Ashes To Ashes: A Ministry of Curiosities Novella (The Ministry of Curiosities Book 5) (11 page)

BOOK: Ashes To Ashes: A Ministry of Curiosities Novella (The Ministry of Curiosities Book 5)
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What he felt now… it couldn't possibly last forever.

* * *

T
he Metzger woman
.

Lincoln awoke with a start. He'd forgotten about the Metzger woman! How could he have been so incompetent?

He set his feet on the floor only to wince as pain spiked through them. He sucked in a breath and blew it out slowly, then sucked in another. He stood. Manageable.

He'd bandaged his feet himself the night before using the medical kit he kept in his study. Hopefully he'd removed all the glass first.

He dressed quickly and edged aside the curtain. Light rimmed another gray, dull horizon. It wasn't raining but it probably would later.

He headed downstairs, avoiding all the creaking floorboards, and outside. His feet stung but so be it. He harnessed a horse to the smaller cabriolet and drove out of the Lichfield estate at speed, heading toward Spitalfields. He easily passed the delivery carts with their yawning drivers and plodding hacks.

Number forty-four A had once been half of a sizable residence but was now a two-up two-down with four windows, set evenly apart, and a green door. A tanned woman with sagging sacks beneath her eyes and deep grooves around her mouth answered his knock. She shrank back when she saw him. Her eyes turned guarded. It was impossible to tell if she was owner of the house or a lodger. She wouldn't be a maid or cook hired by the landlady. No one living in the miserable district of Spitalfields could afford staff.

"I'm looking for Mrs. Metzger," Lincoln told her. "Or Miss Metzger. Is she here?"

The woman chewed on her bottom lip and hugged the door. "Who are you and what do you want?" she asked in a strong Russian accent.

"Is she here?" he asked again, trying to summon some patience. "It's urgent. Her life may be in danger."

She gasped and muttered a Russian expletive. "Why?" She didn't tell him he was too late, thankfully.

"Someone wants her dead. The reason is for her ears only. Please, fetch her for me."

"I am she."

He blew out a measured breath and placed his hands behind his back. "Someone is killing people with supernatural powers. I know that you're next on his list."

She covered another gasp with both hands, or rather, paws. Claws sprouted from her fingertips. When she realized, she shook them and the claws retracted. Her hands returned to normal. She pressed her lips together and glanced past him, left and right. She tucked her hands behind her back.

"I belong to an organization that protects your kind," he said. "I need to take you to safety. Now. Fetch whatever you can carry and come with me."

"But what about my work? My shift begin soon."

"Where do you work?"

"Gumm's Boots on Commercial.”

"I'll tell them you were called away to an ill relative's bedside."

She continued to chew her lip.

"Your loved ones can come with you," he told her.

"I have no one. My husband and son dead."

He removed some money from his pocket. Her eyes widened. It was probably a year's worth of wages. "You can move out of London and rent a room for yourself. This should last you until you find work." He knew he was asking a lot of her, but if he couldn't save her…if she died because he hadn't alerted her yesterday…

He swallowed down the bile burning his throat. "I'll drive you to the station."

"I pack. Wait."

He retreated to the cabriolet. Another woman emerged from the house and paused when she spotted him. She was younger than Mrs. Metzger, but looked just as tired. She edged past him and hurried off along the street, her shoulders stooped.

Mrs. Metzger returned barely ten minutes later with a carpet bag that looked like it had traveled the world. Worn and stained, it nevertheless looked sturdy. Lincoln tied it to the back of the cabriolet.

"I will go to Southampton where there is sea and good air." Her face lifted and the sagging seemed not so pronounced. She held out her hand for the money and he passed it to her. She tucked it into her bodice then climbed up beside him.

"May I ask you a question about your hands?" he asked as the horse pulled away from the gutter.

She folded her gloved hands in her lap. "You may."

"Is that the only part of you that changes? Or is there something more to your magic?"

"Only my hands change, but I see the dead too."

"You're a medium? Or a necromancer?"

"What are these?"

"A medium speaks to the spirits of the recently deceased, but a necromancer can summon those long dead and bring them back to life."

She gasped then crossed herself. "I am medium. I see new spirits, before cross over."

He flicked the reins to drive the horse through the thickening morning traffic. They sat in silence, allowing Lincoln to think. Did the killer suspect Mrs. Metzger was a necromancer and had decided to eliminate her, just in case? Or was he now attacking supernaturals of any sort, no matter if they couldn't be used to reanimate the dead? If so, then everyone in the ministry archives was in danger.

A half hour later, he'd deposited Mrs. Metzger at Waterloo Station and headed home. She was safe, and perhaps she might even be happier living at the seaside than in London. He'd told her to contact him at Lichfield once she was settled. He would add her new location to the files, and keep those files locked away from untrustworthy eyes.

The house was quiet when he entered via the courtyard door, and he didn't need a seer's powers to know why. Gus and Seth were gone. He bypassed the kitchen but felt the venom of Cook's glare nevertheless. A resounding thump of the rolling pin left Lincoln in no doubt that Cook blamed him for his friends' departure.

Lincoln took the stairs two at a time, only to stop dead when he met Lady Vickers on the landing. She greeted him with a smile, which surprised him. Shouldn't she be upset about her son leaving? Shouldn't she be worried that Lincoln would throw her out now? The last time they'd spoken, she'd stoked Lincoln's temper and been determined that he should treat Seth as an equal, at the very least. So why the smile?

"Good morning, Mr. Fitzroy. I see you've been out already, and in such gloomy weather too."

"It has only just begun to rain." He stepped aside, but she didn't move to pass him.

A small crinkle appeared across her smooth brow. "You look troubled," she said, her smile fading.

"I've got some things on my mind now that your son and Gus have left my employ."

"Ah. I was wondering if you were going to bring it up or if I should."

"You are welcome to remain here, madam, whether Seth is present or not. I gave my word."

She squeezed his arm gently. Her eyes misted but quickly cleared and she resumed the mask of nobility again. It had to be a mask, he'd decided. This woman had run off with her footman, of all people. She
seemed
above such things, yet apparently she wasn't. Not that he was the best judge of character, particularly where Lady Vickers was concerned. He didn't understand her at all.

"You are a true gentleman, Mr. Fitzroy. Thank you. If Seth comes to me for advice, I will tell him in no uncertain terms that he must return here. He made an unwise decision, and I'm deeply troubled by it."

"But you don't want him to be my servant."

"No, I don't. But nor do I want him to have nothing, not even a roof over his head. He told me you pay him well, Mr. Fitzroy, and I am not so foolish as to think he's above working
with
you."

As opposed to
for
him. "Do you know where he is?" Lincoln asked.

"No, but I expect him to show his face sooner or later. I am his mother, after all. He can't run away from me too."

Seth wouldn't see it as running away. More like taking a stand. "Thank you, madam, but it's unnecessary. I won't force him to work for me." Coerce, yes, but not force.

He went to walk past her since she made no move to pass him, but she clung to his arm. "Did you go through the calling cards?"

"I haven't had time."

"You had many visitors, as did my Seth. You could both have the pick of the year's debutants." Her eyes lit up with the same gleam he'd seen when she pushed Seth toward eligible women at the ball. Why was she looking at Lincoln like that? "If you want them, that is."

"I don't."

Her grip tightened. She wasn't letting him go yet. "Do you know why I came home to England, Mr. Fitzroy?"

"No." Nor did he want to know. Unfortunately it looked like she was going to keep her hand on his arm until she told him.

"I was lonely. My second husband died, and I'd made few friends in New York. Without friends to introduce me, I wasn't received into the right circles, you see. So I came home to be with my son again."

He nodded. Should he say something too?

"I loved him, you know," she said before he had a chance to think of an appropriate response. "My second husband was a good man, more of a gentleman than my first, even though
he
was the one born to gentility."

"You don't need to justify your actions to me. I don't care."

"Oh, I know that. That's why I like you so much."

She did? He couldn't tell.

"I expect I'll find myself shunned by English society for some time." She sighed. "There will be crude jokes and snide comments, of course, and I'll need to partner either Seth or your intriguing self if I wish to attend parties." Her strong features softened a little, but there was no other sign that she was bothered by these facts.

"Is there a reason you're telling me this?" he asked.

"I'm telling you because I want you to know that it was worth it. Even if I'd known George wasn't going to live long, and even if I'd known that returning to England would be difficult, I would still have married him."

Her face softened more and Lincoln grew worried that she would cry. He steeled himself. "I see," he said, glancing past her.

Instead of letting go, she held his arm tighter. "I don't think you do. You're trying to escape."

He cleared his throat and gave her his full attention. Shouldn't she be saying these things to Seth? Why did she want to tell Lincoln these personal thoughts when she hardly knew him?

"I loved George very much," she said again. "Even though that love cost me a great deal, I couldn't have
not
loved him. I didn't have any choice in the matter. It simply was. Now do you see?"

He saw. He saw that Seth had told his mother more than he should have about Charlie. "I have to go."

She released his arm and he moved past her. "True love doesn't end," she said to his back. "It only deepens with time."

"Your advice is unwanted."

"My presence in London is unwanted by most, but I'm staying anyway. Love isn't always easy, Mr. Fitzroy, but nothing rewarding is."

She'd probably read that in one of the gothic romance novels he'd seen her reading.

It was too early for a drink and he didn't want to summon Doyle to fetch tea. While he didn't think the butler was the lecturing type, Lincoln would rather not risk it. He'd had enough advice and angry glares from the rest of the household to last a lifetime. Now he wanted peace to consider the developments in the investigation.

Unfortunately, a knock on the door disturbed him. It was only Doyle, delivering tea. Lincoln was beginning to wonder if the man had some supernatural seer powers after all. Or perhaps he was simply an excellent butler.

"Sir, I should warn you," Doyle said before exiting. "Cook is talking about leaving too."

Lincoln sat heavily in his chair. The task of replacing his staff suddenly felt overwhelming. He rubbed his forehead and listened to the door click closed as Doyle left. He sipped his tea and tried to think about work again. He should send someone to warn all of the London-based supernaturals to be vigilant, but there was no one left to send. Not even Cook. Lincoln expected him to march into his rooms with a meat cleaver at any moment. With his excellent aim and fierce temper, Cook would be a formidable opponent.

He set the teacup down and left. He slowed as he passed Charlie's rooms but forced himself to continue.
Anywhere but in there.
He headed up to the attic and the files stored there, but found himself detouring to the tower room. It stood empty and cold. The hearth had been swept clean and the mattress stripped bare. The last time he'd been in the room was the day Charlie left.

Charlie.

He shouldn't have come to the tower room. The memories of the day she left were too vivid here. But he didn't leave. He couldn't. He
wanted
to be there, to remind himself that he'd sent her away for bloody good reasons.

He sat on the windowsill and, for a moment, he couldn't remember those reasons. All he could see through the misty rain was the exact spot on the drive where the carriage had been when Charlie climbed into it that day.

She had cried. A lot. He'd almost given in and changed his mind, on numerous occasions, but somehow he'd stood firm. He'd focused on being calm, on shutting himself off, piece by piece. When he'd first learned the calming technique as a child, he'd thought of himself as a canal filled with dozens of locks. Each gated lock would close and shut off the water flow, leaving the downstream water level low. It wasn't until he was older and saw a working lock that he'd realized the gates reopened eventually. The technique still worked, however, and he'd perfected it over the years so that he could shut himself off and let nothing through. Not even Charlie's tears.

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