Read His Lordship Possessed Online
Authors: Lynn Viehl
Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Fantasy, #Historical, #Science Fiction, #Urban, #Steampunk
the attacks on his wife. Something happened last night
that made him terrifi ed of you.”
“What?” I thought back over the dinner. “I know I
spoke out of turn a few times, but he mostly ignored
me. Th e only time he became really agitated was when I
challenged him.”
“Lady Walsh is a pawn in a much larger game.”
He felt me shivering and pulled me closer, lifting one
side of the blanket over him in order to share his body
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heat. “When you spoke of the wound paste, he reacted
strangely. He stared at you for several moments.”
I remembered that look. “As if he were seeing me for
the fi rst time. But that old trick isn’t anything important.
Other than it’s being used to drive his wife mad.”
“I think it’s something else.” He looked out as the
coach came to a halt. “Th e snow is knee-deep. I’ll have
to carry you.”
I pushed off the blanket. “Should I struggle again for
the benefi t of the neighbors?”
“I have no neighbors.”
I saw why when he helped me out. “Dredmore, this is
Feathersound.”
“It is.” He swung me up into his arms.
I linked my hands behind his neck. “Th e lord mayor
allows you to make use of his private residence?”
“His former private residence.” He carried me up the
steps and through the door Connell had unlocked and
held open. “He signed the deed over to me for services
rendered.”
“Does the governor know about this?” I frowned as
I saw his driver lighting a candle to illuminate the dark
hall. “No servants?”
“Offi cially the house has been closed for two years.”
He set me down and instructed Connell to light the
fi res before taking my hand. “Unoffi cially, it’s haunted.
Legally, it’s mine.”
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Dredmore guided me into Feathersound’s library, which
appeared to be as large as my entire fl at. Every wall had
been fi tted with shelves from fl oor to ceiling, save the
center of one where space had been made for a massive
cherrywood secretary. “You cheated the mayor out of his
home by telling him it was haunted?”
“No. I saved his life from what he believed was the
vengeful spirit of his former business partner.” He went to
the hearth and lit the kindling under a large stack of split seasoned oak. “Th e specter turned out to be the gifted
and rather resourceful aide of the mayor’s opponent, who
had hoped to frighten away his competition before the
election.”
“But you didn’t tell the mayor that,” I guessed.
“After I assured His Honor that I had dispelled the
spirit from the premises, I discreetly arranged for the
mayor’s opponent to withdraw from the election.” He sat
back on his heels and watched the fl ames catch. “Directly
after that, he and his aide left Rumsen.”
He hadn’t killed them, as everyone had believed. “You
blackmailed him.”
“I persuaded him to relocate to a city in the east where
he might enjoy more success in the political arena.” He
rose and brushed some melting snow from his shoulders
before regarding me. “Why are you smiling at me like
that?”
“You don’t believe in magic any more than I do.” And
now I had proof of it. “You’re an investigator like me.
You only dress it up with spells and nonsense to hide your
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methods. So how did you disguise the blade you used on
the snuff mage outside court? Was it some sort of trick,
like the way you pretended to pop through the fl oors at
Morehaven?”
“Come here, Charmian.” He removed a dust drape
from a cushiony lady’s armchair by the fi re and gestured
for me to take a seat in it. When I did, he said, “I will
answer your questions, but you must fi rst do something
for me.”
My fi rst, automatic response was to refuse, but
Dredmore had just diverted Walsh’s men from harming
Rina and her gels, and had provided safe sanctuary for
me. I owed him some cooperation, and we both knew it.
“What do you want?”
“Take off your pendant and hand it to me.”
Th e moment I did, I knew Harry would appear, but
at least Dredmore wouldn’t be able to see him. I reached
up, unfastened the catch, and held out the chain to him.
Th e moment the pendant left my fi ngers, my
grandfather’s misty form appeared. He didn’t say a
word, but lunged at Dredmore, who quickly pocketed
the pendant. As soon as he did, Harry turned
semitransparent.
“Why on earth did you do that, you silly twit?” my
grandfather shouted.
“Because I asked her to.” Dredmore looked directly at
Harry. “Hello, Ehrich.”
“You know my grandfather?” I looked from Dredmore
to Harry and back again. “Hang on. You can
see
him?”
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“It’s a trick, Charm.” Harry solidifi ed enough to cast a
shadow on the faded but still colorful Turkish rug. “He’s
only making a pretense so he can use you. You must leave
here at once.”
“You’d rather send her out to die in the snow than tell
her the truth?” Dredmore came to stand behind me, and
I saw his angry expression refl ected in the oval mirror
above the mantel. “She’s your own fl esh and blood, old
man. She deserves to know more than the bits and pieces
that you’ve been feeding her.”
“He seems to be able to see and hear you quite well,”
I advised my grandfather. Th e thought of how he had
possessed Connell at Morehaven, and the prospect of
him doing the same to Dredmore, made me gesture at a
cluster of brass-studded bronze leather armchairs. “Why
don’t we all sit down and talk about this?”
“Sit down and talk. With him?” Harry uttered a bitter
laugh. “You don’t know what spawned him, or what his
sort can do.” He looked at Dredmore for the fi rst time,
and there was pure hatred in his eyes. “But I know, boy.
I know exactly what you are.”
“Have you told her what you’ve done?” Dredmore
asked this with exquisite courtesy. “Why don’t you
explain that, Ehrich? Or are you leaving that for others
to do, just as you did in France?”
“I know he was Houdini,” I told Dredmore, and
watched the white puff of my breath fl oat from my lips.
“Why is it so cold in here now?”
“Th at is his doing.” He eyed my grandfather. “No
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more half-truths, Ehrich. Tell her who you were before
you took possession of that Crown spy. Who you were
when Harry White led his regiment into the Bréchéliant,
and what you were when you came back out.” He waited,
but Harry said nothing, and the ticking of the great clock
by the door seemed to grow very loud. “I see. She’s good
enough to torment, to use, to manipulate, but not worthy
of the truth. Fortunately for you, Charmian is now under
my protection.”
“I beg your pardon.” I stared at him. “Your
what
?”
“Your
what
?” Harry strode forward without looking,
banged into an end table, and caught it before it
toppled. When he took his hand from it he left an icy
print of his palm and fi ngers. “Your father may have
wanted recompense for being taken. Like the others,
Jack deserved it. But his battle was never yours. You
can bloody well do as you like, but you won’t drag my
granddaughter into it.”
“She’s in it to her ears.” Dredmore was sneering
now. “You had your chance to do right by her, Ehrich.
More than a thousand of them, I should think. But you
sacrifi ced her, and her mother, and her grandmother on
the altar of Queen and country and your own pathetic
schemes.”
“So now you’ll cut her throat?” Harry’s eyes took on a
strange purple glow. “I will end you fi rst, boy.”
Th e mention of murder made it high time for me to
intervene. “Whatever quarrel you two have with each
other, it’s nothing to do with me. Lucien, I can look after
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myself, so stuff your protection. Harry, I’m not interested in carrying on whatever feud you have with Dredmore or
his father.” I remembered Hedger’s strange reaction to
learning that Harry was my grandfather. “Is there anyone
who likes you?”
“His name isn’t—” that was all my grandfather got out
before Lucien stepped between us. His broad back kept
me from seeing what he did, but his back muscles shifted,
and then Harry abruptly vanished.
“What did you do?” I asked, shuffl ing back a few steps.
“I banished him back to the netherside.” Dredmore
turned to face me. “As long as you are with me, he cannot
manifest or meddle with you.”
“Harry’s never meddled.” When he would have come
closer I went round behind the chair. “You, on the other
hand, have infl icted an excessive amount of damage to my
reputation, my person, and my life.”
He didn’t like that. “How have I harmed you,
Charmian? By wanting you? By taking what you freely
off ered me? Or by trying to shield you from Walsh and
dark forces that you cannot even begin to fathom?” He
extended his arms in a helpless fashion. “Please, enlighten
me as to which it was.”
I did. “You abducted me and held me prisoner against
my will. You raced about assassinating snuff mages, never
mind that I might be blamed for the murders. Oh, and
you also agreed to kill
me
for twenty thousand pounds.”
“I took that fool’s money to give to you,” he shouted.
“It was to help you settle into a new life—”
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“After I left Toriana with you for some secluded
lovers’ nest overseas,” I tacked on. “Where I could nightly
entertain you until you tired of me? I’d rather work for
Rina.”
“You might as well.” He turned away. “I’ve tired of
you already.”
Th at stung, more than I cared to admit. “Problem
solved, then.”
I came round and sat in the armchair. “Before I’m
forced to leave the country and fl ee for my life, perhaps
you should tell me about this thing between you and
Harry. Start with how you’re able to see his specter,
and exactly how you sent him off .” I was particularly
interested in the latter so that I might do the same if
Harry became troublesome.
Dredmore went to the overly large secretary and
opened the upper cabinet, sliding aside a panel. “He’s not
a specter. He’s a manifesting spirit.”
“Th ere’s a diff erence?” I frowned as he shifted and
I saw the rows of switches that the panel had hidden.
“What’s that for?”
Dredmore put his thumb beneath one switch and
glanced back at me. “You.” He fl ipped the switch.
Two velvet-covered bars shot out from the ends of
my chair’s arms, bending at hidden joints and locking
together at the ends. Before I could get to my feet,
they retracted, shoving me back against the cushions. A
smaller pair of bars swung out beneath my skirts and did
the same, trapping my ankles in place. When I pushed at
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the bars locked across my waist, two cuff s popped out of
them and snapped round my wrists.
“Don’t bother struggling,” Dredmore told me. “You
haven’t the strength.”
I tried but I couldn’t budge the chair’s automatic
manacles. I’d never heard of such mech, but Dredmore
could aff ord things other mortals could only have
nightmares about.
I looked up at him. “When you’re fi nished,” I said
pleasantly, “you’d better plan to sleep with one eye open
for the rest of your bleeding life.”
“Th at I do already, Charmian.” He turned his
attention to the panel, and I heard doors being bolted
and window latches fastening, and then a white-painted
board descended from the ceiling.
I had nothing to do but wait and plot his slow, painful
death, but still I jumped when the table beside me
sprouted a complicated pile of gears, pulleys, and lenses.
“Is it a torture device?” I asked, wondering if he meant
to feed my hands to it.
“It is called an illuminator. Let’s hope it lives up to its
name.” He left the secretary, going round to all the lamps
and turning them down until the room became shrouded
in darkness. He pulled the chair to the other side of the
table machine, and popped a matchit.
Th e bizarre rituals confused me, but the matchit
didn’t. Surely he wouldn’t set me on fi re, trapped as I was.
“Lucien, perhaps I’ve been too harsh. You and I should