Charlie Barker looked abashed and quickly stood, letting his furry companion hop onto the floor. The dog’s paws clicked across the wood until he reached the carpet at my feet. He butted his head into my legs affectionately and wound around me, sniffing eagerly.
“Yes—hello, Toby. I missed you, too.” Toby had survived the incident in Gad’s Valley when his owners had not, and Charlie had not the heart to leave him. “Charlie, what on earth are you doing here? You’re a wanted man! There are posters! People talk about the Werewolf of the West End now like it’s a real thing! You’re a bona fide legend! If you had been seen . . .”
“People see what they want to see,” Charlie said, shuffling his feet. “And if they cannot see the difference between a wolf and a hound, I think perhaps they might not notice little old me. Marlowe sent a telegram. Jackaby has been keeping him abreast of new developments. He told me about the pale man—about you. There was no way I could sit in Gad’s Valley waiting for the next post to arrive telling me you were dead.”
“Charlie!” I wanted to kick him for being so rash and to kiss him for being here. There was no one I wanted closer and no one I wanted less to join me in harm’s way.
“It’s good to see you, Miss Abigail.” He smiled shyly, his deep brown eyes full of real and unapologetic relief. I gave in.
I crossed the library and wrapped myself around him. His arms were warm and strong and he smelled of cedar. Our first kiss had been a parting kiss. This one, our second, was all the more satisfying. It was like honey in hot tea.
I pulled away, breathing him in. “You shouldn’t have come,” I sighed.
“I know.” He tucked a lock of hair behind my ear, his hand brushing my neck softly. “I was careful. I slipped in from the back streets. Apparently I am not the only legend lurking in the alleyways, though. Is it true? The pale man?”
“Yes. It’s true. He’s called Pavel. He’s a vampire, and a despicable cad. I’m all right, really, although Pavel can’t say the same. Wooden stakes and holy water might be preferable, but it turns out a sturdy brick to the face is not entirely ineffective against the dark scourge of the night. I’m a bit hazy on the details, though.”
Charlie pulled away, his eyebrows knit in concern. “What? Marlowe’s message only said that he spoke to you—something about a slip of paper . . . A brick?”
“Oh,” I said. “Oh, yes—you’re a bit behind.”
I recalled to him the details of the past few nights, and Charlie listened dutifully, nodding silently until I was done.
“. . . and that’s all of it,” I finished. “Mr. Jackaby is speaking with Finstern now. They’re in the other room. Would you like to say hello?”
He held my hand as we slid down the hallway. It was a small gesture, but it made me feel sweet and warm and not so alone.
Toby bounded through the door before us, and Jackaby stood up, surprised. “I need to seriously reexamine my perimeter defenses. Is there anyone else in my house that I’m not aware of?”
“My house,” came Jenny’s voice softly, and Owen Finstern spun his eyes suspiciously around the room.
“I’m very sorry to arrive unannounced,” Charlie said. “Under the circumstances—”
Jackaby waved him off. “No explanation needed. We can use any help we can get, to be honest. Miss Rook filled you in on the pertinent details?”
Charlie nodded.
“Then you know that our most immediate threat is Pavel’s daylight accomplice, a female foe employed by the same base and brutal benefactors who bankrolled Pavel.”
“How do we find her?”
Jackaby sighed. “Unfortunately, anyone who knows anything about the mystery murderess or her shadowy council is either missing or dead.” Jackaby scowled at the inventor. “Which you would do well to remember before you go running off to meet them.”
“Then perhaps we should focus on the people who are dead,” came Jenny’s voice from the air above the desk. “Professor Hoole was closer to this device than anyone.”
Finstern spun around on the bench. “Is everybody hearing that?” he asked.
Jackaby nodded. “Yes, and it’s impolite to interrupt while others are communing with the departed, or didn’t your research into the occult teach you that much?”
Finstern’s face lit up. “You’re the dead woman?” he said to the room. “Can you hear me?”
“I can hear you. I don’t like you.” Jenny’s voice was flat.
Finstern clapped like a toddler at a puppet show. “Brilliant! I told Edison it was possible! I told him communication with the other side could only be a matter of calibration and sensitivity. He scoffed at my designs for a spirit phone—of course he didn’t let me keep them, either. This is marvelous, though. How are you speaking?”
“I don’t know. How are you speaking?” Jenny did not sound amused.
“Practiced modulation of the vocal chords. Do you have a larynx? Is there a frequency you need to employ to become audible? Can you see frequencies? Tell me, how many spirits like yourself reside in a city of, say, a hundred thousand?”
“I don’t know!” Jenny said. “I’m not an expert on ghosts, I just am one.”
“Of course,” Jackaby said.
“What’s that?” I asked.
“If our answers lie with the dead—then perhaps we should speak with someone who is an expert on ghosts. You’re brilliant, Miss Cavanaugh, and absolutely right. Nobody knows what Hoole was building better than Hoole. All we need is a means of communicating with him from beyond the grave.”
“Oh, is that all,” I said.
“There are a handful of mediums operating in New Fiddleham,” Jackaby continued. “Lieutenant Dupin used to see one every month to have his cards read.”
“Mediums lie,” Finstern said. “Misrepresentation of observable phenomena. It’s not real.”
“It’s called showmanship,” Jackaby said.
“It is invalid data.”
“Not everything needs validation to be real. Charlie may be onto something. It’s worth a try, anyway.”
Jackaby set Charlie to watching Mr. Finstern and sent me to check on Mrs. Hoole while he darted into his laboratory to make the necessary preparations. I slipped outside and knocked on the door to the cellar.
The bolts click, click, clicked and the door swung open. The widow was in one piece, but she did not look as though she had slept a wink.
“You really shouldn’t open the door straightaway,” I said. “I could have been anyone.”
Mrs. Hoole nodded. “Of course you could. That was stupid of me.”
“Are you all right?” I said. “We’re going out to see if we can find some answers. It’s probably best that you keep yourself sealed in. Do you need anything, though?”
She shook her head. “Why did you protect me?” she asked. “Last night when that monster attacked me, you jumped in front of him. You don’t know me. As you say, I could have been anyone.”
“Oh. It was just the right thing to do, I suppose.”
“How do you know if you’re doing the right thing?” she asked. “I keep trying, but sometimes I feel as though I’ve done nothing but the wrong thing all my life.”
“I’m sure that isn’t true,” I said. “You keep trying—and in the end I think maybe that’s the only right thing anybody can do.”