Gooseflesh pricked down my arms. Allison might have been telling my story from three months ago.
She stepped toward me. “I have to know what really happened with my brother. Mother might believe the newspapers, but I don’t. Tell me how Clarence died.”
I didn’t move. Allison deserved an answer, yet I couldn’t give it to her. Not when my life was threatened and every second counted. Mary clattered down the stairs. “Eleanor, I’ve got your bag!”
I didn’t even spare Allison a glance before spurring myself back into the foyer. Mary held out an old black carpetbag. Her hands trembled. “Now what?”
“Now,” I said, turning cautiously to Allison, who hovered in the parlor’s doorway. “Now I leave.”
“No.” Red flared onto Allison’s face. “You can’t just go. I asked you for answers.”
“I’m sorry,” I said, my voice flat though I actually meant the words. I had wanted to tell her the truth for so long. . . .
I shoved my left hand into my pocket, and withdrawing Jie’s letter, I turned to Mary. “This is where I will be going. I’ll telegraph once I’m in France.”
“France!” Mary cried, taking the envelope. “What’s there?”
“The Spirit-Hunters.” I shot a glance at Allison, but other than a tightening in her jaw, she did not react to this name. I could not help but wonder: did she already know that the Spirit-Hunters had not killed Clarence?
I hefted the carpetbag from Mary’s hands, forcing my mind to remain in the present. “Did you put the emergency money in the bag?”
“Aye. And your brother’s letters too.”
“Good. I’ll be going straight to the wharf.”
“I’ll take you,” Allison inserted. “To the wharf.”
“What?” I spun toward her. “Absolutely not.”
She glared. “Yes. If you are going to run off, I want answers first. You will ride with me.”
I narrowed my eyes, and she matched it with her own stare. Two girls who’d once shared tea and gossip were now bound together by death.
But then it occurred to me that if I accepted a ride, I could move more quickly. I could even say good-bye to Mama, for her hospital was on the way.
Best of all, though, Marcus didn’t know Allison. He wouldn’t recognize her carriage, and I could travel to the wharf unknown. So although part of me felt bad for accepting Allison’s offer under such selfish circumstances, most of me simply wanted to go.
“Fine,” I finally said.
Allison nodded once, and her eyes grazed over Mary. “Where will your maid go?”
“I’ve family in California, Ma’am. Eleanor gave me money for a train weeks ago.”
“You must remember to stay in touch with the solicitor,” I reminded Mary. “Father trusted him, but still—I’d feel better if I knew you telegrammed him regularly. At least until the house sells.”
Mary bowed her head. “Of course.”
“You’re selling the house?” Allison demanded. “Is that how you have enough money for a train ticket?” The look in her eyes—the implication that I’d gotten my money through some nefarious means—set my temper alight.
“The money,” I spat, “came from that sofa you complained I don’t have. And I’ll buy my steamer ticket with the money I saved by not getting a prosthetic, by pinching coins for months, by selling off all my things. I have not yet sold the house, but we have interested buyers. It should sell soon—it must sell soon, for otherwise I cannot afford Mama’s bills.”
Allison’s nostrils flared. “You could have married my brother, you know. He cared about you, and he would have treated you as well as he treated me. Then you would never have needed money and maybe . . .” Her eyes turned glassy, and her lips quivered. But she did not finish her thought. Instead, with nothing more than a slight sniffle, Allison turned and strode from the house.
Guilt exploded in my belly as I watched her go. I would have married her brother if it had come to that. Underneath his sharp exterior, he had been a loving man.
And like all the other ghosts I wanted to forget, his perfect face haunted me every day.
I towed my mind back to the present. After giving Mary a quick embrace and making her promise to leave the house immediately, I hurried outside and clambered into Allison’s carriage. Her cool poise was back by the time I slid over the velvet bench seats. The last time I’d ridden in this carriage, Clarence had been alive and we’d been on our way to the opera. It was the night he had caught me working with the Spirit-Hunters.
It was also the night he was murdered.
“Now, Eleanor,” Allison ordered as the horses clopped to a start, “tell me how Clarence died.”
“First,” I said, forcing an edge to my words—a strength I wasn’t feeling—“take me to Kirkbride’s.
I want to say good-bye to my mother.”
Allison’s eyelids twitched down. “The gossip is true then. Your mother is sick.”
I nodded.
“All right.” She rapped her knuckles on the carriage wall and directed the driver to the hospital.
Her gaze never left mine as she asked, “So your mother is sick with . . . what? Last I saw her, she was fine. What could possibly be the matter with her now?”
“Quite a lot, actually.” I had to fight to keep from growling. “Mama was never right after my father died. When I told her about . . . well, when I told her everything I’m about to tell you, it was too much.” I dropped my gaze to my bandaged wrist. “It’s even worse than the papers say, Allison. Are you sure you want to know the whole story? Ignorance is easier.”
“But not better!” she cried. “A few months ago, I never thought further than the end of the day.
Now, I see my whole life before and my death at the end. Just tell me what happened, Eleanor. I deserve the truth.”
“The truth,” I repeated. The word tasted like ash. I took a deep breath. “The papers said it was the
Spirit-Hunters who killed Clarence. But it wasn’t.”
Her spine deflated. “Who then?”
I twisted my face away and watched the neighborhood pass by. I’d always imagined looking into
Allison’s eyes when I told her this, but, in fact, I found the words wouldn’t come if I met her stare.
“It all began with our fathers. They were once very good friends, you know. Then your father, Clay, decided to run for city council, and he . . . well, he was one of the Gas Trustees, who controlled most of the city’s jobs—meaning he also controlled most of the city’s voters.” I inhaled deeply. “Clay offered my father a position in his ring of council members, but my father refused and opted to run for city council the honest way. He wanted to stop Clay from corrupting the city.
“Then—” My voice shook. I tried again. “Then your father decided to force mine out of the race by destroying his railroad supply company. He hired thugs to blow up my father’s latest dynamite shipment, and he also told Clarence to make my brother’s life a living hell.”
Allison’s breath hitched, but I didn’t look her way. At this point in the story, Mama had already begun shrieking her denial. She would hear nothing against the Wilcoxes—the past was the past, she had said. All that mattered was the future and regaining the Wilcox family’s favor.
She’d stopped screaming once the whole truth came out.
Shifting in my seat, I wet my lips and resumed my cold account. “The man . . . the man raising the
Dead across the city,” I said, “was my brother. Elijah killed Clarence out of revenge for our father.”
Allison’s body turned rigid, but she made no other indication that she’d heard. So I kept talking.
“After Clarence died and I learned the truth, I went with the Spirit-Hunters to Laurel Hill Cemetery.
Elijah was there, trying to raise our father’s corpse. I—” My voice broke, and I had to grit my teeth to keep going. “I stopped Elijah, but then . . . he died.” I glanced at Allison, finally meeting her eyes.
They were hard—unnaturally so—and it took me a moment to recognize the emotion she wore.
Revulsion.
Yet before I could think how to react, we turned onto a new street and Allison spoke. “Why couldn’t you simply tell me that all this was happening? While it was happening?”
“Would it have changed things?” I rubbed my wrist. “Clarence would still have died, and it would still be my brother’s fault.” And Mama would still have cracked, and I would still be friendless, handless, and fleeing Philadelphia.
Allison clenched her jaw and didn’t answer for several long seconds. Then she said, “Why are you going to Paris all by yourself?”
I tensed. “How did you know Paris? I only mentioned France.”
“Lucky guess.” She frowned. “Now explain. ”
“Do you . . .” I gulped. I had to keep talking—and I had to keep shoving my feelings aside as I did.
“Do you remember the séance my mother held in June? The one where all the guests fainted?”
“Of course.”
“Well, Mama did let in a spirit that night.”
Allison’s brows drew together. “So it wasn’t all theatrics as you claimed?”
“I wish . . . but no. The spirit was a dead necromancer named Marcus. He’d been waiting for years to reenter the earthly realm. His time in death had made him strong, and once he was out of the spirit world, he found my brother. Marcus used Elijah’s magic against him. When Elijah cast a spell to bring
Father back to life, Marcus was able to use the spell instead to bring himself back to life . . . and he was able to possess the nearest corpse.”
“Your father’s body?”
“No. Elijah’s.” I cringed as an image of my father’s skeleton, its jaws latched onto my brother’s throat, formed in my mind. “My father’s skeleton killed Elijah, thereby giving Marcus access to the freshly dead body. And the spell—a spell to bind a ghost to a corpse—was Marcus’s ticket to a new life in the earthly realm.”
A life I would end as soon as I had the chance.
Allison’s eyes grew wide. “So you’re saying your brother’s body is walking around with this
Marcus spirit inside?”
“Yes.” Yellow eyes and howling dogs flared in my mind, sending a ghostly pain through my wrist.
Distractedly, I massaged it.
“And your hand,” Allison said, her nose curling up slightly, “what happened?”
“One of the Hungry Dead bit it.” More memories, more flashes of blood and chaos, flooded through my mind. The Hungry who had bitten me—a long-dead Civil War soldier—had been so fast.
So rabid. There’d been no chance for me to escape.
“By the time I broke free,” I added softly, “it was too late. My hand was destroyed, and I had to have it amputated.”
Her face paled, but other than that she was surprisingly calm. It was . . . odd. And so very, very different from Mama’s reaction. “You are handling it all quite stoically,” I told her.