Read His Lordship Possessed Online
Authors: Lynn Viehl
Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Fantasy, #Historical, #Science Fiction, #Urban, #Steampunk
I tried to pitch my voice to sound half-snobby, half-
forlorn. “Her husband got himself killed last night. I’ve
just come from the morgue, and now I’ve got to break the
news to her.”
“Th a’so?” He looked a bit uncomfortable now. “Pitiful,
this night’s business. Bloody Talians.”
“Where are you taking all this?” I gestured to the cart.
“Some bigwig said move what we could down to the
cargo houses.” A glimmer of sour humor came over his
features. “Wouldn’t give us naught for hauling, ‘course,
so we had to make do.”
Evidently the nobbers had loaded the ton’s treasures
deliberately into pig carts—and everyone said they had
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no sense of humor. I let him hear a little of my chuckle
before I turned it into a polite cough. “Th at’s where I’m
headed. Milady and her maids were taken down to the
docks for their safety. Can’t fi nd a cabbie to save my life, though.” I tugged at my bloodstained bodice. “I’d walk,
but I’ve already been attacked once by some bloke covered
in blood. Be all right if I walk with you, then?”
He looked doubtful. “With this pong, you’d want to?”
I shrugged and let my voice quaver a little. “Better
than going on alone.”
“Aye.” He tugged on the lead rein, stopping the horses
before off ering me a hand. “But you’ll ride this time, lass.
Like a proper lady.”
“Th ank you.” I smiled and let him help me up onto
the empty driver’s seat. Once he whistled the tired horses
shuffl ed back into motion, and we were off .
As I suspected, the smell drove everyone away from
the carts, even the beaters who came trotting from the
direction of Rumsen Main. I hoped as long as I kept my
head down and didn’t do anything to draw attention to
myself I’d be as good as invisible.
Th rough the snarls of my hair I noted the brigadiers
who were putting out fi res by pumping seawater from
tanker carts into the household tubes. If the owners
survived the night, they’d be returning to a wet, scorched
mess, but at least the stone shells of their homes would
still stand. I hoped my own place would still be intact,
and then I recalled that it wasn’t mine anymore. A laugh
escaped me as I realized that I was not only a fugitive
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murderess but also a vagrant.
Th e cart creaked to a stop at the back of a loading
dock, and the nobber helped me down from the seat.
“Th ey’re keeping the gentry over there, with their
boats,” he told me, nodding in the direction of the yacht
yards. “I’d walk you over, but I’ve to unload all this scram fi rst.”
I started to thank him, and then did one better by
giving him a deep, respectful curtsey. “I will always
remember your kindness, dear sir.”
“Aw, now. Weren’t nothing.” He looked pleased and
embarrassed. “Get on with you, then.”
I started toward the yacht yard, but as soon as my
escort went to hitch the horses I turned and hurried
toward the docks. I could see the militia standing guard
on the deck of the Talian ship, and counted among the
prisoners shackled to the mast Montrose Walsh as well
as Celestino. On the dock below stood a beater next to a
row of bodies covered by blood- and soot-stained tarps;
on the very end was one soaked with wide patches of
brackish water.
Th is thing will occupy my fl esh,
Dredmore murmured from my last memory of him,
but my spirit will go where it
can never touch me. I understand now. I will be where Harry
has been, all this time.
Zarath hadn’t won. Not yet.
Th e beater bristled as I approached him. “You can’t be
here, miss. Crime scene, this is.”
“Inspector Th omas Doyle sent me,” I lied. “I am—I
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was—in the employ of Lord Dredmore. I’ve come down
from Morehaven to identify his remains.”
“What now?” Th e beater looked confused. “I thought
he were already tagged.”
“I’ve been asked to confi rm it’s him.” I walked past
him, moving down the line of tarps. I glanced back.
“Which one, please?”
Th e beater took a step after me, stopped, and then
waved an arm. “On the very end. Mind you don’t touch
him.”
I got to the tarp and dropped down beside it, gripping
the pendant tightly as I uncovered Dredmore’s head.
Death had leeched the cruel beauty from his features;
they resembled a waxen mask cast in a too-smooth mold.
When I lay my hand on his brow it felt like icy, damp
stone.
“I said not to touch!” the beater called to me.
“Sorry!” I removed the pendant from my pocket,
carefully draping the chain round his neck before I stood
and stepped back. “All right, Lucien. Th e spell is over.
I’m releasing you.”
While I waited for Dredmore’s spirit to return to his
body, I wondered how he had fathomed the secret of my
pendant. Th e mystery had come together for me only
while Doyle had been questioning me, and even now I
wasn’t sure I’d worked it out exactly right. My doubts
loomed as Dredmore’s body remained still and lifeless.
“Don’t you do this to me, Lucien,” I muttered,
reaching down to smack his face. “Not after all I’ve
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gone through this night. You’re a deathmage, damn
you. Surely you can overcome it—you must try. For me,
please.”
A shadow fell over Dredmore’s body, one that was
shaped like Inspector Doyle. “Step away from the corpse.”
“He’s not a corpse.”
“Kit.”
I turned my head. “I lied to you, Tommy. I didn’t kill
Dredmore. He wasn’t in his body, you see, because he
put his spirit inside my pendant. Give him a minute and
he’ll come back.”
“Th at’s enough of that.” He took hold of my arm.
“Come away now.”
“But he will wake up. He has to.” My throat went
tight as I considered the now very real possibility that
I had been wrong about my parents, the pendant,
everything. “I worked it out, I know I did.” Was there
some sort of spell I was supposed to cast? Surely not. I’d
break it the moment the words left my lips.
“My fault she got over here, sir.” Th e beater joined
Doyle and glared at me. “Told me you sent her.”
I looked up at the sky. “Lucien? I’ve made a mess of
this. I need you to tell me what to do. How do I fi x this?”
“Charm.” Tommy grabbed me by the arms and shook
me until my teeth chattered. “Stop it. You can’t do
anything more for him.”
“Damn you.” Th e moment he stopped I shoved him
away. “You swore you wouldn’t do this.”
“I’m not—”
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“Tommy Doyle calls me Kit, Harry.” I pushed him
a second time as I advanced on him. “Only
you
call me Charm. Tell me how to bring Lucien back.
Tell me
.”
“You’re not Aramanthan, and neither is he. Th ere is
no coming back for mortals.”
He dodged my quick fi st, teetered on the edge of the
pier, and dropped into the water with a huge splash.
I leaned over to see that he bobbed to the surface, and
ducked the white mist that rose from the water before I
tossed a rope down to a very confused-looking Doyle.
“Grab hold of this, Inspector.”
Th e beater came after me, his trunch held ready to
pound my head in, but the white mist descended between
us and reformed into Harry. Th at was enough for the
beater, who spun round smartly and ran the other way,
shouting for help.
“You can’t defy fate, gel.” Harry blocked my path back
to Dredmore. “Killing him is what you were meant to do.
What you were born to do. Even he knew it.”
“Th en why did he say I had to release him?” I
demanded.
“Death is his release.” Something like pity glimmered
in his eyes. “You’ll fi nd another chap someday, Charm.
One who will treat you as you deserve.”
Since he was of no use to me, I forced myself to think.
Mr. Jasper had said shattering the dreamstone dispelled
its power . . . “What if I break the stone? Will that free
him?”
“It’s nightstone, my dear,” he said. “You can’t.”
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But I was a spell-breaker, and the stone was spelled,
and suddenly Harry wouldn’t look me in the eye.
“You’re a terrible liar, old man.”
I knelt down and pulled the pendant from Dredmore’s
neck. Th e only hard object I had was my father’s pocket
watch, and once I wedged the stone against the dock
boards I pulled it out.
“No.” Harry sounded genuinely frightened and swiped
at me, but his hand passed through my arm. “Charm, if
you smash it you’ll be torn to pieces—”
“Th en I’ll go and be with him.” I brought down the
pocket watch as hard as I could, smashing it into the
stone. Th e watch’s crystal shattered, and a piece banged
into my chin, cutting me.
Harry let out a long breath. “Th ank the Gods.”
Blood dripped from my face onto the nightstone as I
lifted the ruined watch a second time. “God damn you,
Lucien, come out of there.”
“Charm.”
Th e second time I hit the nightstone I felt it crack.
Purple-black light poured across my face, freezing my
skin and blinding me. I fell back, feeling as if the dock
had begun spinning like a top, and rubbed at my eyes
until they cleared.
“You are the most stubborn, idiotic, mule-headed
mortal female it has ever been my misfortune to know,”
I heard Harry say as the sky blurred and the Talian ship
began to turn transparent.
“What? Wait.” I looked over at Dredmore’s body,
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but it and the tarp were gone. “Harry? Where is Lucien?
What have I done?”
“Made your father happy at last, I expect.” He sat
down beside me, as solid as I was, and put an arm round
my shoulders. “Close your eyes now or you’ll get very
dizzy.”
I couldn’t even blink; the world had gone mad. Night
turned to day as the sun rose in the west and climbed
backward through the sky. Th e tide rushed in and out.
Great clouds of black smoke funneled down into the city,
dwindling to thin streams before disappearing altogether.
Cargo handlers working faster than could be followed
dragged crates out to load them on ships that raised
anchors and sails and moved against the wind out to sea.
“I don’t believe it.” I thought my eyes might pop out
of their sockets. “Everything is going in reverse.” I raised a hand to cover my gaping mouth, only to see it growing
as transparent as Harry. “Am I dying?”
“No, my dear. You’ve worked the only magic you
can. Your father’s science.” My grandfather made a rude
sound. “Th at wasn’t a pocket watch. It was another of his
blasted mechs.”
I glanced down at the ruins of the watch. “What did
it do before I smashed it?”
“Doesn’t matter now; you’ve bonded his mech and
her magic with your blood, and the watch’s power has
been released.” His voice grew distant. “I’m afraid you’ve
turned time on its head, Charm.”
I tried to stand, but my legs wouldn’t work. “When
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will it stop?”
He was only a faint outline in the air now. “When
you’ve return to the beginning of it all, of course.
Assuming you survive the journey.”
Harry vanished, and then, so did I.
“Charmian.”
I fl oated through the darkness, seeking the voice
calling my name. Only after some time did I realize it
came from inside me, and was enough like my own for
me to believe I’d spoken.
Until it came again, and scolded me. “I did not raise
you to be ignorant, or a coward, and you have conducted
yourself as a clever and resourceful woman. Since we were
parted, you have made me and your father very proud of
you.”
I lifted my head and searched for a Harry-like
presence, but no spirit appeared. “Mum?”
“I don’t trifl e with the passages between worlds as my
father does,” my mother said. “I am quite content here.
Or I was, until this moment.”
It had to be my mother; no one else could make me
feel such guilt. “But you’re dead.”
“Th ere is the death of the body, which comes to every
person in the mortal world,” my mother said primly.
“It cannot be stopped or avoided; it must be accepted
as inevitable. But that which animates us, that which is
the essence of us; that never truly dies.” A comforting