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Chapter Eleven
The body remained too near to me as it fell flat, but even
though I wanted to scramble away, shock and terror rooted me.
There was then, as one might imagine, panic in Mrs. Northe's
fine home. A few screams pierced the suddenly fraught room, awash in murmurs
and stirrings, our collective trance so rudely jarred into a living nightmare.
Lavinia rushed up to Nathaniel and murmured in his ear. He
placed a protective hand upon the small of her back, nodding confidently as she
shared something insistent. She drew the tulle veil that spread back from
behind her feathered, beaded fascinator around her face and cupped the gathered
fabric against her mouth with a lace-gloved hand.
"No one breathe freely," Nathaniel cried, putting
his red silk cravat to his mouth, and others followed in his example. Lavinia
made a move to withdraw, but he held her close and through the veil, I saw her
fair cheeks redden.
"It's the powder to be careful of," Lavinia
clarified for everyone's benefit, her usually soft and timid voice now carrying
with the weight of necessity and authority. "Take care."
Everyone did as instructed; cravats and silk scarves, shawls
and gloves, all created a shield. I did what I could with my sleeve, wishing I
had some of the draping, flowing fabrics so many of the Association boasted.
"Stay here," Veil instructed to his crowd. He moved
toward the front door in order to survey all of his crowd at once rather than
having his back to anyone. "We must see if George was followed, if there
were any others targeted. Were any of you approached? Have any of you been
pressured by any 'doctors' or anything bearing the seal printed on that
original leaflet?" His coterie shook their heads. "Then Lavinia has
taken good care of you indeed since the first incident. We must remain
vigilant."
"Is he dead? Georgie?" asked a mousy girl draped
in black velvet, pointing a satin-gloved finger at the floor. I peered closer.
There was a slight hitch of breath from the man's back, barely perceptible but
there nonetheless.
"Not dead yet," I stated, hoping to help keep
calm, as a death among us might trigger any number of unfortunate reactions. I
wiped at my nose with the edge of my sleeve.
Veil gestured to a slender man in dark, embroidered silk
whose black hair was slicked back and braided- Chinese, I assumed, though in
the cultural fugue that is New York City, one should never assume. The
intensely focused man nodded and slipped out the front door, his compact frame
tensed. Perhaps he was Veil's bodyguard; this quiet man who I hadn't noticed
until that very moment he was drawn out, as he'd blended with the more ostentatious
crowd, a good safety measure.
Just then I heard a familiar voice of someone who was
clearly surprised by a stranger at her front door.
"Excuse me, and you are? This happens to be my home.
Did I summon for a party I forgot having thrown?" Mrs. Northe, key in
hand, stood framed in her grand doorway of beveled glass, decorative ironwork,
and carved wood.
Just as lovely as her home, she wore a deep green satin
dress that was neither casual nor formal, the very definition of elegance in
all she presented to the world. Her slightly off the shoulder dress was made
more modest by a gray shawl that glimmered with silver beads. Her lace-gloved
hands, the only part of her that showcased any tension, were fisted tightly about
her keys, fan, and reticule. Were the situation not dire, the look on her face
would have been pricelessly amusing as she took in her home overrun by a coven
of striking, black-clad creatures positively dripping off her stairs and
furniture, filling her halls and parlor, wide-eyed and trembling.
"Well, well," she murmured as she swept in her
front foyer, shaking off apprehension so that her presence might command the
room in nearly as impressive a manner as Veil. "I've an unexpected murder
of crows to host, do I?"
Murder was an unfortunate word for a cluster of ravens,
considering the circumstances. I doubt Poe would have written this scene; he'd
surely find it distasteful and a bit much.
"The Lady of the Manor, I presume!" Veil cried,
bowing, his ascot still cupped to his mouth, though that had no effect on his
being heard. His voice could boom no matter what obstructed it. Mrs. Northe
gaped slightly. He maintained his bow as he continued. "Nathaniel Veil at
your service, madame."
He swept his hand about him, presenting his compatriots.
"If you'll forgive us, Her Majesty's Association of Melancholy Bastards
here needed to host a meeting for our collective safety…" Veil stood
upright again, towering over the woman whose home he had overtaken as she
looked up at him blankly. "But as you can see from the supine body of
Mister George Fernstock there, our little soiree has been interrupted and
compromised. And a damn shame, that, as I was putting on a right good show.
'"Tell me, my esteemed lady, do you advise we call the
police on this matter or just hope for the best?" He gestured around him.
"Oh, and do be aware of a red powder. It seems to be the culprit of
madness. That's a very lovely embroidered shawl you have there, madame, I'd
suggest breathing through it."
Mrs. Northe blinked, unable to look away from Veil as if he
were a fascinating species of creature she'd never encountered up close. She'd
seen him on stage, of course, but close and in person, his quality as force of
nature was truly something to be reckoned with. After a moment she brought the
shawl draped elegantly over her shoulders to her face. She searched the crowd,
met my eyes, and her shoulders eased slightly. I gave her a look that hopefully
read how glad I was to see her.
There was a questioning look in her eyes that made me uneasy.
I never liked noting her in any attitude but firmly in control, cool and
collected and exuding a confident plan. But I needed to remember she was human,
not my guardian angel, not my fairy godmother of mythic quests. We were all
just trying to stay one step ahead of madmen, to varying degrees of success.
And something wasn't quite right—man lying unconscious at my feet aside.
"I do think at this point, Mister Veil," she
replied finally to his query, "that the police will need to be involved.
My associate in the clerk's office and I have gathered enough information about
some of the Master's Society property to prompt proper scrutiny, and I'd rather
leave that up to authorities. I am not a vigilante type, and I'd not suggest
that course of action for any of your associates either."
The black-clad crowd shook their heads. Like most people I'd
ever met, they simply wanted to be left in peace and given leave to be their
own masters and mistresses.
Mrs. Northe approached me. She bent, and unceremoniously, she
proceeded to draw me away from the body on the floor. Through her intervention
I felt able to move, though I was oddly light-headed. The room spun a bit as I
stood.
"Have you seen Jonathon?" she asked quietly.
"He and I were supposed to investigate a site that may be the very crux of
the Society's New York
operations, but he didn't show. That isn't his style…" She trailed off,
frowning as she stared at me. I didn't like her words, and I didn't like the
look on her face even more so.
She wiped something off my lip. There was a bitter taste in
my mouth. She brushed her fingertips over my face, and then over my collar. Her
lace gloves came away red. I felt a dull sensation blossoming in my stomach
becoming sharper as panic opened into full bloom.
"What?" My voice sounded far away to my own ear.
"What did you say?"
"Jonathon," Mrs. Northe continued. "Not that
you're his keeper, but I thought perhaps he was with you… It didn't seem like
him to not turn up… I don't mean to worry you..."
"Jonathon," I murmured. "Jonathon." The sound of his name was an exotic spice upon my
tongue. He was the whole of my heart, and he was absent. That was…unacceptable.
I cocked my head to the side in an abrupt movement that felt foreign. My breath
was heavy and strained against the stays of my corset that were suddenly
violently tight against my rib cage.
Damn Jonathon Whitby. Damn his beauty. Damn his hold over
me. Were there not greater things to be held in the clutches of?
I heard laughter, low and far away, deep and rumbling, like
thunder. It was not mine, and it did not seem like the laughter of anyone in
the room, which had dimmed significantly. Whispers coursed past my ear like
wind.
Oh, that couldn't be a good sign. Whispers in my mind,
unless they were warnings from my mother, were to be avoided. My mother was
dead. This was not her whispers. It was a crowd. That meant something else
entirely.
I closed my eyes. My body shuddered with strange sensations
that were both seductive and vaguely disturbing in their sudden sweeping intensity,
as if every inch of my skin were suddenly on fire and sensitive to suggestion.
And pain. There was a deep, widening, vicious chasm of pain...
And then the curtain was drawn on rage. A pure, unchecked,
heretofore unheard of rage took center stage.
"Where is
Jonathon?!!" someone shrieked.
It took me a long moment to realize that someone shrieking
was me. I think I tore at something. Or someone.
That's the last thing I remember before darkness overtook me
in a swift and obliterating shot.
--
(End of Chapter 11 -- 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 sequel: The Twisted Tragedy of Miss Natalie Stewart and/or donate to the cause! Donations directly support the editorial staff.
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You're going to make us wait a whole week? *sigh*
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