“I’ve never known you to be so eager to review old files.” Perry preferred to leave the paperwork to either him or the clerks.
She didn’t reply. She was still staring at nothing as she strode at his side with her hands in her pockets. This wasn’t the first time he’d thought that Perry was troubled. But if he asked her, he knew he’d not get an answer. Best thing to do was wait her out, much as he hated it.
Garrett glanced down, avoiding a wooden crate and the small boy curled up beside it. He absently flicked some chink toward the lad, who plucked the shilling out of the air in surprise. Nothing else he could damned well do to help the children littering the streets. For a moment his expression darkened and he shot a look toward the gleaming Ivory Tower that soared over London, home to the blue bloods and, most important, the prince consort and his puppet queen.
The crowd parted around them, men and women alike shooting them blank-faced stares. Nighthawks weren’t as hated as the blue bloods of the Echelon, but they were still the law. For the humans that lived in this borough, they were little better than the pox. Recent riots had fueled the tension, and martial law had only recently been lifted. The prince consort might have crushed the spirit of the people for the moment, but Garrett had the vague sensation of thunder brewing in the distance.
He’d always felt safe before, but for some reason the hairs along the back of his neck were standing on end. This was more than the rumble of discontent among the human classes.
He knew that feeling.
The type of feeling he’d always had when he worked the streets as a lad. As if someone was watching them.
Placing a hand in the small of Perry’s back, he directed her around a barrow boy.
“I thought you weren’t going to touch me.”
“I think we’ve got eyes on our tail,” he replied. “Pretend you see something in the window that you’re interested in.”
The street was narrow, edged by several pubs and shops. With the afternoon light fading, the streetlamps were few and far between and wouldn’t be lit by the lamplighter until later. Perry arched a dubious brow, then turned, dutifully pointing something out to him.
“A butcher,” she murmured. A full pig carcass hung in the window and the butcher glanced up at their interest, his hands swiftly wrapping a piece of meat in waxed paper. “And they call us barbaric with our thirst for blood.”
“See anything?”
A quick glance. “Dozens of people. It’s late afternoon, Garrett. Are you certain you’re not simply—”
“Five quid we’re being followed,” he countered.
She rarely took his bets. He always won. Perry’s lips thinned. “Fine. Let’s draw them out, whoever they are.”
As she turned to separate, he caught her arm above the elbow, a fierce flash of heat spiraling through him. “No.”
Perry twisted, throwing him off with a dark glare. “Don’t,” she warned.
“Perry.” He caught up to her, the street vanishing into a chiaroscuro landscape. The idea of watching her walk away from him into potential danger was more than he could bear, particularly following the incident at the factory. “I’m not going to let you—”
A distressed sound echoed in her throat. Garrett looked down in surprise.
“Don’t hold me back,” she whispered. “I know what happened at the factory. I know how poorly I reacted. I promise I won’t do it again. I’ll hold myself together. I can
do
this.”
She was thinking he didn’t believe her capable? “I don’t give a damn about that.” One look at her showed she didn’t believe him.
Bloody
hell
. “Fine. Separate. Let’s play a little cat and mouse. You draw him. I’ll double back and see if I can get a line on him.”
At least if he sent her ahead through the streets, she’d be a little safer and he could keep an eye on her. Garrett slipped the small aural communicator from his pocket and clipped the brass clockwork piece in his ear, insisting she do the same with hers.
They separated, making a great show of her being interested in something farther down the street. Garrett shook his head, shoved his hands in his pockets, and stalked up one of the alleys, snapping his fingers to catch the attention of several sprawling youths as though to question them.
He gave her two minutes, feeling the tick of every second. Then he shimmied up one of the old rusted ladders attached to the building beside him until he stood on the rooftop, with its excellent vantage point.
She was gone.
Not something that should concern him, as she could move quickly when she wished, but the knot of dread in his stomach wouldn’t relax. Garrett traced over the rooftops. Laborers were beginning the long trudge home and the streets bustled with activity, hawkers crying out their wares.
“Lovely bit o’ mutton!”
“Some flowers for your lass? Buy her favors! Pretty daisies! Or perhaps some violets?”
And there… The lean figure striding up the center of Abagnale Street. No sign of anyone paying her undue attention. Except…a tall man with his bowler hat pulled low over his eyes. Garrett couldn’t see the front of him, but the man stopped as she did, pretending to examine the nearest barrow, and then continued on as soon as Perry started walking again.
What were the chances that the man following her sported an almost Prussian beard?
“Got him,” Garrett murmured, knowing that she’d hear him through the aural communicator. “Thirty paces behind you. I think it’s Sykes.”
Even through the earpiece he could hear her intake of breath. “I’ll play lure then.”
Lure
. His pace quickened, knowing she’d try to tempt the stranger out of the crowd. Which meant somewhere isolated.
The next corner she took, she strolled left.
“Perry, I can’t see you,” he snapped. “Get back on the main street.”
“Is he following?”
Garrett risked a look. “Yes, damn it. Don’t make any more turns. I’m coming.” He began to run, skating over the roof tiles and leaping between houses. He was breathless by the time he reached the street she’d turned down, though not from exertion.
No sign of her. “Where are you?”
“Third alley,” she murmured quietly. Which meant she didn’t want others to hear her.
Sound crashed through the device in his ear. Garrett winced and clapped a hand over the brass piece. “Perry?”
No answer. Just another jarring sound. An almost feminine grunt, as if she’d been hit. “Got him!”
Garrett ran.
Hitting the edge of the roof, he leaped out into the air, landing with a thud in the alley below. Perry was grappling with the man. She hit him in the throat with an open chop of the hand, and the moment he staggered backward, she spun and kicked him in the face. The man stumbled.
That’s right, you bastard. No easy prey here
.
The moment the stranger saw Garrett, he took off, fists pumping at his sides as he pounded down the narrow reaches. Pitted brickwork lined the alley, full of shadows.
“Got him!” Perry darted after him.
“No!” Damn her! Garrett went after her.
It wasn’t enough. The stranger ran directly at the brick wall at the end of the alley, then hit the ground in a slide, feet first. There was a small, timber door in the wall, probably an entrance into a cellar somewhere. The stranger hit it and vanished into the darkness as it splintered.
Perry sped up.
“Don’t you dare!”
She hit the ground in a slide, her coattails splashing through a puddle of icy mud. Garrett lunged forward, snatching her by the arms as her legs and hips disappeared inside the small opening.
He yanked her back, jerking her legs out of the way. A second later a large meat hook bit into the dirt from within. Garrett caught a glimpse of a pair of dark, rabid eyes and then the man was gone.
“What the hell is wrong with you?” he roared. “We don’t know what’s down there!”
Perry scrambled to her feet, brushing off her coat. Her face had paled. “An onion cellar, by the smell of it.”
Immediately he knew he’d taken the wrong tone with her, but she was going to be the death of him. “You didn’t know that. And you could have ended up gutted.”
“I’d heal,” she snapped. “And he’s getting away.”
She shoved open the door of the building, revealing a small home with a pair of startled women looking up from the hearth. One of them pointed toward the window at the back, her hand clapped to her chest. “He…he went through there.”
Out into the other alley. Garrett staggered to a halt in the empty confines, cursing under his breath. “Can you smell him?”
“Nothing but bloody onions.” Perry exchanged a wary glance with him. “He has no personal scent.”
A blue blood, then. Although from the speed he’d moved at, that was already certain.
“His clothes?” Garrett asked, for she could often track a man to within ten inches of his home.
“Laundered recently. Damn it. This whole area smells like tar. I can’t get anything else!” She kicked a crate, sending a cat flying from its midst, which startled the pair of them. “It had to be Sykes. He must have seen us at his home.”
Bending over, Garrett caught his breath. Now that he had a moment, anger started to burn. “You nearly got yourself hurt. What the hell were you thinking?”
That put her back up. “I was thinking that this could be the bastard who cut those poor girls’ hearts out!” There was a strange quiver in her voice. “I need to find him, and this was the best chance we had.”
“Find him! Not get yourself killed! You’re a blue blood, damn it, but you’re not invincible!”
“Would you have stopped Byrnes?” she snapped. “I’m just as good as he is!”
“You don’t have to prove that to me.”
“Maybe I’m not proving it to you! Maybe it’s for me?” There was a flash of wild eyes. Frightened eyes. Swiftly masked. “Forget I said such a thing.”
Like
hell.
He grabbed her arm. “What’s this all about? You’ve more than proved your worth over the years.” Sudden understanding made his grip tighten. “This is about the factory, isn’t it?”
Perry struggled. “It’s…not just the factory.”
“Yes, it is,” he said. “You think you have something to prove to yourself.” She looked up. The depth of emotion in her eyes almost drowned him but Garrett steeled himself. “You’re off the case.”
“
What?
”
“If you’re not thinking clearly, then you’re a danger to yourself.” He dragged his arm out of the way as she reached for him. “No. I mean it, Perry.”
Her jaw dropped open. “You son of a bitch. Don’t you dare.”
“Desk duty. For three days. Until you can prove to me that you can keep a calm head.”
“You can shove that—”
“Don’t make it a week,” he warned.
“If you’re doing this because of what’s happening between us—”
“I’m doing this because you were reckless,” he snapped back.
Perry’s mouth worked, her eyes flashing mutinously. Pressing her lips together over some rather choice words, he imagined. “As you wish, sir.” Biting the words out. “And now we’ve lost him. He’ll be miles away or gone to ground.”
Better that than to risk her life. His nostrils flared. He could, in part, understand her frustration. “Time to return to the guild and discover if Byrnes has had any more luck with Ava. And you could definitely do with a bath.” He glanced down at her muddy boots and leggings. “If Doyle doesn’t dunk you in the water trough outside before he lets you on his precious carpets.”
He didn’t say anything else. He wasn’t sure if he trusted himself not to make the situation worse.
And he wasn’t completely certain if she wasn’t correct in his reasons for doing this.
***
It was a long trip back, using trains and omnibuses the way they used to before he’d been promoted. Perry rubbed at her eyes as Garrett opened the front door to the guild. What a long, confusing day, capped off by that horrendous chase. She could smell the rot of the streets clinging to her boots and clothes and, worse, to her skin. All for nothing. The bastard had gotten away, and now Garrett was going to put her behind a desk for the next three days. He’d keep her there the whole time too, just to prove his point.
Had she been reckless? Perry stepped under his arm, deliberately ignoring him as he held the door for her. The moment she’d seen the stranger following her, a white light seemed to go off in her head. If she’d stopped and thought about it, she’d have talked herself out of giving chase into the cellar, but not because of the risk.
Because she was frightened.
There. She’d admitted it to herself.
Doubt gnawed at her from within. All she could see was that laboratory again. Screaming, pounding at the walls, lost in the dark… Unable to breathe. Her vision narrowing down to a tiny pinhole and numbness tingling in her lips.
No matter how strong she’d made herself, how many ways she knew how to kill a man, the moment her past reared its ugly head, she became nothing more than a quivering mess.
“There you are!” Doyle barreled through the foyer, his face flushed and angry. “I’ve ’ad lads out searchin’ for you for ’ours. You oughtn’t be traipsin’ the streets like you used to.”
Perry was brushed aside as the old man clucked and cooed over Garrett. She shook off her maudlin thoughts. Time for that later. She had to focus again. Prove to Garrett that she wasn’t a risk to herself.
“You’ve a visitor.” Doyle slipped Garrett’s coat off his shoulders.
Perry flung off her muddy gloves and raked her hair out of her eyes. She needed a cheroot and a glassful of blood with a heavy dash of whiskey in it. Then those case files.
But first… She met Garrett’s eyes. “I owe you an apology.”
Surprise lit his features. Followed by wariness. He crossed his arms over his chest. “I’m listening.”
“You were right. I should have thought about it first. It was reckless.” Her cheeks burned. “And it did have something to do with what happened at the factory.”
“Apology accepted.” Garrett took the small tumbler of blood that Doyle passed him. “We’ll discuss it later in more detail. You’re still on desk duty for three days, however.”
Doyle looked her up and down, eyeing the small trail of mud she was leaving on the rugs. Trying to pretend he wasn’t as curious as hell about that little encounter. He gossiped like an old woman.