“Perhaps.” Yet she was uneasy even as she admitted the possibility. The oldest branch of sorcery, while powerful, was not enough to cause these effects on a ruling spirit’s vessel–and if a Sympathy to Victrix had been in effect, Emma herself would not have become attuned to whatever work was being performed.
If it was indeed a
“Which is?”
At least he did not seek to
Emma turned, took two irresolute steps toward the coal grate. Halted. “If not for an accident, I could have been one of them.”
“Ah.” Thankfully, he added no more. He merely let her know she was heard, perhaps understood. Though
She swung back to face him, her jewellery running with crackling sparks as tension made itself visible. “I need your help, Mikal.”
The Shield cocked his sleek dark head. He actually looked thunderstruck, and well he might. Two slow blinks–his yellow irises quenched for a moment–then another.
“You have it without asking, Prima.” Formal, and very soft.
“He seems capable of that much, at least.” A half-bow, a Shield’s traditional obeisance, he turned on his heel and was gone in a heartbeat.
The door closed behind him, and she let out a pent breath.
If he sought to reassure her, he had succeeded halfway. She gazed over the wrack and ruin of her study, and brought her hands together, sharply.
The resultant
What had she not told him?
She held up one hand, counted said and unsaid reasons as if teaching a child-rhyme.
One finger.
Two.
Three.
Four.
And fifth, last but not least, the most galling of all, counted upon her dexterous thumb, the digit that separated man from beast.
Chapter Twenty-Seven
A Legitimate Concern
The night passed without incident, and so did the next day, save for the broadsheets screaming of murder in the Eastron End. Those were carried immediately to Miss Bannon’s study. Clare was, of course, supplied with his own.
The
The house was in mourning, and Philip appeared every morning wearing a black armband.
The fact that reminders of Valentinelli’s presence would fill the rooms there as well was certainly not a consideration, was it?
Late in the evening, Finch tapped at the door of the workroom. Clare had been a trifle surprised at the mess left in that stone-walled room, but Philip had not even blinked at scrubbing the blood off the walls. Tidying the place had taken a day’s worth of work, and he was cogitating upon the advisability of a series of experiments involving his own blood and a spæctroscope.
Philip tossed the door open. “Morning, guv! Come to visit the peasants?”
“You are an annoyance, boy,” Finch replied, quite unperturbed. “Telegram, sir.”