Chapter 5.2 (For previous chapters please see links on the right column)
Crenfall kept counting the bugs on the sill of his cell.
It
occurred to me after a while that it was in a sequence, and it didn’t
necessarily match the creatures on the sill. I'd never been particularly gifted
at mathematics, but I did take note of it, and Mrs. Northe seemed to as well.
But I wished to write down the numbers.
That I hadn't traveled with a diary
frustrated me. Mere months ago I'd have never been without paper, to write
things down to communicate as my voice had been absent for so many years. What a strange thing to have taken for granted. How interesting that I'd so readily abandoned such an intrinsic tool of survival. We are adaptable creatures. Well, some of us. The man before me hadn't adapted. He'd broken in two...
Mrs. Northe repeated what she'd said, that she had questions, and the clouds of
madness seemed to part and an eerie lucidity shone through like a jarring ray
of sunlight.
"You've questions?" he said in wispy voice.
"About why I'm here?"
"Yes, please. Tell us why you're here."
"You cannot beat the Majesties, you know. You'll fall
under the Master in the end. Everyone will," he said matter-of-factly.
"I'm sure that's true," Mrs. Northe said softly,
with a quiet conspiratorial air. "And I've been wanting to know why I've
been chosen to see and know some of your secrets." Crenfall narrowed his
eyes at her. "I brought Lord Denbury's portrait into the Metropolitan,
Mister Crenfall. I've been trying to learn the ways of this society, but I
cannot do that without a guide," she murmured, playing as though she were
excited. Crenfall puffed up his chest proudly. "What we should expect and
welcome from these Masters?"
"Expect that the gentlemen will want everything. You
can welcome his taking of what is rightfully theirs. They are not hasty. Their revolution
is quiet and dark. The minion and I were sent from London . Ahead of operations.”
"The minion.
Lord Denbury, you mean?" Mrs. Northe clarified.
"No." Crenfall grinned. "But he looked an
awful lot like him, didn't he..." The man's ugly, raspy laugh bounced
about the dank stone space.
"What sort of operations?"
I hissed through clenched teeth, balling my fist, wanting to lash out at his
casual reference to what had been an experience of unmitigated hell for
Jonathon.
"You know, business,"
Crenfall replied, turning a sick smile to me. "New business. Pretty business."
I shuddered. The demon had liked to use the word
"pretty." A demon who had gotten far too close... I shoved the
memories back.
"How many people were sent here?" Mrs. Northe
continued.
"Just the inhabited
young lord and I first. A Majesty will follow. And soon. A shadow has already
been cast over doctors. More experiments, you know."
"Business...and experiments, these will be wholly in New York ? Or more
places?"
"To take preeminence anywhere, one must certainly have
deep roots in New York City ,"
Crenfall stated as if that were obvious. "Grand and central, all tracks
will lead home."
The word home
seemed to set him off, he winced and something darkened. "The abyss. We
come from the abyss. We return to the abyss. In the end the dark will always
take you so take it first and it will be kind, a soft touch, gentle decay,
nothing to fear. The paths are worn deep with heavy tread, those we serve,
those who have come before to do the dirty deeds. Such dirt. We are filthy
creatures, mankind..."
It was hard to follow, his mental landscape a tangle. He repeated
a few choice words, touching upon abysses and filth, eventually leaving his ode
to pierce us again with wide, terrible eyes. He continued more lucidly:
"Here the new world order shall unfold. The old order. The old shall be
new again. The dead, alive. The peaceful, militant. The leaders restored. The
striving, crushed. And the content, terrified."
And then suddenly, he rushed at us, shrieking. We scrambled
backward, startled by the extreme outburst. The orderly was instantly upon Crenfall,
who murmured apologies as he retreated back into his corner once more. "I
get these fits, madame," Crenfall whined to Mrs. Northe, sweeping a
terrified gaze to me, then to the orderly. "Please, I'm sorry. I'll be
better..."
"It's all right sir, thank you." Mrs. Northe
placed a calming hand on the orderly's forearm.
Crenfall begged again, cringing. "Please understand. I
did not start this with the desire to hurt anyone. I only wanted to serve. For
the world to be sorted properly. But once you choose a path and walk it a
while...there is no turning back."
Mrs. Northe stood her ground and maintained her gentle but
unequivocal tone. "Tell me where your associates meet. Names, if you
can."
Crenfall looked at us helplessly, murmuring, wide-eyed,
"They're all Majesties. We don't know their true names. Such power in
names, you know. Their blood is the finest. And they will situate themselves
among the grand and glorious, the central and the vital. Better to seize the
heart of the city."
"He's raving, madame. I hope you've sense enough to see that," the orderly growled, his
fist still threatening. Mrs. Northe offered the orderly a reassuring gesture.
"I'm trying... I'm trying to serve," Crenfall
murmured, offering up a soft plea. "Please bestow your grace upon me...for
I do grow scared of the dark..." And he was off again, counting the
insects round his window bars, only with a few more tears on his cheek, and no
other urging from Mrs. Northe garnered any response.
Mrs. Northe turned to me, and I saw a tired, old pain I was
seeing more frequently. Or perhaps I was simply more insightful. She spoke
softly as we left the cell. “I realize that this branch of doctors, scientists,
and analysts are called Alienists because these people are alienated from
society, from everything we think of as capable and compatible with our average
existence. But their patients are still human. They are not so alien that I
cannot still feel them, straining at my mind, their souls reaching out as their
hands do. For something. Someone. For a shred of light, sunlight, quiet...anything
to grasp.”
This was my thought as I walked away, the head Alienist
waiting for us, having listened in, his face contorted in disapproval that he
thankfully kept to himself.
We made our way back toward the entrance, past chambers of
experimental operation, activity that appeared on all accounts to be somewhat
medieval and torturous. If I strained to hear it, I wondered if I’d feel the
heartbeat of misery. Surely Mrs. Northe did, for it seemed she could not help
herself, lashing out at the attending Alienist. "As a rule, are you
cruel?"
The man just stared at her as if he didn't understand her
question.
As we made our exit, a young man in a black suit, with pale skin,
dark eyes, and an arm held at an angle entered. Palpable sadness was writ wide
within his dark eyes. The crash of water sounded nearby. Likely a man strapped
to a chair plunged into a submersion tank, as I'd seen in passing.
"Barbaric," he murmured.
"Yes, doctor, so you've said," came the weary
reply from the warden at the door. "Do open your own institution then
instead, will you?"
I couldn't help but turn to the slight man whose presence
was magnetic, whose eyes were so fierce, and smile. He returned it, an action
that transformed his face, removing his hat as he bowed his head to me and then
Mrs. Northe before walking away, making us all passing strangers once more.
“I was about to decry that there were no persons of true
feeling I’d yet seen in a place like this,” Mrs. Northe murmured, nodding after
the man. “Perhaps there is hope for the hopeless. I always say that there is,
as a general rule, but sometimes…those are just hollow words.”
Hope for the hopeless. That made me think of Maggie, and as
we stepped outside those doors, straining toward that open lawn beyond, I
blurted:
“Please tell me Maggie won’t be brought to a place like
this. What happens when she’s well enough?”
Mrs. Northe sighed as we climbed again into the calash that
she had instructed come back around for us to take us again to the small steam
ferry that would chug gladly back to Manhattan .
We sped away from the looming complex, and I did not look back. She turned to
me with a withering stare that caused me to shrink back in the bouncing seat.
"Do you really think so little of me that I'd let
Maggie, my niece, misguided as she is, be swept away into these terrible
systems?" she asked, her voice pained. "These days a woman can get
committed for reading a romance novel, let alone "witchcraft," and I
swiftly put my sister's vain head out of that notion. It's no wonder Margaret
was seeking something more meaningful out of life. Her mother seemed more
concerned with the family reputation than whether or not her daughter was well.
I'm sending her off to Chicago ,
to be looked after by one of my dearest friends in all the world, Miss Karen
Sheldon. She and my dear Amelia, the one that died, are...were...bosom friends.
Maggie will be in the best of care and company with Karen."
"And yet you opened your home to Lavinia Kent , but not
your own niece—"
"My sister wanted Maggie sent away. This was the compromise. Please don't question me," Mrs.
Northe snapped. "I would hope you know enough by now that my friends, to
the last one of them, are incredible, I daresay magical people. Karen is...inconsolable in losing Amelia, they
lived together since they were girls in school, and this mission might just
save two souls at once. Karen is very gifted empath and will seek out the root
of Maggie's trouble and return her to us well again."
Boarding the steamboat, sprawling Manhattan
lay ahead of us, and as always I was stunned by the skyline, the looming towers
of the mid-complete Brooklyn
Bridge , a behemoth of
gothic stone straining to the sky, the churning industry along the river, the
bobbing masts of countless ships and the puffs of constant steam engines. Busy,
churning, burning New York .
A devil in your midst wants to eat you whole. But does it not underestimate
you, grand city?
"So did we gain anything?" I asked, turning the
subject away from Maggie. I was relieved by Mrs. Northe's assurances but still
not sure what to think, wondering if Maggie would ever recover, if there was
anything left for us as possible friends, even after all the stupid things
she'd done.
I thought of what had struck me in Crenfall's words, words
that may have meant something. I had grown accustomed to picking apart single
words as clues; the magic that had imprisoned Denbury worked off specific
words, a direct spell. Words had far more power than people gave them credit
for. As a girl who'd spent a good bit of her life mute, I appreciated that fact
more than most. "The grand and the
central," I stated. "Do you
think there's something going on near the Depot? Grand Central Depot?" I wanted to compare that
area to the addresses Brinkman offered Jonathon and see if there was any rhyme
or reason to them.
"I do, yes," Mrs. Northe said, nodding, her
expression fixed in concentration. "And then there were the numbers. And
then the reference to Majesties. High-born
folk, which would explain the connection with the English, who have more
stratifications that we'd like to think we have here, though they merely take
different forms, and the discussion of what seemed to be a societal shift. And
the ancient power of the name once more. If there are further spells afoot, we
must keep that at the core. I ought to have written those numbers down. There
is code in madness, and sense in code. Incredible works of scripture and art
have been written in odd sequences and fantastical scenarios. But it was
familiar to me. I think it may have been related to the golden ratio. But
rearranged...”
I blinked at her, hoping she’d explain. She smiled. “I
thought your father may have explained that one to you at some point. The
golden ratio is a mathematical concept that can be applied to art. It’s thought
to be divine, a ratio of composition and proportion that is thought to be most
pleasing to the eye, a pattern that repeats in nature, something Godly. Ah.
Yes, that’s why it was odd.”
“Crenfall was doing it backward, then,” I offered.
“Inverted.”
“Precisely.” She chuckled mordantly. “At least these
wretches are consistent in their disregard for the proper order of things. It
would seem they’d prefer the world be inside out.”
“Just chaos?” I asked. I thought about what we knew so far,
the demon’s insinuations of a new dawn. “Surely they want more than anarchy.
What does mere chaos buy them, other than perhaps entertainment?”
“Oh, there is a greater agenda, but the true scope of it
seems to elude me. All the paranormal experimentation has to be leading to
something, but I’m just not sure exactly what. I believe they seek weapons of
control and terror, the soul-splitting and the reanimation and the chemicals
are part of that quest, but to what end they'll be used I’m still not sure.”
Having transferred to a trolley car and after a two block
walk to her townhouse, Mrs. Northe brought me into her parlor, and I, of course,
looked around and listened for any signs of Jonathon's presence, but there were
none, to my great disappointment. I'd become used to catching him up on
information immediately, and the thought that he was out and about without me
was a fresh torture, the kind I'd only felt when he had gone to England to
attempt to sort out his affairs.
When I'd first met him, our souls had communed through a
painting, and with a flood of guilt, I realized I'd liked it—or at least felt
more confident—when he was trapped, as it was a measure of control I'd had over
the situation. I didn't like that at all; the realization looked ugly to me
when I pondered it within me. I needed to allow him to affect his situation for
the better on his own. I'd seen the sort of revitalization of his spirit that his
own direct action had wrought. Being his savior had been delicious for me, a
power like I'd never known. I craved that sensation again and empathized with
the addict of some powerful drug.
Mrs. Northe waited for her maid to leave before she
continued with her thoughts, proffering the tea that had been prepared for us.
"I've been worried that Crenfall is a liability to us, that if a Master's
Society member were to interrogate him it could jeopardize us. But it would
appear Crenfall and the demon were lone operatives without a direct overseer.
At least not one who could have foreseen the final business with the painting.
Considering the timing, Crenfall couldn't have managed to see the portrait in
pieces, so I doubt he could be an informant, though we might want to make your
father aware that the Metropolitan might be a source of intrigue, if any of
them still think Lord Denbury's painted prison still hangs there, and not in
pieces."
I stared at my hands, the worn lace gloves I needed to mend
a couple of fingertips of, and felt overwhelmed as how could we pick out
Society operatives in a city thronged with people. Anyone, anywhere, on any
street, could be looking for us. It was maddening. I picked up the teacup and
forced myself not to shake; trembling was tedious to me at this point. I dearly
did not want to appear as fragile as I felt. I felt Mrs. Northe's eyes upon me
before she continued:
"I can't imagine it would have occurred to 'society
operatives' that a mute girl would speak the counter-curse to set Lord Denbury
free, so you may yet be safe while his cover may have to remain carefully in
question. We don't know what could have gotten back to London . I made sure that Mr. Smith cleaned up
everything around Preston 's hospital wing. The
staff there was informed of his suicide, and no one seemed very surprised, glad
to have the wing reopen without his morbid presence and constant séances."
Well. His suicide
wasn't entirely a lie; Preston had most
certainly brought on his death himself. It was just a bit more complicated,
with reanimate corpses and ghosts holding surgical scalpels. The thought of
Mrs. Northe's personal guard Mr. Smith stalking about in his eerie, quiet way,
tying up loose ends and settling matters with unsettling efficiency, brought a
perverse smile to my face. He was the most inscrutable man I'd ever met, but I
trusted him.
Mrs. Northe, seeing that there were no more queries or
answers for the day, knowing we already had plenty to think about, had a
carriage brought round to my home. I entered a quiet house with Father quiet in
the study, went quietly to my room in the quiet way that was so often
comfortable between us. Then, as I sat gingerly upon my bed, there came the
terrible question of what to do with myself next.
My thoughts turned dark, and I knew, before I even closed my
eyes, that a nightmare would come.
And I knew it would be one for the record
books.
---
(End of Chapter 5.2 -- Copyright 2013 Leanna Renee Hieber, The Magic Most Foul saga - If you like what you see, please share this link with friends! Tweet it, FB, + it! The Magic Most Foul team really hopes the audience will continue to grow and it can only do so with YOUR help! If you haven't already, do pick up a copy of Magic Most Foul books 1 and 2: Darker Still and The Twisted Tragedy of Miss Natalie Stewart and/or donate to the cause! Donations directly support the editorial staff.
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