Read The Diabolical Miss Hyde Online
Authors: Viola Carr
Eliza's stomach knotted, sick. “I'm sorry to hear that.”
“I'll take on his cases in the meantime, naturally. The least I can do for a dear friend.” Reeve puffed stinking smoke at her. “I believe you're trespassing, madam. Good day.”
“But I have evidence in the Chopper case. Iâ”
“That case is closed. We have the murderer in custody.”
“Geordie Kelly?”
“The very same.”
“Inspector, with all due respect, I've questioned him and I believeâ”
“I don't care what you believe. The boy confessed an hour ago.”
Her mouth soured. She could imagine how Reeve had likely elicited that “confession.” “But it can't have been Geordie. There's an electrical machineâ”
“The case is closed,” interrupted Reeve, propping his feet on Harley's desk. “You no longer work here. Good day.”
But his gaze flickered, a tiny slip in confidence, and suddenly she spied a different Reeve. An old-fashioned police officer, who'd always relied on the ways of the street, tip-offs and pay-offs and confessions by brute force. Whose job was skidding out from under him, usurped by brighter and younger men, altered beyond recognition in a new world of strange technology and politics he couldn't comprehend.
Bizarrely, she felt a twist of sympathy, then stamped on it. He was still a bitter little woman-hater. “Butâ”
“Shall I have you escorted from the building?” Reeve didn't look up from the file he was reading. “Believe me, madam, it'll hurt you more than it hurts me.”
“That won't be necessary.” Eliza squared her shoulders and resisted the temptation to punch him in the face. “Good day, Inspector. We'll talk again when the next woman is murdered.” And she pushed past Sergeant Porter, who hovered at the door, and strode out.
She stamped down the stairs, conflicting thoughts scrapping like angry rodents. Harley Griffin, praying at his wife's bedside. Clara Morton, red-eyed and grief-stricken. Geordie Kelly, quivering in the lock-up, thrashed into a confession he didn't understand.
Bright sparks of rage blinded her.
Curse that Reeve for a stupid ape,
hissed Lizzie.
Let me at him, I swear . . .
She took a deep breath, trying to be calm. She needed a plan, not a berserker's fury. The killer would soon strike again. And all she had to go on were a diagram of an impossible teleporting machine and the perverted insight of a razor-wielding lunatic . . .
Fuming, she stalked out into the busy street. Late afternoon sun glared along the roofline. Her eyes swam and watered, and suddenly Lizzie's eyes focused, sharper than a blade . . .
Thwack!
She collided with a hard body and stumbled, skirts dragging in mud. Her vision wobbled, a bright wash of fever, and Lizzie crouched like a tiger, ready to spring . . .
Matthew Temple steadied her, one hand on her waist, and straightened his cap. His bottle-green waistcoat dazzled in the sun. “I say, Doctor, are you all right? How fortuitous. Just the lady I need to seeâ”
“Not now, Mr. Temple,” she snarled, and pushed him aside.
But he grabbed her elbow, jostling her bag against her hip. “I really must speak with you.” An odd note of pleading spiked her attention. “It's urgent. It's about your murder caseâ”
“Are you following me, idiot?” She rounded on him, thrusting her face in close, and he jumped back in alarm. “You've
been at every crime scene in remarkably quick time this week. Perhaps you do have information about the case. Perhaps the murderer is you.”
His face greened to match his waistcoat. “That's ridiculousâ”
She lifted one finger in warning, and he fell silent. Her rage bubbled over, and her muscles juddered eagerly. Grab him, close her fist around his skinny throat, and squeeze . . .
“Just stay away from me,” she growled, and whirled away.
People scattered from her path as she strode up towards Long Acre, barely watching where she was going. Shouts and strange laughter echoed, a tornado of confusion. She reeled, stumbled, fought on her way. Was that others laughing? Was it Lizzie? Was it herself? Her bag slipped and fell, papers and bottles scattering. Blindly, she scooped them up, and Hippocrates gurgled and shrank from her touch. She stuffed him back in the bag and hurried on.
Conflicting urges collided, dragging her in multiple directions. Her wits stretched thin like rubber. Her head swelled, threatening to burst. The bitter taste of her remedy repeated on her, flooding her mouth with burning bile.
Something was awry with her prescription. No doubt about that now. And only one man could tell her what was happening.
She waved down a cab, and it shuffled to a halt on brass legs, purple electrical coils snapping sparks. She jumped in. “New Bond Street,” she spat, “and make it fast.”
About time,
whispered Lizzie.
He's been playing you all along. Will you ask the tough questions, or shall I?
The cab rattled along, legs pistoning, and the rocking motion made her seasick. Did she have the courage? Did she really want the answers?
In the depths of the darkened cab, she sucked in a deep breath for nerve and let Lizzie out.
W
HEN WE GET THERE, THE STREET'S DARK, AND SO
is the shop, the blinds drawn. The front door's locked, and the door to upstairs too. He's hiding.
I want to kick those smug polished windows until they shatter. Inside me, Eliza squirms, unwilling yet compelled. I know how she feels.
But I'm angry. I can't breathe in this damn dress. And I won't be stopped by some prissy locked door.
So I suck in the biggest breath I can, stretching my laces a little. I wander casually into the entranceway, where no one can see me in the shadows. I yank a pin from Eliza's swept-up hair-doâChrist, I must look a sightâand shove it in the lock.
They ain't much, these cheap door locks, and I've learned from the best. In half a minute,
pop!
The door clicks open in my hand.
I take the narrow stairs three at a time,
hip! hop!
The landing has only one door, and I shove it open and stride in.
He's reading in his little chair by the fire, wearing a purple smoking jacket, pince-nez perched on his nose. Yellow stuff is
plastered in his milky hair, as if he's wiped his hands in it. The room's stuffed with books, teetering shelves packed to bursting on every wall, and there's paper and ink bottles and all manner of mess.
I grab him by his fluffy jacket.
Slam!
Into the bookshelf. A few books tumble, and his glasses fall to the floor. I hold him thereâhe's right skinnyâand grin my maddest grin.
“Marcellus Finch,” says I, “you sneaky little bastard.”
Marcellus grins, just as mad. His heart is racing. I probably outweigh him, and he knows it. “Lizzie, my dearâ”
“Don't you âdear' me.” I bang him a little harder into the books. He smells of alchemy, of burning wood and melting gold. “What've you done to our remedy, you white-haired loon?”
His baby-blue gaze glints, mischievous. “Couldn't possibly sayâ”
The old man's got courage, I'll give him that. I grab his scrawny neck, twist his chin higher. “You
will
bloody say, or I'll keep right on squeezing. Hell, I don't know my own strength these days.”
His throat jumps in my palm. But there's fire in his eyes. “You're magnificent,” he chokes. “Just as I told Henry you would be. Remedy, be damned. Why do you even care?”
He makes a good point. A week ago, I might have agreed. But things are different now.
“I don't, you old buffoon. But you're upsetting Eliza, and that I can't have.” I squeeze tighter, threatening. “Now tell me what's going on, or you'll see just how magnificent I am.”
Finch's eyes bulge. “Ugh-mmph. Aant halk.”
Another good point. I loosen, just a little.
A wet splutter. “He made me, all right? He wanted to see what would happenâ”
“He who?” I demand. But rich inevitability scorches in my soul.
“
Him.
Your guardian. He's the kind of man you don't say âno' to.”
“You've worked for him all along,” I accuse. “Why did you lie to her? Jesus, Marcellus, she
trusts
you.”
And so did I.
Never had much doing, Marcellus Finch and I. Once, when I was young and stupid, I tried to turn him, get him on my side. He refused me. Now I stay away from him. He's Eliza's friend, not mine, and I see now he's a loyal man. Just not to us.
“That was the arrangement,” he protested. “I was never to tell. I was to let you . . . her, that is . . . I was to let
her
have
you,
but on
his
terms. One needs to ease into these things. Accidents can happen.”
A strange chill ripples through my belly, echoes of long-forgotten childhood memory. Shivering in my nightdress in a midnight corridor, fierce whispers coming from the bedroom of a dead woman.
An accident, Henry . . . Poor pretty lady . . . happens all the time . . .
“Oh, aye?” I venture, just to see what he'll say, but I'm uneasy, twitchy, reluctant. “Accidents like our mother's death?”
Marcellus blinks. “You'd best ask him about that.”
Oh, lord. What the hell's gone on here?
I cover my trouble with a sneer. “Right. And what about Captain Lafayette and his medicine? Did you just want to âsee what would happen' to him, too?”
Finch's gaze flickers, sullen. “That wasn't my fault. Curses like his are myriad. I tried. I just got it wrong.”
I laugh, though it ain't funny, and let him go. “Whatever you say. Just tell me where I can find my precious
guardian
.” I salt that last word with sarcasm. Fine job he's made of it.
Finch shakes himself, straightening his clothes. “The Rats' Castle, of course. I thought you knew.”
My mouth gapes. The King of Rats. That creaky old skeleton from the Royal had it right . . . and like a midnight-black rose, a shadowy new world opens before my eyes.
“Don't tell me,” I say at last. “The place with the blue light and the stinky-arse door-keeper.” Not a brothel after all. Now that I've finally figured it out, I can't wait. I'm dying to see this place. Maybe, I'll finally find where I belong.
“Just so.” Finch peers blindly at the floor, searching.
But I find his pince-nez first. He grabs for it, but I hold it away out of his reach. “What's tonight's watchword?”
He gives a cunning serpent grin that puts me in mind of Mr. Todd. “You're a clever lady, my dear. You figure it out.”
I snort in disgust and hurl the glasses at him.
He catches them, surprisingly nimble. “Just one thing,” he calls, as I whirl to leave. “For your own sake.”
“What?”
“Let Eliza talk to him.”
I halt and glance back.
He's earnest. “I swear, I never meant her harm. Things are more complicated than you know. Just let her ask the questions.”
“Why?” I grumble. “Does he think he's too good for me, too, same as everyone else?”
“Because Madeleine was her mother, too.”
And that, even I can't argue with.
Eliza's feet hit cold flagstones, and behind her, a cab rattled away.
“Whaâwhere are we?” She peered down a dark, narrow street littered with garbage. The smell assaulted her, rotten meat and excrement. Rickety buildings teetered inwards, broken shutters dangling over the street, where beggars and sleeping dogs slumped in the muck and drunken fellows sang and staggered. And at the end, a doorway with a flickering blue light . . .
Rats' Castle.
No time like the present,
whispered Lizzie. And of their own accord, Eliza's legs began to walk.
“Oh, no. Lizzie, don't. He made us promise not to pry, remember?”
And the Philosopher promised to burn us if we don't . . .
Her muscles cramped. Try as she might, she couldn't control them.
Be buggered. We're going in.
“Lizzie, what are you doing?” But before Eliza could think or do anything, her legs had marched her along the muddy street to the doorway.
Rap-rap-rap!
Her fist thumped the door. “Open up, you crusty old bastard!”
Her blood burned. Her skin stung, alive. She hadn't
changed
. Not all the way. But it felt . . . exciting. Exhilarating, to let Lizzie have her way.
The door lurched open, and the same crotchety fellow
glared out, red-eyed. “You again. Didn't I tell you to bugger offâugh!”
Eliza
(Lizzie)
grabbed his skinny throat and slammed him against the wall. Her nails dug into greasy skin, and his pulse throbbed against her palm. “The watchword is âscrew you, rat-squeezer,'” she snarled. “How'd you like that?”
The fellow spluttered and nodded rapidly, eyes bulging. Beyond him, a dark stairway descended, lit with blue arc-lights that zapped and hissed at the darkness. The faint smells of smoke and hot metal beckoned.
This wasn't a house. It was a tunnel. But to where?
“I'll take that as a yes.” She hurled the door-keeper aside, banging his head against the wall for good measure, and hopped inside. The door slapped shut behind her. And like that, she was in.
Eliza stumbled on the steps, stomach churning. Her dress felt too tight, as if she'd grown a size. She couldn't breathe. No air. Frantically, she tugged at the top of her bodice, popping a clip to loosen it, and gasped gratefully. “What did we just do?”
Lizzie's chuckle writhed under her skin, ready to burst free.
Just a little practical persuasion. Always here to help.
Eliza tossed her cloak back. Her hair crackled, alive with static. “That's enough of your help, thank you.”
Oh, for sure. You take it from here. Just lending a hand.