The Fatal Flame (36 page)

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Authors: Lyndsay Faye

BOOK: The Fatal Flame
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We followed the incendiary into the sky.

When I set foot on the roof of the soaring town house, I lost my breath a bit. The stars were out, securing the sky high above us with diamond-tipped pins. A prettily worked fence bordered the rooftop, and along its edges wrought-iron benches had been placed facing outward at intervals. Currently they looked down on the orgiastic election-day carousal below. Shouts and guffaws and the popping of firecrackers reached our ears from every direction save for the back area of the mansion. It was the one unique aspect of a painfully blank dwelling, and I couldn’t lie to myself.

It was marvelous.

Spread out around us like a feast, Manhattan glowed. Tiny points of light beginning around Thirtieth Street and stretching all the way to the Battery. I could see the grand stripe of Broadway, the stately progression of Fifth Avenue, could see clear across the river to the dark forests of New Jersey, and when I turned, there were the distant winking beacons along Brooklyn’s bustling shoreline. For once the air was clear, and we were too high above the cobbles to see the filth in the cracks. I’ve never liked New York. It’s too hard to survive here. But for about seven seconds that night, I adored it. Its power and its scope.

“Welcome to my humble sanctuary!” Symmes said, spreading his arms wide with his back to us.

That’s when it hit me.

The man was a special breed of insane. It takes a certain sort of vanity to grow so very fond of oneself that one cannot imagine losing the game. He’d already thumbed his nose at Tammany in his relentless quest for wealth. He’d already grown so addicted to godlike destruction that he preferred torching his own properties to collecting the rent. But Tammany is dangerous. So is Silkie Marsh, whose stitch in the patchwork I’d begun to guess at in Chief Matsell’s office.

So too is Valentine Wilde, who stood watching Symmes ignore him with a sort of placid wrath.

“‘Humble’ isn’t the word I’d have picked,” Val suggested.

“No, you’d have picked a coarser one.” Symmes gave a small shrug of one shoulder.

“I might have, at that. What were you planning on proposing to me, Symmes?”

I could see the clench of disgust grip Symmes’s back despite being twenty feet distant. He pivoted, blue eyes frosted with the sort of juvenile choler I’d only ever before witnessed in kinchin who’d been smacked. Say what you will about Silkie Marsh—she’s an adult, and a formidable one.

“You will refer to me as Alderman Symmes until such time as I am no longer your alderman, which is a faraway dream of yours,” Symmes snarled.

Valentine smiled, the one that trickles snowmelt down a man’s neck. “I’ll decline that offer, seeing as I’ve never knowingly taken orders from a pimp, thanks all the same.”

He’s speaking flash to me and regular American to Symmes,
I realized.
Two conversations simultaneously, half everyday language and half unabashed code.

Which is what flash was created for,
I reminded myself, settling into my role.

“Refrain from crude libel, if you please, Captain. These negative electioneering slogans grow so tedious,” Symmes requested with a soft smirk.

“I could ask the same of you, or didn’t you tell Drake Todd and Archie Vanderpool I’d not so much as piss on your buildings if they were on fire?”

“Oh, yes, that was me. And the
least
I can do to your reputation, I assure you.”

“Do you figure it would be much to your credit if Ward Eight knew you for an incendiary? Or didn’t you torch your own slums?”

Jesus Christ, what have you done?
I thought, edging closer.

Sighing, Symmes took a sip of brandy, swirling the glass. “Your rather stupid brother has been talking with his new arrest, I take it. What did Sally Woods tell you, Mr. Wilde? That I’m a very bad man and must pay for it? If I’d known how much trouble that wench would cause, I would never have allowed her to tempt me into bed.”

Val shot me a look.

“She was his peculiar,” I owned, identifying her as the alderman’s mistress, “though she savvies now he was naught but a rabbit-sucker—”

“God Almighty, how difficult is it for you cretins?
Speak English!
” Symmes cried.

He smashed the snifter against the rooftop. Fine crystal shattered into a jagged spill of mirrored stars. Symmes surveyed the mess and widened his stance as if actually proud of the act.

Valentine sipped at his own expensive spirits, not the slightest bit put off over this infantile display. “Just what did you do to make Miss Woods suppose you a
very bad man
?” he inquired.

No. Do
not
begin this subject now, not when . . .

“Oh, would you really like to hear about that?” Symmes chuckled. “That tart was an amusement to me at first, I’ll grant. She could suck a cock and talk female rights out of the same mouth, which only goes to show that it’s the lowest of whores who deign to touch that nonsense in the first place. In any event, she provided me some pleasurable hours and then failed to respect my position. For a while her strike amused me, but the business went too far. That merited a harsh lesson in the way the world works—as you can probably imagine, given your own circumstances.”

My brother tilted his head, justly puzzled.

“Valentine, measure me,” I whispered desperately, demanding he listen close. “Symmes wanted to see you caved, so instead of lioning you direct, he came out dead set against James Play—”

“I will
not
be trifled with!” The politico was practically screeching by this time, his even features distorted into a rictus of rage. “Stop speaking in ridiculous vulgarisms this
instant.
And you know perfectly well what I’m talking about, Valentine. Sally cared for nothing and no one the way she cared for that loyal little bitch Ellie Abell. So when Sally’s defiance knew no limits, after I was publicly
humiliated
in the newspapers, I sent for her lapdog.”

Val’s razor attention had fixed on me. “What has Jim to do with—”

“Meanwhile, I’ve so
very many addresses
, one of my secretaries must have made a mistake.” Symmes smiled lightly with his lips parted, a merry summer’s-day expression. “Somehow Miss Abell ended up at the Queen Mab, which as you know was once used for
quite
another purpose than manufactory concerns. I hear that something absolutely appalling happened to her there. We all missed her sunny disposition so, come the opening whistle Monday morning at New American Textiles.”

All was as I’d thought, then. Robert Symmes had delegated a rape as he delegated everything else. An arrow quivered in my heart all the same, and I drew an unconscious half step back. My brother, for his part, had gone quite still. When he’s intimidating people, he tends to employ small, repetitive movements—the swirl of his stick or the tapping of his fingers.

Not this time. He was as motionless as his own headstone.

“How long did you instruct McGlynn to keep her?” I questioned.

“Oh, only overnight, I assure you. Longer wouldn’t have served my purposes. She imagined she’d escaped him, the fool. That wasn’t the clever part, though,” Symmes crowed. “The clever part was the week
after
Miss Abell disappeared from the manufactory, when I found her cowering in a low den in Ward Six. I told her I’d heard about the truly appalling miscommunication, that I had immediately fired Ronan McGlynn upon learning his true colors. Of course, I simply requested that Mr. Gage oversee the repairs for American Textiles instead, but what she didn’t know couldn’t harm her. Then I offered her a generous bonus to pay for expenses while she recovered, as well as work without fear of sacking if she returned, even supposing she was with child. Which she was, though she lost the brat, I believe.”

The fact that I’d figured as much didn’t go far toward settling the inferno in my chest. On the contrary.

“In any case, I was
unprecedentedly
merciful with the creature, as I thought it would pay to keep her close. She proved duly grateful, naturally. Where else could a fallen woman have found employment besides a brothel? I probably saved her life. Meanwhile, I told Sally that if she ever darkened the threshold of New American or tried to see her friend again, bits of Miss Abell would be delivered to her front door.”

“What,” Valentine said in a perfect monotone that chilled me to my core, “have you done with James Playfair?”

“He’s at my ken,” I murmured. “Plenty sanguinary, but snug in kip, I promise—”

“You haven’t heard?” Symmes laughed, rocking backward on his heels. “I dipped him in hot pitch and covered him in chicken down. No wonder you haven’t dropped out of the race yet, and here I thought I’d simply miscalculated. I’d have chosen your brother here, but I needed
someone
to arrest Sally Woods since you defected. Now she’s safe behind bars, of course,” he added wistfully. “So you can expect a similar lesson in your future, Mr. Wilde. That is, unless Valentine here withdraws from the race
instantly.
Regardless of the election results.”

It would be a mistake to say that the alderman frightened me, as I was already too deeply mortified to register animal terror. But he’d
convinced
me, and entirely.

Symmes wanted a reckoning.

“Do we have him to rights—enough to see him scragged?” Valentine asked me under his breath.

I ached to say yes—that I’d collected plentiful hard evidence, enough to convict Symmes of firestarting and assault, and yes, we could watch the most despicable man of my acquaintance swing from a rope in the midday sun. But the fact is that I’d failed us utterly. Symmes had passed out filthy tasks as if they were court favors—I could make cases against Gage, McGlynn, the incendiary herself. But I couldn’t promise the alderman would hang, not when my key witnesses were a set of radical females.

Only that a jail door might shut on him—and might open again far too soon.

“I’ve close to nix,” I whispered, ears burning.

“In that case, mizzle,” Val directed me steadily.

He was ordering me away. “I can’t—”

My sibling lifted his crescent-stamped chin and raised his voice, switching to plain talk. “Alderman Symmes here doesn’t want any more of your cheek while we’re about a Tammany matter. This is negotiation of terms. Be scarce before he decides to think up something uglier to do to you than he already has.”

Robert Symmes smiled and pulled out his pocket watch.

“Val—”

“I said
mizzle.
We’ve been roped, and if we’re to tap the farmer, I need privacy.”

Roped
meant that Symmes had us cornered—but
tap the farmer
was flash for
arrest the alderman.
Symmes lit a cigar and swaggered off to survey the nocturnal landscape, waiting for me to vanish. The concept of leaving turned my blood to water. But while I knew that Val would never trust a bargain made with the devil, he could trick Satan himself into a trap, which gave me a pale-edged flicker of hope. The principle tenet of my life since birth has been that my brother is cleverer than I am.

So when he insisted that I go, I headed for the door.

“Careful,” I warned.

Val winked at me. “He’ll be a lag before sunup. See you downstairs.”

It wasn’t strictly possible for Symmes to be a convicted felon prior to dawn. But if anyone could do it, I thought as I descended, liquor still singing faint arias in my bloodstream, Valentine could.

The click of the portal to the sky shutting reached my ears, and I hesitated.

It had clearly been my brother who’d closed it. So I walked along the hallway past the garret, trotting down the staircase.

I was nearly back to the parlor before I stopped with my foot on a lushly carpeted step, thinking more clearly than previous. Realizing I’d still a full brandy glass in my hand, I set it on the rug with some care.

You’re wrong,
I thought as a tidal wave of fear flooded my stomach.

No you aren’t
.

Then I was stumbling back up the endless flights like a man possessed.

Stairs, corridor. Stairs, corridor. Stairs, corridor.

Stairs, corridor.

Flying past the garret, I sailed up the final steps and threw myself at the entrance to the rooftop.

I plunged into the cooling air. All was quiet save for the squeals of the carousers far below, their drums and whistles and off-key bawdy songs. Far above New York, a few thin clouds draped themselves in languid configurations across the inky sky.

Whirling, I shouted for my brother.

Then I saw him.

Valentine had slumped to the rooftop with his back to the iron railing. Eyes closed, fingers of both hands laced tight over his knees. His tall hat was missing and his togs more disarrayed than previous—his scarlet cravat had been torn open, waistcoat buttons all but ripped away.

Numbly, I walked to join him and peered over the barrier.

The pearlescent starshine was faint, my vision blurred. But I could almost make out a broken heap of clothed bones.

Robert Symmes, lying where my brother had clearly thrown him to his death. And the glint of a wicked black pool creeping slowly outward along the stones.

22

On her chain of life is rust,

On her spirit wing is dust;

She hath let the spoiler in,

She hath mated her with sin,

She hath opened wide the door,

Crime has passed the threshold o’er. . . .

—PUBLISHED IN
THE ADVOCATE OF MORAL REFORM AND FAMILY GUARDIAN,
1852

I
STARED
AT
THE
LIFELESS
BODY
of the former alderman, my teeth fixed in a vise and my scar throbbing. Hearing in my imagination—which has always been too dynamic for my liking—the final slender shriek that must have woven itself so neatly into the cries of dead rabbits and Bowery girls, another splash of red in a savage tapestry.

I knelt on the rooftop beside my brother.

Val’s bare head was bowed almost to his knees, limbs gently trembling like the shimmer of a match. I gripped his shoulder. But he still wouldn’t look at me. He brought his right hand up to press his thumb and forefinger hard into his eyelids.

“It was . . . unfortunate that I flammed you, but . . . I didn’t want you to see that.”

My throat twisted.

“You’re disgusted anyhow, for all you didn’t watch, I know.”

Shaking my head violently because my mouth wasn’t operative proved fruitless, because Val continued, eyes still trapped beneath his fingers, “It’s fine, you’re far too square to condone what just happened, hate me all you like, but I can generally see our way clear out of a scrape, and this—”

“I’m not disgusted,” I managed to say.

He hazarded a glance at me. I’ve seen Val half dead on so many occasions that they live fossilized in my skeleton, but I’d never before seen him look frightened.

It terrified me.

“Aren’t you?” he asked.

“No.”

Valentine nodded once, as if he understood me. His eyes fell shut again, limbs relaxing fractionally as his head fell back against the iron railing.

“Fair enough. It isn’t as if it’s my first murder.”

I’m reasonably sure my heart stopped.

Val wasn’t talking about a shiv in a sawdust-strewn gambling den. My brother isn’t—wasn’t—a killer, no matter his thug proclivities. He was talking about Henry and Sarah Wilde, and an accidental fire that put our parents under the ground with the roots and the worms a very long time ago. Back when Greenwich Village was filled with brilliantly green cornfields and sheep pens and the sixteen-year-old Valentine Wilde lit a cigar in the barn.

“Of course it’s your first murder!” I cried, shocked out of my stupor.

He flinched, startled. Sliced a disbelieving look at me.

“Buggering hell, Valentine, I—of course it is, are you insane? You just killed a man who should have hanged and never would have, the worst man I’ve ever met, and we’d
never
have been safe otherwise, not in bloody Oregon would we have been safe from him. You did it for me and for Jim and for all those girls he’d have kept tormenting like a cat with a mouse, all because you knew I’d never have the balls to do the same, and now you’re sitting here and comparing that to . . .
Of course
it’s your first murder!”

“You’ve said that three times now,” Val answered in an oddly small voice.

“Well, are you
listening
?” I shouted.

He swiped his fingers over his eyes once more. “It’s . . . ah, of passable interest to me, since I’ve always thought you felt the opposite. So yes, actually, I am listen—”

One second I was kneeling paralyzed on a rooftop. The next I was crushing my brother, clinging to wreckage like a shipwreck victim, knowing that no gesture I could make would ever atone for the things we’d done to each other. But the inadequacy of gestures, I realized with his coat between my fingers, was a petty and cowardly reason not to make them in the first place. I thought of what Mercy had said, on the night she’d returned to me.

Just because I don’t know where my efforts will bleed into offense doesn’t mean I shouldn’t try them out first.

So I wrapped my arms around Val’s shoulders, which confused the blackguard, because he recoiled and then stilled and then chuckled miserably for a spell. Finally he snaked one hand up and pressed my arm. Hard.

I didn’t mind.

He sighed. “What’s that list of yours again, your tally of my shortcomings?”

“Narcotics, alcohol, bribery, violence, whoring, gambling, theft, cheating, extortion, sodomy, spying, forgery, lying, and now murder.”

“Impressive.”

“Your
first
murder. Congratulations. Do you fucking understand me? Your
very first
—”

“Jesus, my Tim, give a cove some breathing room, supposing you want to have a conversation with him. Tim. I’m serious. Timothy,
get off
before I throw you from here to Ward One.”

Settling back against the railing, I draped my wrists over my knees. Shattered glass sparkled at us from a few feet distant, looking about as broken and as glinting with a strange, unsettled hope as I felt just then. Valentine straightened one leg to the floor and pulled the other shin closer. Seeming no more prepared to move than I was.

“Turns out you’re flasher on the muscle than Robert ‘Bonecrusher’ Symmes after all,” I mentioned.

My brother laughed heartily at that, features twisting. He was right. He shouldn’t have found it funny. But then I shouldn’t have said it, so I figure we were even.

“I warned Symmes I was coming for him,” he said when the pained fit of mirth had passed. “The fight was fair.”

“I could read that in your togs. You didn’t have to tell me.”

“Yes,” he said flatly. “I did.”

We were quiet for a little.

“We should be running out the door,” I mused.

“We should be
strolling
out the door, bidding a hearty fare-thee-well to the butler, mentioning in passing that Symmes is too lushy to see straight.” Valentine pulled his cravat the rest of the way off, twining it in his fingers. “You’d make a sam-fool assassin. Timothy?”

His voice had dropped, so I listed my head in his direction. “Yes?”

“Just how bad is the . . . James Playfair business?”

“Bad. I’d have sent for you, but Jim didn’t want Symmes to stake undue claim on your attention.”

“Jim is a flouncing dunce with naught between his ears but maudlin piano concertos, the coded sentimental meaning of every sodding flower sold at Catharine Market, and inexpressibly stupid conceptions of honor.” Val wasn’t fooling anyone. His tone was equal parts fierce and fraught.

Oh, so my brother does love him,
echoed faintly in my pate.

“You’ve been looking after him?”

“Yes.” I swallowed, recalling it. “I robbed your house.”

Valentine turned to me, incredulous. “
You’re
the figner who pinched my morphine?”

“You’d have wanted to help.” Shaking my head, I muttered, “He wouldn’t let you, so I stole your morphine.”

“Tim, that’s a mighty kindness, I—oh, God, don’t tell him.” Val’s hooded green eyes flew wide in alarm. “Jim can’t know that I killed a man in cold blood, he’d never—”

“He would,” I objected. “And
you
should tell him. But
I
won’t. You . . .”

I trailed off when an explosion dazzled our vision. A little to the right of us, emanating from another rooftop. An expert lightning maker had fashioned a blazing barrage of fireworks, rockets cascading into the atmosphere and crumbling into smoke as they floated to the cobblestones. A thunderous cheer erupted from below.

The starbursts were red.

“You’re an alderman,” I said, awed. “They’ll be looking for you both.”

Val drove a distracted hand through his already madly disarranged hair. “I can’t say as I feel like making an acceptance speech.”

“Be that as it may, congratulations. Again.”

Val only chuckled, still wincing. “Did you really
vote
for me?”

“Fifteen times.”

“Oh, sod off, you unbearable little prick.”

“No, I did.”

“My God. That’s almost touching. No wonder you’re dressed like a color-blind Bowery fop.”

Lips parted on a peppery reply, my eyes drifted from the scarlet constellations, and I felt the blood drain from my face. At first I thought I must be mistaken. That there had been a sort of catch in the world’s clockwork, a fretful tic in the cogs.

Seconds later my brother saw it. He pushed to his feet with some effort, cursing.

Farther down the block and one street past us shone the merest hint of another warm glow on the wall of a town house in Greene Street, one we couldn’t have seen save for our higher vantage point. Above the hint of light, smoke trickled upward in a drowsy spiral.

“That’s Silkie Marsh’s brothel,” Val realized as I joined him at the edge of the roof. “I’ve not seen her all day. She was at none of the polling stations, none of the sprees. It wasn’t like her.”

We exchanged a look.

There it is,
I thought as the panic swooped down, flew with soft wings through my body like a bird coming home to a familiar roost.

My brother and I sprinted down the first two flights of stairs. When we’d reached the lower two, Val caught me by the jacket with a bitten out “Slow down,” and I obeyed. By the time we’d reached the foyer and the butler had entered the hall with a raised eyebrow, I’d tamed my breathing.

“Alderman Symmes managed to get a touch hockey,” Val mentioned. “He’s reflecting over his concession speech, no need to rush, but asked if in a quarter hour you’d be so kind as to bring brandy in a new snifter. Damned if the first didn’t manage to give him the slip.”

“Of course. Good night, sir,” the servant intoned.

We were walking across the street next, still walking, reining ourselves like the riders of high-strung mounts, sliding through patches of darkness and skirting half-stupefied clusters of electioneers. Avoiding yellow pools of gaslight as if they would burn us.

“Accident?” Valentine questioned.

“Not a chance.”

“Ideas, then?”

“One. Symmes found out she’d played him cross. Is there anything Madam Marsh loves more than that brothel, after all?”

“How do you mean, she played him cross?”

I pondered the nature of Symmes’s designs—the finest ways to hurt people threaded into an immaculate plot like a square of lace. And I knew, as I’d only guessed in Matsell’s office, that the overgrown child spreading havoc like a stray dog pissing on Croton pumps, all his energy channeled toward dominance, had owned such a passionate love of suffering that a single snipped thread could have unraveled the whole and left it a silken tangle.

As, indeed, had happened.

Stepping round the corner at last, we ran hell for leather in the direction of Madam Marsh’s establishment. The single building that, about a week previous, I’d been asked to protect.

“Offering you a girl to abuse that day at the Queen Mab was a pretty dense mistake, for all your hooliganism,” I pointed out. “As if someone who knew you intimately had planted a notion guaranteed to explode in Symmes’s face.”

“What are you saying?”

“I’m saying that Symmes has been Silkie Marsh’s landlord since before he was an alderman. And I’m betting that she didn’t like it.”

My suspicions weren’t based on the fact Silkie Marsh had known so much about the fire in Pell Street so quickly, or had been aware of Miss Woods’s shackled enmity. Considering her stargazers with their wide ears and her Party insiders with their wide mouths . . . Madam Marsh might as well have been the bricks in the walls, the creak of a stair just when a man supposes himself alone. All the Tammany schemers confided their machinations to her, and Symmes might have proved no exception.

No—the blindingly obvious clue was that she’d
known
that
Val would announce his candidacy that night at the Knickerbocker 21. When I thought of the transparency with which she’d first approached me at that soiree, not in the least amazed that Val of all people had defied Tammany, I could only curse myself for not having seen the vendetta being played out before my eyes.

It comes as no shock to me that Val rebelled against Robert’s leadership, for lack of a more apt term,
she’d said.

As if that weren’t enough, giving me all the story I could ever ask for, she’d said during the uncanny meeting at Tammany Hall:

It is about nothing whatsoever save for revenge, Mr. Wilde.

She’d been telling me the truth. I just hadn’t realized she’d been referring to herself.

“You’re thinking she suggested to Symmes I solve his Sally Woods problem and mentioned I’d like something unusual in the way of a bonus. Meaning Silkie didn’t want me on the incendiary case so I’d be duped after all,” Valentine said, comprehending me.

“She wanted you on the incendiary case so you’d expose her landlord and made sure to drag me into it as well, not knowing I’d been at the Queen Mab by chance. It’s almost flattering,” I panted.

“It falls a hair short.”

We stopped before her brothel, hearts pounding. Val regarded the scene before us with an expert’s canny eye. Meanwhile, my usual affliction asserted itself, my stomach shrinking into a stony pebble.

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