was yanked back into her body in time to slam her knee into his groin.
“Bitch!” he shouted, releasing her with a shove that sent her hurtling backward to trip and sprawl on the rug near the fallen bells.
She wiped her mouth on her sleeve, eyeing Corey with disgust and loathing.
He loomed over her, fury making him seem even larger, his scar white against the scarlet of his flushed complexion. “I’ll show you what kind of proper gentleman I am and not take you on this floor here and now. You can play the simpering innocent, but not for long, my darling Miss Hawthorne. Not for long.”
“You’re a pig.”
He smiled as he bent, placing a hand around her throat, his fingers gently squeezing. She tried to pull away, but his grip tightened. She couldn’t swallow, couldn’t breathe. Madness flickered in his gaze. “I’m going to enjoy our wedding night. Pain can be such an
aphrodisiac, did you know?” She clutched at his hand, trying to loosen his hold before she passed out. “So, if you want to keep all that lovely pink flesh intact, you should be very careful how you speak to me from now on.”
He released her, straightening to adjust his cuff, pluck a hair from his sleeve.
Callista scrambled to her feet, her chest heaving as she sucked in great lungfuls of air. If he had hoped for screams or sobs, he was disappointed. She glared at him, fury hazing her vision. “Why me? You could buy any woman in London for your bride.”
His eyes slid casually over the bells scattered on the floor before returning to her face with a blaze of triumph. “Because I’m a businessman, Miss Hawthorne. And I know a bargain when I see one.”
Before she could respond, voices sounded in the corridor: “. . . must have dropped it in the room . . . go and have a look . . .”
Mrs. Hopewell.
Callista didn’t think twice. Leaving her bells behind, she ducked between the curtains where a hidden door led to the dining room. Fumbling with shaking hands for the handle, she yanked it open, tumbled inside, and threw the latch behind her. Fleeing up the stairs, she slammed her bedchamber door shut. Not that it would keep anyone out. Corey had been right on one point. She and David did have much in common.
They were both prisoners whose time was fast running out.
* * *
By the gods, he was dead.
Pocketing the key filched from Branston’s office, Callista rushed to David’s side. He remained as she’d left him twenty-four hours earlier, knees drawn up, eyes closed. But now all the color had drained from his skin and long purple streaks inched their way up from his bound ankles. Matching ugly patches of red stretched from the ropes at his wrists almost to his shoulders. Unthinking and in a panic, she knelt, placing her cheek upon his bare chest, praying for a heartbeat.
“You smell like cabbage.”
The deep voice rumbled against her ear, throwing her back onto her haunches. “You’re alive.”
A corner of his mouth curled up in a tired smile. “Really? What gave me away?”
“I didn’t sense death like I usually do right here”—she tapped her breastbone, then added with a frown as she realized he was joking, not actually asking for an explanation, “Do I really smell like cabbage?”
“Good, comfortable smell. Reminds me of the army.”
She gave herself a surreptitious sniff. “I’ve been in the kitchen assisting Mrs. Thursby. She needed someone to keep her gin glass filled.”
“Knew a soldier in the Forty-third. Killed a man over a plate of boiled cabbage. Shot him right between the eyes.”
“That’s horrible.”
He chuckled, his smile widening to a boyish grin. “You didn’t taste the cabbage.”
Feeling herself blushing, Callista hid her discomfiture in a quick scan of the room. A nearby trunk
looked her best bet. Dragging it over, she rummaged through old magazines, a moth-eaten fox muff, and a set of mildewed cravats. “I suppose I should be relieved. If you’re well enough to tease, you’re probably not in imminent danger of expiring.”
He gave a gruff bark of laughter. “You’re not like most women, are you?”
She paused, every sense on alert. “What makes you say that?”
“Most women, upon being told they smell like boiled cabbage, would fly into the boughs over the insult.” Even now, a spark of impish mischief lurked in his bleary, bloodshot eyes. Did he never take life seriously? She thought of her own predicament. Did he never despair?
She shrugged and continued to search through the trunk. “You’ll have to do better if you’re going for outrage. I’ve grown a thick skin over the years.”
“Actually, I was going for compliment. Illness has affected my aim.”
“But obviously not your tongue.”
“Minx,” he muttered.
She withdrew an old velvet frock coat and draped it over his midsection. He didn’t seem to be cold, but he was definitely, awkwardly, very . . . very . . . male.
“Glad to see you safe, Fey-blood,” he said, licking some moisture back into his chapped lips. “Worried you caught trouble sneaking up here last night.”
“You’re a prisoner, tied up and half-dead, and you’re worrying about me? That’s rich.”
“What, this?” He shifted, wincing as he did so, a quick indrawn breath between gritted teeth. “Minor setback. Hardly worth mentioning.”
She eyed him speculatively. The bone-white pallor of his body worried her. His gaunt, sickly features scared her to death: eyes sunk within deep hollows, lips tinged blue. Had she waited too long? She’d batted her idea back and forth all day and seen no other alternative. But now the reality of the plan seemed ludicrous. Even if she didn’t sense the presence of imminent death, he was clearly unwell. But was that her only reason for second-guessing herself? Or did it have more to do with his quicksilver charm and his stomach-fluttering stare?
She’d no experience with men of his quality. She felt like a child as she struggled to counter his witty banter and a fool as she melted at his enticing smile. But better a live fool than a dead bride. If anyone could help her escape Branston and Corey, this man could. He was her best—and maybe her last—hope.
“I have a proposal for you.”
“Really?” The smile vanished. She caught a glimpse of the dangerous beast she’d watched savage Corey’s hired killers and was oddly reassured. “Go on.”
“If I help you escape, you agree to take me with you.”
His brows inched skyward. “You’re more brazen than you look.”
This time she refused the blush stealing up her neck. Yes, she was proposing a very unorthodox idea to a nude man, who even sick as death looked like your average Greek god, but it was that or marriage to Corey. Embarrassment was nothing compared to what awaited her at his hands.
“I need an escort to my aunt in Scotland. You need the knife I have secreted in my pocket. I think we can help each other.”
“What about your brother?”
“He doesn’t want . . . that is . . .”
“Scotland is your idea. Not his.”
“I’m of age. He has no legal right to keep me here.”
“Why doesn’t your aunt come and collect you?”
“The particulars of my dilemma aren’t your concern.”
“It’s my concern if I’m carting you all over the countryside with an irate brother after me.”
“Your choice is simple, Mr.—”
“David.”
“It’s simple . . . David; escape with me or rot here alone.”
“You drive a hard bargain, Callista.”
She straightened, chin up. “Miss Hawthorne to you.”
Amusement flickered in his eyes. “When?”
“Now. My satchel is packed, my brother won’t be back for hours. Mrs. Thursby is downstairs sleeping off her gin. Hold still.” Sliding the knife between the rope and his ankles, she began sawing until the cords gave way in a ravel of frayed ends. She pulled it free while unwinding the thin silver chain, revealing ugly black welts where the silver had rubbed his skin raw.