Authors: Kristen Callihan
Tags: #Fiction / Romance / Historical / Victorian, #Fiction / Romance - Paranormal, #Fiction / Fantasy / Urban, #Fiction / Fantasy - Paranormal, #Fiction / Science Fiction - Steampunk, #Fiction / Romance - Fantasy
Discussion of a GIM’s heart was akin to asking another supernatural what sort of knickers she wore, and everyone in the room understood as much. As for Mary, she refused to look at Talent. True, it was simply her heart Holly had referred to, but it did not quell the feeling that part of her had been mercilessly exposed.
“That is to say,” Holly began awkwardly, “I merely meant…”
“Let us not try to step around the elephant in the room,” Mary said with a small smile in her voice. “Say what you need to say and do not worry about my tender sensibilities.”
Talent moved near, his big body sending a shadow over her as he blocked out one of the electric lights. “Get on with it, Evernight.”
Holly went back to her examination. “This one here”—she pointed to the heart taken from the massive crawler whose identity remained unknown—“is quite interesting.
It is close in design to those of the GIM in that one cannot detect a single weld mark and the gears are of a similar style.”
Mary did not want to know how or when Holly had had the chance to inspect GIM hearts.
“However,” said Holly, “unlike the golden heart of the GIM, the material used is an outdated blend of iron.” She picked up a scalpel and scraped along the outer edge of the heart. With her free hand, she pulled on a pair of massive goggles and peered at the fillings. “Yes, you can see it quite well here.”
Talent gave Mary a look clearly stating he’d take Holly’s word on that account. Mary bit the bottom of her lip to keep from smiling back.
Holly lifted her goggles and frowned a bit as she studied the hearts lying side by side.
“Go on, Mistress Evernight,” Talent said, knowing, as most regulators who consulted with Holly did, that she had a propensity for drifting off in mid-thought. “In broad terms, if you please.”
A reluctant amusement glinted in Holly’s eyes. “Very well. The older heart is not as efficient. It is bigger, the gears clumsy and not well designed.” She gestured to the hearts upon her table. “Just look at them side by side. Even a novice should be able to see the difference.”
Mary studied the hearts. “I wonder.… Hmm.”
“Out with it, Chase.” Talent’s hard features were even more so than usual, and she knew suddenly that he wanted to be out and about, searching. A restless soul.
“It simply struck me that, while the older crawler very well could be one of Adam’s early experiments, Mr. Pierce is not. He possesses a GIM heart, yes, but if he were a true GIM, he would not be… well, a veritable physical mess.”
Holly grinned wide. “My thoughts as well. See there.” Her thin, pale finger pointed to the golden GIM heart that had found its way into Mr. Pierce. A thick weld mark ran down the curve along what would be the left ventricle. “It has been repaired.”
A jolt of understanding, and dark dread, went through Mary. “There is a saying, that one must possess a GIM’s soul to possess a GIM’s heart.” She glanced at both Talent and Holly. “If you try to take our heart without earning our soul, our heart will break.”
“Pretty words,” murmured Talent. “But it sounds as though you are suggesting this is more than a bit of poetic fluff.”
“That is exactly what I am suggesting, Master Talent.” She studied the broken heart. “To my knowledge, no one has ever tried to steal a GIM heart until now. Perhaps the heart truly did crack upon theft. In some ways it makes sense. Adam gave us a clockwork heart so that he might control us. I can well imagine him placing that sort of proprietary restriction upon the device.” Mary looked at Holly. “Would the break, and subsequent weld, affect function?”
Holly bent close to the heart, gingerly turning it this way and that. “Given the precision of the design, I should think it highly likely that the break would hinder performance.”
Talent grunted, then tapped his chin with one long finger. “Tell me more about Adam and these crawlers, Chase.”
“There isn’t much in the way of hard facts. These are stories. Before now, I cannot recall anyone having actually seen a crawler. But it is said that they were the very first beings Adam created. Unlike with the GIM, there
were no souls waiting to find a new home or for extended life.” Her lips pressed together as a bitter taste flooded her mouth. “It is said that he simply found a dead body and tried to revive it.”
She glance at a horrified Holly and a grim-faced Talent. “Of course the results were disastrous, as the body was nothing more than a mindless machine.” Mary stared at the hearts. “So he found souls to place in them. That too was a failure because the damage was already done to the body.” She grimaced. “If the brain has started to decay, then the body is not a good candidate.”
In the silence she risked a look, not at Talent, but toward Holly. “Now, I do not know if part of his failure was also because the bodies he used for the first ones were demonic, not human. Lore says that demons, shifters, and lycans cannot be turned into GIM as their bodies do not accept the invasion of metal within their systems.”
Holly glanced in the direction of where the bodies lay covered with a shroud. “Pierce was a shifter. And the other one, his eyes appear black now. A demon?”
“Looks like it.” Talent turned to Mary. “So Adam turned his focus on fresh human bodies. Irreverent bloke, isn’t he? I’m surprised his primus brethren didn’t come after him for such offenses.”
“Perhaps they tried. All I know is that eventually Adam learned to use more of his magic. Now when he creates a GIM, the heart, our revived health, all of it, occurs with a touch of his hand.”
Talent stared down at the two clockwork hearts. “At the risk of jumping to conclusions, someone else appears to be trying their hand at creation.”
P
oppy Lane listened to their report without moving. The past two days’ discoveries had pushed their case up to the top of Mother’s priorities, and Poppy called them into her office as soon as they’d finished with Holly. She reclined in her desk chair, her booted feet propped upon the desk, her pale fingers tented beneath her chin. Two years ago, before going off to battle a demon, she’d hacked off her hair. An act that, Mary knew, had left Inspector Lane nearly in tears. Now Mrs. Lane’s growing hair was swept back in a severe, if sparse, bun, leaving her clean profile stark against the dark walls of her office.
“I heard from Lucien this morning,” Mary said. “He remembers releasing one Eugenia White from her contract with the GIM in 1844. She’s had ample opportunity to make a slave pact with someone.” Mary glanced at Talent. He’d been relatively quiet, forgoing even his usual snide remarks. “I gather you found nothing further, Master Talent?”
He stirred, as if the whole business bored him. “No.
The only significant difference in the crime is the obvious: it was not Pierce but a raptor demon posing as Pierce.”
“Why turn Pierce into a crawler?” Mary asked. “If his blood is so valuable? Why kill the raptor disguised as Pierce, for that matter? When all it served to do was alert us to the abduction?”
Talent’s eyes narrowed as if he was annoyed at her question. “We cannot yet say with any authority that whoever killed the raptor also made Pierce a crawler.” The muscle along his jaw bunched. “You do realize that Pierce might have been sold on the black market for experiments.”
On that pleasant thought, the room fell silent.
“I do not know if it is of any significance,” said Mary, “but we found this at the scene in Trafalgar Square.” She pulled the feather out of her pocket and handed it to Mrs. Lane. Even that small contact sent a zing of power down her fingers.
Mrs. Lane’s straight brows lifted. “An angel’s feather.” She held the thing with care, touching only the very base with her fingertips. “Extraordinary.”
“Angel?” Mary took back the proffered feather and carefully tucked it away. “Are you quite sure?” An angel hadn’t been sighted in London since 1666, during the Great Fire of London. That catastrophe had apparently occurred when a fallen angel decided to set London ablaze in an attempt to cripple England during its war with the Dutch.
“Quite,” Mrs. Lane said smartly. “Can you not feel the power in it?” Her pale lips flattened. “Dark and disturbed. I would guess that particular plumage belongs to a fallen.”
“Christ,” said Talent. “That is just what we need, an incalculably strong, and likely mad, immortal to add to the mix.”
“Why do you assume mad?” Mary asked.
His expression turned cold. “The older ones usually are. And fallen are older than dirt.”
Poppy nodded in an absent sort of way. “Sometimes they are mad. And there will be times when a fallen will be standing right in front of you, and you will never know it because they appear so human.” She gave a brief, small smile. “They aren’t inclined to reveal their true nature to anyone other than one of their own kind. Nor are they inclined to mix with other immortals.”
“Someone would have seen a fallen flying about,” said Talent. “Can’t mistake something that big for a bloody bird.”
Mary almost laughed but caught herself at the last moment. “Yes, but how many people ever look up? And there is our lovely London fog to hide in, is there not?”
Poppy shook her head. “Perhaps you two are unaware of this, but a fallen can shift his appearance as well as you can. Likely even better. A person might very well see a bird when one flies overhead.” With a sigh Mrs. Lane sat back once more and idly tapped her lip with her forefinger. “So, we have an identity stolen, dead shifters and raptors, shadow crawlers running amok, and now possibly a fallen interfering. What a bloody mess.” She turned then, her dark gaze sharp and waiting. “What is the connection?”
The real question was, how was it all linked to Jack Talent? Mary might have considered him guilty of killing raptors, but to kidnap a fellow shifter? Make a shadow crawler? She couldn’t fathom it. Mercer had to have been lying to her. But why?
“It is impossible to tell,” Talent answered before Mary could. “With this shift in his pattern, it will be difficult to track the killer at the moment.”
“Not entirely,” Mrs. Lane said. “As it appears he has a new taste for shifters, we’ll have to find a way to catch him in the act.” Her legs swung down as she sat upright and pulled a sheet of paper from a file. “The list of remaining shifters,” she said, handing it to Mary. “One of whom is in America at the moment, visiting relatives.”
Mary read over the list, aware that Talent hadn’t moved to take it from her or even read the thing. “That leaves a Jonathan Deermont, tenth Earl of Darby and…” Mary trailed off as she read the name.
Mrs. Lane’s hard gaze flashed to Talent just as Mary’s did. “Master Talent,” said Mrs. Lane, finishing for her.
Mary’s blood ran cold. Was he a target? Or simply making himself the last shifter left in London? Her head throbbed.
Talent’s sneer was chilling, but a certain dark humor dwelled within his gaze. “Perhaps I should just offer myself up at Trafalgar Square and be done with it.” He did not appear to mind the prospect.
A wry smile tilted Mrs. Lane’s lips. “My sources tell me Lord Darby has arrived from Hampshire this afternoon. We shall make arrangements to watch him. After that, we’ll see if you need to be offered up for bait.”
Holly Evernight loved her job. It was what she’d been born to do. Inventing was in her blood: from her grandfather Eamon to her cousins, the Evernights viewed the world differently. Possibility. Potential. Life was filled with them. One did not look at a gun and ask, How do I refine it? One looked at a gun and asked, How do I make it extraordinary? A thing was not defined by its limits, but by its potential to reach beyond them. Holly often thought people would do well to subscribe to the same practice
and reach beyond society’s expectations. Which was precisely why she loved the SOS, for it never set limits.
Yet even the most dedicated worker must at some point rest. A fact Holly could concede a few hours after her meeting with Mary and Talent. She rubbed her dry eyes and set down her propelling pencil. The design she worked on wavered before her, a sure sign to call it a day. Or night rather. The lofty space of her workshop was quiet and still, wide shafts of blue moonlight pouring in clean lines through the big windows. For a moment she simply stared at the geometric grid the moonbeams made upon the marble floor, then shook herself out of the trance.
Cleanup took but a moment. Locking away her drafts, Holly moved on limbs that had gone as stiff as cooled India rubber. Outside, in the main halls of the SOS, regulators drifted around. Their natural, free-flowing conversations pinged like brittle tin against Holly’s ears. She was not accustomed to social interaction. Indeed, it drained her and took time away from better things, such as the next invention. But she tried to offer a smile in return for the ones given her.
Heading toward the tunnels and the way out, Holly came to a halt when the massive iron doors swung open, and a pair of fellows came in pushing a trolley between them. Beneath a black pall was the lumpy form of a body. One man caught her gaze, and his hooded eyes lowered as if he hadn’t the right to look at her. It was a ridiculous notion but one that baggers tended to stick to, for few of their colleagues wanted anything to do with them.
Baggers had the inglorious job of prowling the streets for bodies. Should they find any of a supernatural nature, they picked them up and brought them in for inspection and disposal. A grim bunch. Regardless, Holly understood
death as a natural progression of life. And so she gave the man a decided nod. “Good morning, Mr. Kane. Or evening rather.” Her smile felt awkward. “I tend to muddle the time.”
His black brows lifted a fraction, but he nodded back. “Mistress Evernight.” His voice was a deep burr, rough as broken glass, but welcoming enough. Not that he paused. He and his partner, a stocky fellow whose name eluded her at the moment, walked on, his partner giving her the side eye as if he wondered over her sanity because she had talked to them. But he nodded as well and gave a curt “Miss.”
Holly, however, caught the distinct acrid scent of an electrical fire. That it was mixed with the unfortunate aroma of roasted flesh did not stop her from stepping forward. “A moment, gentlemen.”
They paused, the large Mr. Kane lifting those thick brows of his once again. But he did not speak.
“Has this poor person been burned by electrical shock?”
Now his partner joined him in raised brows. “It isn’t anything you’ll be wanting to see, miss.”
“I gather not,” she agreed. “However, as my current specialty is electrical devices, I may be asked to give my opinion regardless.” She motioned to the body. “If I could take a look.”
The man bristled but Kane lifted back the pall. The sight was gruesome. Melted flesh, black singed clothes, and a gaping hole where the fellow’s chest ought to be. Most definitely death by electrical shock. Holly swallowed sharply, then leaned closer. There in that bloody, gory cavity were the remnants of metal. “He was a GIM,” she said, peering at the network of finely wrought valves that were attached to the various arteries and veins.
The sheet flicked back over the body, and Holly gave a start. Coal-black eyes met hers. “As you say, miss,” Kane murmured before pushing off without so much as a by-your-leave. Holly stared after the silent pair, the squeaking wheels of the trolley echoing in the dim space. With a suppressed sigh, she left for the tunnels.
Outside, the air was icy and sharp, and she sucked in a good lungful, trying to refresh her sluggish brain. To her right lay the Palace of Westminster, looming so high and proud that it blocked the moon. Coaches rattled by, and the sounds of the city filled the void. Holly moved toward the hack stand where an SOS guard stood in disguise, his job to keep watch over all comings and goings from this particularly busy entrance. But before she could take another step, something slammed into her, and a hard hand clamped over her mouth.
Holly had no time to swing a fist before she was dragged back into the shadows. She thought she heard someone shout her name, but the sound was muffled. From the periphery came a glimpse of pale hair and the flashing of green eyes. The hand pressed so hard that tears prickled her eyes, just as a pinch at her neck sent a jolt of pain and the welcoming oblivion of darkness.