Read Lockwood & Co. Book Three: The Hollow Boy Online
Authors: Jonathan Stroud
“Okay.” I steadied the dummy on its chain and resumed pacing around it, keeping my weight balanced on my toes.
“You’ll be there?”
I made a series of small stabbing motions on either side of Esmeralda’s battered old bonnet. “Well, where else am I going to be? I live here.”
“Of course. I just thought maybe ten’s a bit early for you.”
“Not at all. I’m always up, aren’t I?”
“Oh, I know. But not always dressed. It might put the lady off if you were sitting there in those big saggy old gray pj’s of yours.” She gave a little laugh.
“Don’t worry, Holly,” I said. “It’s no problem. No problem at
all
.”
I thrust at Esmeralda and skewered her right through the middle of her neck. The dummy swerved away with the impact, twisting the rapier clean out of my hand. I stood there, hands falling to my
sides, watching it swing.
“Ooh, glad
I’m
not a ghost,” Holly Munro said. A tinkling laugh, a waft of perfume, and she was gone.
A
t precisely ten o’clock the following morning, our client arrived. She was a Miss Fiona Wintergarden, a tall, willowy, somewhat desiccated
lady in (I judged) her early fifties. Her hair, cut short and sensibly, was approaching rain-cloud gray. She wore a cream twinset and long black skirt, and a pair of small golden spectacles on the
crest of her angular nose. She sat perched on the lip of the sofa with her knees tight together and thin hands folded in her lap. Her spine was ramrod straight, her bony shoulders forced back
against the fabric of her cardigan like the stumps of dragon wings. If she’d had a bust, it would certainly have been thrust forward; as it was, the effect was aggressively demure.
The employees of Lockwood & Co. positioned themselves around her. Lockwood reclined in his usual chair. George took the seat to the right of the coffee table, and I the one opposite. Our
newest member, Ms. Holly Munro, sat slightly back from the rest of us, legs neatly crossed and with a notebook and pen held ready on her knee. She would take notes on the meeting. Eighteen months
before, when I’d just joined the company, I’d had a similar role. But
I’d
never thought to sit so close behind Lockwood that I could lean forward and speak quietly in his
ear or, by virtue of my proximity to the leader, tacitly become the second-most important person in the room.
There were thick slabs of carrot cake on the table, beside the obligatory tea. This, I thought, was a miscalculation on George’s part. New company etiquette dictated that we couldn’t
eat cake unless our client did, and Miss Wintergarden didn’t seem like a carrot cake type of person. And indeed she ignored the plate when it was offered to her and only sipped once at her
cup before setting it aside.
The fire in the hearth leaped and sparked, casting angular red shadows along the side of our client’s face. “It is good of you to see me at such short notice, Mr. Lockwood,”
she said. “I am at my wit’s end and simply don’t know what to do.”
Lockwood gave an easy smile. “By choosing us, madam, you are already halfway to a solution. Thank you for selecting Lockwood and Co.—we know there are many alternatives out
there.”
“Indeed. I tried several others, but they are not taking on new customers at present,” Miss Wintergarden said. “Regrettably, there seems to be an ongoing kerfuffle in Chelsea
that is being given priority by all the major agencies, and I was forced to cast my eyes a little lower than I would otherwise have done. Still, I understand you are considered reasonably
competent, and also cheap.” She gazed at him over the rims of her spectacles.
Lockwood’s smile had become a trifle stiff. “Er, we endeavor to give satisfaction as far as we are able….May I ask the nature of your trouble?”
“I am being plagued by a supernatural phenomenon.”
“Naturally. Which is?”
The lady’s voice sank low; a thin wattle of loose skin, hanging beneath her jaw, wobbled briefly as she spoke. “Footprints. Bloody footprints.”
George looked up. “Well, I’m sorry you’re upset.”
Miss Wintergarden blinked. “No. I mean they’re
bloody
. Footprints made of blood.”
“How fascinating.” Lockwood sat forward in his chair. “This is in your house?”
“I fear so.”
“Have you seen the prints yourself?”
“Certainly not!” She sounded almost offended. “They were first reported by the youngest members of my staff—the boot boy, the cook’s lad, and others. None of the
adults have witnessed them, but that hasn’t stopped a ridiculous panic from spreading through the house. We have had
scenes
, Mr. Lockwood. Scenes and resignations! I was very put out
by it. I mean, they’re servants. Servants and children. I don’t pay them to indulge in squealing hysterics.”
She glared around, as if daring any of us to disagree. As I met her gaze, I took away the impression of a humorless, rather unintelligent person, for whom only prim correctness and snobbery kept
the terrors of the world at bay. That’s what I picked up from a quick look in her eyes, anyhow. No doubt she thought I was great.
Lockwood wore his gentle, placatory face, which he often used on Whitechapel housewives. “I entirely understand,” he said. “Perhaps you had better tell us all about it from the
beginning.” He lifted his hand as if to pat her reassuringly on the knee, but then thought better of it.
“Very well,” Miss Wintergarden said. “I live at Fifty-four Hanover Square in central London. My father, Sir Rhodes Wintergarden, bought the property sixty years ago. He was a
financier; I expect you will have heard of him. As his only daughter, I inherited it on his death and have remained there ever since. In twenty-seven years, Mr. Lockwood, I have never once been
troubled by ghosts. I do not have time for them! I do a great deal of work for charitable organizations, and host functions that are attended by many important people. The head of the Sunrise
Corporation is a personal friend of mine! I cannot allow my house to gain a dubious reputation, which is why I have come here today.”
None of us said anything, but there was a perceptible quickening of interest in the room. Hanover Square was an expensive location; if Miss Wintergarden was truly wealthy and well connected,
success with this case might give Lockwood & Co. the very push it needed. Lockwood in particular seemed newly alert.
“Can you describe your home?” he asked.
“It is a Regency town house,” our client said, “in one corner of the square. It has five stories—a basement level, containing the cellars and kitchens; the ground floor,
which holds the reception rooms; an upper level with my personal chambers—a library, music room, and so forth; the third-floor bedrooms; and finally the attic level, where many of my
staff—those who bother to remain!—have cots. The stories are connected by a curving staircase, a notable construction in mahogany and elm, designed by the architects Hobbes and Crutwell
for the first owner of the house.”
I shuffled in my chair. Lockwood’s smile had faded, and George was staring longingly at the cake. We knew the signs; Miss Wintergarden, like so many of our clients, enjoyed the sound of
her own voice. We would be here for a while.
“Yes, the staircase is easily the finest on the square,” she continued, “with the most elegant and deep stairwell. When I was a child, my father tied my pet mouse to a
handkerchief and launched it from the top. It parachuted down—”
“Excuse me, Miss Wintergarden.” Holly Munro had glanced up from her notepad. “We need to hurry you a little. Mr. Lockwood is extremely busy, and we only have an hour scheduled
for this meeting. Only
relevant
historical matters need be discussed here. Let’s keep to the essentials, please.” She gave a brisk smile, one that turned on and off as if a kid
were fiddling with the switch, and bent her head to the pad.
There was a pause, during which Lockwood shifted around in his chair to stare at his assistant. We were all staring. George even had his mouth wide open, which made me relieved that he
hadn’t yet had any cake. “Er, yes,” Lockwood said. “Well, I suppose we
do
need to muddle on. These footprints, Miss Wintergarden. Tell us about them.”
The lady had been gazing contemplatively at Holly Munro. She pursed her lips. “I was about to do so, and my speaking of the staircase was entirely relevant, for it is there that the bloody
footprints are found.”
“Ah! Describe them.”
“They are the marks of bare feet ascending the stairs. They are spattered about with blood. They appear sometime after midnight, last several hours, and fade before dawn.”
“On which part of the staircase are they located?”
“They begin in the basement and stretch certainly as high as the third floor.” The lady frowned. “Perhaps higher.”
“What do you mean?”
“The prints apparently become less clear as they go up. Near the basement the full outline of the foot is visible, then the stains become smaller—it’s just the toes and balls
of the feet you see.”
“Interesting,” I said. “Someone going on tiptoe?”
“Or running,” George suggested.
Miss Wintergarden gave a shrug, shoulder blades slicing against cardigan. “I am only reporting what the children said, and their accounts are incoherent. You would do better to look for
yourselves.”
“We shall,” Lockwood said. “Are the prints found elsewhere in the building?”
“No.”
“What surface do the stairs have?”
“Wooden boards.”
“No carpet or rugs?”
“None.”
He tapped his fingers together. “Do you know of a possible cause for this haunting? Some tragedy or crime of passion that occurred in the house?”
The lady bristled. She could not have been more shocked if Lockwood had sprung up, vaulted over the coffee table, and punched her in the nose. “Certainly not! To my knowledge, my home has
never been the site of any violent or passionate incident whatsoever.” She pushed out her meager chest defiantly.
“I can well believe it….” Lockwood was silent for a moment, staring across at the dwindling fire. “Miss Wintergarden, when you phoned yesterday you said this was a matter of
life and death. The prints you describe are certainly disturbing, but I don’t think they can be the whole story. Is there something you’re not telling us?”
The cast of the woman’s face changed. Her haughtiness diminished; she looked both tired and wary. “Yes, there has been an…incident. You must understand that it was not my fault.
The prints had never been a problem, no matter
what
the servants said.” She shook her head. “I acted entirely correctly. It was not my fault.”
“Hold on. So the footprints have been appearing for some time, then?” I said.
“Oh yes, for years.” She glared at me. Her voice carried a defensive ring. “Do not think I have been neglecting my duty, young madam! The prints, and their accompanying
phenomena, have always been faint and insubstantial. And they came so very rarely. No one was ever harmed by them. Aside from the warblings of a few servants, no one even noticed they were there.
In recent weeks, however, they began to be reported more frequently. Finally”—she looked away from us—“it was a nightly occurrence. So I hired three night-watch children to
keep an eye on things.”
We glanced at one another. Night-watch kids have Talent, but they’re not as strong or sensitive as agents. And they aren’t half as well armed, either.
“You didn’t think of mentioning this to DEPRAC?” Holly Munro asked.
“The phenomena amounted to almost nothing!” Miss Wintergarden cried. “I did not see the need to bring in agents at that stage.” She plucked at the fabric of her pullover
as if it were sticking to her shoulder. “There are major hauntings all over London! You cannot trouble the authorities over every Wisp or Glimmer, and I have a reputation to keep up. I
certainly did not want dirty DEPRAC boots tramping around my house.”
Lockwood gazed at her. “So what happened?”
She tapped a small white fist irritably against her lap; her agitation remained, but she was mastering it once more. “Well, I ask you, what did I employ the watch-children
for
? It
was their job to ensure that things did not get out of hand. I gave them the simple task of observing the stairs, of understanding the nature of the apparition. I was sleeping in the house. Many of
the servants had left, but there were still some staff upstairs. It was important we were safe…” Her voice trailed away.
“Yes,” Lockwood said drily. “Your safety was of course paramount. Go on.”
“After the first night—this is three days ago, Mr. Lockwood—the children reported to me while I took my breakfast. They had waited in the basement, watching the stairs. At some
point after midnight, they saw the footprints appear—just as I have described them to you. The prints formed, one after the other, curling up the staircase, as if someone were slowly
climbing. As they went, the pace of the prints grew faster. The children followed, but only for a short distance—to my vexation, when they reached the ground floor, they stopped and did not
go on. I ask you, what good was that?”
“Did they say why they hung back?” Lockwood asked.