Echoes of Mercy: A Novel (27 page)

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Authors: Kim Vogel Sawyer

BOOK: Echoes of Mercy: A Novel
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Here he was bemoaning her absence again when he should be thankful she’d stayed away. Maybe it would have been better if the door had slammed into his chest rather than his head. It might have knocked Miss Carrie Lang from his heart.

He hailed a passing hansom cab and paid the driver two bits to tote him to the factory. His first night back he didn’t want to wear himself out with the walk and be unable to complete his duties. Part of his duty tonight, albeit a personal one, would be retrieving those blueprints for Carrie. He also intended to extract the reason she was so keen on seeing them. If his suspicions were correct and she was hiding something from him, it might help him find the courage to sever his ties with her completely.

He arrived late—more than twenty minutes past clock-in time. Hightower would probably write up a complaint against him, but so be it. According to the rules Father had put into place for all the workers, Hightower would need three write-ups before he could release him. Just this morning Father had said he’d bring Oliver’s masquerading to a halt at the end of the year. So he’d leave long before Hightower had compiled enough valid excuses to terminate his employment.

As he gathered his cleaning supplies, he couldn’t resist a light chuckle. He wished he could be a fly on the wall when Father told Hightower his own son had been mopping floors and greasing gears. He supposed he shouldn’t gloat—it wasn’t polite—but he didn’t like Hightower, and he didn’t mind saying so. As a boy, he’d often envied the unknown lad Father had selected from the Chicago orphanage to work in his factory. Back then his dislike for Hightower had centered around Father’s seeming interest in him. But as Oliver had become acquainted with Hightower the adult, his dislike became personal. The man was a cad through and through.

Bucket, rags, and scrub brush in hand, he moved across the wide crating area toward the break room. After his days away he imagined there’d be plenty of scrubbing to do in the room where the workers ate their meals. He passed Carrie, who was bent over a crate, tack pinched between her finger and thumb. He eased up behind her and leaned in so she’d hear him over the factory noises. “Good evening, Carrie.”

She jumped, bouncing the hammer off her thumb. With a sharp intake of breath, she dropped the hammer and shook her hand wildly, her lips set in a grimace of pain.

Oliver put down his cleaning items and stretched his hands toward her. “Let me see.”

She yanked her hand away, glaring at him. “Don’t bother. It’s nothing.”

Her thumb was already swelling. Soon it would be as colorful as his face. He cringed. He truly hadn’t intended to startle her. Cupping his hand beneath her elbow, he steered her toward the little room used by the staff doctor. “Come on. The night-shift doctor can wrap that up for you.”

She tried to wrench free of his grasp. “I told you, I’m fine. Let me go.”

He gave her an impatient look. Why was she being so stubborn? “Carrie, your thumb clearly is not fine. Look at it.”

She did.

“It’ll be as large as a sausage if you don’t get it wrapped.”

She clamped her jaw tight, but she moved along beside him without any further arguments. When they reached the infirmary, Oliver ushered her through the door. But the doctor wasn’t in the room. Oliver crossed to the door leading to the sick bay, opened it, and peeked inside. No one was in there, either. “Where could he be?”

Carrie hovered near the doorway, cradling her thumb against her bodice. “It doesn’t matter. I can still hold a tack. I’ll go—”

Oliver dashed across the floor, the sudden movement causing a slight ringing in his ears. Would dizziness follow? Catching hold of her elbow again, partly to keep her from leaving, partly to keep himself upright, he pulled her toward the examination table in the center of the room. “Climb up there,” he said. “I’ll wrap your thumb.”

“Ollie, really, you needn’t—”

Lowering his brows, he affected a stern frown. “I’m not going to argue with you.” He paused, allowing his lips to curl into a teasing grin. “You made sure my wound was tended. The least I can do is return the favor.”

“You returned the favor all right.” She looked ruefully at her thumb and its blackening nail. “As they say, ‘Turnabout is fair play.’ ”

He helped her onto the edge of the table and then began opening cabinet doors, looking for bandages. “Just be glad the hammer didn’t bounce off your head. You can’t get a concussion from a whack on the thumb.” He located a roll of thin strips and carried it to the table. “Hold out your hand, thumb up, please.”

With her lower lip sucked in and her brow furrowed, she watched him unroll the narrow cotton cloth. Her obvious nervousness made him nervous, and he sought the means to put her at ease. Conversation might take her mind off his ministrations. While he wound the strip around her thumb, snug but not too snug, he asked, “What is it about our elevator that stirs your interest?”

She yanked her hand back, unraveling the bandage. “Why?”

He gathered up the strip and reached for her hand again. “Because you were going to tell me. Remember? We had a deal.”

Shoving her hand behind her back, well out of his reach, she fixed him with a glare that could curdle milk. “Yes. We had a deal. But if I honor my part and tell you the reason, are you going to run off and report everything I say?”

Her accusation set him back a pace.

She went on, her tone brittle. “Tell me the truth. Have you been tattling on me?”

The word “tattling” almost made him laugh. Such a childish word. But when he thought about it, wasn’t that what he’d done? He’d observed her without her knowledge, had gathered information, and had shared it with his father. He preferred to think of his actions as investigative rather than gossipy, but he supposed in this case they were the same. He didn’t know what to say, so he stood stupidly before her with his head throbbing and his heart aching.

“You have, haven’t you?” She didn’t wait for his reply but hopped down from the table and pushed past him. “I can’t believe I trusted you. Relied on you. I—” Her voice broke on a strangled moan. She stifled the sound and held her chin high. “Stay away from me, Ollie Moore. I want nothing to do with you.” She darted out the door.

Oliver started to run after her, but the room spun. He sagged against the doorjamb, one hand on his head. “Carrie!”

She passed two other craters, who watched her race by and then turned
their gazes on Oliver. Their faces twisted into matching, knowing smirks. Oliver inwardly groaned and moved to the examination table. He propped himself against it, willing the lightheadedness to pass. He needed to explain to Carrie the purpose of his reporting. He’d only wanted to prove to his father that they had no reason to distrust her. But how could he do so without divulging the truth of who he was? He’d gotten himself entangled, and there seemed to be no escape.

The look of betrayal on Carrie’s sweet face pierced him to the center of his being. Now alone in the quiet infirmary, he experienced a longing to share this burden and find reparation from the One who held all the answers of the universe. But just as his prayers for Mr. Holcomb had been offered too late, he feared these prayers would be useless. She’d never trust him again. Unless …

As quickly as his swimming head would allow, he headed for the janitor’s closet and the tin tube that held the blueprints for the elevator.

“Moore!”

The shout brought Oliver to a halt. The night-shift foreman, Alden, jogged toward him. Oliver shifted in place, eager to complete his own errand.

“Yes?”

Alden took a look at Oliver’s face and barked out a laugh. “Guess the boss wasn’t kidding when he said you’d gotten a good knock on the noggin. Reckon that smarts some, huh?”

Oliver grimaced. “Some.”

“How’d it happen?”

“Ran into a door.” A partial truth, but no way would he admit Carrie’d done it.

The foreman laughed again. “Well, now that you’re back, you got some catching up to do. Two nights ago one of the new hires fell asleep and let a boiler get too hot. A vat of raspberry filling bubbled over. Hightower said to leave it for you to handle when you got back on duty since he couldn’t trust the newly hired first-shift janitor to do it right.”

Oliver nearly rolled his eyes. He knew better than to be flattered.

“It’s dried and hard now—it’ll probably take a hammer an’ chisel to get that vat an’ the floor around it clean again.”

Oliver edged toward the janitor’s closet. “You want me to do that now?”

Alden scowled. “We can’t use the vat until it’s clean.”

Stifling a groan of frustration, Oliver nodded. “All right. I’m on my way.” The blueprints—and Carrie—would have to wait.

Caroline

If Ollie’s head hurt half as much as her thumb, Caroline almost felt sorry for him. Pinching tacks became increasingly painful as the night progressed. By the time the lunch break buzzer blared, her thumb appeared twice its normal size, and the nail wore a purplish-black half moon. The constant throb beneath the nail made her nauseated. She’d been anticipating the apple fritter Kesia had packed for her midnight dinner, but food had lost all appeal. Which was just as well, because she had a more important task to tend to than eating.

As workers filed toward the break room, Caroline sidled up to the other craters. “I’m going to the infirmary—see if the doctor is back so I can get my thumb wrapped.” She held up the purple appendage to validate the need. They nodded at her, one grimacing at the sight of her thumb. Satisfied they’d carry the tale to the other workers if anyone—namely, Ollie—happened to notice her absence, she turned and headed in the direction of the doctor’s little examination room. But halfway there, with a furtive glance over her shoulder to be sure no one saw her, she changed course and made her way to the janitor’s closet.

Ollie had indicated the blueprints were on a shelf. The closet wouldn’t be so large she’d need assistance in locating a few drawings.
Don’t let him catch me, please
. The plea, more a demand than a prayer, exploded from her pattering heart. “Him” covered both Hightower and Ollie. One man had frightened her, but the other had shattered her. She didn’t have the strength to face either of them at that moment.

She closed the door behind her, sealing herself in darkness. Arms outstretched, she moved slowly forward, and something tickled her cheek. She
stifled a shriek—a spider web? No, she’d located the light’s pull cord. She gave it a tug, and a bare bulb sent glaring light through the small room. Blinking against the sudden onslaught, she turned a slow circle, her eyes seeking anything resembling a stack of drawings.

Buckets, sponges, boxes packed with hardware, folded towels, and other assorted items filled the shelves, everything placed just so. The closet’s meticulous organization raised a wave of unexpected sadness. How could a man who took such care with inanimate objects treat her so callously? The two halves didn’t seem to fit with each other.

Pushing aside thoughts of Ollie, she began shifting items, peeking behind every box and crate. She explored the bottom three shelves, which were at eye level or below, but the top shelf was above her head. She grabbed a bucket, turned it upside down, and climbed on its bottom, giving herself enough of a boost to view the contents of the uppermost shelf.

A stack of folded papers held down by a tarnished tin tube caught her eye. She pushed the canister aside and lifted the papers. To her dismay they were only yellowed, mouse-eaten newspapers, apparently forgotten. Frustrated, she tossed them back on the shelf. They slid against the tin tube, rolling it over and revealing a paper label pasted on its side. A minuscule black-and-white drawing of the elevator filled the center of the label.

Caroline’s pulse leaped in response. The blueprints! She grabbed the tube and hopped down from the bucket. Oh, how pleased Noble would be! She headed for the door, tube in hand, but before she stepped out, she made herself stop and think. She examined the tube, measuring it with her eyes. Fifteen inches in length and perhaps three inches in diameter, the tube was large enough to garner notice if she carried it in her hand. Should she slide it inside the full sleeve of her dress? There was ample fabric to accommodate the canister, but she wouldn’t be able to bend her arm. The shank of her lace-up shoes was too snug to slip the tube in next to her leg, and she had no desire to carry it beneath her skirt. But somehow she had to smuggle it out of the factory.

Break would end soon, and she needed to return to her post, preferably with a wrapped thumb so no one would wonder why she hadn’t seen the doctor. Where could she hide the tube? Then she smacked her forehead. The
recent lack of sleep had rendered her incapable of thinking clearly. Why take the tube? Blueprints were printed on paper. She could fold the drawings and tuck them inside her clothing without anyone noticing.

The top squeaked as she twisted it loose. Tipping the tube sideways, she tapped it to release the drawings. Nothing fell into her waiting hand. She tapped it harder. When no rolled pages emerged, she turned the tube upright and held the opening toward the light.

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