Mina Wentworth and the Invisible City (5 page)

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Authors: Meljean Brook

Tags: #Romance, #Paranormal steampunk romance, #Paranormal, #Fiction

BOOK: Mina Wentworth and the Invisible City
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The path of crushed grass led to the garden gate set into the rear wall. Mina tugged on the handle, and it opened easily. Arching her brows, she looked back at him. “It only locks from the inside.”

“So someone unlocked it to let the wheel in,” Rhys said.

“We’ll find out if the household was diligent about locking the gate, but yes. Perhaps someone even opened it for them—though I don’t see any footprints in this area. It might have been unlocked earlier, in anticipation. Redditch regularly walked in his gardens; they knew he’d be out here eventually.” She bent to examine the face of the wooden gate. “There are no scratches, nothing that tells me a giant wheel pushed it open—and if it runs on a track as the impression in the grass suggests, it would at least be scraped. Come, let’s see how far we can follow it.”

Not far. The track remained clear in the dust of the alley between the garden wall and the mews, but disappeared where the alley met the cobblestone street.

Frustration tightened her mouth. “Blast. We’ll have to ask people whether they’ve seen it.”

Rhys knew that she found eyewitness testimony unreliable at best, and impossible to procure at its worst. “There are always people out at this time of night. Now that Newberry’s here, I’ll walk the streets around the square and ask if anyone saw it.”

She looked up from the tracks, studied him as if considering his offer—though by the humor tilting the corners of her eyes, he knew she’d already decided it was impossible. “And what would you do if they obviously had seen something but didn’t want to talk?”

“Drag them here by the scruff of their necks.”

Her grin lit her face, twisted straight through his gut. God, what she did to him. If there hadn’t been a dead man on the other side of the garden wall, he’d have taken advantage of the shadows and shagged her against it.

But he
wouldn’t
interfere with her work. In the space of a few minutes, he’d seen how brilliant she was at her job, at looking, at seeing. Mina was more than he’d ever deserved, but she was exactly what a good man like Redditch deserved; no investigator would work harder or do better to bring the viscount’s murderer to justice.

Mina sighed as she started back toward the garden. “This wasn’t how I intended to spend this evening.”

He hadn’t, either—but they’d get to what he’d intended later. “Neither did Redditch,” he said dryly.

His reply brought a quick smile to her lips. It was gone by the time they returned through the gate. A head taller than the butler and twice as wide, Newberry stood at the library door with Prescott. Mina waved the constable into the garden, pointing him toward the body before turning back to Rhys.

“That is all, then. I’ll be speaking with the staff, knocking on doors and asking whether any of the neighbors saw anything, trying to track down Percival Foley, then examining the body at headquarters. I don’t know how late I’ll be.”

“I’ll wait up for you,” he said.

She smiled. Her inspector’s flat stare dropped away for a moment, her gaze softening as she looked up at him. After a long, searching glance that he felt over every inch of his skin, her eyes unfocused and a frown marred her brow.

“What is it?” Whatever concerned her was a concern for him, too.

“Anne.”

“You’re worried about her reasons for staying over again?” Rhys guessed, and when she nodded, he asked, “Do you want me to stop by your parents’ house and bring her home?”

“Yes.” She closed her eyes, gave a short laugh. “But I don’t know if we should. I’m not her mother. I don’t . . . I don’t know how much I can tell her to do.”

He’d never known a mother or father, so Rhys was the last person to advise her on this. But he couldn’t deny he felt the same. He’d grown as possessive and as protective of the girl as she had.

“And at least she’s not on the streets,” Mina said, then shook her head. “But if she was, would
she
think that a problem? She’s lived years without us and done perfectly well.”

Right or wrong, he knew his feelings on this. “She might have got along perfectly well without us, but she’s ours now.”

“You
would
say that. I was doing perfectly well, too, until you came along.”

And made her his. “And now you aren’t?”

“Now I am even better, and the thought of getting along without you tears me apart.” Her hand found his, her gaze holding his just as tight. “But Anne’s not used to having a family. Perhaps she doesn’t know that because we care, because we worry, we need more than a gram that says she’s not coming home.”

Rhys wouldn’t have known that either, but he was learning. “So I’ll stop by their house and take her home.”

“No. I don’t want her to feel she’s done something
wrong
. We’ll speak with her tomorrow.” Her fingers squeezed his. “I must work now.”

He knew. But because she had not let go of his hand yet, because only Newberry was out there to see, he bent his head and kissed her on that beautiful, incredible mouth. “Be safe.”

It was as close to an order as he could give her, but more like a prayer.

“I will.”

Her promise had to be enough, because lurking over her would only drive her away. So he forced himself to walk away, past the blushing constable, and leave Mina to her work.

Chapter 3

No one whom Mina
and Newberry spoke with saw anything. The giant wheel rolling out of a rich man’s garden, through an alley, and down a well-lit street might as well have been invisible. Mina was not surprised. Everything in this city might as well have been invisible. Everyone was afraid that, eventually, something they said might come back and harm them—especially if it were about something they didn’t understand to begin with.

But as she and Newberry walked the neighborhood, and not one claimed to have seen it, Mina began to wonder whether there
had
been nothing to see. Perhaps the wheel had rolled to a nearby home or into the back of a lorry. If someone had opened the gate for the wheel, it was possible that someone had also been waiting to help it quickly escape.

Wherever the wheel had gone, they were not making any progress finding it near Portman Square. She’d return in the morning with Newberry and knock on more doors, make another round of the streets.

The corpse collectors arrived to take the viscount back to headquarters. Mina oversaw the loading of the canvas-wrapped body into the wagon before climbing into Newberry’s police cart. Prescott had found Percival Foley’s direction written on the viscount’s recent correspondence, saving Mina the effort of discovering the location of his manufactory.

“Foley’s in St. Olave, constable,” Mina said as she settled onto the cart’s rattling bench. “Let’s hope that the traffic has cleared or we’ll not see dinner before midnight.”

The color in the constable’s face deepened to a dark pink against the red of his beard. “St. Olave, sir?”

Relatively new to London, the constable hadn’t completely gotten his bearings, especially when their work took them across the Thames. It was nothing to blush about—there were many places in the London area that even Mina hadn’t visited—but one of Newberry’s charms was his tendency to redden on a blink.

“Just over London Bridge, constable,” she said, and grinned when dismay replaced the blush. Crowded with shops, vehicles, and pedestrians, the bridge was a nightmare to pass at the best of times. “Or we can cross at Trahaearn Bridge and drive east, braving the rookeries.”

Where even an armed constable and inspector might not intimidate the worst of the criminal lot, particularly at night. Many of the slums in Southwark had burned during an outbreak of fires the previous year, but they’d quickly rebuilt, tiny warlords establishing small territories.

“My flat is en route to Trahaearn Bridge, sir. I suggest that we head in that direction, beg my wife for a bit of something that we can take with us to eat, and drive on to London Bridge.”

Good man. Mina nodded her agreement and braced herself as the cart jolted forward. They made good time to his small, cozy flat on the second level of a converted mews, where Newberry’s sensible—and very pregnant—wife asked him to cut and wrap hunks of cheese, bread, and salted boiled eggs while she chatted with Mina. Newberry blushed for a record length of time after Temperance checked on his progress and complimented his skillful use of a knife, then again when she laid a farewell kiss on his cheek.

So sweet. It still surprised Mina that the prudish bounder had ever taken off his clothes long enough to make a baby, and she’d have wagered that he’d been fiery red the entire time.

Temperance was smiling as they left. Mina couldn’t help but notice how her gaze remained on Newberry until the moment the door closed. Rhys watched her in the same way when she left in the morning—Mina knew, because she always looked back for that final glimpse of him, too. But was it just love? Or more?

“Does she worry?” Mina wondered, stepping into the cart.

Newberry looked up over the bonnet, where he’d been re-lighting the cart’s gas lanterns and unlocking the tires. “Sir?”

“Does your wife worry when you’re on the job?”

“Yes.” The cart’s frame creaked as he took his seat. “Some days worse than others, but she always worries a little.”

Even though he was a giant of a man—strong, sensible, and armed with opium darts and guns—that wouldn’t matter, she knew. The first week that Newberry had been paired with Mina, shrapnel from an exploding boiler had almost gutted him as they’d chased down a suspect. How could Temperance
not
worry after that? If it had been Rhys, Mina would have worried, too.

“Is there anything you do to make it easier for her?”

“Yes, sir,” Newberry said. “I keep coming home.”

And Mina would continue returning home to Rhys. She nodded, gestured for Newberry to start for London Bridge. The noise of the cart forced them to shout when they spoke, but Mina didn’t attempt any conversation. She mulled over the viscount’s murder as she ate, reviewing the staff’s statements, looking for inconsistencies in their accounts. She didn’t find any. Hopefully her interview with Foley would give her more to go on.

The bridge was the usual tangle of vehicles, with urchins darting in front of the cart and forcing them to a stop, peddlers closing in from the side when they did, and the stench of the Thames perfuming it all. Newberry made it over without swearing once—that Mina heard, at any rate. Once past, they waited on the Borough until traffic to the bridge lightened enough for the cart to cross onto Tooley, where Mina had Newberry slow again so that she could study the buildings they passed. Though untouched by the slum fires of the previous year, most were in sorry shape, stone crumbling and boards rotted, almost every window broken. In the dark, the numbers were impossible to read, but a few of the structures were more recognizable than others.

A peaked roof on the northern side of the street gave Mina her bearings. “There’s the old church! Turn right up here.”

A rutted lane led up Church Yard Alley. A few lights flickered in the windows of the one-level rows of houses they passed. Men and women sat on doorsteps, sharing opium pipes—most of them laborers in the stockyard meat market, judging by the cleavers and bone saws attached to their arms. A wrinkled woman with a boisterous laugh and her lower legs grafted to a rolling peddler’s cart shouted an offer to exchange her tires for theirs. Mina grinned and shook her head, and as soon as they were past, reminded Newberry to double-lock the wheels when they arrived at Foley’s factory.

Set in the yard of an old school, the spark-lighter manufactory took up one wing of the building, with a tin-roofed warehouse attached to the far end. Gray smoke rose from columned chimneys. The windows had been boarded over, with slits of light peeking through. Like most factories in the London area, Foley’s laborers worked in two ten-hour shifts, from four in the morning until midnight.

Inside, the work floor was more brightly lit than most Mina had been in, but just as hot. Tired-eyed women and children sat on benches in front of long tables, mechanically assembling igniter heads to the wick tubes and tossing the finished lighters into crates. Most of the women had stripped down to chemises, clinging and transparent with sweat. At a nearby station, a thin-chested man with hydraulic hammers at his wrists pounded wires flat against a steel table. Sparks flew as metal sheets were cut into thin strips, and a rotten, garlicky odor hung over the room.

“It’s the phosphorus,” Mina said when she saw Newberry’s hard swallow, and nodded to the far end of the work floor, where women wearing gloves and goggles dipped igniter wires into large vats. Open windows at the back and exhaust fans dissipated most of the fumes, preventing them from reaching combustible levels, but the smell still permeated everything in the factory.

Though the work never stopped and most of the laborers hadn’t been chatting, a hush seemed to fall over the floor as they noticed Mina. Not just because she’d been in the newssheets, obviously—one woman turned and spit on the floor. Saving the Iron Duke didn’t overcome the taint of her Horde blood in everyone’s eyes, but as long as they weren’t spitting on her, Mina wasn’t interested in fighting that perception tonight.

She was only interested in a brass wheel, and the reason Foley had left Redditch’s home so abruptly. She looked to the nearest station, where a quartet of women rolled strips of tin into circles. “Where might I find Mr. Foley? Is he here?”

A young blond with scarred fingers nodded, gesturing with her chin without taking her eyes from Mina’s face. “Up that stair. He lives in the old headmaster’s quarters.”

“Has he been up there all evening?”

“No, Your Gracious—”

“Grace,”
one of the other women said under her breath.

“‘Inspector’ will do,” Mina said with a faint smile.

“He wasn’t here all evening, inspector. He left halfway through our shift and was out until . . .” She shook her head and looked to the others for help. “What time was it?”

“Half-past eight.” The gray-haired woman’s hands and arms were skeletal prosthetics, made from steel and configured like bones. Instead of using pliers to bend the metal strips, she simply pinched and rolled. “We’d just come off dinner bell and were having a nip outside when his cart came into the yard.”

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